Enjoy the ultimate jeep safari with an experienced local Bedouin guide, showing you all the Highlights of Wadi Rum! Feel on top of the world by standing on top of a rock bridge, cool down in the canyon or have fun by running down from a sand dune.
At each stop the guide will tell you a story about the sight and you get the time to explore, take pictures, interact with local Bedouins, walk around or even climb. Some sights have shops where Bedouins offer free tea, souvenirs, and a place to sit and relax.
We also prepare a delicious Bedouin lunch, cooked outside on the fire. And at the end of the tour, we watch the sunset from the best viewpoint.
For the ultimate Wadi Rum experience, you can also book an overnight stay in a tent at our camp, or sleep under the stars in a cave.
You will visit the following sights: Lawrence spring, Khazali Canyon, Red sand dune, Little bridge, Um Fruth Rock Bridge, Abu khashaba canyon, Lawrence house, White desert, Mushroom rock and Burdah rock bridge
Lunch
Wadi Rum Village - We will meet at the Rest House in Wadi Rum Village. This is the first place you will see on your right, when you enter the village. There is a supermarket and a souvenir shop and our office is just around the corner. When all tourists are present and welcomed by the guide, we start the jeep tour (usually around 10:00)
Lawrence Spring - This natural water source with cool water running down the mountains into the throughs, is the camels' favorite hangout! With small trees and the almost fluorescent green moss, this is a true oasis. Relax here, just as the Bedouins and their herds used to do, and watch how herds of camels pass by, longing for fresh water. Or climb up the mountain to see spectacular views and the many inscriptions of Thamudic origin.
Khazali Canyon - From the outside, this looks like an ordinary mountain, but when you enter the canyon between the split mountains, you take a journey back in time. You can see the traces of the merchants who traveled with their caravans from Egypt to Damascus, and of the pilgrims who passed through the canyon to Mecca. See the fascinating Thamudic, Nabatean, and Islamic inscriptions, and petroglyphs of humans, animals, and soles of feet when you enter the canyon. And a series of basins in the back.
You will make your own way to the meeting points