The lonely planet claims that you need 2 days to do the museum and we did it in 45mins! The boys said that they were completely overwhelmed and there was too much to take in, so asked to go for a long lunch instead. There was tons in the museum and it would have been very interesting had we had a guide with us. We focused our attention in the Tutankamum rooms. The mask of death was the must see item. It was amazing what these guys had in their tombs with them. It reminds me of our Taoist traditions a little. They go to the Netherlands or the underworld after they die and they bury with them things they need to help them in the after-life; including statues of servants and overseers (365 servants for everyday of the year and 36 overseers for each block of 10 days (I think)). Mathieu was of course super excited about quite a lot of the stuff as he studied it in school last yr. It was cool to see the jars in which they kept the organs and the different mummies. The mummies of the pharaohs were kept in a special area that cost another 100 EP entrance fee so we decided to give it a miss. I will probably have to come back to see it another time.


Day -4, 5, 6 Bahariya Oasis
Karim, the hotel owner, organized this trip for us and came along with us. The boys were of course thrilled and he was good company if not for the smoking and the incessant Egyptian music. He claimed to have given us a special rate at 300USD but we found the same at a travel agency down the road and this was before any bargaining and with private car transfers instead of the pubic bus. Knowing that it wasn’t the best deal, the boys still wanted to go with Karim as they felt that he was a friend. I guess service is still more important than price.
Anyway, the 5hr bus trip to the oasis was uneventful except for Stephan having the runs and us having to stop the coach numerous times.

We stayed at Bahir Sahara Camp the 1st day. It was charmingly rustic and we would have liked to have stayed a few more days if not for the gazillion flies and the primitive bathroom. The flies came out in swarms and literally covered the food. The boys of course could not eat and Nic was only too clear about how disgusting flies where and how they spat out poison on our food so that it would make the food ingestible for them (and this would cause food poisoning).




The temperature is so hot that it is difficult to do much. We still had an eventful afternoon climbing sand mountains, swimming in hot springs (Only Mat got in the water. The rest of us where too hot and too grossed out by the mould in the cement tank to swim!), visiting the salt water lake etc…. It would have been nice to have a geologist with us to explain how all these amazing things are formed.
We saw mountains of crystal, sand corals (guess it must have been the sea before), white desert of chalk formations, black desert of volcanic deposits etc…….. It really was wonderful. I am ashamed to say that we were not very environmentally friendly as we took some stones with us when we left. (The Egyptians encouraged us to take a souvenir…. But I know, it is no excuse!)










Making sand angels (angels have not started flapping their wings in photo yet...) and drawings........ amazing what we can do!!!

I was ill the night we camped out in the white desert. I had such a bad cold that I took a flu tablet and crashed out, missing the glorious sun-set and the starry moon-lit night. I did make the sunrise though and this was spectacular. Somewhere in my drug induced sleep, I re-call the kids freaking out over the foxes that we were circling our camp-site waiting to eat our dinner scraps. The way back was rather tedious with 4 hrs in a 4x4 to get out of the desert followed by the 5 hr ride back to Cairo. This time, we did not have the luxury of the coach but had to take a micro-bus. We were packed like sardines and I had Stephan on my lap throughtout the trip. There was some disgusting odor in the bus that made us all want to puke and to top it off, we were stopped at the police check-point and not allowed to cross because tourist are not allowed on micro-buses. Someone paid some bachess after a good 15mins of raised voices…….. and we were allowed to leave.


Travel around Egypt is very restricted with police check-points in almost every town. We have to write a declaration that we do not require police escort to go from place to place if not, we would have to pay for the police to be with us. The worst scam is the tourist police that are supposed to be there to protect us but are in fact colluding with the tour guides and companies so that they have a cut of the pie too.


Meditation in the morning was glorious (but V V cold)






