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- Jaa
- keskiviikko 21. joulukuuta 2022 klo 13.00
- ☀️ 23 °C
- Korkeus: 176 m
EgyptiMaqābir al Mulūk25°44’25” N 32°36’7” E
Valley of the Kings

In ancient Egypt, when you died your body would be mummified and your soul would enter the underworld to meet Osiris who judged your soul. This determined if your soul was worthy enough to enter the Kingdom of Osiris.
Your heart would be weighed on a scale against a feather. If it was lighter than the feather, it meant you were good and you would enter the Kingdom of Osiris. If not, your heart would be eaten by Goddess Ammut and your soul destroyed.
The tombs in the Valley of the Kings were created to transmit these kings to the underworld and the more elaborate the tomb, the more elaborate the send-off. Despite the name, out of the 63 tombs that have been discovered, only twenty are kings. Some are noblemen and family members of royalty.
We are staying on the East Bank now but when we return to Luxor after our trip south we will be staying on the West Bank for one full day. But apparently one day isn’t enough time on the West Bank so today we went across the river to see the Valley of the Kings.
We arranged for a driver to take us there, Allah, in a white car. Wouldn’t you know but another Allah met us in a white car and we started on our way. Then about 10 minutes later, we get a call that the driver was waiting for us. He was waiting for us? We had to tell the driver to go back because there was a mixup with Allahs and white cars. He graciously turned back and didn’t accept any money from us.
Then we were off with the right Allah, who turned out to be a real gentleman who spoke well in English. He gave us the lowdown on how to get tickets and more tickets for the tufftuffs (little shuttle cars) that would take us into the Valley. He said that it would probably take us 2 hours but we were lucky because there were very few tourists when we went at around 2:30 pm. What a bonus.
We went into 4 King’s tombs - Ramses V &VI, Ramses III, Ramses IX and Tawroset/Sethnakht - and once again we were very impressed by what we saw. The colours on the thousands of images were so bright and the carvings so precise. How exciting it must have been for the archaeologists to have found them.
We could have visited King Tut’s tomb but apparently it is very small. On top of that, everything was taken out of it and placed in the Egypt Museum in Cairo so there isn’t much to see.Lue lisää
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- torstai 22. joulukuuta 2022 klo 9.00
- ⛅ 15 °C
- Korkeus: 83 m
EgyptiTur‘at Aşfūn25°17’37” N 32°33’12” E
Day 1 - Sailing Up the Nile

The big day has arrived for our sailing trip up the Nile!
Eleven people were picked up in Luxor and we were driven 50 km south to Esna, where our Dahabiya sailboat, the Loulia, is moored. We are sailing on the Nile for four days from Esna to Aswan on this beautiful boat.
A Dahabiya is an old-fashioned, Victorian, 2 sail sailboat that has 4 cabins and 2 suites, so room for 12 people. These are the same sailing vessels used during the nineteenth century by many archeologists, who counted on them as sailing houses, and even royalty who viewed them as the most comfortable way to tour the Nile. We were advised to travel up the Nile rather than down so that we could actually sail. If there isn’t a wind, the boat is towed by a tugboat. I think that there are at least 8 crew members, a cook, Mohamed, and the guide, Abdullah.
The plumbing and water filtration systems are good. During the day, when we aren’t visiting a site, we can curl up in a corner on the deck to read, talk to others, play games or just watch the scenery. All meals are provided and the food comes from farmers and markets on the way. What luxury.
So who are we travelling with? Our Egyptologist guide, Abdullah, who studied the history of Egypt at the university of Alexandria for 7 years. A Dutch vice principal and her mechanic husband, Marit and Chris. Two lawyers from Brooklyn Hilary and Sal and their two delightful teenage daughters, Anna and Sarah. A French gynaecologist Silvie, and her two daughters, Johanna and Emily as well as one daughter’s husband, Ahmed, who is Egyptian. So an eclectic mix.
Before setting out, we walked a short distance to the Esna Temple of Khnum. A short while ago work was done on this temple to clean the walls and ceilings. Archaeologists were amazed to find that under all the dust, dirt and soot there were vividly painted coloured figures that covered the walls, columns and ceiling. Backgrounds were left white. Archaeologists had long believed that the colours had been lost to time.
Returning to the boat we walked through the bustling local market. It is actually overcast and quite cold today, maybe 6C. It is the first day that we haven’t had the sun. We needed our jackets and a couple layers today.
We were supposed to sail to El Kab and Qessia today but there was a sandstorm there so we moored on the banks of the river and did a walkabout around a little farming village. The kids loved entertaining us by singing, showing us their bikes and trying to speak English.
Our lunch and dinner were delicious and gave us all an opportunity to get to know each other a bit.Lue lisää
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- perjantai 23. joulukuuta 2022
- ☀️ 20 °C
- Korkeus: 72 m
EgyptiKafr al ‘Awḑalāb24°59’57” N 32°51’46” E
Day 2 - Sailing Up The Nile

Being on a Dahabiya sailboat is a wonderful way to see the Nile. It is quiet and peaceful. Today started out wonderfully, warm and sunny - in contrast to yesterday.
Chris and I were up early as usual but the generator doesn’t come on until 7 a.m. I went out on deck and it was beautiful to watch the sun come up. We are hearing about a huge snowstorm in Ontario that is causing flight cancellations and closures. Pretty nasty for people wanting to travel to see family members right before Christmas.
This morning, a tug pulled us to the town of Edfu where we visited the temple of Horus (in Greece he was known as Apollo), one of the best preserved temples in Egypt. You would think that we would be tired of visiting temples but each one is quite different from the others and each one has its story.
According to myth, this site was where the falcon- headed god, Horus, fought a battle with his uncle, Seth, who had cruelly murdered Horus’ father, Osiris.
We have enjoyed having an Egyptologist with us to explain the history and stories that the temples are telling us.
The sandstone temple was built between 237 and 57 B.C. but abandoned in 391 when the Christians banned pagan worship and razed many of the temple’s carved reliefs. Over time, the temple became buried 12m (39’) beneath drifting desert sand and layers of river silt. Local people built their homes directly over the temple grounds. Only the tops of the temple gateways were visible in 1798 when the French identified it. In 1860, work began to free the temple from the sand. Because it had been buried, it is beautifully preserved.
.We returned to the boat for a lovely lunch and the sail was lifted so we could sail to a small island where the boat was moored for our second night.Lue lisää
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- lauantai 24. joulukuuta 2022
- ☀️ 21 °C
- Korkeus: 72 m
EgyptiKafr al ‘Awḑalāb24°59’57” N 32°51’46” E
Day 3 - Sailing Up the Nile

Yesterday, we moored in Gilbil El Silsila where the cliffs on both sides make this spot the narrowest point on the Nile. At one time a long chain was strung across the river and people had to stop to show what they were carrying and pay a tax before going on. We actually saw the hole that the chain went through the rock on our side.
During the early morning the Nile is lovely. It is so calm, quiet and peaceful. While we were doing a little birdwatching, we noticed that some plastics have collected at the side of the river - water bottles mainly, as well as plastic bags, etc., but not a lot yet. Most garbage is burned from what I can see.
About 430 species of birds have been seen in Egypt. We saw herons, a bittern, plovers, kingfishers, swamp hens, ducks, egrets and an osprey in this spot. Of course, we have seen lots of pigeons, house sparrows and crows too, but we are actively looking for a sighting of a hoopoe or a black ibis.
Once again, we had beautiful weather. After eating a hearty Egyptian breakfast, we went ashore and checked out this site.
The pyramids in Cairo were made primarily of limestone but the temples in Luxor and the areas south of it were made of blocks of sandstone. Gebel El Silsila was the major quarry site for sandstone. Blocks were cut out and floated down the Nile to Luxor tied to tree trunks. Thousands of workers lived here.
Shrines dedicated to Horemheb, Seti I, Ramesses II and Merenptah were carved into the rock here. You could see that the Christians were here as white crosses were painted over the images in several spots. We walked along the shore and saw where masons carved their signatures and saw several old tombs. Our guide can read hieroglyphs so he explained what the writing said.
We returned to the boat and continued up the Nile towards the double temple of Haroeris and Sobek the crocodile god in Kom Ombo.
But before we got there, we had an opportunity to go swimming in the Nile! The boat stopped at a sandy beach and several brave souls, including the two of us, donned bathing suits and jumped into the cold water (18C?). We were surprised by the strength of the current even just a few meters away from the shore.
A delicious and healthy warm lunch was served shortly afterwards. I must say that we have only eaten very tasty Egyptian meals - lots of different local vegetables at every meal, a meat, pasta or rice, a salad, bread and more. The food is served attractively in big dishes that we pass around. For lunch today, we had carrots, cauliflower, zucchini, chicken, pasta and salad. So good.
By the time that we finished lunch, we were close to Kom Ombo. We had travelled through fertile farming areas where sugar cane grew and cows and water buffalo grazed. Kingfishers swooped down and water birds waded in the shallow water. In the past, sacred crocodiles basked in the sun on the banks.
We rounded a bend in the Nile and saw the city. At one time it was an important trading centre and military base. Gold was traded here but more importantly African elephants that were brought in from Ethiopia.
We docked and then walked a short distance, through children selling trinkets, to the temple. As the temple was dedicated to two gods, it was built in a symmetrical manner. Two entrances, two linked halls with carvings of the two gods on either side, two altars, and twin sanctuaries. I read that there may even have been two groups of priests.
As usual, we were in awe of the carvings and the height of the temple. Supposedly it took 400 years to build this temple. Building it up must have been a feat as the blocks are so big. Abdullah told us that they built sand ramps and used animals to pull the blocks up to the top. It took years to get them in place, Then the carvings were started and painted.
Outside of the temple, we visited the Crocodile Museum that houses the mummies of 40 sacred crocodiles ranging from 2- 5 m long. There were crocodile coffins and sarcophagi, eggs and fetuses and statues of the crocodile god.
On our return to the boat, we noticed that the harbour had filled up with cruise ships and taking people on tours to see the temple. Our beautiful sailboat is so much nicer than the ships we saw. Also, we can go into and stop at places that the bigger ships can’t. And best of all the boat moves silently. We all love it.
We moved on to the island of Maniha, where the Dahabiya will moor for the night. It has been a full day so we are all just relaxing, reading or writing before our 7 p.m. dinner. What a life…Lue lisää
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- sunnuntai 25. joulukuuta 2022
- ☀️ 21 °C
- Korkeus: 107 m
EgyptiElephantine24°5’22” N 32°53’51” E
Day 4 - Sailing Up the Nile

Merry Christmas from Egypt!
Last night was a lot of fun. The 12 of us bonded over the past 3 days and have enjoyed each others’ company. I really like the fact that conversations are interesting and positive and we are like-minded when decisions have to be made. A very good group.
All of us eat our delicious meals together and noisily around a big table. The youngest is 21 years old and the oldest, Chris, is 72. We have lots to laugh and talk about. Our surprise dessert was a big heart-shaped cake decorated for Christmas! And then the chef and crew came out with a drum and sang for us. All of us got up and had fun trying to dance like the Egyptians.
Today we sail to Daraw and take a walking tour to the village to visit the largest camel market in Egypt. It was once the last stop on the famous 40-day desert road between Sudan and Egypt.
Camels are sold here every day of the week but Tuesdays, Saturdays and Sundays are the main days and today is Sunday. The Sudanese camels are kept in quarantine for 2 days before being sold. From here, most of them go to another camel market north of Cairo where they are either sold to farmers or slaughtered for meat.
We sailed onwards to the Nubian village of El Koubania, near Aswan. The town, which seemed like a ghost town to us, lies on the eastern banks of the river. The land around the dusty village was lush and with green farmland. I read that “ Nubians are an ethnolinguistic group of Africans indigenous to present-day Sudan and southern Egypt who originate from the early inhabitants of the central Nile valley, believed to be one of the earliest cradles of civilization.”
We arrived just as the little children were getting out of the school and riding their donkeys home. The rest of the village was quiet. There are no cars there. All the men were working on farms and we did see a few women talking outside of their houses but not many. Our guide pointed out that every third house was empty. Young people leave the village for work and don’t come back.
A few of the houses had walls that were decorated with camels, buses, ships, airplanes and basically all different types of transportation. Abdullah explained that when the house owner has completed the Haj pilgrimage (the Muslim tradition to visit Mecca in Saudi Arabia), they illustrate their trip on the exterior walls of their houses and then everyone knows that they have done it. Saudi Arabia is not that far from their village. People go east through the desert and then it’s a couple of hours on a boat ride across the Red Sea to Saudi Arabia.
We returned to the boat and sailed on to another sandy beach where a few people, including Chris, put their bathing suits on so that they could say that they went swimming in the Nile on Christmas Day.
The boat continued on to Aswan where we moored for our last night in the Dahabiya. Once again, our meal, duck, was excellent.
Aswan is about 500 miles south of Cairo and 200 miles north of Sudan.
We saw an interesting phenomenon. The bright new moon was within a pale full moon and it went DOWN in the sky and disappeared by 8 p.m. Hard to explain, but that’s what it did!
Tomorrow morning, we will say goodbye to our new friends and be picked up at 8 for our short journey by van and ferry to Elephantine Island across from Aswan.Lue lisää
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- maanantai 26. joulukuuta 2022
- ☀️ 40 °C
- Korkeus: 86 m
EgyptiElephantine24°5’5” N 32°53’9” E
Ending Our Boat Trip in Aswan

Today our boat trip ended after breakfast. All of us headed in different directions. We are staying in Aswan on Elephantine Island for 3 days. Chris and Marit went to Abu Simbel and will return to Aswan tomorrow. Hilary and Sal and their daughters were staying at the famous Cataract Hotel and will fly to Abu Simbel, tomorrow. Silvie’s French family were flying back to their respective homes in Paris, Berlin and Cairo. We wish that everyone has a safe trip home.
Aswan is the starting or ending point of many Nile Cruises, but it’s also a destination on its own. With its Nubian culture, it feels different from the rest of Egypt. There are lots of places to visit - museums, temples, a monastery, Nubian villages, the high dam and local markets. It is also from Aswan that you can do a day trip to the famous Abu Simbel.
We were dropped off at the ferry docks and taken across the river to Elephantine Island. The island is the largest of Aswan’s islands. It was once a significant trading post, particularly for ivory, which may be the reason for the name (elephantine means elephant in Greek).
The island is small and we easily found the Mango Guest House. It was pretty early to be checking in but the owner Pook, from Denmark, met us, offered us tea and coffee and gave us tips for places to visit.
She suggested that today we could take a ferry to Aswan, walk up the Corniche and get a motorboat that would take us across the Nile to the Tombs on the West Bank. After seeing the tombs, we could walk 4 km across the desert, or take a camel, to an old Coptic monastery, have lunch at the Sunset Place tent and then get a boat to bring us back to the island. Sounded like a plan.
The Tombs of the Nobles located in Aswan are usually called the tombs of Qubat El Hawa. They date back to the Old and Middle Kingdoms (2500 BC and 2000 BC) and are built following a simple plan - an entrance hall, a pillared room and a corridor leading to the burial chamber.
The wall paintings inside the Tombs of the Nobles were quite different from others that we have seen. They were colourful and they clearly displayed the daily life activities of the ancient Egyptians. We had to climb a long set of stairs to get up to the tombs but then we had a great view of Aswan and the Nile looking east, and the desert looking west.
From there, we had to make a decision about how to get to the Monastery of St. Simeon. The 4 km walk through the desert followed a camel trail. Hmmmn. It’s not so easy to walk on the fine sand with no shade…
We decided to ‘rent’ a camel for the two of us but the saddles are brutal and camel riding is not the most pleasant. I decided to walk rather than endure the pain. Chris rode to start. I walked with the camel owner, who insisted on holding my hand, in the shade of the camel. My shoes and socks filled up with sand. We came to a steep hill that went up to the monastery and Chris and I traded spots.
The Monastery of St. Simeon, also known as the Anba Hatra Monastery. Visiting this Coptic monastery provided us with a glimpse of the early days of Christianity in Egypt and how the monks lived as far back as the 7th century. Unlike some other Egyptian ruins, this attraction does not draw crowds, so it made for a pleasant experience. We had fun trying to guess the function of each section of the monastery by looking for clues. A giant grist stone indicated the mill. Small rooms with stone benches were probably the dorm. We could imagine people cooking in the kitchen. We even identified stables and washing areas, maybe toilets too?
By now, we were hungry and easily found the Sunset Place near the Nile. We had a wonderful meal with a Stella beer under a big tent with cats and dogs for company. Everything was cooked from scratch so we had to wait a bit but it was worth it. The owner arranged to have a boat take us back to our island. All pretty easy.
When we got back, I was pretty pooped out. We both just had a shower and relaxed in our room.
Tomorrow we will explore Elephantine Island.Lue lisää
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- tiistai 27. joulukuuta 2022 klo 6.57
- ☀️ 10 °C
- Korkeus: 92 m
EgyptiElephantine24°5’23” N 32°53’21” E
Mango Guesthouse

While in Aswan we based ourselves at the Mango Guesthouse on Elephantine Island just a short boat ride from the mainland.
On the island there are no roads or motor vehicles, just tiny sandy paths between houses. Lots of people were outside and everyone was friendly. It is much quieter and old-fashioned on the island. We are so happy that we made the decision to stay here.
Riding on the ferry is a fun experience. We could easily and cheaply cross the river to busy Aswan in minutes. Two completely different worlds.
Bu the way, we didn’t realize that men sit in one section of the boat and the women in an other and we just sat together, wherever. We got some funny looks but we get funny looks all the time. Oh well, we are tourists. From now on we will follow the rules.
P.S. We just learned that the men don’t care but the women do not want to be touched by any men except their husbands. And heaven forbid if other women see a man touch you. The tongues would wag!Lue lisää
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- tiistai 27. joulukuuta 2022 klo 9.00
- ☀️ 14 °C
- Korkeus: 92 m
EgyptiElephantine24°5’23” N 32°53’21” E
Elephantine Island

Today’s weather. Low of 10C and high of 25C. Sunny all day.
Mornings outside are surprisingly cold but our puffer jackets, buffs and layers have been awesome!
There seems to be so much to see here. There is no way that we could visit all that Aswan has to offer in the time that we are here.
We decided that since we have already seen so many temples and tombs, and we have travelled so much in the past 18 days, that we would just omit the trip to Abu Simbel. Hopefully we won’t regret it. Later today, we are meeting up with Marit and Chris from Holland who went there right after leaving the boat yesterday, so we will hear about their trip and see their photos later today.
This morning, we went for a walk around the Island. There are two Nubian villages here. Many of the Nubians in the villages and farms on the Nile were relocated here during the last half of the twentieth century as construction of the High Dam in Aswan neared completion. The construction of the dam essentially meant that the Nubian communities had no option but to move as their homes were going to be flooded in the creation of the huge Lake Nasser.
So what did we see as we walked around the quiet village we are staying in?
- a shop with a man weaving on a loom and filled with lovely hand- woven cotton, linen and silk/linen shawls.
- a primary school. The kids are studying for exams so they weren’t at school but we met teachers and the headmaster and could look around.
- the inside of a Nubian house. The man took us on a tour of his house that was filled with stuffed and live crocodiles!
We passed a group of ladies and Chris noticed a Mickey Mouse design on the front of an old lady’s dress. He pointed to it to make conversation and the old lady screamed and backed away, giving him a dirty look. Later we learned that women do not allow any man to touch them in any way. Only their husbands can do that. He didn’t touch her but she thought that he might. We passed this lady again later in the day and she gave Chris the evil eye and once again loudly scolded him, we think, in front of her women friends.
The Aswan Archaeological Museum is close by and so are the 2 km square km ancient ruins of Abu with its Temples of Khnum and Satet. The temples date back to 1497 BC. and that’s where we met three of our fellow boat mates.
In the afternoon, we crossed the river and went to the bustling city of Aswan.Lue lisää
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- tiistai 27. joulukuuta 2022 klo 11.30
- ☀️ 10 °C
- Korkeus: 89 m
EgyptiElephantine24°5’2” N 32°53’12” E
Nilometer

While visiting the ruins on Elephantine Island, we were on a quest to find an interesting instrument called a Nilometer – a staircase under a temple that was used to gage the Nile’s water level and its clarity right up to the 19th century. We weren’t sure what we were looking for but we did find it!
The Nilometer on this island, under the old temple, had 52 evenly-spaced steps that led straight down to the Nile, and there were white indicator markings on the walls at different levels for each step. Before the Aswan Dam was built, in the 1960s, the river water must have come up pretty high as the staircase was long. Actually we found two Nilometers in the ruins but the other staircase was blocked off.
Only priests and rulers, whether pharaohs or later, Roman or Arab leaders, were allowed to monitor the nilometers, and their ability to predict the behavior of the Nile was used to impress the common people. And also to determine how much money would be collected in taxes. This is why so many nilometers were built in temples, where only priests would be able to access the mysterious instrument.
Earlier, we did see another Nilometer in the Temple of Kom Ombo, but had no clue what it was. An Egyptian man try to tell us what it was by throwing a rock into a dark staircase and we heard a splash. But we thought that he was saying, millimetre, so it didn’t make sense. We thought that it was just a flooded stairway. Anyways, the water in that one came from the Nile by way of a canal that deposited it into a cistern. And again, the indicating markers were carved into the wall, accessible by staircases for the priests and rulers who predicted the fate of the Egyptian crop.Lue lisää
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- tiistai 27. joulukuuta 2022 klo 12.30
- ☀️ 21 °C
- Korkeus: 139 m
EgyptiJabal Bās24°3’59” N 32°52’43” E
Aswan’s East Bank

Today we were surprised to see all of our fellow boat travellers in various places in Aswan! The American family in the Elephantine ruins. The Dutch couple at the Mango Guesthouse and the French family on the ferry. It’s a small world.
The Dutch couple, Marit and Chris, arrived from their trip to Abu Simbel at around lunchtime and we all went to eat a jerk chicken and tagine lunch at the Bob Marley restaurant near the ferry landing. We ate home-cooked food on a colourfully decorated terrace overlooking all the activity on the Nile River and Aswan city. The food was good and the experience was relaxing. We will go back.
We crossed the river to the bustling city of Aswan where we split up. Chris and I wanted to visit the award-winning Nubian Museum which is close to the Old Cataract Hotel where Agatha Christie’s book, Death on the Nile, took place.
The museum was a treat to visit as the building is lovely. It showcases the history, art and culture of Nubia and serves as a reminder of what was lost beneath Lake Nasser when the Aswan High Dam was built. Exhibits are beautifully displayed and explanations in Arabic and English clearly told us what life was like for the Nubians from 4500 BC through to the present day.
We tried to visit the Americans we met on the boat trip who were staying at the Old Cataract Hotel but security was tight and we were told that we had to pay an entry fee of $35. Well that wasn’t happening so we moved on. Little did we know that they would give us a voucher that could be used for food and drink once inside. Actually it isn’t a bad way to control the crowds that want to see this old and famous hotel. Scenes from the Death on the Nile movie were filmed here.
Next door to the hotel there is a public garden called the Feryal Garden. What we enjoyed the most was the quietness of the park as it was hassle-free. There wasn’t anyone trying to sell anything or offering to guide you so it was a very pleasant change from the streets just outside the gates.
The park is built on a granite hill. It's multi-level with winding paths, big trees and terraces overlooking the Nile. It has good views over the river and we enjoyed seeing the local people relaxing there while the sun went down. I think that we were the only tourists.
Once the sun goes down, it gets dark fast so we went back across the river to our guesthouse where we ordered a Nubian pizza with Marit and Chris.Lue lisää
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- keskiviikko 28. joulukuuta 2022 klo 0.25
- 🌙 12 °C
- Korkeus: 92 m
EgyptiElephantine24°5’23” N 32°53’21” E
Motorboat Trip Through the Cataracts

We are getting a little tired of tours featuring tombs, ruins and temples, so we decided to do something a little different with our Dutch friends, Marit and Chris. We found out that we could easily rent a motorboat with a driver to take us further up the Nile through an area known as the Cataract.
Pook, our landlady, kindly arranged to have a motorboat ready to pick us up at 10:30 a.m. It cost us less than $15 an hour and we could stop wherever and whenever we wanted to. What a deal. We started out by going around Elephantine Island, watching young boys on surfboards, singing the Macarena song while hitching rides on the sides of tourist boats. They will do anything for a buck, or a quarter.
Once again we saw the tombs of the nobles but this time from the river. The ramps that the sarcophagi were pulled up on to the tombs, were clearly visible.
Aswan’s botanical garden is located on a nearby island. Until 1916, it was the property of a Lord Kitchener who was a commander of the British forces. He had a passion for beautiful palms and plants and transformed the whole island into a botanical garden. We asked our driver to drop us off at the entrance and then pick us up at the other end of the island.
The island covers 6.8 hectares or 16 acres and is full of plants from the Far East, India and parts of Africa. Because of the plants and the island’s location, it is full of birds, and vendors. Of course, you can’t visit any part of Egypt without the usual and somewhat annoying vendors asking, “Where you from?” and “What is your name?” before starting the sales pitch. We just try to ignore them.
We got back into our boat and continued on into the cataract area.
Upstream from the island, the Nile is ‘interrupted’ for about 5 km by different sizes and shapes of granite blocks. Before the dam was built, the river used to rush through these blocks throwing up “high plumes of spray in a deafening roar”. That was the way that travellers in the 1800’s used to describe it. Now the cataracts look much different and the boulders are high and dry, creating little islands in the river. It was a very pretty.
Before we turned to go back to Aswan, we stopped at a little, colourful Nubian village and did a walkabout. The Nubian houses are painted with bright colours, the floors are covered with sand, and the domed houses have lots of windows and an open roof. This island’s livelihood depends on tourists so upon disembarkment, we were greeted by little boys playing drums and singing and hoping for money. As we walked further into the village, we passed riverside restaurants and lots of stalls selling clothes, spices, handmade cotton scarves and trinkets made in Egypt. It wasn’t what we expected to see but it is what it is.
We went into a primary school where a teacher, for a tip, demonstrated teaching a lesson. We were the students. He taught us how to say the numbers from 1 - 10. I’m afraid that we didn’t do very well with our pronunciation or remembering the words. Chris was asked to recite the Arabic numbers from one to ten. An impossible task! So he had to go to the front, put his hands in the air and was lightly ‘spanked’ with a ruler by the teacher every time he mispronounced a word.
In general, the Nubians seem friendly and hospitable. They usually welcome people by offering them a cup of hot tea, either Egyptian tea (Hibiscus tea or Karkade) or Kenyan tea and it is considered rude to refuse. Time is different here.
Just an aside - most of the people we met had teeth that were in very bad shape. I don’t think that they ever brush them. The dentists’ sole job is to pull teeth.
After our visit, we boarded the boat and headed back down the river to Aswan. We asked to be let off at the old Cataract hotel, where Agatha Christie wrote her famous book “Death on the Nile”. Our boat trip lasted 2 1/2 hours and it was a perfect way to spend a few peaceful hours.
From there, we walked through the non tourist area of Aswan (thanks Chris for the tour, lol ) to the granite quarry where an unfinished obelisk is located. More about that in the next footprint.
At the end of our little trip, we felt that we had done enough so we took a taxi back to ferry docks, crossed the river and had lunch once again at the Bob Marley restaurant.Lue lisää
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- keskiviikko 28. joulukuuta 2022 klo 14.00
- ☀️ 23 °C
- Korkeus: 109 m
EgyptiJabal Bās24°4’13” N 32°53’42” E
Unfinished Obelisk in the Granite Quarry

The captain of the boat we were on dropped us off at the dock near the Old Cataract Hotel so that we could walk to the old granite quarry where Egypt’s giant obelisks were made.
An obelisk is a tall, four-sided, narrow tapering monument which ends in a pyramid-like shape at the top. For Egyptians, the obelisk was a monument that was very erected to commemorate an individual or event, and honor the gods.
We wanted to go there to see what would have been the largest of all Egyptian obelisks (1280 BC) but … it’s construction was abandoned due to the appearance of a crack in its shaft. Theories say that it could have cracked during an earthquake. If it had been finished it would have stood 42.5 m tall and weighed about 1,200 tons.
Apparently, workers carved the obelisk using very hard dolorite balls to pound the granite rock into shape. I cannot imagine how hard the work would have been in the searing summer heat. To release the obelisk, depressions were made around the obelisk and wedges of palm wood were placed under its edges. These were soaked in water so they would expand and crack the rock.
Once the obelisk is released, the hard work of transporting the tower to the shore and then up the Nile to the the great temples of the north, started. Then, raising it upright. The four of us tried hard to figure out how in the world they did it! An amazing feat.Lue lisää
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- torstai 29. joulukuuta 2022 klo 15.00
- ☀️ 22 °C
- Korkeus: 69 m
EgyptiLuxor25°41’56” N 32°37’52” E
Travel Day - Aswan to Luxor

Today is a travel day. Usually a little hectic but I would say, a little more hectic here. Haha. Everything is in Arabic and we are on our own. A bit of an adventure.
I don't want to bore you so I am suggesting that you stop reading here. To us, the afternoon was full of crazy experiences that can't be explained. You had to be here... but here is the calm version.
This morning, we ate breakfast packed up said goodbye to our Dutch friends, took the ferry to Aswan and then went into the souk to buy our grandkids some t-shirts. Negotiating a price in Egypt is a process that requires patience, good humour, conversation, some acting and a cup of tea. It can be fun as long as you aren't in a hurry. We did okay.
We returned to the island, had some lunch picked up our bags, took the ferry back to Aswan, got a taxi to the train station and then had to figure out the train system as everything was in Arabic.
We were told that there were no seats left in the first class cars at 3 pm so we saved ourselves a few Egyptian pounds and bought 2nd class tickets. We could deal with dirt for 3 hours. Lysol handiwipes came in handy.
We recognized the Luxor train station but rather than get hassled by all the touts we took a cab to the river. Our guesthouse sent a boat to meet us and to take us across the river to the west Bank where the house is located. We were in for a pleasant surprise when we saw our apartment!Lue lisää
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- perjantai 30. joulukuuta 2022 klo 11.09
- ☀️ 18 °C
- Korkeus: 58 m
EgyptiLuxor25°41’55” N 32°37’54” E
The Luxor Guesthouse

We lucked out by staying in this lovely, clean guesthouse with great service on the West Bank in Luxor.
From the train station, we took a taxi to the last king’s Winter Palace, now a hotel, and waited for a boat ride across the Nile to where we are staying. Our host, Ahmed, met us at the pier after praying at the mosque. He has been to Mecca on a pilgrimage three times and said that the experience was very meaningful.
We arrived in the dark so some of the photos were taken then. Most of the pictures were taken from our balconyLue lisää
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- perjantai 30. joulukuuta 2022 klo 14.00
- ☀️ 23 °C
- Korkeus: 77 m
EgyptiMedinet Habu25°43’12” N 32°36’3” E
Luxor’s West Bank - Habu Medihat

The morning was glorious. The big Egyptian sun came up over Luxor and the Nile, and it was beautiful. Thanks Ra, (the sun god), for rejuvenating us after a long travel afternoon yesterday.
We have only one full day here before heading to the Red Sea. The guesthouse that we are staying in is excellent and it is very peaceful here. Birds are singing, donkeys braying, a variety of boats are going down the river and here local people are going about their business in a casual, laidback way. Here, it is a lot quieter and peaceful than in Luxor, which we can see and hear across the river!
The East Bank has a lot to see but the West Bank is where all the main archaeological sites are located. A village on this side, Gourna, was expropriated and villagers were moved when important statues or temples were discovered under their homes. Villagers were using tombs as their septic tanks! I think though that for years the villagers didn’t tell anyone about anything that they found in their backyards. By being moved, they lost their livelihoods, I.e. selling trinkets to foreigners.
We really thought hard about whether we wanted to visit another temple site while we are here. The apartment is so roomy, the terrace is lovely and we are getting lazier. But reading about Medihat Habu, a site not usually seen by tourists, intrigued us. So, we arranged to visit it in the afternoon with Ahmed, the lovely man that has made our stay at the guesthouse so special. While we visited the temple, our laundry was being done.
Ramesses III, who reigned from 1184—1153 BC, was the last of the great pharaohs of Egypt. During his reign, Medinat Habu functioned as a walled city with the temple and an administrative center inside of walls that protected the inhabitants of the area during hard times. Later on, the complex became a walled town for Coptic Christians living in the area.
We decided to use Ahmed as a guide. He was an expert on Egyptian history and was able to explain and answer many questions that we had unanswered during out trip so far. It was the perfect time to get a guide!
Our first impression of the temple was awe. It is in such good condition and imposing. The carvings are exquisite. We entered through a massive stone gate (18 m) that once had huge wooden doors. And I mean it when I say massive.
The complex behind it, the Temples of Ramesses III, has relief carvings depicting the king defeating Egypt’s rivals from Libya and the Sea Peoples and what was done to prisoners (hands and penises were cut off while scribes recorded the numbers). In fact, the whole temple illustrated his warring successes. Etchings in the stones were very deep so that they couldn’t be scraped off without destroying the stone. It would be a permanent record for future generations.
From the two main temples we continued into several holy courtyards with more well-preserved reliefs and columns, many with their coloring still intact, and then leading into a final very sacred hypostyle hall (a room with huge pillars supporting the roof).
We are always amazed by the vibrant colours ( green, red, blue, yellow, white, black ) in the reliefs. How in the world have the colours remained so vibrant? Ahmed didn’t really know but seemed to think that the coloured mineral pigments were rubbed right into the stone.
We were so happy to end the temple part of our trip with Ahmed. He was great!
But it wasn’t quite the last temple… See the following footprint.Lue lisää
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- perjantai 30. joulukuuta 2022 klo 16.00
- ☀️ 22 °C
- Korkeus: 103 m
EgyptiMaqābir al Malikāt25°43’39” N 32°35’35” E
Hatshepsut Temple

Ahmed felt that we could just make it to the Hapshepsut temple before the ticket office closed at 4:30 pm, but just before we got there at 4:15, it closed. He spoke to a travel agent who just happened to have 2 extra tickets so we were able to happily go in.
A little tuff tuff train took us to an area that had rugged limestone cliffs that rose nearly 300 m above the desert plain. At the foot of these cliffs sits the beautiful Temple of Hatshepsut. It has clean lines and looks very modern but it was built into the mountain between 1473 and 1458 BC.
It must have been even more stunning when it was built as there used to be a wide road flanked by sphinxes and gardens with exotic trees and perfumed plants leading up to it.
Considered one of Egypt's greatest pharaohs, man or woman, Hatshepsut, a woman, brought great wealth and artistry to her land. She was usually carved or drawn as a man, complete with muscles and a beard, as was the artistic tradition for pharaohs. But historians knew the truth as she always made sure the art included a reference to being a woman, such as “Daughter of Re” or “His Majesty, Herself.” When she died in 1458 B.C., Egypt would not see as powerful a female ruler for another 1,400 years, when Cleopatra came to the throne.
She sponsored one of Egypt's most successful trading expeditions, bringing back gold, ebony, and incense from a place called Punt (probably modern-day Eritrea). One of the reliefs at the entrance, documents this boat trip. It also shows strange animals and plants as well as different looking people and houses.
The temple was vandalized over the centuries. Hatshepsut’s stepson had her name and feminine pronouns removed from many of the stones and several statues of her destroyed. Two decades after her death, he decided that all evidence of her reign as king of Egypt should be erased, but his reasons remain unclear.
Later, early Christians (6th to 8th century) turned the temple into a monastery and defaced many of the reliefs. But it is still a beautiful and unique building with beautiful reliefs and we were happy to have seen it before we leave Luxor.Lue lisää
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- lauantai 31. joulukuuta 2022 klo 10.00
- ⛅ 15 °C
- Korkeus: 78 m
EgyptiLuxor25°41’57” N 32°37’52” E
Hurghada, the Cancun of Egypt?

We have met several European travellers who have raved about Hurghada. It is located on the coast of the Red Sea and is one of Egypt's most popular and affordable tourist destinations. We have been told that it has beautiful beaches and perfect crystal-clear waters for diving and snorkelling. It used to be a tiny fishing village before Egypt's 1980s tourism boom. Now the city stretches 20km along the Red Sea. It is very different from the Egypt that we have been visiting on the Nile.
We have met several good drivers who said that they’d drive us for a fair price. We figured that it did cost more than the bus ($100) but it would be a much shorter and better drive, and door to door. So, we hired Abdo, one of Mohammed’s cousins.
The 3 1/2 hour drive took us north beside the Nile, then east through a big desert, then through the dry mountains close to Red Sea and then to the populated area near Hurghada.
With Chris’ help, the driver found our home for 5 days - the Redcon Suites - just in time for New Years Eve celebrations.Lue lisää
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- lauantai 31. joulukuuta 2022 klo 20.00
- ⛅ 14 °C
- Korkeus: 58 m
EgyptiLuxor25°41’55” N 32°37’54” E
New Years Eve in Hurghada, Egypt

A Happy New Year to all of our family and friends from Egypt’s Cancun!
People in Egypt celebrate new year with fireworks, parties and family gatherings. Most Egyptian families bring in the New Year without champagne and make their resolutions on burnt pieces of paper, which is followed by dissolving the ashes in alcohol. In some places people enjoy a festive dinner at a hotel that may have performances, shows and dances.
I read that dancing around a fire is one of the oldest traditions of their culture. And, January 1st is celebrated with a sunrise hurrah not a midnight kiss (even though we snuck one in).
Cabbage is another "good luck" vegetable that is eaten on New Year's Day by many. Cabbage leaves are considered a sign of prosperity, representing paper currency. On our way to Hurghada we saw huge cabbages being sold on wagons pulled by donkeys on the streets. In some regions, rice is the lucky food that is eaten on New Year's Day.
We are staying in an apartment building for our time in Hurghada and right next door is a steakhouse called Charly’s Hot Stone Steak. It was very tempting to have a steak in Egypt, especially on New Year’s Eve. So that’s what we did. We hadn’t had lunch because of our drive from Luxor so we had an early dinner before the parties began.
The dinner was amazing. We ordered an appetizer of mussels that came with yummy bread and dips as well as a glass of white wine and a big bottle of Stella beer. Then a big plate of grilled vegetable, two salads and another big plate of French fries arrived. This was followed by two raw steaks - one 300g and the other 350g. - sitting on a heated brick-sized black rock. We hardly had any room left on our table! The idea was that the waiter would pour alcohol on the steaks and light them on fire to seat them and the hot stones would cook them to our preference. It was great!
English Christmas music was played and a balloon arch was placed at the entrance of the restaurant. It was such an enjoyable experience and what do you think we paid for all that, and the tip? $52.00 Cdn! We started out the New Year on the right foot!
As we are in an apartment and can cook, we did a small bit of grocery shopping for the first time. Coffee, eggs, bread, cheese, milk, tangerines and apples. Tricky, as most labelling is in Arabic and things don’t look the same.
We have a TV but again it was the first time that we turned one on. The only English channel had world news from Al Jezeera but that was interesting for us. We didn’t last long though. We fell asleep and then got up at 11:30 pm to see the Egyptian year in. We have a balcony overlooking a street and the Red Sea and had a good view of what was going on.
Right at midnight, fireworks were let off on the street below. They must have been aimed at our building because we had to jump around in order to avoid the bits of burnt paper from the fireworks, landing on our balcony. Egyptians seem to love noise so cars were honking horns and people were shouting. It didn’t last long but it was exciting to see.Lue lisää
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- sunnuntai 1. tammikuuta 2023
- ☀️ 22 °C
- Korkeus: 15 m
EgyptiMinqar Channal27°13’34” N 33°50’28” E
Hurghada’s Marina

The new Marina is in a harbour located in the central area of Hurgada. Our apartment is only 2 km away, an easy walk to see some of the 200 mega yachts that are moored there. We left at around 10 a.m. when there were very few people on the streets and it was pretty chilly.
The Marina has a promenade that features restaurants with food from around the world (Italian, Greek, Thai, Argentinian), as well as bars and shops. It is a nice and clean area with views of the sea and the luxury yachts. We visited it in the morning when the marina was rather empty as we imagine that the place comes more alive around the sunset.
As it is a real tourist area, it tends to be a little more expensive for eating out than other places in Hurgada, but it is a popular dining spot worth experiencing. We had a light lunch of vegetable soup and shrimp salad. The views over the bobbing yachts and the Red Sea stretching to the horizon, can’t be beat!
Walking home, we commented on the many big construction projects that were started and abandoned. I wonder how much Covid played in stopping construction. We have seen it everywhere we have gone. Materials are laying around unfinished buildings but no sign of workers…
A little note about the Red Sea. Right now, it is actually a lovely turquoise colour. I guess that at times, it gets a bright red algae bloom that turns the water in the sea red or brown. Thus the name.Lue lisää
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- maanantai 2. tammikuuta 2023 klo 13.00
- ☀️ 22 °C
- Korkeus: 12 m
EgyptiFranken Point27°13’48” N 33°50’34” E
El Mina Mosque

Last night, the disco across the street from where we are had the music going full blast from 11 - 2 am. Yikes. We will give it another try but if it's noisy tonight we have the option to move to a quieter room tomorrow. Crazy resort towns.
About 2.5 km away, near the Marina and fish market, there is a large and impressive mosque called the El- Mina Mosque, or the so-called Heavenly Mosque.
El-Mina Mosque was built out of white marble and has two magnificent minarets, each about 40-metres high. We can easily see them from our apartment.
When we got to the mosque, there had just been a call to prayer so men were praying. We were told that you can always identify a devout muslim as they have a brown spot or zebibah, Arabic for raisin on their forehead. It is a dark circle of callused skin, or in some cases a protruding bump, between the hairline and the eyebrows. It emerges on the spot where worshipers press their foreheads into the ground during daily prayers. We saw many men with this spot.
I hadn't brought a scarf to cover my hair so only Chris went in.
The inside of the mosque has an inner hall that is rich and colourful, with magnificent chandeliers hanging from the ceiling, elaborate arches, carved and engraved walls and a 25-metre high dome.
It opened in 2012. This mosque is located directly on the sea and can accommodate about 10,000 worshipers at the same time. It includes two high minarets, 25 domes, a hall for religious occasions and another for lectures and meetings, and there is a very large square in front of it.
After seeing the mosque, we walked through some back streets and were invited into a shop to have a cup of date tea. We had a quite the conversation with the young man whose family lives in Luxor. He told us how farmers create gardens in the desert. First they dig a well for water and then they bring in the rich mud/silt from the Nile and place it on the sand. It takes a little time to establish the gardens but once trees and plants are in place they are good. Another mystery solved.
We have arranged to go out into the Red Sea tomorrow, board a submarine and go down 22m to see life in the coral reefs. This is a first for us!Lue lisää
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- tiistai 3. tammikuuta 2023 klo 11.00
- ☀️ 21 °C
- Korkeus: Merenkorkeus
EgyptiDishet Abū Minqār27°11’30” N 33°50’13” E
Submarine Trip in the Red Sea

Hurghada is known for its water that is clear, calm and warm for most of the year. It has become popular for water-sports, particularly scuba diving and snorkelling. It’s pretty cool here at this time of the year, so we aren’t going snorkelling. Instead, we made arrangements to go underwater in a submarine. We have never done that before.
We were picked up from our hotel by taxi and taken to a posh resort area for a two hour tour to see the plentiful marine life of the Red Sea. The submarine is the only recreational sub in Africa and the Middle East and carries 44 passengers and has a crew of two pilots. It descends to a depth of 22 meters. I read on their website that there are only 14 recreational subs in the world but I find that hard to believe.
When we got to the dock, it started to rain. It was the first rain that we have had since we arrived in Egypt and didn’t last long. Actually a rainbow appeared over the ocean.
We boarded a big boat that took us on a 1/2 hour ride out to where the sub was docked. The hatch was open and we went down a ladder into the sub. All of us had assigned seats in front of a porthole and a screen. The screen showed what was happening on top of the sub as we descended. Two divers were on top and they dropped into the water as we went down.
The sub went a short distance to a 500 m coral reef full of colourful fish. The divers took turns doing funny antics in front of our windows. They fed the fish right in front of the portholes so the fish were right up close. One diver was taking photos of all of us and making people laugh. You could buy the photos afterwards.
We returned to the submarine docking area, boarded the waiting boat that took us back to the port. It was an interesting undersea ‘safari’ but nowhere near as exciting as the hot air balloon ride we took in Luxor!
Oh, we also got certificates at the end of our journey.Lue lisää
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- tiistai 3. tammikuuta 2023 klo 18.00
- 🌙 20 °C
- Korkeus: 11 m
EgyptiMinţaqat as Saqqālah27°12’45” N 33°50’28” E
Egyptian men, and women…

Today is our last day in Hurghada and we are just relaxing today in the sun, on the rooftop terrace of our accommodations. We are presently sitting/lying on an outdoor ‘bed’ with a canopy and have a great view of the city and the Red Sea. And a little time to think various thoughts about life in Egypt.
The other night, we went into a little shop so I could buy a light Egyptian cotton tunic top. I went into the shop after asking a lot of shop owners what their tops may cost. I knew that the price stated is always too high and you have to spend time, and probably have a cup of tea, before coming to a price that I was willing to pay. Chris came in too.
I found a top that I liked while Chris tried orange flavoured tobacco in a water pipe (shisha) and mint tea was made for me. I was pretty well ignored and interrupted when I asked questions while Chris was treated like royalty. Egyptian men respect other men. Women? Not so much. The male shopkeeper (they all are) kept asking Chris which blouse he would pick for me as if I didn’t have a choice. Chris said that it was my choice. After this, Chris asked him a few good questions about the role of the wife. Apparently, the man makes all the choices for a woman. Including giving permission to use the bathroom!
“Traditional gendered roles view the man as a "pro-creator, a protector, and a provider," and the woman as "pretty and polite but not too aggressive, not too outspoken and not too smart.” Oh, oh. I’d be in trouble if I lived here.
So what conclusions have I come up with regarding the average traditional Egyptian male and the way he treats women?
There seems to be a need to control. Some Egyptian men (not guides or people working with tourists) take it upon themselves to control a woman's life totally. Everything from what she wears, to who she talks to and what she does for a living is controlled by a man throughout a woman's entire life. First, the father, then the brother or another significant male family member and then a husband.
So then I wondered, why is it that a woman is controlled in this country from the day she is born till the day she dies? For some men, it is the perception that women are an "accessible source of shame" and therefore, her thoughts, her feelings, her movement and every other part of her existence must be controlled until she is married off. Once the woman is married, the cycle restarts and its the husband's turn to dictate how she lives her life.
So, who would want to live like that? I read that “The inability to admit wrongdoing in any relationship is disastrous because one member is made to feel like their feelings don't really matter to the other person in the relationship. If this is a continuous act, the other person is eventually made to feel that they really don't matter. Confidence and self respect will go out the window resulting in a never ending cycle of settling down for less than what they deserve.” Let that sink in …
I read that Egyptian men are unable to admit when they do something wrong because they fear that by admitting it, they become less and therefore equal to women. This all stems from the fact that men are given a higher importance from the day they are born. Unfortunately, this is evident in many Egyptian families and can even be seen in a brother and sister relationship and in a mother and son relationship. Boys can do what they to.
Now, regarding the Egyptian man's tendency to interrupt women. Who knows why they do this but if a women demands that the man listen to her, he starts to talk louder and louder and won’t let you put a word in. Control. As soon as Chris intervened, the man respectfully listened to him.
I took it all with a grain of salt but feel sorry for the women who live with these types of men.
By the way, I did a great job of bringing down the price of the tunic. It only took me about 45 minutes of haggling, followed by a handshake. To me, it is all a fun game.Lue lisää
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- torstai 5. tammikuuta 2023 klo 5.00
- 🌙 16 °C
- Korkeus: 9 m
EgyptiMinţaqat as Saqqālah27°12’47” N 33°50’28” E
Redcon Suites

We stayed in the Redcon Suites while we were in Hurghada. A bit of a change for us as we had our own little apartment in a 4 storey building. We usually enjoy staying in hostels as we can interact with people, both travellers and locals, but sometimes we enjoy just being on our own. After 3 weeks of travel, this place was our little break from people. It was somewhat noisy at night though when the bar got into its New Years Eve weekend party mode!
The apartment had everything that we needed including a small kitchen. A little market was close by so we were able to get some food to cook but as mentioned in another footprint, there was a great restaurant next door that we went to a couple of times.
We could go across the street to a small private beach and there was a rooftop terrace on our building. Everything was clean and comfortable but as in many places we have stayed in, the internet reception was intermittent. The only English TV channel that we could get was the world news on Al Jezeera. That was fine for us.
The men at the front desk were pleasant and gave us some good advice about what to see. We were even able to get our laundry done there for $3.00 Cdn.Lue lisää
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- torstai 5. tammikuuta 2023 klo 8.14
- ☀️ 16 °C
- Korkeus: 10 m
EgyptiMinţaqat as Saqqālah27°12’46” N 33°50’28” E
Egytian Money

Before we left, we couldn’t get any Egyptian money at our bank in Canada, but it was easy peasy to take out money from ATM machines in Egypt. We couldn’t take out a lot, no more than $400 Cdn, at a time but that’s okay because it isn’t expensive here. And if necessary, our VISA card worked fine. A few places wanted to charge a 3% VISA card usage fee but that wasn’t the norm.
We never used coins, just bills. Five pound notes, or $.25, were used to use bathrooms. This bill is smaller and dirtier than the other bills which are all about the same size. We washed our hands a lot after using the money.
We had to get used to the big apparent cost of things. Things were cheap but lots of bills were used.
All Egyptian pound banknotes are bilingual. They have an Arabic face and an English face. The Arabic side has pictures of Islamic buildings in Egypt. The English side shows ancient Egyptian motifs with engravings of figures, statues, and temples.
There are coins too but we rarely saw them. Egypt’s coin design is based largely on its ancient history. The coins include pictures of pharaohs, pyramids, and past dynasties, including Tutankhamun, Cleopatra, and the Pyramids of Giza.
Tutankhamun is featured on the highest coin, the 1 pound coin, and it’s no wonder why. The myth of King Tut is world-famous, and his tomb is one of just a few perfectly preserved Egyptian Royal Tombs.
Cleopatra also makes a fitting face for a coin, as a strong woman able to hold a country together throughout warfare in a male-dominated society.
The notes are printed with security measures. In 1930, for the first time in the history of Egyptian banknotes, a watermark with a scribe was used in issued banknotes.. Then, in 1968, they began using a metallic thread instead of watermarking.Lue lisää
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- torstai 5. tammikuuta 2023 klo 9.30
- ☀️ 14 °C
- Korkeus: 31 m
EgyptiArmenian Catholic Church30°2’50” N 31°14’25” E
By Bus to Cairo

Pre bus trip…
How would we get to Cairo from Hurghada? Well, there is an airport and it takes 1 hour by plane to get to Cairo…There are no trains that go to Cairo. A private driver would work … But we decided on taking the 6 hour Elite Gobus for $14 each. We have time and we will be able to see some of the countryside along the Red Sea before going inland to Cairo. And the bus is ‘elite’.
It was easy to find a place that sold bus tickets. Most people here do speak a fair bit of English so Chris didn’t have any trouble buying them. Thursday, January 5 at 9:30 a.m. Check out the ticket in the photo.
I forgot that Arabic is written right to left so when I saw the ticket, I thought that it said that it was a ticket for Cairo to Hurghada!
I believe that we get a snack box of goodies to eat on the way.
Post bus trip…
Not bad. The 6 hours went by pretty quickly and we had a good driver. Almost the whole trip was through the Eastern Desert and the mountains.
We were given a snack box with water, Nescafé coffee and Lipton tea, a croissant with cream cheese and a little chocolate cake.
Each seat had a monitor with a charging station and a TV screen. We had a choice of 99 movies in English. We were given earphones too. Chris watched a Reacher movie with Tom Cruise and I watched a show called My Spy.
We didn’t stop until we reached Cairo. There was an outhouse-like washroom in the middle of the bus. Everything was clean and a man made sure that we had what we needed.
We were able to walk to the Holy Sheet Hostel from the bus station which was great since we had been sitting for so long. It was good to see all the young guys who work at the hostel again. They wanted to know how our trip went. A nice home coming.
Lastly, we decided to go to the same restaurant we had gone to before - a koshery place. The last time 3 men who were sitting near us paid for our dinner. This time, a big family from Jordon sat next to us and guess what? They paid for our dinner too!!!!! We couldn’t believe that if could happen twice. We have no clue what the dinner cost.Lue lisää