Abu Simbel
The Great Temple and the Hathor Temple, both moved to higher ground when the Aswan dam raised the waters. Worth every hour of the trip down.
We crossed into Egypt at Taba on the 5th of May, traded the desert sun of Wadi Rum for the Red Sea coast, and pointed south. Cairo first — chaotic, vast, twelve to sixteen million people braided around the Nile. The National Museum alone could fill a day; we gave it two.
Then south by train to Luxor and the Valley of the Kings, by air to Abu Simbel, and back up to the Sinai for a week of cheap rooms, scuba diving, and a sunrise hike up Mt. Sinai. Egypt is where the trip first felt big.
The Great Temple and the Hathor Temple, both moved to higher ground when the Aswan dam raised the waters. Worth every hour of the trip down.
The Pyramids and the Sphinx right outside Cairo. The must-see in Egypt — though paying extra to walk inside the Pyramid only earns you an empty tunnel.
The life and blood of Egypt. National Museum, the Citadel, the Bazaar, countless mosques. The museum alone could fill a day.
The Valley of the Kings and Queens lies across the Nile. Famous burial-site excavations, Luxor Temple in town, Karnak just outside.
The hippie sanctuary on the Sinai. Dirt-cheap to eat and sleep, scuba and snorkeling for next to nothing, Mt. Sinai a hike away.
Famous for the dam. Not a must-see — but if you're already passing through on the way to Abu Simbel, take a look.
A pleasant surprise. There's a nice boardwalk, and the Suez Canal begins here on its way to the Mediterranean. Hot, humid.