
Here's a whole bunch of sand. That's
probably Dakhla off in the distance...palms and greenery, and big
cliffs behind. Each oasis is in a valley...they're leftover
prehistoric riverbeds, and they're close to the existing water table,
so things grow there. I think I was out here having a secluded
breakfast, hiding my date bread and drinks from the Ramadan
types.

That rock is about the size of a
bowling ball. It's been weathered into a very strange piece of what
looks like rusted plumbing. A lot of what it's sitting on will be
smashed pottery left over from various civilizations that marched
through.

Your standard relatively modern grave
yard, set against more of nearly nothing at all.

More strange flat desert wasteland. The
plateau on the left is full of tombs from the Roman era, a five-level
condo of corpses, most of which have been removed by
archeologists.

Dead guys in the aforementioned tombs.
I'm sure there are dead gals in there as well. They've just been
sitting out there for a couple of thousand years...

An older Islamic graveyard. When you
get married or a boy gets circumcised, you head up to the white tomb
and go inside, burn some incense, then smudge mud on the walls or
leave a celebratory flag. A little holdover of ancestor-worship and
the Egyptian relationship with the dead. Seems blasphemous to
me.

The little town of El Qasr. The centre
of it is multi-storied mud rather cunningly designed, although you'd
never know it from this photo. Thrill to the ancient olive press! At
sunset the palms host vast flocks of white birds that seem like water
birds trapped inland.