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Up the Nile

Monday, July 21st, 2008

To go from Aswan up to Luxor you can drive, train or go up the Nile, depending on your budget this means a big fancy cruise ship, or a very basic felucca- nothing much in between. But to be honest, I would rather a felucca any way as it seems more romantic and authentic, plus it is cheap, very cheap. I kind of expected it to be pretty basic, and it was. Just a big mattress with a shade sail and a tiny cabin type thing where the crew slept. We has 13 of us  on the boat and I am fairly certain that some of them did not expect it to be so simple. Two American girls looked shocked when they arrived, “Is this it?” and went to get McDonalds to make themselves feel better. We did have a good group, myself and Hugh (English) and 2 older and very strange french people and the rest American, a guy called Brian a cool older couple, a group of 4 friends and 2 girls. The last 6 people were only staying one night so left the next morning which left us a bit more space on the boat.

So we pretty much just lay around reading, talking and watching the coast go by. Despite warnings about swimming in the Nile, the water looked too good to resist so me and Brian spent a lot of time swimming. We stopped for lunch and then went up river a bit to camp for the night. Our big mattress area was a bed, table and seats all in one. Basically it was a lot of lying around doing nothing and after Aswan this was perfect, no one to hassle you and staying out of the heat.


We went for a bit of a walk around the local village and then after tea it was bedtime. Surprisingly it got cold, very cold during the night and so not much sleep. Around 6am someone said they were cold and blankets appeared which meant I got a good couple of hours sleep during which time half our boat team left to continue on to Luxor by car while the rest of us, now which more room spread out for another tough day. It took a bit to convince the crew to actually keep moving, not so easy to get any information out of them about when we were leaving or where we would go but eventually we sailed on and stopped for another long lunch break and some more swimming where we got the American couple in the water, Hugh though was far too sensible and wouldn’t go in….I am sure he would have secretly laughed at us all if we got sick from it!

After more sailing and talking trash we pulled up with a few more feluccas to watch the sun set and eat some tea, later that night we moved up the river a bit more to where we would get picked up from. Sailing at night was amazing, the moon was big and bright and reflected on the water, the stars were out and a mosque was playing its call to prayer in the distance. There was something slightly surreal about moving quickly and quietly through the water that night. Very cool.

A night close to a main road and traffic and a lot of bugs was not so great however, so not a lot of sleep again. Then it was up early to be bundled off in some sort of pick-up to see some temples on route to Luxor. Generally the trip was great, cool people and good to see rural Egypt, however it would have been nice to do a bit more moving and get closer to Luxor as we didn’t even make it half way and drove the rest of the way, but good times, good people.

temples and mini vans in Aswan

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Some people seem to deal with heat OK, despite being 45 degrees they look fine, make-up and hair still in place and charging around the streets without seeming to notice the crazy heat. I am not one of those people. I spend my days in Egypt with my hair plastered to my face, I am constantly wet from sweating and have even redder than usual cheeks. Despite drinking 3 liters + a day I still feel extremely dehydrated a lot of the time. I am having a couple of cold showers a day just to cool down but their effect lasts for around 2 minutes before I am all sweaty again,  I can’t have any skin touching, so I can’t rest my hand on my arm or cross my legs. At night I just lie spread out under my fan regretting not paying the extra $5 for air-conditioning.

But in saying that its still not impossible to do stuff and the hot weather keeps lots of tourists away so its easier to get buses and trains and have temples and ruins to yourself.

I arrived in Aswan around 2pm and spent about an hour trying to find this hotel, walking with my pack up and down the market was awful, but the time I found it after walking past it twice I was drenched in sweat and took a good couple of hours to recover. Aswan is set around the Nile and pretty much built on tourism. Walking down the corniche (along the Nile) means dealing with 100’s of offers of felucca (a traditional style boat) rides, horse and carriage rides, restaurants, shops and everything else. Walking through the bazaar (market) is worse, its like a gauntlet of men who start with trying to get you in their shop them move on to telling you they live alone and would you like to come home with them. Walking along the corniche turns out to be easier. It’s not all bad though, its not dangerous and you can ignore people, plus sometimes its funny because it is so ridiculous.

After spending the rest of the day relaxing and getting some food I went to bed early in preparation for a 3am start on a minibus tour to Abel Simbel. While its not difficult to travel independently in Egypt, to see lots of the sights you need to join day trips because they are often outside of the city. Minibus tours seemed to be designed to be as painful as possible, the seats have head rests which push your head forward and there is way to many people in the back. But you do what you have to and it is worth it at the end. plus for a $10 tour its hard to complain.

Abu Simbel was a 3 hour drive out of Aswan and really amazing, a huge temple that was actually moved from its original site because it was getting flooded, the temples were reconstructed exactly as they were including facing the sun the right way and everything. It was massive, and very impressive, plus my first chance to see hieroglyphics up close for the first time. And when we first arrived there weren’t too many people around which was cool. After spending a bit of time there we headed back towards town with a stop at the High Dam, probably the most unimpressive sight ever, it was just a dam, but I found out later a bit more of its huge significance to Egypt as it supplied power and controlled the Nile- which given that the Nile essentially controls Egypt makes it pretty significant . We also stopped and caught a boat over to a cool temple ruin on an island, by this time it was so hot you had to run from from shaded area to shaded area to avoid the sun. In the shade its not so bad, just the blinding sun  it too much.


By the time I got back to the hotel we had been going for 12 hours so I grabbed some food and had a nap. I met a guy called Hugh on the tour who said he was doing a felucca trip to Luxor in 2 days time so I went and booked at the same place and then randomly ran into each other at dinner time. So we spent the following afternoon together over on one of the  islands which has Nubian villages, Nubian’s are a local group of people who are different from Egyptians. It was very different over there and very quite, we wandered through tiny alleyways with houses and found a little cafe type thing where we had a rest and talked to the most laid back guy in the world who talked to us about the affect the dam has had on Nubian people. Later that evening we watched the sunset up in a park where we continued to be talked to by lovely but slightly annoying old men

“Do you like Egypt?”

” Yes, just too many people talk to us, we get no peace”

“ahh yes that can be bad when all you want to do is watch the sunset but…blah blah blah”

haha, it was kind of funny. After the sunsets loads more people come out and walk around, you see more women and people that aren’t just trying to sell you things so its kind of nice. Also food is so stupidly cheap. I can get a felafel sandwich for 1 EL, which is about 25 cents, also big cups of fruit in mango juice for 1.50 EL, things are cheap here. The funny thing is though is that the heat totally takes away my appetite and I have hardly been eating anything, usually one decent meal a day and a couple of snacks or juice. Its strange, I have never felt not hungry before. The difference in prices though are pretty crazy, like dinner at a local type place is around 5-10 EL, where if you go to a tourist place the same thing will be 30-40 EL. So it can be easy to spend a lot of money. One night I splashed out for seafood and it cost 35 EL which seemed ridiculous but then I realised that it was around $8 which is not so bad!

getting in the tourist mode…

Monday, July 7th, 2008
It feels easy to slip back into the tourist thing, spending days looking at things and eating lots. My first full day in Singapore I went for a walk around the little India district with Rula and Hannah, we stumbled ... [Continue reading this entry]

Halong Bay

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
Halong Bay is this incredibly beautiful and massive bay east of Hanoi. Filled with rocky hills, caves and national parks as well as floating fishing villages and lots of tourists.

We were ... [Continue reading this entry]

Snakes and Planes

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
You know how on planes everyone rushes to get off really quickly? Well in our overtired-everything-is-funny state we waited until people had gotten off….so talking and laughing away we suddenly realized that EVERYONE was off the plane and only the ... [Continue reading this entry]

Back in ‘Nam’

Sunday, January 21st, 2007
Only 3 weeks until home time! Can’t believe the year is almost finished, but not quite yet still more countries to visit, things to see and lots more to buy. And Vietnam is a good place to go shopping! We ... [Continue reading this entry]

Mountains and Maoists: Annapurna Base Camp trek.

Sunday, December 10th, 2006
I’m bruised, blistered and very, very sore, but I made it!! Arrived back after 9 days of trekking in the Himalaya’s, we did it in 9 days rather than 10 cause we were so fast (well that and I was ... [Continue reading this entry]

Annapurna Base camp

Sunday, December 10th, 2006
Day 1 Birethanti to UlleriHad to actually get to the start of the trek so a life-threatening bus ride which smelt strongly of vomit along winding mountain roads got us there, luckily, in one piece. Signed in at a few ... [Continue reading this entry]

Kiwi community in the heart of Kolkata

Sunday, November 26th, 2006
Getting to Kolkata turned out to be not so bad, meet a cool Canadian guy who was in the bunk above me so we had a good night chatting away to all the other passengers and sharing food. Ended up ... [Continue reading this entry]

Muscle beach and celebrity spotting on the Ganga

Sunday, November 26th, 2006
I was off to Varanasi that night but couldn’t get a direct train so first had to get about 3/4 of the way to Allahbad. A long night despite having a sleeper as most people around me weren’t too interesting ... [Continue reading this entry]