The Sahara's Most Remote Corner: Exploring The Tenere, Land Of Fear | Timeline

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The Sahara's Most Remote Corner: Exploring The Tenere, Land Of Fear | Timeline


The Sahara is the biggest desert on earth. It takes its name from the Arab word for “emptiness”. In the dead heart of that emptiness there’s a place called the Tenere. The Tenere takes its name from the Tuareg word for “nothing”. A nothing the size of France in the middle of an emptiness the size of the United States. It’s no wonder the locals…

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22 Comments

  1. Niger should called be Air and resettle all nigro tribes from this country. It is berber country, ok? The same thing should will do with Chad, resettle nigro and repalcing them Arab

  2. While l haven't the wealth, the health or freedom to travel, l have always wanted to see the extremities where most people don't venture– to see a volcano, an iceberg in the Arctic, and this- ride a camel through the desert. I love Animals and have always thought of Camels as a very noble and beautiful Animal. "The Ship of the Desert"

    Just like drinkable water is the oil of the desert, but worth more!
    There was education but much beauty in this video as well. And that includes the music!
    Thanks again Timeline for another good one!👍😊
    ❤🐪🫏🐫❤ . 🐾🌈☮️🇨🇦

  3. Desert guy: "this is my stuff, this is my sisters, and this is my wife"…

    American women: "huh unh sucka/that's NOT how that goes here!"

    (Me: speaking from my soon to be ex-wife's pov)

    (Cool camel though!💯❤️😍)

  4. I love Yamaha, Suzuki, and Honda bikes, and the new Harley P.A. has sparked my eye! (Cause I'm American thru and thru, and because it's an AWESOME bike, but there's a reason the Yamaha corp. named their iconic bike "Tenere"….(just sayin')

  5. Just awesome production all the way professional , it happens to be 1 of my dreams I'm never going to see , to do just what he did almost exactly , so great im ready to binge watch it again .

  6. Very beautifully narrated video. I was there in 1984 with my wife, three children under five and a Land Rover. We had no back-up other than 200 litres of diesel and 120 litres of water. We had our adventures and congratulate you on yours. We still have our Agadez crosses from the local silversmiths and our memories.

  7. My friends think I’m nuts but I identify with that place. I was raised in a high desert in Eastern Washington, USA. As a young teenager I was reluctantly moved to Seattle, a land of rain. I hated it. Finally escaping I eventually left for health to Hawaii to find it’s actually much a desert. Life brought me back but I immediately left for the Eastern Oregon high country, then Utah and Nevada. I didn’t realize why really. I just followed a feeling. I ended up traveling the Black Rock desert, the Mohave and the Sonoran all the way to Mexico before returning due to COVID closures. Seeing this stirs me to begin again, perhaps a new continent 😎. I’ve finally found myself. I love deserts.