Selam is a tabia or municipality in the Dogu'a Tembien district of the Tigray Region of Ethiopia. The tabia centre is in Addi Werho village, located approximately 3 km to the northeast of the woreda town Hagere Selam.
Geography
The tabia stretches down north of the ridge occupied by the main road towards the Tinsehe gorge. The highest peak is Imba Khoboro and the lowest place at the foot of the waterfall in Tinsehe.
Geology
From the higher to the lower locations, the following geological formations are present:
* deep, dark cracking clays, temporarily waterlogged during the wet season
Inclusions
* Rock outcrops and very shallow soils
* Rock outcrops and very shallow soils on limestone
* Deep dark cracking clays with very good natural fertility, waterlogged during the wet season
* Shallow stony dark loams on calcaric material
* Brown loamy soils on basalt with good natural fertility
Gently rolling [Antalo Limestone] plateau (in the lower parts), holding cliffs and valley bottoms on limestone
Associated soil types
* shallow stony soils with a dark surface horizon overlying calcaric material
* moderately deep dark stony clays with good natural fertility
* deep, dark cracking clays on calcaric material
Inclusions
* Rock outcrops and very shallow soils
* Shallow very stony loamy soil on limestone
* Deep dark cracking clays with very good natural fertility, waterlogged during the wet season
* Brown to dark sands and silt loams on alluvium
Climate and hydrology
Climate and meteorology
The rainfall pattern shows a very high seasonality with 70 to 80% of the annual rain falling in July and August. Mean temperature in Addi Werho is 18.8 °C, oscillating between average daily minimum of 10.5 °C and maximum of 26.7 °C. The contrasts between day and night air temperatures are much larger than seasonal contrasts.
Rivers
The Tsaliet River is the most important rivers in the surroundings of the tabia. They flow towards Tekezze River and further on to the Nile. These rivers have incised deep gorges which characterise the landscape. The drainage network of the tabia is organised as follows:
Whereas they are dry during most of the year, during the main rainy season, these rivers carry high runoff discharges, sometimes in the form of flash floods. Especially at the begin of the rainy season they are brown-coloured, evidencing high soil erosion rates.
Springs
As there are no permanent rivers, the presence of springs is of utmost importance for the local people. The main springs in the tabia are:
May Gudgwad in Khunale
May Miheno in Miheno
Water harvesting
In this area with rains that last only for a couple of months per year, reservoirs of different sizes allow harvesting runoff from the rainy season for further use in the dry season. Overall they suffer from siltation. Yet, they strongly contribute to greening the landscape, either through irrigation or seepage water. Main reservoirs are:
Traditional surface water harvesting ponds, particularly in places without permanent springs, called rahaya
Horoyo, household ponds, recently constructed through campaigns
Settlements
The tabia centre Addi Worho holds a few administrative offices, a health post, a primary school, and some small shops. There are a few more primary schools across the tabia. The main other populated places are:
The population lives essentially from crop farming, supplemented with off-season work in nearby towns. The land is dominated by farmlands which are clearly demarcated and are cropped every year. Hence the agricultural system is a permanent upland farming system. The farmers have adapted their cropping systems to the spatio-temporal variability in rainfall.
Schools
Almost all children of the tabia are schooled, though in some schools there is lack of classrooms, directly related to the large intake in primary schools over the last decades. Schools in the tabia include Khunale school.
History and culture
History
The history of the tabia is strongly confounded with the history of Tembien.
Religion and churches
Most inhabitants are Orthodox Christians. The following churches are located in the tabia:
Arba’ite Insesa
Abune Kiros
Kidane Mihret, at the foot of, and partly under Tinsehe’s waterfall, in a forested cove
''Inda Siwa'', the local beer houses
In the main villages, there are traditional beer houses, often in unique settings, where people socialise. Well known in the tabia are
Kindhafti Abadi at Tinsehe
Genet Gebrehiwet at Tinsehe
Roads and communication
The main road Mekelle – Hagere Selam – Abiy Addi runs at the southern edge of the tabia. There are regular bus services to these towns. Further, a rural access road links Tinsehe and Addi Werho to the main asphalt road.
Tourism
Its mountainous nature and proximity to Mekelle make the tabia fit for tourism. As compared to many other mountain areas in Ethiopia the villages are quite accessible, and during walks visitors may be invited for coffee, lunch or even for an overnight stay in a rural homestead.
Touristic attractions
Tinsehe waterfall
Geotouristic sites
The high variability of geological formations and the rugged topography invite for geological and geographic tourism or "geotourism". Geosites in the tabia include: