We visited two national parks back-to-back in Azerbaijan: Shirvan and Gobustan.
1. Shirvan National Park is a small (about 200 square miles) park 60 miles southwest of Baku that was formed primarily to protect the goitered gazelle, seen atop the tower below:
There are other animals there, of course, but none so important--or visible--as the gazelle that gets is name from the way its neck puffs out during mating season. The park has had a very successful breeding program--they started with 131 gazelles in 1961 and now have over 8,000. We saw quite a few:
Here is a fairly good shot of the "goiter" in the male's neck:
Our other wildlife sightings included a very cute (and not very wild) kitty:
This picturesque dove cote could be almost anywhere in the world:
Look carefully. Do you see something hiding in the bushes out there?
It was some kind of a fox:
This land used to be at the bottom of the Caspian Sea, and it is still below sea level. Ten to fifteen percent of the park is water reservoirs:
We weren't as focused on the birds, but we did see some kind of an egret:
. . . and a black kite:
The grasses themselves were quite beautiful:
I love this little bridge that appears to made from bamboo. There are tire tracks leading to it. Did we drive over it? I can't remember, but it doesn't look sturdy enough to hold a car:
2. Gobustan (also spelled Qobustan) National Park is famous for its rock carvings, mud volcanoes, and stone pots.
We started at a funky museum near the parking lot:
It was full of unusual dioramas:
The museum also documents some of the early man archaeological finds:
The official name of this UNESCO World Heritage site is the Gobustan Rock Art Cultural Landscape Resesrve:
The variable, dramatic rock formations alone are worth a trip:
Can you pick out some engravings in the rocks below?
Here is a close-up of the dancing figures. Incredible, isn't it?
That cow figure in the center is an aurochs, a now extinct species of cattle that used to cover this area:
We saw lots of aurochses (aurochsen? aurochsi?):
The curly horns look like a kudu to me:
A somewhat primitive glyph of a man on a horse:
A more skilled rendition of a horse:
Somehow the human figures look as though they are moving:
After all, SHE gets to touch:
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Signs like this get Bob excited. Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending whom you ask), no venomous vipers appeared:
These deep holes were carved into the rock as a kind of a well to catch rain water. They date back to the Bronze Age (3300-1200 BC). The numbers are a recent, and in my view unfortunate, addition:
We only saw a very small part of the park. Other sections have mud pots (aka mud volcanoes), which I would love to have seen. Apparently Azerbaijan has 300 of the earth's 700 mud pots, and most of them are in Gobustan.
Gobustan is an aspiring rock artist's dream:
We had visiting mud volcanoes on the itinerary, but recent rains made the dirt roads impassable. I loved the gazelles in Shirvan and enjoyed comparing Azerbaijani efforts to protect wildlife to U.S. efforts I've seen. The age of the rock art and the quality are quite amazing.
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