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PLACES
TO GO
 
NAMES: Ad Turres (Roman) for Tamerza, Ad Speculum (Roman)
for Chebika and Madés (Roman) for Midés.
LOCATION AND ACCESS: In south-western Tunisia (Djérid region), 65 km north-west of
Tozeur, 95 km west of Gafsa. Railway stations at Gafsa and
Tozeur. Tozeur international airport.
DIALING CODE: 06.
TOURIST INFORMATION: In Tozeur, Commissariat régional au tourisme, avenue Abou el
Kacem Chebbi, tel. 250-503 / 250-088.
ACCOMMODATION: See Hotels Listing.
FESTIVALS: Tamerza festival (April-May).
SOUVENIRS: Carpets, minerals.
On your way south, beyond Sousse and Kairouan, subtle changes in the
land and color soon become apparent. The olive groves grow sparse, the land takes on
shades of ocher and buff, jagged outlines of mountains appear in the horizon. Date palms
and tawny rocks, the road seems endless when at last Gafsa appears. First of the great
date palm oases , Gafsa is also an ancient prehistoric site.
Return to the
present and discover the weaving shops where the carpets
are made, brightly colored ,figurative in a wonderful naive style . From the top of a
minaret view the whole oases of a hundred thousand date palms and the orchards of apricot
and lemon trees. In the center of town, the Roman pools are the delight of children and a
nearby small museum exposes a exquisite collection
of Roman mosaics. Refreshed, continue on to
Metlaoui, where the "Red Lizard" a small train once belonging to Tunisia's beys
leaves for a trip through the superb gorges of Selja. Continue to the mountain oases...

Chebika ,a
small earthen village with its palm trees and mini waterfalls lying at the foot and slopes
of the Djebel el Negueb was once a Roman outpost and one of the mountain refuges of the Berber peoples. From here up a steep winding road
,lies Tamerza another refuge which gives a breathtaking view of the region with its salt
lakes and river gorges.The ancient town, destroyed by floods in 1969, was rebuilt and from
the terrace of a modern hotel , constructed on the top
of a canyon one can view this lost village dating from Roman times. Tamerza is the site of
a Festival gathering the inhabitants of the
mountain oases and where Berber arts, traditions, folklore and music can be enjoyed.
A few kilometers
away Midés , still relatively "undiscovered" is the last and most fascinating
of these oases refuges. The gorges have been sculpted by the river torrents and vast
monuments carved in a myriad of shapes. Guides will lead visitors through the trails of
this wild and once impregnable earthen citadel . As in Tamerza, floods destroyed the old
village and a new one was built higher up.
The palm groves and gardens, as well as a small market place lie at the foot of a plateau
on the mountain. Natural springs spurting from the rocks create the waterfalls and
irrigate these unusual mountain oases.
Copyright© 1999 The Tunisian Tourism Office.
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