Morning light on ancient stone
It's 08:50 and I'm sitting on a bench near the entrance to the Siq, watching the first tour groups begin to arrive. I've been here since 06:30, when the site opened - wanted to walk through the canyon before the crowds, before the heat really sets in.
The temperature is perfect right now. 20Β°C and sunny, with that particular quality of desert morning air that feels impossibly clean. By afternoon it'll hit 24Β°C according to my phone, which is actually pleasant compared to what I'd expected for July in Jordan.
I did the walk through the Siq and back already. Got to the Treasury just as the first light was hitting the facade properly - around 07:15. There were maybe a dozen other people there at that hour, mostly photographers with serious equipment. We all just stood there in silence for a while, watching the stone shift from deep burgundy to that famous rose-red as the sun climbed higher.
The canyon itself is extraordinary. Walking through it in the quiet, with just the sound of my footsteps and the occasional bird, I kept thinking about the Nabataean engineers who designed the whole water system. There are channels carved into the rock walls, still visible after two thousand years. The problem-solver in me appreciates that kind of lasting solution.
I'm not sure what to do with the rest of the day. The Monastery climb is calling to me - those 800 steps everyone talks about - but I'm trying to remember what I learned yesterday in the quieter sections. That lesson about stillness, about not always rushing to the next thing.
Maybe I'll go back to the hotel for a while. Rest during the heat of the day. Come back this evening when the light is different again.
There's a Bedouin man setting up a tea stand near where I'm sitting. He's arranging small glasses in perfect rows, precise and methodical. He caught me watching and smiled, gestured to ask if I wanted tea. I shook my head - too much coffee already this morning - but I appreciated the offer.
The tour groups are getting larger now. I can hear guides beginning their speeches, the same information repeated in different languages. Time to move.
I think I'll walk toward the Royal Tombs instead. Less famous than the Treasury, but from what I read, the architecture is just as impressive. And probably quieter at this hour.
174 days left. The number sits in my mind differently now than it did in Cairo. In Egypt, time felt stretched out, almost suspended. Here in Petra, surrounded by stone that's been standing for millennia, 174 days seems both impossibly long and terrifyingly short.
The restlessness that drove me here from Cairo has settled somewhat. Not gone - I don't think it ever really goes - but quieter. More like curiosity than urgency.
I'm going to spend today exploring without a plan. No checklist, no must-see sites. Just walking and seeing what I find.
That feels right.