My guide looked like a spy from old cartoons or a flasher our parents warned us about, but he was a really nice guy who was just cold in 60 F weather. |
We went to a 'rug school' but the students were on break, so someone else had to deomonstrate how the rugs are tied and then the threads trimed to make them look more presentable. |
That is an amazing amount of cauliflower so artfully arranged as to stay purched on that truck. We saw similar feats with carrtos, beets, and cabbages. |
This traffic was at least moving, but as you can see we are riding on the line. If the road is wide enough for four cars, there really is no need to stick to the three lanes that are drawn on it. |
This was part of the 1 year anniversary of the revolution as celebrated in Alexandria. It is interesting to me that it is in English. |
These cats were guarding the mediteranean. |
This was the view of the Nile from my hotel windo in Aswan. Much nicer than the Nile in Cairo or Alexandria. |
Sunset over the Nile in Aswan. The powerlines you can see are from the Aswan dam. |
An interesting mix of traditional and modern. |
This picture is just to prove that I saw actual hyrogliphics and didn't just make it up. |
An idyllic scene along the Nile. It could really have been 1000 years ago. |
I am a sucker for a balloon ride, even if it means getting up at 4am. |
We got a whole new perspective on the city of Luxor. |
Sunrise from the balloon. |
The Nile is redirected into irrigation canals. Since it only rains 2-3 times a year and never very much, all the agriculture is from irrigation. |
It looks like they are rooms, but they dont have roofs. Sometimes there were chickens and even livestock in them. |
Do these kids follow the balloons every morning? |
Just a sample of the ferry docks. |
The Nile, farms, Luxor and in the background, the valley of the kings and Queen Hatshepsut's Temple. |
Our balloon from below. |
One of the colossi of Memnon. Apparently they used to guard a temple which was recycled for its building materials. |
This was painted on the ceiling to symbolize the night sky. I think it must be amazing to have seen the night sky before smog and light polution from cities. |
This is Tutmosis III's head. It is remarkably well preserved. On the right is another copy that is more complete, but the head was too far away to get a good picture. |
These are ram's head sphinxes. They go both to the Luxor temple and to the Nile. |
The guy on the left has the white crown of upper Egypt and the guy on the right has feathers for his hat, so one of them is a pharoh and the other is a god. It looks like they are about to kiss. |
I cant remember if this is a calendar or an accounting book, but it shows the numbers and they clearly used a straight edge when they made their table. I only wish my students were so careful. |
This was a giant pilar forest. Maybe they didn't really know how to make roofs, but it doesnt seem like just a great hall if it is so full of pillars. I liked it, because it felt like a forest to me. |
The Egyptian flag. I asked my guide if the design had meaning. She wasn't sure but guessed at something not memorable enough to have stuck with me. |
Dinner on the run? |
In case I needed to feel closer to the horse, our next trip around the football field was on the beast directly. |
This camel wasn't nearly as photogenic as Casanova at the pyramids, and not being as tall, he was much eaiser to ride, not that we went very far. |
My final transportational adventure was desert tortise. I didn't actually climb on, but one of the kids did. |
I hope these boxes didn't have TVs or other breakables in them. |