Petra

The object of our trip!  At last!  The walk in has stunning views and is more impressive on person than you can imagine

The narrow canyon or Siq.  Notice how few people are in our pictures.   Tourism is down 90%

Everywhere along the way,  the caves carved into the rock are tombs, and the niches one held images is the Nabatean gods of! There were 2 aquaducts feeding water to the city from 2 springs,  miles away

And at last

There were so few people there,  it was amazing.   And we walked on.  The Street of Facades

The street of colonnades

This is a fast as we went,  enjoyed a bit too easy and then decided to head out.   In total we walked about 14,000 steps,  since we took the golf cart shuttle out.  5 miles was far enough

Our group

On the way to Wadi Musa

An outstanding craft of this area is mosaic.   We visited Mt Nebo, the place Moses was allowed to see the holy land.

The Monestery here, which marks the spot,   is decorated with 3 levels of mosaic floors,  each very impressive. 

We visited another Greek orthodox church where a 3rd c mosaic map was found, describing the holy land

We had to them visit the workshop for mosaics.  

On the drive on,  we passed a crusader castle from the 1100s, once beseiged by Saladin.

Our stop this night is excellent!  Right across the street from the entrance to Petra!  The contemporary town of Petra is called Wadi Musa, or Moses Valley.   Our room and our view.  Tomorrow is the big day!

Jordan

We’ve arrived first to travel past many bedoin camps along the road to view the dead sea

We stayed right on the dead sea at a really nice spa hotel,  the Movenpic Dead Sea

A once in a lifetime…. which is enough

A 2 AM Wake up call for our 6 AM flight

Breakfast that early,  an egg,  coffee,  some fruit and cheese, …. at least I’m awake.  Our trip to the airport was only 15 minutes in the early morning traffic,  so,  not bad.  

At the airport,  Viking rep Ahmed got us thru security and check in and left us with instructions.   Find the Egypt air office,  tell them you are 27 together for Gate H01, and they will direct you to the bus for another airport!

Well, ALMOST!   we found the gate,  downstairs, but it wouldn’t open for about half hour.   It was a very small area with lots of people,  not just us!  After a bit longer than expected, past our posted boarding time by a lot, they opened the doors to the gate area and the last security check.  (There seems to always be 2 or 3)  we were first in line.   Nice! 

Unfortunately,  only the men could go thru!  At one is these security checks,  everyone is patted down, and only a woman can pat down women.  You guessed it!  No women agents available!  All the men,  the whole plane load,  went thru while we waited. Patiently at first. But as time went on,  tempers were flaring,  particularly among the Muslim women and their men on the other side.  Most of us were watching the spectacle! 

Must have been close to 6 by now,  as men pulled out prayer rugs and got down on the floor in the back of the room.  One elderly woman demanded a chair, pulled it right across the walk way thru the metal detector, right in front of me,  and sat down to pray.  I was hoping she was praying for a last security person,  as i was by then. But,  who knows. 

Now one of the heavily veiled young women,  with a heavy fur lined long coat,  black burka and face covered, gloves even,  was over heating,  and melted to the floor.   Another got down there, i think to help,  but as it is Ramadan, they can’t even drink a bit of water. 

In the meantime,  since then men were all checked thru, they routed some of the women to the other line,  but we still waited.   The pushy lady behind us was pushing our bags, coats and shoes too at this check point, into the unmoving machine.   And we waited.  Nothing moving.

Finally after about half an hour,  a young woman security agent arrived, cheered by the American women in line.  She stopped to argue a bit with the men, but finally she motioned me in,  and the lady behind me, Elaine, also on our tour.   But…. our bags,  shoes,  coats,  etc, having been pushed into the xray machine were going no where, because there was no one  to turn on the conveyor belt and read the xrays!

Now our young security lady had to go back thru and move our things onto the moving belt of the other xray machine.   That stopped her checking thru the ladies,  of course,  but bags were coming thru…. with no one to claim them!  (All while about 4 men stood around, doing nothing,  or yelling for us to take bags.  Our bags were not thru it yet and the ladies that owned these were stuck on the other side of the metal detector shooting for the lady to come back to pat them down!  AAKKK!)

Oh the joys of travel!  Some more humerus things… the 1 Muslim man traveling with 3 young ladies 3 children handling everyone’s boarding passes himself.  Have our men a bit of appreciation for having only 1 wife to attend to!

Back to Cairo

Boarding our charter flight in the morning for a relaxing day in Cairo… at least for us,  as we have no excursions planned.

Our last night,  or half a night,  since we leave for the airport at 3 AM for our next segment of the tour, Jordan and Petra.

We have had a fabulous program director / Egyptologist, Mohamed Samy.  He has been a wealth of knowledge and offered us the best experience at each stop is our journey.  

We had the afternoon to ourselves too relax and enjoy the Intercontinental Hotel and The large City Stars Mall attached.   We both decided a hair cut would be a nice way to freshen up. 

Our last buffet dinner was in the hotel.  Here are a few of the egyptian dishes.

Edfu, Our last temple

This temple,  half way between Aswan and Cairo, is by far the largest and most complete of all the temples we have visited.   It is Amazingly intact!  A temple to Horus, the falcon God.  120′ tall, 160′ long, it took 180 years to build finished in about 57 BC.

Statutes of Horus

A copy of Horus’s boat was constructed in the 19th c

Inside of the hall of columns and the inner sanctuary

I am intrigued by the deep relief carvings of the different animal hyroglyphics

Papyrus

Of course we had to visit a papyrus gallery.  They showed how the plant was used to make the papyrus, by squeezing our the liquid and sugars,  soaking for 6 to 12 days and then pressing. The stripes are them laid,  cross each other, to make the sheets.  There are more now than just the traditional designs of ancient Egyptian gods ,  with lovely water color paintings

Philae Temple

It was interesting to see 1 more temple site saved from the Nile flooding of the old dam  built in 1902.  This site was raised in 1972 to 1980.   40,000 blocks of stone were cut and placed on another higher island in the Nile.   Philae Temple was later used as a church,  so you can see cruises inside

Nubian life

Aswan is on the Nubian area of Africa,  on the southern gate of the Nile and Egypt.  we took a boat ride to visit a typical family home,  3 generations living together.  

 

The view from the roof showed the layout of the house and the village.   The woven mats make a roof.   There is no rain here at all.

Nubian life

Aswan is on the Nubian area of Africa,  on the southern gate of the Nile and Egypt.  we took a boat ride to visit a typical family home,  3 generations living together.  

 

The view from the roof showed the layout of the house and the village.   The woven mats make a roof.   There is no rain here at all.