
Tunis, Tunisia
We took the early morning ferry from Trapani (Sicily) to sail to Tunis. We got to the dock at around 7am. The ferry had already arrived, coming down from Sardinia, and the semi-trailers were rolling off.
Rotate to landscape to view slideshow
We visited Nefta on a day trip from Tozeur.
Considered by many Sufis to be the spiritual home of their faith, Nefta is the destination for many pilgrims. There are quite a few mosques and other religious centres in the town.
We got to ride a camel at the small Berber encampment about 15 kms out of town towards the nearby Algerian border. The few Berbers that live here in their traditional tents make a living (?) selling a few nicknacks to the tourists and offering to take you for a short camel ride over the sandhills. Well, you get to experience what riding a camel is like, I guess.
There is a date processing plant in the town, and this provides seasonal work (mainly) for young women while the boys are out climbing the trees to cut the date stalks. There doesn’t appear to be much else to do when the dates have been picked and processed.
The town itself sits around a huge depression (corbeille) which is ringed by some big tourist hotels, well positioned to catch the sunsets.
The Chott el Jerid (a huge expanse of dry nothing) is nearby. There are friendly cab drivers in the main street and they will be happy to take you for a drive to see the sights.
Nefta is not as big as Tozeur, but it has the same interesting brick patterns in the buildings in the old part of the town. You can walk down into the depression (the Corbeille) and there is a swimming pool at the bottom.
The salt-flats near Nefta were used as a filming location for the Star Wars movie.

We took the early morning ferry from Trapani (Sicily) to sail to Tunis. We got to the dock at around 7am. The ferry had already arrived, coming down from Sardinia, and the semi-trailers were rolling off.

Ksar Oulad Soltane, near Tataouine, is an excellent example of a Berber plains village used by the semi nomadic tribes.

Dougga is one of the best of the ancient Roman town sites we have seen, a good rival to Ephesus in Turkey.

Casa Mila is the last private residence designed by architect Antoni Gaudí and perhaps his most iconic.

Relax by the cozy fire, have a ride on a tourist train, visit a gold mine, wander through the historic cemetery – it’s a great weekend away in Walhalla.

King Island, famous for dairy products, crayfish, high quality beef and now golf, is a gem in the middle of Bass Strait. And it has the tallest lighthouse in Australia.