JARDIN D'EDEN
Read moreA palm grove in the middle of the Tekemkent oasis, which has a botanical garden with fruit trees: pomegranate trees, grapefruit trees, mango trees, banana trees, lemon trees. The vegetable garden is filled with aromatic plants: basil, lemon grass, mint... An oasis that wears its name divinely well! You will even have the possibility of bathing in a large basin in the shade of the date palms... A basin which is also used to water all the plants of the garden. This palm grove also has tents and toilets for accommodation.
GARDENS
Read moreCreated in 1996, they produced their first harvest in 1999. Their goal is to diversify the food supply of the inhabitants of Oualata, to provide a complementary source of income to the 60 families who operate them and to fix the population in the region thanks to 2 reservoirs which, in the hot season, work with solar panels. If you have the chance to meet one of the 2 engineers who work there, visit them with him, you will be amazed. The water is first pumped from a non-permanent water table, raised and then stored in a reservoir, the pressure exerted making it naturally flow back down to the gardens.
Then, the irrigation system set up allows to save water by allocating to each plant the flow that is necessary for it. This technique has made it possible to introduce species that would have been incompatible with the climate of the region. We discover date palms, jujube trees, baobabs, lemon trees, mandarin trees, mango trees and even vines! Vegetables are not forgotten with tomatoes, beans and onions consumed fresh on the spot or dried. So much so that the market garden production is today superior to the consumption of the inhabitants! Fruits and vegetables are exported to Néma. The gardens also produce compost from camel dung, medicinal plants and natural insecticides. This vegetation attracts a lot of game, including a few hares, which are an important food supplement for those who trap them.
DIAWLING NATIONAL PARK
Read moreThe National Park of Diawling was created to respond to the degradation of natural spaces caused by dams built on the Senegal River. For some years, park managers have recreated the seasonal flood, using dykes and structures, the main source of the park's wealth. This park with a human face, of 16 000 hectares, once again receives visits to migratory birds such as ducks, teal, swallows and other eagles or hawks. The abundance of fish, during wintering in these low-depth waters attracts crested, cormorants, pelicans and herons. Warthogs and herds of cattle, goats and camels are attracted by the burgeoning vegetation that grows in quantity on the shores released by the waters. The park is inhabited by sedentary Wolof, less and less nomadic Moors and Des.