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-   -   UK to Jordan (https://www.horizonsunlimited.com/hubb/route-planning/uk-to-jordan-2094)

NeilT 5 Oct 2004 22:53

UK to Jordan
 
Hi, can anyone recommend a good route from the UK to Jordan on my hornet 600. Will i need a carnet???? Just begining to plan it so any info now much appreciated!

Cheers
Neil

PS I'm currently in marocco driving a knackered renault 19 places it really shouldn't go... too much fun!

omar mansour 6 Oct 2004 02:32

hi
so you can go al the way to turkey,via bulgaria,or by ferry from italy ,or greece,to south of tureky,then you enter syria,but i believe you must have a carnet,
the route is realy great,you will have alot of fun,its cheap,so good luck

goodwoodweirdo 18 Oct 2004 18:40

Hi guys, Jordan sounds like a great trip, I’ve tried a couple of times to get to Jordan, just for a holiday – never manage to pull it off. Any idea of the KM’s if you go via Italy and a suitable time frame. I know It’s like saying how longs a bit of string, but I would like to do it during work holidays. 2-3 weeks max !! What’s the best months to go, spring / autumn I guess.

Steve Treloar 18 Oct 2004 19:08

Quote:

Originally posted by goodwoodweirdo:
Hi guys, Jordan sounds like a great trip, I’ve tried a couple of times to get to Jordan, just for a holiday – never manage to pull it off. Any idea of the KM’s if you go via Italy and a suitable time frame. I know It’s like saying how longs a bit of string, but I would like to do it during work holidays. 2-3 weeks max !! What’s the best months to go, spring / autumn I guess.

Steve Treloar 18 Oct 2004 19:33

I'll try again,as you like to go places you shouldn't in the Renault.when in Syria try an adventurous trip to Palmyra.I did it back in the late 80's when i was working for a travel company. All the instructions I was given was to camp overnight at the Quatz Castle of Rassfah .approx.200k east of Aleppo.Up early the next day and get this, head south with alittle bit of west and you will get to Palmyra in 2daysAlot of the dirt tracks through Syrian desert run east -west. So basically you are riding on the pist. Within 1/2a day you will start to see a V in the mountain range in the distance, head for that to a pass through the range.
the Bedouins where very friendy .TADMOOR was the local lingo for Palmyra.once over the range you follow tracks .just ask the local for directions.We had a great 2 days in the middle of the Syrian Desert.Times have changed so check up to date onfo Though is a Hornet 600 a road bike?

Vaufi 19 Oct 2004 13:34

Neil,

it might be tricky to get a ferry from Italy to Syria, otherwise via Egypt and through Sinai to Jordania. They won't let you in if you travel through Israel. :-(

Another possibility is to take a ferry from Italy to Cyprus and from there another ferry to Syria.

I guess the best (and most adventurous) way would be via Vienna, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, but time might be a problem.

As far as I know you do not need a carnet for any of these countries.


beddhist 19 Oct 2004 18:18

Quote:

Originally posted by Vaufi:

Another possibility is to take a ferry from Italy to Cyprus and from there another ferry to Syria.
As far as I know there are NO ferries to the Middle East, except, possibly, to Israel. If you have info on any that DO run, please post the info here. Many of us are looking for that possibility.

------------------
Salut from Southern France, the bikers' paradise,

Peter.

pietro.spera 20 Oct 2004 14:55

There is a regular ferry line Piraeus/Cyprus and - as some local agent told me - some ferry during summer between Cyprus and Beirut.

Vaufi 20 Oct 2004 20:51

Peter,

try this link:
http://travel.yahoo.com/p-travelguid...ansportation-i

Unfortunately this is only general information. I read something similar in a motorcycle magazin some time ago, but cannot remember which ferry it was :-(

Hans

Marco K 23 Oct 2004 01:31

go to greece, take a ferry to Cyprus, take a ferry to Haifa (israel) don't let them stamp you passport, drive to Jerusalem (magnificent city) check out Jericho and suroundings, cross the Allenby/King Hussein bridge into Jordan. That is doable. If you want to go back trough or visit Syria then you have a problem. They will not allow you in. If you really want to go? flush your passport and apply for a new one en drive back through Syria and Turkey.

beddhist 23 Oct 2004 03:26

Hans,

I think the clue is in the "some time ago". I haven't been able to find any site that gives you a 2004 or 2005 timetable, let alone let you make a booking. All I can find is "Service suspended".

However, if anybody finds out definite info then I'm very interested. Then again, hopping the Greek islands and crossing Turkey doesn't sound bad, either.

------------------
Salut from Southern France, the bikers' paradise,

Peter.

Vaufi 24 Oct 2004 00:10

Peter,

Marco is right. So is your "clue".

I found the article on ferries - it's from March 2001.

The ferry Marco mentioned is from Piraeus via Patmos, Rhodos, Limassol to Haifa. The shipping company is called Salamis Lines. Unfortunately there was no more info about the company.

Cheers from Southern Bavarian biker's paradise to Southern France biker's paradise ;-)

Hans

beddhist 25 Oct 2004 04:05

OK, let's put this Salamis affair to bed once and for all:

Salamis Lines

A one-boat company running between Haifa - Israel, Limassol - Cyprus, Rhodes, Patmos, Tinos, Piraeus. ( http://www.greekislandhopping.com/Li...s_ferrycos.htm )

Services have been suspended until further notice

Greece - Cyprus - Egypt
PASSENGER / VEHICLE FARES IN EURO FOR 2002.
Will Be Published Soon ( http://www.ferries.gr/salamis/ )

I hazard the guess that the company has gone belly-up 2 or 3 years ago, but their website (hosted by someone else) refuses to die and continues to haunt us.

And the first site again:

Ferry Services Remain Suspended

"The well established Piraeus—Rhodes—Cyprus—Israel ferry route has all but been abandoned in the wake of the on-going problems in Israel and the Iraq War. Likewise cruise operations between Cyprus, Israel and Egypt have also been badly disrupted. It is unclear at the moment how things will pan out during the summer months, but it would be wise to plan on the assumption that neither routes will be in operation."

There is a link to a Lebanon ferry, but that, too, seems to have disappeared.

Oh, well, we won't need it until next season...

------------------
Salut from Southern France, the bikers' paradise,

Peter.

fireboomer 16 Jan 2005 01:43

We made our mind up and wonna ride from Belgium to Jordan and back. Timing is May - June this year.

Al together this is the plan:
* Brussels - Dusseldorf station
* Take a overnight train with the bikes on the train to Italy (Venice or Ancona)
* Take a ferry to Patras in Greece. Pref a day ferry that we jump on after the night train
* race from Patras to Athens Greece and take a night ferry to Rhodos or Cyprus
* ferry to turkey
* ride to Syria
* take 2 weeks to ride around Syria an Jordan
* take a week to get back.

The ferry Italy Greece will decide when we take the train. Don't wonna spend a lost day in (expensive) Italy. Rather loose a day in Greece.

In total we would have a month.

Mayby the getting wont go as fluent as mentioned above. I am gonna start calling around tomorrow to get the schedule together.

Any thoughts are more then welcome.

For the rest:
* Syria no carnet needed
* Jordan, not clear: carnet or no carnet??? And if one is needed, where should I go to get one in Belgium?


Pieter.

beddhist 16 Jan 2005 03:35

Pieter,

I don't think going via Cyprus is possible, unless the Green Line is now open.

Get your carnet from the Belgian Automobile Club. Also, check out Carnet link on the left here.

Have a nice trip!

Ciao,
Peter.

------------------
Salut from Southern France, the bikers' paradise,

Peter.

fireboomer 17 Jan 2005 23:44

We'll go via Rhodos.

Who knows if a carnet is really needed for Jordan. Been reading different things. Some didn't have one and were ok, some had it and used but didn't really feel it was necesarry.

Any recent info?

Pieter.

Julio 7 Feb 2005 01:12

Hi All

Has anyone found anymore info on whether a carnet is needed for Jordan yet as I been getting conflicting reports.

I'm leaving at the end of April from the UK and will more than likely get a ferry direct from Ancora to Cesme in Turkey which seems like the easiest route. As I cannot seem to find a ferry from Pireas in low season without loads of hanging about and island hopping.

It will work out about €380 for a single ticket for me and the bike and takes 3 days.

Also anyone got any good info on Lebanon as planning to spend a week there also?

Cheers

Julio

jamieT 7 Feb 2005 12:05

Pieter,
Cannt remember, but either used the carnet but it didn't seem compulsoru, or didnt use it at all for Jordan. I ll have a check.
Julio
Lebanon is great. Camping at Byblos campsite has a very friendly mechanics next to it. The road across the Anti Lebanon past the Cedars and into the Bekaa valley is excellent and empty. Good hotel in Baalbek has a lock up for bikes and a great view of the ruins. Cannt remember the name, but its the only old fasioned hotel. The Chouf mountians have good fun roads and a few thinks to see.

Generally great people. Recommend it.

JT

fireboomer 14 Feb 2005 16:28

After several phonecalls this is how our trip looks like:

1. ride from Belgium to Dusseldorf
2. take night train with german railroads to Verona in Italy. Bikes come with us on the train. (already booked)
3. morningride from verona to ancona, 3 hour ride.
4. take the ferry from ancona to patras (greece) the same day in the afternoon.
5. arriving next noon in patras,then 3 hour ride to athens.
6. take an evening ferry from athens to rhodos
7. arriving next morning on rhodos, take ferry to turky rihgt away.

This way we will arrive in Turky in 2 days and 2 nights. The train is the most expensive. The ferry are very cheap if you are ok with camping on the deck.

The only thing we have to figger out still is the evening ferry from athens to rhodos and the ferry from rhodos to turky. Don't think that will be a problem.

Going home is the same thing in the opposite direction. One question. Do we need to be a day ahead in Turky to do the paperwork before taking the ferry to rhodos (greece). I've reports you have to hand over you passport the day before and so...
Who has info?

ON the paperside. This is the info I got:

* Jordan:
NO CARNET NEEDED if you don't stay longer then 2 weeks. Also bikes are still allowed into the country. Info confirmed by the Belgian automobile club and the Jordan embassy in Belgium.

* Syria:
this one is harder.
-- >the belgian automobile club states a carnet is neededn.
---> Syrian embassy in Holland says no carnet is needed.
---> Syrian embassy in Belgium doesn't really knows but assumes all things are taken care of at the border.


In both case a multy entry is no problem, just a bit more expensive.


What is the way to go concerning Syria? It is quite determing since syria is inbetween Turky and Jordan. Petra and Wadi Rum in Jordan are the goals of our trip.

NeilT 15 Feb 2005 02:26

Damn I'm jealous! I started this thread but since then my plans have taken a wide detour so no Jordon for me.... not yet anyway!

Have a great trip, sounds like a one to do for sure!

Neil

fireboomer 15 Feb 2005 19:38

Anyone else keeping an eye on developping situations beteen Syria and Libanon?
Libanon mobilzed its army and is tension with Syria is rising.
Anyone who thinks we should avoid certain regions?


Pieter.

Julio 19 Feb 2005 16:16

I guess that there not too many tourists going through as Visa only took 2 days to process.

Julio

simonandmags 25 Feb 2005 22:25

We did the Turkey to Italy ferry route last November, and took the following route with no problems.
Cesme to the greek island of Chios, 45 minutes
Straight onto the 9 hour overnight ferry to Athens, greece.
Arrived early morning in Athens,
3 hr ride to Patras
then 22hour crossing to Ancona sailing that afternoon.
Passports don't have to be submitted the day before, just roll up and pay your money at a nearby travel agent

The ferry from Patras to Ancona with the ferry company 'Superfast Ferries' was pure luxury.
There is no reson why this route cannot be used in reverse

ozhanu 26 Feb 2005 10:18

Hi All,

I am also planning a trip to middle east on june-july 2006 depending on my bank account my route will be UK>Italy>Ferry>Turkey>Syria>Lebanon>Jordan>S.Arabi a>Oman>UAE>Qatar>Bahrain>Iran>Turkey>Ferry>Italy>U K.

I am a citizen of Republic of Turkey and I'm currently living in the UK. All my investigations shows that, you need a carnet for Turkey if you wanna continue to Middle East.

The best way from UK to Turkey according to my plannings are from UK to Brindisi (Italy) and take a ferry to Cesme (Turkey) takes 1,5 day. then from Cesme to Syria border try to follow the central Turkey roads. The roads on south cost are narrow and to many bends, especially after Antalya (i've been there 3 times)and also not well maintained. However, on the other hand you may see some of the the best views on the world. Sea on your right and forests on your left. Even so, I cant risk my life. Traffic is quite "outlaw" in Turkey, so take care, especially to coaches and lorry/trucks. You may visit http://www.ommriders.com/ sites for more info. Any question about Turkey wellcome. Last word; Turkey is quite safe. Dont bother about it!

Forgat to write:
for ferries visit:
http://www.marmaralines.com/
or
(This is govermental organisation might be cheaper)
SUN TOURS HOLIDAY GmbH / Germany
Rossmarkt 6 D 63739 Aschaffenburg / DEUTSCHLAND
Tel: 0049 60 21 256 42 - 60 21 256 55
Fax: 0049 60 21 256 53
E-mail: info@sun-tours.com
info@suntoursgolf.de


Ride safely
ozhan u. / www.ozhanu.com

ozhan u. www.ozhanu.com



[This message has been edited by ozhanu (edited 26 February 2005).]

fireboomer 6 Mar 2005 01:03

Simon,

Any budget on those ferry's. How cheap or expensive was it and what kind of accomodation did you get? Did you book ahead?

Latest confusing thing I found out is that the foreing ministery of Belgium states that we need a visum for Turkey? First thing I hear about it. Who knows more?

Are there alternative routes to avoid the windy busy coastroads in Turkey? How long should we take to get from Marmaris to Syria? Considering that Syria and Jordan are the main goals of our trip?


I also have a tire question but will post it in an other topic.

[This message has been edited by fireboomer (edited 06 March 2005).]

ozhanu 7 Mar 2005 08:23

Hi firebomber,

As a Turkish, I may answer your questions. if you go to the offical site of Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the link below:
(http://www.mfa.gov.tr/MFA/ConsularIn...Foreigners.htm)

you will find the following information:

Belgium: Ordinary passport holders are required to have visa to enter Turkey. They can obtain three-month multiple entry visas at the Turkish border gates. Official passport holders are exempt from visa for their travels up to 90 days.

So, you dont have to apply for the visa. You can get one on the border for the cost of around £14.

Marmaris to Syria.. Marmaris is a town of Mugla City and if you want to enter Syria from Kilis (a town of Gaziantep) the distance is around 1096 Km via South Cost. The offical speed limit in Turkey is 90Km/h out of the cities. The shortest way is via South Cost (Mugla> Antalya> Mersin> Adana> Osmaniye> Gaziantep/ Kilis). Alternative route might be Mugla> Burdur> Isparta> Konya> Adana> Osmaniye> Gaziantep/Kilis. However, there is strong wind and crowded traffic at Konya Plain, also longer than the SOuth Cost route. I suggest you to take the South Cost Route. It is also touristic area. You might find cheap and safe accommondation as well if you want to stop for overnight.

Good Luck!
ozhan u. / www.ozhanu.com

beddhist 7 Mar 2005 17:52

It would be a shame to miss the coast road, as it is very scenic and mostly not too much traffic. I have good memories of that.

Re speed limit: I believe that the limit for bikes is considerably less, unless it has changed recently. Can somebody plase verify that?

------------------
Salut from Southern France, the bikers' paradise,

Peter.

fireboomer 8 Mar 2005 11:10

With the coast road you mean the windy road direct to the coast with n° 400?
Ok, then I will have to change the planning. We planning to avoid this because we have read that it is very busy / dangerous and no fun to ride on because of constant strong winds.

Turkey is part of our plans, but not the main goal. So it's a 'passing through' country. In my experience these parts of a trip are more dangerous then once you are in the area of destination. Most accidents happen going to and comming from.
That's why I am looking for a convenient and safe route through Turkey.

beddhist 9 Mar 2005 01:34

For what it's worth, here is the ferry info via Rhodos:

RHODOS - KOS

Duration Journey : 3 hours with car ferry
All Taxes Included : Not applicable
Frequency : In Summer period, several connections per day.
In winter period, one connection per day.

http://www.ankertravel.net/modules.a..._hodc=29#arama


------------------
Salut from Southern France, the bikers' paradise,

Peter.

ChrisC 13 Mar 2005 07:21

Hi
I took the ferry from Brindisi, Italy to Piraeus, Greece in Feb '99, then drove across and up through Greece to Turkey. The roads through the mountains were very icy - many cars crashed off the road, grip was difficult even in a Landie.
In our trip through Turkey we hit a major snow storm/blizzard on the road from Istanbul to Ankara - 0n the way to Coppadacia. Again many vehicles crashing off the road including a coach just minutes ahead of us - he had passed us do 80-90mph!!
Numerous bodies were spread across the road.
As before beware of the coaches and trucks, as they drive right on the limit and show smaller vehicles no respect.
Yes the Konya plain is extremely windy - gusts blow you back and forth across the road - on of the most unpleasant stretches of road I have ever driven on - imho take the coast road.
Our trip then took us on to Syria, Jordan, Egypt and onward down the East coast to Cape Town and beyond. Ended up being away for over 2.5 years! Awesome experience.

Happy travels - travel happy.



------------------
ChrisC

pietro.spera 13 Mar 2005 13:57

Quote:

Originally posted by fireboomer:
We made our mind up and wonna ride from Belgium to Jordan and back. Timing is May - June this year.

Al together this is the plan:

* race from Patras to Athens Greece and take a night ferry to Rhodos or Cyprus
* ferry to turkey

For the rest:
* Syria no carnet needed
* Jordan, not clear: carnet or no carnet???

Don't trust in the ferry Rhodos-Marmaris. We tried it two times, in summer 2001 and summer 2002, and, notwithstanding it was listed in the official schedule, it didn't exist (and it was september, still a touristic seasons...). So, both the times we ended up with the ferry Bodrum-Kos. If you have a tight schedule, might be better to consider a ferry Piraus-Kos, instaed the one Piraus-Rhodos and then wasting a day there. On the other hand, I doubt there are reliable connection Cyprus-Turkey, not to mention the difficulties to cross from the Greeck part of the island (where the ferry from Piraeus arrives) to the Turkish part (from where the ferry might leave to Turkey).

About the carnet, we used it both in Jordan (2002) and Syria (2001 and 2002), but my feeling is that it much easier to get into Jordan without it than in Syria. In any case, if you have it, you save time and money. In fact, if you don't have it, the syrian ask for you to pay an extra insurance (I don't remember how was in Jordan, but in general they were much more easy going than the syrians).

fireboomer 14 Mar 2005 02:36

Well,

We booked the ferry's after informing with these people:
http://www.paleologos.gr/contact.asp

They have quite a few companies they represent. So gives you a choice in time and price.

I also got a mail from a ferry company from rhodos to marmaris. Looks we can go ahead and book it. They sail daily it says in the mail.

For Jordan no carnet is needed if yous stay no longer then 2 weeks (cfr Jordan emabassy in Belgium).
Syria also no carnet needed (cfr Syrian embassy in Belgium).

Tommorow we are supposed to get our visa for Syria, then on to the Jordan embassy.


Pieter.

Update: got the visa for Syria today without any trouble.

[This message has been edited by fireboomer (edited 14 March 2005).]

fireboomer 21 Mar 2005 01:43

Got our visa for Syria in a week and that for Jordan in 2 days.
Both are multiple.

Still not clear what the paperwork for Jordan involves. CPD seems not necessary, but nobody wants to say for sure.
Syria is ok.

Working on the route. Gonna try to take some 'smaller' roads / tracks.
Are Syria and Jordan comparable to Marocco concerning driving conditions?


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