Essayer OR - Gratuit
Exploring Ethiopia:A journey through ancient wonders and cultural icons
Gulf Today
|April 06, 2025
As we darted through Addis Ababa's morning rush hour, my jet lag couldn't dull the energy of Ethiopia's capital.
-
We wove through crowds of office workers headed to high-rises and families leading goats home for Orthodox Christmas feasts while our guide explained how one needs at least three weeks to fully experience his country.From the dramatic peaks of Simien Mountains National Park to the sprawling salt plains of the Danakil Depression, natural wonders alone could fill a month of adventure.
But there's also plenty for time-pressed travellers like we were. "With a few days, you can get a taste," guide Yonas Zewede of Landscape Ethiopia Tours assured me. So, we embarked on a whirlwind trip that would prove him right, an ambitious three-day sprint through remote sacred sites and bustling city streets in this East African nation. The city, "New Flower" in Amharic, is being transformed, with construction nearly everywhere you look. Historic churches and mosques neighbour contemporary shops and restaurants amid a forest of cranes and scaffolding. Among its enduring treasures is Ethiopia's most famous export: Arabica coffee. We started the day at Tomoca Coffee on Wavel Street, one of Addis' first coffee roasters. For less than a dollar a cup, the standing-room-only institution serves up macchiatos - bold coffee with a splash of milk - or a milder blend of coffee and tea, known as a sprice.
However, to fully appreciate the region's coffee culture, one must experience a coffee ceremony, a ritual still practiced in homes, restaurants and hotels across Ethiopia. Incense mixes with the aroma of beans roasting over hot coals, each batch ground by hand before being brewed in a clay pot and poured with precision, as bowls of salted popcorn circulate.Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition April 06, 2025 de Gulf Today.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Gulf Today
Gulf Today
Ireland’s climate battle is being fought in its fields
On a windswept Irish farm, high-tech cow collars track animal health and solar panels glint on the milking parlour’s roof, as a country famed for its lush green pastures tries to reduce its agricultural carbon footprint. The Farm Zero C project near Bandon, County Cork, also manages grazing carefully, uses hedgerow and scrub habitats to shelter pollinators and birds, and plants legume crops to cut chemical fertiliser use, all producing measurable reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Around 40 percent of Ireland's total greenhouse gas emissions come from agriculture, far higher than the European Union average.
2 mins
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
Court orders man to pay Dhs30,000 to another
The Abu Dhabi Family, Civil and Administrative Cases Court ordered a man to pay Dhs30,000 in compensation to another man for publicly defaming him in a public place.
1 mins
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
SL players leave Pakistan after explosion, citing security reasons
At least eight Sri Lankan cricketers will return home without playing in their tri-nation white-ball cricket series against Pakistan and Zimbabwe due to security concerns, a Sri Lankan official said Wednesday.
1 mins
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
India-born author gives her dishes a global mix
The sizzle of frying paneer and the aroma of chilli-infused honey filled the air at the Cookery Corner of the 44th Sharjah International Book Fair (SIBF 2025) as New Zealand-based cookbook author Ashia Ismail-Singer took the stage to demonstrate her signature recipe Parmesan-crumbed paneer drizzled with hot honey.
1 min
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
NMDC Energy, Baker Hughes to localise major solutions
NMDC Energy, a leading provider of engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) services for offshore and onshore energy clients, has entered a strategic Memorandum of Understanding in Saudi Arabia with Baker Hughes, the US global energy technology company.
1 min
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
Former CJ challenges 27th statute amendment
Former Supreme Court (SC) chief justice Jawwad S. Khawaja has challenged the 97th constitutional amendment, seeking a direction that the apex court retains exclusive jurisdiction to determine the lawfulness and constitutionality of the proposed tweaks.
1 mins
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
Khaled hails efforts of the Smart and Autonomous Systems Council
His Highness Sheikh Khaled Bin Mohamed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, has attended the second edition of the DRIFTx exhibition, organised by the Abu Dhabi Investment Office (ADIO) at Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi.
3 mins
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
Israel reopens Zikim crossing to allow aid trucks into Gaza
GAZA STRIP
3 mins
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
Parkin announces new tariff in two areas
As part of its efforts to regulate parking services and improve the user experience, Parkin has announced the implementation of a new parking tariff in two areas of the Emirate of Dubai.
1 mins
November 13, 2025
Gulf Today
Raducanu helps England prepare for All Blacks clash
There is nothing unusual about elite coaches bringing in expertise from other sports but a few eyebrows were raised at England's training base on Tuesday when coach Steve Borthwick said that tennis player Emma Raducanu had been helping out.
1 mins
November 13, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
