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In Israel we love to eat the soft yogurt cheese called labaneh, scooping it off the plate with pita.
But Nissim, our excellent guide through the Bedouin part of the Beer Sheva market, explained that labaneh can also be made into these dried lumps.
Strained labaneh is pressed in its cheese cloth
between two heavy stones and later sun dried.
The balls can be easily stored and for a long time.
Arabs have been doing this for hundreds of years.
I guess when Bedouin were still largely nomadic, it was easy to transport the labaneh in such form; add water and it is easily reconstituted to soft yogurt cheese.
The labaneh made by Arabs in the southern Hebron Hills is slightly different in shape from that made by the Bedouin here in the Negev.
One version is round and the other is oval.
To see how women in the nearby village of Dirijat produce labaneh, please see my pictures from 2008, when I spent five days living there, learning Arabic.
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Showing posts with label Jane's Walk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jane's Walk. Show all posts
Friday, May 27, 2016
Monday, May 9, 2016
Making a mandala deep in the quarry
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As explained in the previous post, one of Friday's Jane's Walk walks went down into Beer Sheva's ancient quarry.
Guide Shir had us play some nature games, e.g. each of us had to find something natural that interested him/her and collect eight examples of it.
A botany student came up with a flower in different stages of development.
The geology student found a flint that had been knapped thousands of years ago.
Always attracted to spirals, I brought dry snail shells.
And then we arranged them on the earth into a mandala!
Click on the photo to see it well.
Long live this ancient quarry and long live these nice young people who love the earth and our Land!
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(Linking to Our World Tuesday.)
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As explained in the previous post, one of Friday's Jane's Walk walks went down into Beer Sheva's ancient quarry.
Guide Shir had us play some nature games, e.g. each of us had to find something natural that interested him/her and collect eight examples of it.
A botany student came up with a flower in different stages of development.
The geology student found a flint that had been knapped thousands of years ago.
Always attracted to spirals, I brought dry snail shells.
And then we arranged them on the earth into a mandala!
Click on the photo to see it well.
Long live this ancient quarry and long live these nice young people who love the earth and our Land!
.
(Linking to Our World Tuesday.)
.
.
Labels:
Jane's Walk,
Our World Tuesday,
people,
quarry,
spiral
Saturday, May 7, 2016
The ancient, wild, huge quarry in Beer Sheva
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A nice, comfortably small group turned out for one of the Jane's Walks on Friday morning.
Shir was our good guide, extolling the value of slow meandering, taking us through fun exercises in positive psychology, and opening our eyes to better engage with nature.
Nice boys, eh? I think they are students at Ben Gurion University of the Negev.
One studying geology said that we were sitting in part of a canyon formed millions of years ago, the Afiq (Gaza-Beersheba) canyon.
Today the quarry is in between Beer Sheva's residential blocks.
Its area is about 8 acres and it is very deep. And very exciting!
(With a click or two you can enlarge the photos.)
The Ottomans (who controlled our area for 400 years) quarried stone here from 1900 to 1917 to build their city of Beer Sheva (the area now known as the Old City).
Let us pray the quarry never becomes a construction site!
I hope it stays wild, but the next-best thing is an envisioned Geo-botanical Park and Center for Environmental Education in conjunction with the Nature Protection Society.
Here is the relevant part in a 2010 Jerusalem Post article called "Blueprint for Beersheva" --
.
A nice, comfortably small group turned out for one of the Jane's Walks on Friday morning.
Shir was our good guide, extolling the value of slow meandering, taking us through fun exercises in positive psychology, and opening our eyes to better engage with nature.
Nice boys, eh? I think they are students at Ben Gurion University of the Negev.
One studying geology said that we were sitting in part of a canyon formed millions of years ago, the Afiq (Gaza-Beersheba) canyon.
Today the quarry is in between Beer Sheva's residential blocks.
Its area is about 8 acres and it is very deep. And very exciting!
(With a click or two you can enlarge the photos.)
The Ottomans (who controlled our area for 400 years) quarried stone here from 1900 to 1917 to build their city of Beer Sheva (the area now known as the Old City).
Let us pray the quarry never becomes a construction site!
I hope it stays wild, but the next-best thing is an envisioned Geo-botanical Park and Center for Environmental Education in conjunction with the Nature Protection Society.
Here is the relevant part in a 2010 Jerusalem Post article called "Blueprint for Beersheva" --
(Linking to ABC Wednesday and Camera Critters.)One of the more underrated projects in the 2020 brochure is “The Quarry,” which lacks, at this point, a targeted completion date. To Beersheba activist Ethelea Katzanell, that’s unfortunate.
“The quarry – a hole in the heart of the city – is really an important ancient geological site located between the Bet and Daled neighborhoods,” she says. “Lots of people don’t even know it’s there – it’s fenced off, so you’d have to make a special effort to see it.
“I’m surprised this project isn’t being pushed forward – it has a big potential for quick implementation, and doesn’t involve a tremendous amount of money.”
The influential Katzanell serves on a host of city advisory boards. “I’m on the Environmental Committee, the Historical Site Committee and both the Tourist and Beautification Committees,” Katzanell laughs, as she ticks the assignments off. “Anything having to do with what the city offers people, both residents and tourists alike. To me, the Quarry is such an important asset to Beersheba, and one so close to completion, we should be moving ahead on this now.
“The history is fascinating. It started back in the 1980s. when the BGU Geology Department studied the area and proposed turning the quarry into a geological site – you can see the strata going back millions of years. They presented the idea to the city as an educational and tourist site very much like other geological sites all over the world. Nothing happened. They couldn’t find a sponsor.
“In 1994, the project was resurrected. An English version of the proposal was written up and presented again. All the city offices signed off on it, permits were approved, everything was ready – even a sponsor had been found, a French donor.
“Just as it was ready to go, the sponsor, for whatever reason, withdrew. And the project dropped out of sight, again.
“In 2007, I heard a rumor that the project was going to be killed – that a tower was going to be built on the Quarry site,” Katzanell continued. “I was horrified. I rewrote the project for a third time, included everything that had been proposed before, and turned it over to “Earth’s Promise,” a local environmental organization. Together with their experts, geologists and environmentalists, they proposed the creation of a Geo-botanical Park and Center for Environmental Education, in conjunction with the Nature Protection Society. The Park would include all the geographical distinctions, the strata marks, plus all the unique local vegetation for teaching and study.
“I’m surprised another sponsor hasn’t been found. This is a relatively modest project in terms of cost, and the city has already signed off on it. The Quarry Project could be completed pretty easily. I’m hoping that now, in 2010, we can finally move ahead with this.”
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Labels:
Beer Sheva,
Camera-Critters,
Jane's Walk,
people,
quarry
Friday, May 6, 2016
Jane's Walk tours in Beer Sheva
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Four tall buildings are going up on a small, formerly quiet residential street in Beer Sheva's Gimel Neighborhood.
And the neighbors, the old-timers, are not happy about it.
This afternoon the worldwide Jane's Walk citizen-guided walking tours began in Beer Sheva.
More over the weekend.
Check the link to find a Jane's Walk in your area.
.
(Linking to Sky Watch Friday.)
.
Four tall buildings are going up on a small, formerly quiet residential street in Beer Sheva's Gimel Neighborhood.
And the neighbors, the old-timers, are not happy about it.
This afternoon the worldwide Jane's Walk citizen-guided walking tours began in Beer Sheva.
More over the weekend.
Check the link to find a Jane's Walk in your area.
.
(Linking to Sky Watch Friday.)
.
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