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A Journey To The Hottest Place On Earth: Dallol Ethiopia

No one travels alone to the hottest place on earth. You need, for starters, a driver and a Jeep stocked with water bottles and four days of non-perishable food. And because that Jeep is bound to sink in the fine sand of the desert, you need another Jeep (and another driver) to tug it out. There are no places to lodge or dine in this desert, so you'll need space for cots, a cook, plus a few armed guards, because the hottest place on earth is also somewhat lawless. And finally, because an entourage of this size costs many thousands of dollars, you'll need some fellow travelers to split the bill – the sort of people who like to fry themselves on vacation.
My father is the easiest recruit. Dad, who naps best roasting in the afternoon sun, is a lover of extreme heat. He's also an extreme traveler, drawn to the fringes of places, all the countries where no one honeymoons. Alone, he's wandered Rwanda, Bangladesh, Kazakhstan and Sierra Leone. From my father, I've inherited both tendencies: I'm known for getting pig-pink sunburns, and also for stalking the edges of maps.
The Danakil desert lies on the fringes of three maps – the maps of Ethiopia, Eritrea and Djibouti. All three countries claim a sliver of this sweltering, low-lying desert, named the cruelest place on earth by National Geographic. It's also a tectonic triple juncture – three plates converge here – as well as a major volcanic hub. I don't have to mention any of this to my father – not the endless salt flats, lakes the color of Listerine, or camels by the thousands. When Dad starts calling this desert "the Frying Pan," I know he's in.
On a message board, I find two more people to enlist – a concert pianist and a computer engineer. Both are keen on reaching the Danakil in early December – the mildest time of year in the cruelest place on earth.
Gallery: Dallol, Ethiopia
Their travel records are remarkably even (Omer, just like dad, almost drowned white water rafting on the Blue Nile), until Antarctica comes up. My dad only gazed in its direction from the tip of Argentina. Omer, however, touched the South Pole.
There's a smile on my face when I ask Omer about the Danakil – why doesn't he come with us? "I hate heat," Omer shakes his head with conviction. We tease him that my dad will easily even their score by going to the hottest place on earth. Omer looks conflicted. Omer smokes a cigarette. Omer buys a ticket to Mekele at the airport the next morning.
If the Danakil desert is the basement floor of Ethiopia, Mekele is the top rung of the basement stairs. It's where you pause to gear up – and group up – for this desert voyage. In Mekele, the five of us merge with a carpenter from Dublin, an ironworker from New Jersey and two Israeli girls, fresh out of the army. We fill five jeeps and have nothing in common but a love of travel, and a willingness to sweat for it.
The jeeps plunge down tan mountains for hours, mountains that feel primordial, perhaps because I know Lucy, the 3.2-million-year-old hominid, was unearthed near here, perhaps because civilization completely drops off. Every couple miles, we break for a flock of donkeys and camels strapped with thick tablets of salt, and the lone shepherd trailing behind his herd, wearing a Kalashnikov.

The Danakil, unlike highland Ethiopia, whose ancient churches and popular cuisine are drawing more tourists than ever, still wears a KEEP OUT sign. The heat, of course, is brutal. So, guidebook writers warn, are the Afar tribesmen. Legendary for their ferocity, the Afar no longer castrate outside visitors as they were rumored to in the early 20th century, but the Ethiopian government requires all travelers to hire armed guards. I'll understand this measure better when news of a massacre in the Danakil makes headline news: five people are killed and four more kidnapped in the Danakil, just one month after we leave. And despite the Ethiopian government's swift move to send more security forces into the Danakil, the region remains dangerous.
For now, I'm too focused on heat to weigh other dangers. The numbers on our Jeep's temperature monitor continue to rise, even as the sun goes down. I remind myself, as we dip below sea level, that this is just a warm-up. The real heat won't strike until we reach the sizzling edge of the frying pan, an uninhabited region, roughly 130 meters (426 feet) below sea level, called Dallol.
Dallol holds the record for average annual temperature: 94 degrees. It's only advisable to visit Dallol in the early morning, before the sun has reached a critical height. So we camp in the nearby village of Hamed Ela, where camel caravans also spend the night. In the morning, the moon is hanging low on the pinky horizon when our guides get us in motion, into Jeeps, and off towards the Eritrean border.
Sand gives way to salt, and soon we're in a landscape of white crystals glinting in the fresh morning light. The ground is miraculously flat. Our driver, who has been battling fine sand, cannot resist the urge to gun it. We surge ahead of the other cars in what looks like a Jeep race across some frozen Minnesota lake.
The wintry illusion is broken with a glance at my sweating dad. No one in our Jeep is shivering. I see sunburned calves, emptied water bottles, bites dotting our ankles. The overnight in Hamed Ela gave half of us fleas.
Suddenly, in the pure white expanse, a huge brown mound appears, rising like a cliff from the sea. It's the only vertical mass in sight, and apparently, our destination. The jeeps brake and park. Nobody tells us this is a collapsed volcano; our guides are coaches in a race against heat, not docents. We're ordered to find a full liter of bottled water, and to bring it with us up the lumpy brown mountain. Halfway up, I turn around and squint down at the Jeeps, now toy cars, their tire tracks a long S-curve in the vanishing horizon of salt and sand. At the summit, I find my travel mates standing in silent reverie.
Mind you, it takes a lot to hush these guys. Ultra-extreme travelers, they've never met people quite like themselves. Our trip feels at times like a Fringe Travel convention, with everyone spouting stories of remote places and "if you go" tips. Already, I've learned that the worst predator of the Amazon is the mosquito, that chimpanzees in bad moods will rip your face off, and that the very best way to do Sri Lanka is by elephant.
Dumbstruck now, my comrades crouch down beside pale green toadstools – mineral formations whose glossy tabletops are smooth as marble. It feels oddly like we've just walked in on something – a meeting? a moment? Whatever these green outgrowths are, they stop us cold, right at the doorway of Dallol. I see Omer creep ahead, still silent, towards a far more arresting vista.
The hottest place on earth is an assault of color: slime yellow and deep rust, pea green and Barney purple. Some of the formations look like coral reefs, others like egg shells, air-blown from the hot breath of the earth below. It's a psychedelic plain of sulfur deposits, iron oxide crust, acid lakes, and tiny geysers that gurgle up steaming water. Everyone wanders off alone, crunching over the brittle earth, heads down, heads shaking.
I know the ground is hot – you can even hear the soft throbbing of water boiling underground – and yet I can't help treating it like ice. A Buffalo native, I grew up skating on rinks and shimmying across slick parking lots. The ground here feels way too familiar to shake the fear that my feet will fall right through. Sure enough, just when I work up the nerve to step with force, the purple ground collapses beneath my foot. The sneaker I pull back out is rimmed in bright yellow goo.
Everywhere we step, things break and splinter. It sounds like a china shop, full of looters. This desert lends travelers so many chances to grasp its remoteness. You feel it in the sudden lime-green oasis of grazing camels, where no one else watches on; you feel it on the rim of the roiling volcano nearby, where nothing holds you back from the luminous caldera; and you feel it here, in this fragile masterpiece of sulfur and salt, where a day's worth of tour buses would crush nature's strange design. You start to think: we really shouldn't be here. This desert wasn't built to handle a human intrusion, and the human body certainly wasn't built to handle this desert.
I feel hot, but not to a degree that alarms me. Only when I lift a hand to my chest and feel, beneath the soaked fabric of my t-shirt, collarbones like hot radiator pipes, do I understand what my body's dealing with. Heat in Dallol doesn't just beat down from the sun. It hisses up through conical vents, bubbles up in sulfur pools, and radiates from the thin ground with force. I get the feeling that this medley of heat is off the human register – mine at least. I'm not even thirsty. How is that possible? While I wonder, my dad hands me his liter of water and stands there until I finish it. We should go soon.
I see the armed guides – perched on the cliffs above us, their guns set into stark relief against the brightening sky – abandon their posts. The guides are corralling us. Time to go. As we clomp back down the mountain, there's lots of talk of the moon.
"Patrick!" a guy who's been to Kabul calls out to a guy who's been everywhere else. "You don't have to go to the moon now!"
When I think of the moon, I don't see trippy colors, or bubbling geysers, or a trail of shattered crystals where past explorers walked. And I've never heard that the moon reeks of rotten eggs either. There's nothing at all lunar about the hottest place on earth. What my travel mates are trying to say is that they've never been anywhere like this. For once, no one has comparisons. We're all, regardless of our travel records, equally awed.
Back in the Jeeps, blazing towards the white horizon, I look down at my sneakers. The fluorescent goo has died and faded into a neutral grime, like that was all just some fever dream up there, a place we made right up.












Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
Walt Armour May 31st 2012 5:25PM
The United States has a a record setting temperature of 134 degrees.
Reference:
United States temperature extremes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_temperature_extremes
For the United States, the extremes are 134 °F (56.7 °C) in Death Valley, ... both the lowest state maximum of 100 °F (37.8 °C) and the highest state minimum of 12.0 ... Each state's low temperature record USA Today, last updated August 2006.
We, who live in Phoenix Az can well attest to high temperature on a daily basis in the summer months.
whirple May 31st 2012 6:16PM
Phoenix sucks.
peldyn May 31st 2012 9:25PM
I was thinking the same thing, that Death Valley was the hottest place on Earth. It too has some amazing geological formations. I would definitely recommend a visit.
Maureen May 31st 2012 5:55PM
I can't wait to hear more.
J. Lo May 31st 2012 5:48PM
Count me in! Where do I sign up?
Bill May 31st 2012 5:51PM
What is the fastest animal on Earth? An Ethiopian chicken.
Dizmaster May 31st 2012 6:12PM
Did you try to fry an egg, when you were out there??? I would have tried to cook any kind of food possible, just for the heck of it.
itomas May 31st 2012 7:30PM
While reading (and appreciating the entire narrative), I was unable to escape the thoughts of wealth beyond my own means. Whether I wanted to or not, it would not be possible for me to afford such a journey. I suppose the travelers are the "haves" and I'm among the "have-nots".
james Jun 1st 2012 12:29AM
How do you write about the hottes place in the world and forget to put the highest degee in the artical?
remoat May 31st 2012 7:46PM
a very descriptive essay.. lots of details about geography, political borders, behavior of guides, etc.. just one thing missing: whats the temperature in the hottest place on earth? nothing about that, just descriptions about how it feels and the average annualized temperature.. what about the hottest temp ever recorded in the daytime? the lowest in the daytime? what about the average temp at nite? is it just me or did the travel guide blow it leaving out the temp. while he was there? he told us a great deal, and left out the best part..
Cyndi May 31st 2012 7:58PM
Interesting piece, great writing, I could feel the heat.......thank you
MeanGreenBeam May 31st 2012 8:21PM
The Dallol Depression, also called Danakil Depression, is a desert with some areas that are more than 100 meters (328 feet) below sea level. This is special because it is one of the lowest points on earth not covered by water. There are hot yellow sulfur fields among the sparkling white salt beds. Heat isn't the only thing people feel in the Dallol Depression. Alarming earth tremors are frequently felt. There are also several active volcanoes. So just how hot is it at the Dallol Depression? Temperatures can reach as high as 145 degrees Fahrenheit (63 degrees Celsius) in the sun. Hotter than Death Valley, CA
steve May 31st 2012 8:31PM
That was a well written and informative article, but what I don't get is why brag about going to the hottest place on earth at the coolest time of the year? (and don't tell me it's about the heat, I understand.) that's like bragging about driving the fastest car in the world and going the speed limit. That's like bragging you swam in the deepest spot in the ocean and never even went all the way under the water. That's like bragging about winning a hot dog eating contest and not eating the buns too. That's like bragging you drank your nephew under the table, but he was 12 when you did it. where's the real bragging rights?
Mark Manchusic May 31st 2012 8:46PM
We enjoyed this article, its of particular interest because we are doing a reconstruction survey here at Death Valley National Park area. Temp is little over 113 degrees, forecast of 118 tomorrow, however we are supplied with Military Thermal tents , therefore we survive quite well. Good article, extremely interesting.
Don May 31st 2012 9:33PM
It would have been nice if the pictures had descriptions so we knew what we were looking at. What is all the yellow stuff?
Teri May 31st 2012 9:36PM
Interesting article, but since the author didn't mention the temps in Dallol, check out the link below. Note that Death Valley actually has the highest average temp recorded annually...
http://www.mytripblog.org/pg/blog/ethiopia-social-manager/read/10649/the-dallol-danakil-depression
C linder May 31st 2012 10:15PM
The vehicals are not jeeps but Toyota Land Cruisers
SteveWard3928 May 31st 2012 10:23PM
Yes it is an interesting article. But I still have to ask......Why??? Why would anyone be so interested in blazing up under the desert sun? I sweat when it is 50 or 60 degrees due to medication I am on. I doubt I could survive a trip like this one. As for Phoenix, I lived there for 2 years and I still have people say "Well it is a dry heat". When it is 113 degrees....it is hot any way you slice it.
Kat May 31st 2012 10:36PM
What I could research was...Dallol Ethiopia- The climate varies from around 25 °C (77 °F) during the rainy season (September–March) to 48 °C (118 °F) during the dry season (March–September).
Coleen May 31st 2012 10:35PM
The hottest air temperature ever recorded on earth:
2005 in the Lut Desert in Iran at 70.7° Celsius which is 159.26° Fahrenheit. (the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrophotometer (MODIS) on NASA's Aqua satellite actually records this as surface temperature, so the record doesn't apply)
Previous to this on Sept. 13, 1922 El Azizia in Libya 57.8 °C (136°F)
Death Valley, California, USA, where it got up to 57.1°C (134°F) on July 10, 1913.
Highest average:
The hottest average is Kalahari desert in South Africa=43.3 degrees Celsius=109.94 F
Dallol, Ethiopia, is the most consistently warm place on earth with an average yearly ambient surface air temperature of 34.4°C = 93.92F