20 December 2010

Egypt - 2nd to 11th of December 2010

What do you want after working till after midnight, making it to the airport with no sleep for a 4.30am fight to Egypt that doesn't end up leaving until closer to 6am, and arriving at your destination 5 hours later after a 30 minute stopover in Cairo where we had to hurredly obtain our Egyptian visas before the connecting flight to Dahab? If you answered "lost luggage and an uncooperative airline not willing to deliver your bags to your hotel", you'd be right.


Thankfully our hotel was awesome and picked them up for us when they were next back at the airport, and we could check in at our hotel early, by then we desperately needed a snooze. Bit of a waste of a day really, only getting outta bed after dark to meet some friends who were randomly also in Dahab. We only had two nights in Dahab, but immediately wished we had more time. We spent the day inbetween snorkelling the red sea, in what surely must be some of the world's best (wish I had an underwater camera). And the hotel itself was amazing, right on the sea in a great spot just out of town. Saying goodbye to small friendly Dahab we got the hourlong flight back to chaotic Cairo. An uneventful night before meeting up with our weeklong tour nice and early for Day 1 of the tour - Cairo. First stop was Saqqara to see the oldest major stone building in the world, the step pyramid, built around 2600 BC.
Back into Giza for the compulsory pyramids (bigger than you'd think) and sphinx (smaller than you'd think).
A fully tiring day, and by the time we got on our overnight train to Aswan at 11pm we were beat. So beat in fact that we actually got some decent sleep on a very jerky non-sleeper train.
Time in Aswan for a quick dip in the hotel pool before heading out to the Dam (who knew - the Nile is dammed) and the Philae Temple. Our first proper Egyptian Temple (although actually built by the Greeks when they invaded to keep the Egyptians happy) and its an amazing spot, on an island in the lake, it looked amazing in the late afternoon sun. Time the following morning for another quick swim and a trip through the Aswan markets before jumping on our felucca early afternoon.Arguably the highlight of the trip, the Felucca brings you back to basics. Our home for the next two night, the Felucca is just an old sail boat with a thin mattress, where we ate, slept, and chilled out in the sunshine while Captain Bob (so-called because of his love for Bob Marley and his dreads, his real name was probably Mohammed) zig zagged his way down the Nile.
We parked up the first night next to a local house for shisha and henna tattoos (and a bathroom), awokened way too early the following day with the sounds of morning prayer dishing out from the nearby mosque. An extremely relaxing day with nothing to do but read our books and chill out. Here we are parked up for lunch...
About 5pm the wind died, and an hour later it got dark, so we were stranded in the dark with large cruise ships narrowly missing us as we drifted down the nile looking for our pre-arranged park-up spot. We finally made it safe and sound for a bonfire night on the sand.
An hours cruising the next morning (so we were told, we were still sleeping!) before we said goodbye to our crew and got back into temple hunting.
First Up Komombo on the shores of the Nile.
...followed by Edfu temple, with a huge facade.
A few hours in the bus north to Luxor. We stayed in an amazing hotel right on the river bank, with a heated pool and 5 (Egyptian) stars. A swim in the pool (and the obligatory beer at the swim-up cocktail bar) and we were back into it, this time Luxor temple at night. All lit up, its quite mystical...
Across the road for some quick bargaining at the Luxor markets.
Another early morning for a trip to the Nile's west bank and the Valley of the Kings. Its a series of underground tombs where Kings were mummified and buried with all their possessions. Most of these are now empty, but the carvings on the walls, still colourfully painted were well worth the trip. Unfortunately no cameras allowed.
Around the corner to Queen Hatshepsut's temple. Not allowed in the Valley of the Kings because she was a she, she built her own temple nestled into the side of the mountain that backs onto the Valley of the Kings.
Our last Temple was easily the biggest in terms of ground coverage, Karnak Temple.
Here's our legendary tour guide Hady explaining the designs - most showing various kings offering goodies to the gods.Dinner in Luxor before our return sleeper train, again not a bad sleep all things considered. Time to check into our hotel in Cairo and the necessary coffee before hitting the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Home to a bunch of scary mummies and lots of sparkling treasures, most from Tutankhamun's Tomb (apparently a fairly un-noteworthy King, other than the fact that his tomb was never discovered and robbed by the robbers, so was found in its full glory in the 1920s). We spent the afternoon shopping, first at a perfumery and secondly at the Cairo Markets.

But we didnt have a lot of time, we had to hurry back to the hotel to pick up our bags and rush for the return car ride through Cairo's mental traffic to the Airport. An epic holiday, with so much history, we loved it!