• Abdullah Pharaon with the seedlings of wild trees he is growing at a farm south of Amman, in Jordan. All photos: Khaled Yacoub Oweis / The National
    Abdullah Pharaon with the seedlings of wild trees he is growing at a farm south of Amman, in Jordan. All photos: Khaled Yacoub Oweis / The National
  • Mr Pharaon quit his job as a software engineer during the Covid pandemic and began his solo project to conserve Jordan's indigenous trees and shrubs
    Mr Pharaon quit his job as a software engineer during the Covid pandemic and began his solo project to conserve Jordan's indigenous trees and shrubs
  • He travels across the country to collect the fruit and seeds of local plants
    He travels across the country to collect the fruit and seeds of local plants
  • The fruit and seeds of the carob tree, one of seven species Mr Pharaon is trying to propagate. The carob fruit is used as an alternative to chocolate
    The fruit and seeds of the carob tree, one of seven species Mr Pharaon is trying to propagate. The carob fruit is used as an alternative to chocolate
  • Mr Pharaon collects seeds of the wild pistachio tree.
    Mr Pharaon collects seeds of the wild pistachio tree.
  • Mr Pharaon with some of the 700 seedlings that he has grown so far
    Mr Pharaon with some of the 700 seedlings that he has grown so far
  • Mr Pharaon says he is guided by trial and error as he has no horticultural training
    Mr Pharaon says he is guided by trial and error as he has no horticultural training
  • Planting wild pistachio tree seeds
    Planting wild pistachio tree seeds
  • One of the young carob trees in bloom
    One of the young carob trees in bloom
  • Rock rose seedlings
    Rock rose seedlings
  • A carob seedling grown from fruit of the tree Mr Pharaon collected in Petra, southern Jordan
    A carob seedling grown from fruit of the tree Mr Pharaon collected in Petra, southern Jordan
  • Mr Pharaon plans to transplant his young trees to places that hold special significance for him
    Mr Pharaon plans to transplant his young trees to places that hold special significance for him
  • After starting out alone, he now involves volunteers in seedling production, from seed collection to planting
    After starting out alone, he now involves volunteers in seedling production, from seed collection to planting

Jordanian software engineer branches out to save kingdom's trees


Khaled Yacoub Oweis
  • English
  • Arabic

During the Covid pandemic three years ago, Jordanian software engineer Abdullah Pharaon was on a work Zoom call when it dawned on him he no longer wanted to continue in his job.

“My colleagues were reduced to a grid of faces on the computer. Something about that didn’t feel natural. It also felt very lonely,” he says.

A graduate of US and British universities, Mr Pharaon, 34, was working from Amman for a software company in Ontario, Canada, where he had lived for seven years.

Since he resigned he has been making regular trips to remote areas of Jordan, collecting the fruit of native tree species that also grow in the rest of the Levant.

At a farm near Amman, he extracts the seeds – some species are harder to process than others – and tries to grow them in small pots.

The goal of his solo effort is to preserve trees that were part of the daily life of people in the area for millennia.

Mr Pharaon says the trees have almost become friends, partly because “they are unique and characteristic of the region”.

When they are mature enough, I wish to plant the seedlings in locations that bear special significance to me
Abdullah Pharaon

He began with oak. Its seed, the acorn, is large and easy to handle, unlike the delicate seeds from the red berries of the eastern strawberry tree, which he added to his collection at a later stage.

His attempts to coax the seeds to sprout and grow are guided by trial and error.

“There is not much literature on how to extract them and germinate them,” he says.

Mr Pharaon is baffled that most plants in Jordan's commercial nurseries are tropical and not suited to the climate.

“Not too much attention has been given to producing seedlings of indigenous species,” he says.

Man-made threats

Forests barely exist in Jordan, a parched country of 10 million people.

Illegal logging and rampant construction have shrunk its already sparse tree cover, while the grazing of farm animals undermines the ability of wild trees to reproduce.

“Herds eat the sprouts and prevent regeneration of the forest,” Mr Pharaon says. “In Jordan, the man-made threat is more prominent than climate change.”

He works on a farm owned by Mamdouh Bisharat, the 85-year-old scion of a landowning family that played a role in the foundation of Jordan as British protectorate in 1921.

Mr Bisharat, a conservationist himself, donated part of one of his farms in 2022 for Mr Pharaon to pursue his project.

Shepherds and their livestock roam near the farm on the road to the airport. If even one goat manages to come near his pots, three seasons of work will be destroyed, Mr Pharaon says.

He has so far managed to grow 700 saplings from the thousands of seeds he planted.

“I keep this area well fenced,” he says.

Most of the seven species he is cultivating “have a story behind them”.

From the bark of stryrax, a small deciduous tree, comes a resin that was used as incense for hundreds of years in churches in Bethlehem. The reddish carob fruit, which looks like a large chilli, has been traditionally made into a molasses, and eaten as a desert with bread and tahini.

“It is a natural alternative to sugar, and chocolate,” Mr Pharaon says.

Extract from the hard seeds in the carob fruit, which are inedible, is used as food stabiliser and in pharmaceuticals.

“I am interested in the overlap between indigenous species that grow on their own, and the economic value or commercial use,” he says.

Abdullah Pharaon shows the fruit from the carob tree and a seed that he extracted from it. Khaled Yacoub Oweis / The National
Abdullah Pharaon shows the fruit from the carob tree and a seed that he extracted from it. Khaled Yacoub Oweis / The National

Some of the carob seedlings he grows came from Petra, the famous Nabataean historical site and nature reserve that has been undermined by rapid construction in the past two decades to accommodate tourists.

He also collects the seeds of an evergreen shrub called rock rose, which produces a “pretty flower”.

The areas where the trees grow seems to be a factor in the viability of their seeds, he says. The most successful carob seedlings he has came from the southern edge of Amman, which borders desert.

For now, Mr Pharaon has no plans beyond growing the saplings to a significant size, unlike the usually small ones sometimes sold by commercial nurseries.

"My goal for the time being is to spend time with the seedlings at all stages of their development and observe them throughout all seasons.

"When they are mature enough, I wish to plant the seedlings in locations that bear special significance to me," he says.

"Growing the trees will not be my life’s work per se. At a later stage, I would like to design activities around seedling production whereby participants can get involved at all stages of the process, from seed collection to planting.

"I have already begun with small groups of volunteers but would like to grow it as I gain more experience."

Women & Power: A Manifesto

Mary Beard

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How to get there

Emirates (www.emirates.com) flies directly to Hanoi, Vietnam, with fares starting from around Dh2,725 return, while Etihad (www.etihad.com) fares cost about Dh2,213 return with a stop. Chuong is 25 kilometres south of Hanoi.
 

11 cabbie-recommended restaurants and dishes to try in Abu Dhabi

Iqbal Restaurant behind Wendy’s on Hamdan Street for the chicken karahi (Dh14)

Pathemari in Navy Gate for prawn biryani (from Dh12 to Dh35)

Abu Al Nasar near Abu Dhabi Mall, for biryani (from Dh12 to Dh20)

Bonna Annee at Navy Gate for Ethiopian food (the Bonna Annee special costs Dh42 and comes with a mix of six house stews – key wet, minchet abesh, kekel, meser be sega, tibs fir fir and shiro).

Al Habasha in Tanker Mai for Ethiopian food (tibs, a hearty stew with meat, is a popular dish; here it costs Dh36.75 for lamb and beef versions)

Himalayan Restaurant in Mussaffa for Nepalese (the momos and chowmein noodles are best-selling items, and go for between Dh14 and Dh20)

Makalu in Mussaffa for Nepalese (get the chicken curry or chicken fry for Dh11)

Al Shaheen Cafeteria near Guardian Towers for a quick morning bite, especially the egg sandwich in paratha (Dh3.50)

Pinky Food Restaurant in Tanker Mai for tilapia

Tasty Zone for Nepalese-style noodles (Dh15)

Ibrahimi for Pakistani food (a quarter chicken tikka with roti costs Dh16)

The specs

Engine: 8.0-litre, quad-turbo 16-cylinder

Transmission: 7-speed auto

0-100kmh 2.3 seconds

0-200kmh 5.5 seconds

0-300kmh 11.6 seconds

Power: 1500hp

Torque: 1600Nm

Price: Dh13,400,000

On sale: now

Updated: November 11, 2023, 7:41 AM