Dale

Dale

Yes its me Dale......and this is where I take the time each night when I travel, to reflect.  Which is a modern way of saying I'm just trying to remember what I did from one day to the next.  Things can get muddled on holiday and a doumented blog can save on future fights...... especially when I can change the date in the database at will.

Monday, 20 February 2012 18:03

Day 7 - back in Cairo

Flight from Aswan to Cairo, short haul, domestic terminal MUCH nicer than international. Picked up at the airport by Mustafa and dropped at the hotel. Four broken down cars, one accident and construction causing six lanes to reduce to one made for an interesting journey.

Monday, 20 February 2012 17:57

Aswan

Morning all. Sitting on the top deck of the ship waiting to disembark so I'll update you on what we were up to yesterday. By the way we're in Aswan now and the last two blog entries were uploaded (put onto the internet for the grannies) from here after the tour in the morning. Awan is the final stop on the NIle cruise due to a massive dam regulating the level of the Nile and providing electricity for the rest of the country.100 0684-300x225 Once again we were off bright and early in a van travelling up river to the dam. There's a look off spot to take photos (no video allowed though how they can tell when a digital camera is in video mode I have no idea) where there is the basic information about the dam. This is actually the second dam located here in Aswan, the first built during British occupation in Victorian times. The second is about three times the size and uses Russian engineering (having been refused assistance by the americans, the UN, the europeans...not sure if they asked Canada). Its an incredible structure (wide not high given the flatness of this flood plane) and holding back the largest man-made lake in the world. I wonder if they will have this claim once the chinese are finished with the Yangtzee. The hydroelectric output is 175,000 trillion mega-watts max. That's quite a bit. It services the entire country (for now) with the exception of Aswan which has its own facility. Their electric demands are mounting so there is a nuclear project underway.100 0685-300x225 Pretty much the entire Nubian society (which was located in the south of Egypt and is more african) had to be re-established elsewhere since its now underwater. We then were taken to a boat launch and motored to an island where another temple stood. This had also been moved due to the new level of the Nile to its current location. T

his was the most modern temple having Trajan and Hadrian elements to it which is getting to around 300 BC. I won't elaborate on the elements since they are similar to the temple Horas. Following this we returned to Aswan and went sailing on one of the Feluccas, very gracefull vessels constantly moving around the Nile. Its funny when you read the guide books where they are mentioned I kind expected to see one boat. Maybe. But there are tons of these things.

They really are the main method of transportation on the Nile. Very different from our boat at home it has a fairly short main mast very far forward in the boat (like a lazer or sunfish or pram). It's one sail is like a right-angled triangle (pythagorus?) with a very long mast on the verticle, a short boom on the horizontal and nothing on the hypotenuse. The sail is constructed from strips of cotton sewn vertically and this sail bascally rotates around the shorter main mast. Simple, brilliant and cool is how low-tech it is.

The lines made from hemp, pullies from wood, no traveller, a dagger board instead of a keel and it all functions above a big sunshade that pretty much covers the entire deck/cockpit. This sunshade also doubles as a platform when tieing up the sail and, if necessary, for crew if the boat is full of tourists. We are quite lucky travelling with just the three of us. We always have our own bus, boat, guide..... so we move about efficiently and can ask as many stupid questions as we want. In the afternoon instead of lying around on deck we wandered about, found the internet cafe, bought hyacienth leaves (you'll find out why) and strolled through the markets.

Facinating.

Monday, 20 February 2012 17:30

Day 6 - Edfu and Kuombo temple - up river

Started the day at 7:15 with Pancakes !

Crepes with a light sugary syrup - probably sugar cane.

Tuesday, 29 September 2009 00:00

Luxor to Edfu

We started the day early - breakfast at about 7:00 so that we could be prepared to tour at 8:00. The sun gets hot very early, so you want to be outside early in the morning. We headed through Luxor, passing the Club Med on the way and the luxor temple.

Tuesday, 29 September 2009 00:00

Luxor, West bank, Land of Death

Just before dinner Monday evening at an internet cafe 5 minutes walk from the boat. Dodgy connection.

Monday, 28 September 2009 00:00

Day 3 Windsor to Cairo

Just sitting here in Heathrow waiting for our flight to Cairo. You could probably live in this place (if you could afford it).

At the seafood bar, which does look nice, you can get caviar and a glass of champagne only 455 pounds! But I'm getting ahead of myself.

Saturday, 26 September 2009 00:00

Day - 2 - tooling around west of London

Day - 2 Ok so we (Jim and I) were a little slow off the mark this morning. Dave rang our room at 9:00 after walking along the Thames and through the town for an hour - our wake-up call.

Monday, 21 September 2009 00:00

Preparing for Cairo !

Dale and I are off to Cairo with cousin Dave. 

We’ll be travelling through the UK, spend a few days there, then off to Cairo and a 4 day NILE cruise, seeing the sites.  We’ll be aboard M/S Shahrazade – a cruise ship for about 100 passengers.  We travel from Luxor. 

Sunday, 19 February 2012 21:22

Day 1 in Las Vegas - Saturday 29th

We arrived in Las Vegas after an uneventful flight with WestJet (about 4 hours). 

We took a taxi to the RV center (about 20 minutes) in blistering heat (38C+).  

We had to watch the video all about taking care of the RV (Paul had watched it before but I made him watch through it again).   We signed up all the papers (paid extra $60 to not have to fill up the propane or do the grey or black water – yuck – well worth it).  

Sunday, 19 February 2012 21:20

Basics of a trip

Get the ticket bought.  Then, check out Jack Rabbit’s email blasts and the Survival Guide for much information. 

The important thing is water.  All else is secondary.  Got to bring our own.  This will be fun !

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