Mesopotamian Marshes Wetland — Iraq
Ancient reed-marsh wilderness between the Tigris and Euphrates — vast bird-filled waterways, water buffalo, and floating villages surviving from antiquity.
About this spectacle
The Mesopotamian Marshes of southern Iraq are one of the world's great wetland spectacles, a vast labyrinth of shallow lakes, reed beds, and open water stretching across the ancient floodplains between the Tigris and Euphrates. Visitors move by traditional wooden mashoof boats through corridors of tall Phragmites reeds that tower overhead, opening suddenly onto silver expanses of still water reflecting enormous skies. Thousands of waterfowl wheel and call — herons, egrets, pelicans, and migrating waders crowd the shallows. Water buffalo wade through reed margins, tended by Marsh Arab communities living on floating reed islands. The air is alive with insect hum, the splash of fish, and bird calls layering into constant ambient sound. At dawn and dusk the light turns the water copper and gold, silhouetting reed curtains against wide horizons. This is one of the Middle East's most biodiverse wetland ecosystems, a living remnant of ancient Mesopotamian landscape.
When to go
Sep — May, peak Oct — Mar
Getting there
Nearest airport: BSR. Nearest city: Nasiriyah.
Booking options
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