The plateau of Falougha. Water is supposed to come crashing down here in spring (see picture) |
Slow posts coming your way. Not much happening these
days. I work. I hike. I hang out with friends. I work some more. It’s a little
boring. I miss having adventures, hanging out in camps, going to demonstrations
and visiting front lines. It can’t be adrenaline all the time, one of my
editors once told me, but life’s a little slow for my taste at the moment. I
need a little upheaval, but am afraid to ask for much, because upheavals in
Beirut tend to get out of hand quickly.
This is where the river would run, had there been any on the plateau. Instead, lots of wild flowers |
So another slow post. Spring has arrived, a month early, and
I went for a hike. This hike is close to Beirut, on the plateau above the
Chahrour waterfalls of Hammana. The area is called Falougha, and it’s a bit of
a weird place. For years and years the Syrians set up camp here, and so it was
not accessible. When they left, the Lebanese army established a base there, and
they use it to teach their soldiers how to drive tanks and shoot RPG’s and the
like. Shepherds land there with their troops in summer as well.
This water comes from within the mountain |
Part of the he waterfall is up and running though, but
the water comes from within the mountain. It is strange to realize that inside
this mountain there is this huge reservoir with water that discharges, 24 hours
a day 7 days a week, a steady flow of water. I am not sure how these aquifers
function, but the one in Jebel Knisseh (which is the name of the mountain) is
one of the biggest in Lebanon. So there’s either this immense cave in there
(hollow mountain?), or it seeps from layer to layer, not sure how. In my next life I am going to be a geologist.
This constant water flow has not been lost on the
government, who are now building a dam on the upper part of the plateau. This
sounds a little useless to me, because the stone is porous; that is why the
water ‘sinks’ into the mountain, where it is stored, and then it leaves again
through a number of springs, of which the waterfall is one of the largest. Building
a dam right there where it is clear it sinks into the mountain is lost on me. There
are quite a few people in Hammana, the town overlooking the waterfall, against this dam. They’re
afraid that their steady water supply is being tinkered with. Building dams
these days is quite controversial, not just from an ecological
point of view, but it seems even sectarianism can get
involved.
Lots of caterpillar nests though |
Anyway, with our track record, this dam will most likely
either never be completed because funding suddenly stops, not operate because
they forgot to install the final vent or they cannot decide on what sect will
occupy the post of dam manager, or nor function longer than 6 months because someone
will have forgotten to order spare parts or the maintenance manager is incompetent
and the money needed to order spare parts ended up in his pocket. That’s how it
goes. In the mean time, it does provide much needed work for that region, much
like the Edgar Hoover Dam project. So. a
nice hike, some 40 km above Beirut.
And pretty blue flowers |
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