As was discussed here, I recently returned from spending nearly three weeks in Chad. Chad is nearly entirely in the Sahara, and has been on my list for years, but the pandemic botched multiple trips. This was a group tour, as there is literally zero infrastructure, and attempting a trip like this solo (even with a sat phone) could mean perishing out in the Sahara.
This trip went far better than my previous trip, but it was far from easy. There were 15 consecutive days of camping, most days were 5+ hours of driving (through open desert), food was very repetitive (basically the same thing for lunches and dinners every day), and there was also sand storms and day time temperatures hovering around 100F.
However, it was very much worth it to see a way of life (there are still nomads and camel/goat/sheep herders that live in the Sahara their entire lives) and unique scenery unlike anywhere else. Outside of Utah and China, Chad has more arches than any other place on the planet, and it has virtually no tourism (no parking lots full of cars waiting to get their selfie at Delicate Arch, no roads, etc). Of course that also means that if something goes wrong, you are very much on your own. We passed several stranded vehicles during our drives where the worst case scenarios transpired. One poor guy had 2 flats and a failed transmission. A 14 wheel truck (packed very high & full with cargo) somehow lost all of his engine oil through some sort of cracked engine block, and had been stuck for nearly a month waiting for rescue. We offered them water, but there's not much more that can be done in those scenarios.
It was truly a unique experience, and I feel fortunate to have seen it. What follows are some of the highlights from the trip:
IMG_1187 Four arches
IMG_1054-bw0 fortress
IMG_0976-bw0 fins
IMG_1155 Archei d'Guelta (ancient camel watering canyon)
IMG_20221118_070559 the slot
IMG_0468 heading to Sudan
IMG_20221111_084730 Faya, the largest "city" in the north
IMG_20221110_140251 the wind always blows to the left. always.
IMG_0951 the window
IMG_0929 lunch stop arch
IMG_0519 lunch stop dunes
IMG_1203 Aloba Arch, the world's 8th largest (by max width)
IMG_1217-bw0 twisted
IMG_1180 the elephant
IMG_0959 the twins
IMG_20221113_171439 camping on the dunes
IMG_1114 the mask
IMG_20221112_072214-bw0 layer cakes
IMG_20221116_074616 so many windows
IMG_20221111_164442 camping at the oasis
IMG_20221118_071606 walk through
IMG_20221113_082400 Ounianga Lakes (fed by an aquafer, salt + algae creates the colors)
IMG_20221116_120630 slot canyon
IMG_1073 the bottle
IMG_1166 the eye of Tokou (wide enough to drive 4 trucks through side-by-side)
IMG_20221109_154501 death
IMG_1010-bw0 baby arch (about 12ft tall)
IMG_0545 the freeway
IMG_20221122_100700 heavy load
IMG_1153 hello
IMG_1209 Aloba arch from the other side
IMG_0497 deep, soft sand for days
IMG_0489 sand storms suck
IMG_0913 tiny windows
IMG_0939 the gateway
IMG_1216 twisted arch again
If you want to see more, I've got about 700 photos posted here, and a detailed trip report available here. Also the GPX track that i recorded for the entire trip is available here (about 3000km).
This trip went far better than my previous trip, but it was far from easy. There were 15 consecutive days of camping, most days were 5+ hours of driving (through open desert), food was very repetitive (basically the same thing for lunches and dinners every day), and there was also sand storms and day time temperatures hovering around 100F.
However, it was very much worth it to see a way of life (there are still nomads and camel/goat/sheep herders that live in the Sahara their entire lives) and unique scenery unlike anywhere else. Outside of Utah and China, Chad has more arches than any other place on the planet, and it has virtually no tourism (no parking lots full of cars waiting to get their selfie at Delicate Arch, no roads, etc). Of course that also means that if something goes wrong, you are very much on your own. We passed several stranded vehicles during our drives where the worst case scenarios transpired. One poor guy had 2 flats and a failed transmission. A 14 wheel truck (packed very high & full with cargo) somehow lost all of his engine oil through some sort of cracked engine block, and had been stuck for nearly a month waiting for rescue. We offered them water, but there's not much more that can be done in those scenarios.
It was truly a unique experience, and I feel fortunate to have seen it. What follows are some of the highlights from the trip:
IMG_1187 Four arches
IMG_1054-bw0 fortress
IMG_0976-bw0 fins
IMG_1155 Archei d'Guelta (ancient camel watering canyon)
IMG_20221118_070559 the slot
IMG_0468 heading to Sudan
IMG_20221111_084730 Faya, the largest "city" in the north
IMG_20221110_140251 the wind always blows to the left. always.
IMG_0951 the window
IMG_0929 lunch stop arch
IMG_0519 lunch stop dunes
IMG_1203 Aloba Arch, the world's 8th largest (by max width)
IMG_1217-bw0 twisted
IMG_1180 the elephant
IMG_0959 the twins
IMG_20221113_171439 camping on the dunes
IMG_1114 the mask
IMG_20221112_072214-bw0 layer cakes
IMG_20221116_074616 so many windows
IMG_20221111_164442 camping at the oasis
IMG_20221118_071606 walk through
IMG_20221113_082400 Ounianga Lakes (fed by an aquafer, salt + algae creates the colors)
IMG_20221116_120630 slot canyon
IMG_1073 the bottle
IMG_1166 the eye of Tokou (wide enough to drive 4 trucks through side-by-side)
IMG_20221109_154501 death
IMG_1010-bw0 baby arch (about 12ft tall)
IMG_0545 the freeway
IMG_20221122_100700 heavy load
IMG_1153 hello
IMG_1209 Aloba arch from the other side
IMG_0497 deep, soft sand for days
IMG_0489 sand storms suck
IMG_0913 tiny windows
IMG_0939 the gateway
IMG_1216 twisted arch again
If you want to see more, I've got about 700 photos posted here, and a detailed trip report available here. Also the GPX track that i recorded for the entire trip is available here (about 3000km).