Comet Hunter
Supporting Member
SO, i am slowly getting my DSLR images processed from my trip to the Middle East visiting both Jordan and Egypt.
On my actual 1st day we visited the Amman Citadel, but as luck would have it, they were having a "sandstorm" which made me realize I was not in Kansas anymore.
All the pictures of that day came out pretty bla due to the background storm so I am not going to bother posting, but you can see in some of these images below some of the remnants of that storm till the sun came out.
This grouping is from Jerash Jordan. Jerash today is said to be home to one of the best-preserved Greco-Roman cities, which earned it the nickname "Pompeii of the Middle East". In 2025, the findings of a mass grave excavated in Jerash attest archaeologically and genetically to the presence of the Plague of Justinian in this region of the world.
All comments welcome! I have lots more images to share as I get them processed
# 1 Such a grand entrance to this site
Such detail
If walls could talk!
OK, a little camera trickety as I added this cloudy blue sky, Maybe over kill? This was a really dreary photo with the original sky. 1st time for me adding a new background sky
But this image captured the real scale of this place showing my wife with her friend, with LOTS of other people being cut out too
This one below shows how the sky really looked in the above image originally,
I think Humpty Dumpty was here?
One of the locals. Yep, Im not in Kansas anymore
Can you image what this looked like or what it was like living here during its hayday ?
I can only imagin at all the people who walked through this door way over time
Each little nook was a appartment or storekeepers shop, the original strip mall
Photo Bombed, I missed that guy
During its peak in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, Jerash (ancient Gerasa) had an estimated population of 15,000 to 20,000 people, acting as a thriving Roman city in the Decapolis league. The city's population remained robust, around 25000 people during the Byzantime period, before declining following the 749 AD earthquake which took its toll
Another gateway of wonderment, parts and pieces just hanging on for dear life!
The original Lego's .. Such details in these carvings. And I have trouble cutting a 2x4 to the right length lol
rand
On my actual 1st day we visited the Amman Citadel, but as luck would have it, they were having a "sandstorm" which made me realize I was not in Kansas anymore.
All the pictures of that day came out pretty bla due to the background storm so I am not going to bother posting, but you can see in some of these images below some of the remnants of that storm till the sun came out.
This grouping is from Jerash Jordan. Jerash today is said to be home to one of the best-preserved Greco-Roman cities, which earned it the nickname "Pompeii of the Middle East". In 2025, the findings of a mass grave excavated in Jerash attest archaeologically and genetically to the presence of the Plague of Justinian in this region of the world.
All comments welcome! I have lots more images to share as I get them processed
# 1 Such a grand entrance to this site
Such detail
If walls could talk!
OK, a little camera trickety as I added this cloudy blue sky, Maybe over kill? This was a really dreary photo with the original sky. 1st time for me adding a new background sky
But this image captured the real scale of this place showing my wife with her friend, with LOTS of other people being cut out too
This one below shows how the sky really looked in the above image originally,
I think Humpty Dumpty was here?
One of the locals. Yep, Im not in Kansas anymore
Can you image what this looked like or what it was like living here during its hayday ?
I can only imagin at all the people who walked through this door way over time
Each little nook was a appartment or storekeepers shop, the original strip mall
Photo Bombed, I missed that guy
During its peak in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, Jerash (ancient Gerasa) had an estimated population of 15,000 to 20,000 people, acting as a thriving Roman city in the Decapolis league. The city's population remained robust, around 25000 people during the Byzantime period, before declining following the 749 AD earthquake which took its toll
Another gateway of wonderment, parts and pieces just hanging on for dear life!
The original Lego's .. Such details in these carvings. And I have trouble cutting a 2x4 to the right length lol