Call us today!

+1-917-9055850

Salad Trail (Shvil HaSalat)

The Salad Trail is one of the most original tourism experiences in Israel: visitors walk through the agricultural fields of the Gaza Envelope, pick fresh vegetables directly from the plants, and prepare a salad on the spot with the ingredients they have just harvested. The trail, created by local farmers, turns the region’s agricultural identity into an interactive experience that is educational, delicious, and deeply connected to the land.

The Experience

Guided groups walk through fields of cherry tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, herbs, and leafy greens, learning about each crop, the growing conditions, the technology used in desert agriculture, and the challenges of farming under the threat of rocket fire. Visitors pick the vegetables, wash them at field stations, and prepare a fresh salad that tastes nothing like anything from a supermarket. The flavors of sun-warmed tomatoes and just-picked herbs, eaten in the field where they grew, are a revelation.

Farmers

The farmers of the Gaza Envelope grow a significant percentage of Israel’s vegetables, using advanced irrigation, greenhouse technology, and desert agriculture techniques. Many of the farms were damaged or destroyed on October 7, and the Salad Trail represents the community’s determination to rebuild, to welcome visitors, and to show that life and growth continue even in the most difficult circumstances.

Israel’s Agricultural Miracle

The Salad Trail is a window into one of Israel’s most remarkable achievements: turning a small, mostly arid country into an agricultural powerhouse. Israel’s climate is extraordinarily diverse for its size. In a country smaller than New Jersey, you find Mediterranean climate on the coast, alpine conditions on Mount Hermon, subtropical warmth in the Jordan Valley and the Arava, and true desert in the Negev. This diversity means that Israel grows almost everything: citrus and avocados on the coastal plain, dates in the Jordan Valley and the Arava, grapes and olives in the Galilee and the Judean hills, tomatoes and peppers in the greenhouses of the Gaza Envelope and the Arava, apples and cherries on the Golan Heights, bananas near the Sea of Galilee, and wheat in the Jezreel Valley.

Israeli agricultural technology has turned limitations into advantages. Drip irrigation, invented in Israel in the 1960s by Simcha Blass, revolutionized farming worldwide by delivering water directly to the root zone of each plant, reducing water use by up to 70%. Desalination plants now produce more fresh water than the country consumes naturally. And the greenhouses of the western Negev, where the Salad Trail operates, use computer-controlled climate systems, biological pest control (Bio Bee at Sde Eliyahu pioneered the use of beneficial insects instead of pesticides), and recycled water to produce crops that are exported to Europe year-round. The cherry tomatoes in a London supermarket may well have come from a greenhouse within rocket range of Gaza.

Visit with Hoshen Tours

The Salad Trail is a taste of the Gaza Envelope at its most hopeful. Hoshen Tours includes it alongside the memorial sites to show both the grief and the resilience of the region.