On the way from Jerusalem to the Dead Sea, there is a must stop for every tourist bus. This is Alexander (and every tour guide knows him by name!) who is entertaining the tourists and takes them for a short ride for some bucks.
These bi-weekly markets run on Thursday's and Sunday's throughout the dry season. There's no better way to end a trip to Darwin than watching the sun go down over the beach with a freshly made watermelon juice in one hand and a woodfired pizza in the other.
The older city that has been attached to Tel Aviv. Many of the old Arabic houses have been restored beautifully; others are falling apart.
The Dead Sea (Hebrew: יָם הַמֶּלַח, Yām Ha-Melaḥ, "Sea of Salt"; Arabic: ألبَحْر ألمَيّت, al-Baḥrᵘ l-Mayyitⁱ, "Dead Sea") is a salt lake between the West Bank and Israel to the west, and Jordan to the east. At 420 metres (1,378 ft) below sea level,[2] its shores are the lowest point on Earth that are on dry land.
The annual Pushkar camel fair in north-western India is by far the greatest livestock fair on Earth!!
Caesarea is an ancient city built by the Roman's in central Israel near the Mediterranean Sea.
When the consumptive tourists enter my frame, I realise it is not travel-pace that matters most.
Israel possesses a number of diverse regions, with landscapes varying between coast, mountain, valley and desert landscapes, with just about everything in between. Beyond the towns and cities, each region of Israel holds its own unique attractions.
This article was published along with a 6 pages review of my Artworks at the “Popular Photography of China” magazine – with approximately 500,000 copies.
Would you like to immerse yourself in culture and art while escaping the confines of the everyday life? How about a vacation on a budget?