Dougga

Here I am at Dougga once again. It sure is a great site!

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We first drove up to the western entrance but decided to go find some food before visiting the site. Also, the walk was a bit further from this entrance. Good views though.

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At the hotel that we ate at they had a tasteful display of looted Roman antiquities on display.

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Attack of the sheep! The herders were moving them from the olive groves through the ruins to pastures on the other side.

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One of the many cisterns on the site.

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Some other temples and ruins that I hadn’t gotten to the last time I was at the site.

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The biggest cistern complex. It’s used as storage now.

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The leftovers from excavation.  Used wheelbarrows.

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The circus. It’s the only flat piece of land within several kilometers of Dougga. It appears that the Romans flattened out the top of the hill to make a spot for the circus.

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An odd marker cairn covered in Latin.

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People still live in and around the ruins.

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Early Christian sarcophagi unearthed and stacked up like cord wood during initial excavations.

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Early Christian crypt.

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A parting shot of the theater.

Ain Draham and Around

Up to Ain Draham. We visited the carpet co-op and ate lunch at the bombing boar hotel. We also stopped the car a couple of times in the cork forest. At one place, where we stopped to buy some souvenirs along the side of the road, we took on a young girl for about a kilometer. Her dad had sold us some wooden figures and asked if we could give her a ride to school. She didn’t speak modern standard Arabic so I couldn’t really talk to her very well. She seemed a bit startled by being put in a car with a bunch of foreigners to get a ride to school!

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Cork forests.

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The line where the mountain meets the sky is also the line between Tunisia and Algeria. At one point, we were just down the hill from it.

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About two kilometers out of the cork forest on the road to Bulla Regia, we passed this guy carrying a bunch of sticks. There were several other of these people walking along the side of the road for a couple of kilometers. Fuel sources are scarce outside the forests.