Three Egypt travel secrets

March 3, 2010 · 17 comments

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Big thanks to Sabina Lohr for tagging me in the Tripbase Best Kept Travel Secrets project!

Secrets are funny things. We like hearing them almost as much as we love sharing them. Though we know we probably shouldn’t. Same goes for travel. I mean, if I told you all about the Pyramids, millions of tourists would come to Egypt each year to see them. We can’t have that.

Living in Egypt, and having worked as a tour leader, I’m also no longer sure what is and isn’t a secret here. Perhaps I’ve become blasé. Take Siwa Oasis as an example. Hundreds of km from Cairo, in the middle of the desert, with picture postcard-perfect sand dunes, and more hot and cold springs than you could shake a date palm at. It’s the perfect secret. Except, you’ve probably heard of it. Same goes for Basata camp, on the Sinai, or Marsa Alam, on the Red Sea coast.

So, here are three Egypt secrets you may not know. Better than that, I won’t have to kill you after telling you.

1. Abydos Temple

A few hundred km north of Luxor, Abydos is – in my opinion – the coolest temple in Egypt. It may look like a multi-storey car park from the outside, but inside are some of the most gorgeous, delicate bas-reliefs in the whole of Egypt, and the colours are exquisite.

It also contains the most important in situ Egyptian king list, a record of all the pharaohs that ruled Egypt since the time of Menes. There are, of course, some notable exceptions. Akhenaten and his heirs (including Tutankhamen) were scrubbed from history, because he was a troublesome heretic who sacked the priesthood and instituted a new, monotheistic religion. Queen Hatshepsut, who ruled Egypt as pharaoh during the 18th Dynasty, is also missing, since everyone knows you can’t be a real pharaoh unless you have a beard.

And like every Egyptian temple worth its salt, Abydos is replete with mysteries. There are hieroglyphs here which some people claim show fabulous flying machines, such as the so-called Abydos Helicopter.

The area around Abydos is also said to possess immense spiritual power. From 1946 to 1981 an English woman called Dorothy Eady lived in the temple. She believed she was the reincarnation of a temple priestess, and lover of Seti I (the pharaoh who built the main temple). Rather worryingly, given that she was meant to be his lover, she took the name Umm Seti, which means mother of Seti.

2. The Solar CITIES Urban Eco Tour

This is the perfect travel secret to give away, because it really shouldn’t be a secret, yet hardly anyone knows about it yet.

Solar CITIES is an NGO that works directly with poor communities in Cairo, helping them design and develop sustainable technology solutions for their everyday problems and needs. To date, and with very limited funding, they have built and installed over 30 solar water heaters, and a handful of biogas generators, on houses in Darb al-Ahmar and Manshiyat Nasser. Other work currently going on includes converting small generators to run on biogas rather than kerosene.

Manshiyat Nasser is where Cairo’s Zabaleen community of garbage collectors live. One of the cool things about the project is that it makes use of locally available, mainly recycled, materials. Also, it’s a bottom-up, participatory approach to development that taps in to the collective intelligence and ingenuity within the communities, and therefore addresses their actual rather than perceived needs.

If you come to Cairo, Hana Fathy – a remarkable young man from Manshiyat Nasser, who has been involved with the project since the start – can give you a tour of their work. You walk through one of the most fascinating areas of Islamic Cairo, and head via al-Azhar Park into Manshiyat Nasser. This is where the majority of Cairo’s mountain of rubbish is manually sorted, processed, re-used and recycled. Along the way, you can visit families that have been involved with, and have benefited from, the project, and learn how some of the poorest people, in one of the most crowded and polluted cities on the planet, are using home-grown green technology to improve their lives.

You can learn more about the project on the Solar CITIES blog, and you can find details of the tour here.

Full disclosure: Hana is a good friend of mine. I believe the work he is doing is incredibly important, as well as super-interesting, and I’ve been trying to help him as much as I can. So I put his tour up on the NileGuide Cairo trip planning site (which is where the previous link goes). As far as I’m aware, this is currently the only travel publication that carries any information on the tour.

3. The wonderful versatility of the galabaya

I thought we could mix it up a bit, and give a non-place-related tip.

The galabaya is the traditional Arab dress. It comes in different styles and goes by different names, but essentially it’s a loose, flowing robe. A man-dress, if you will. Or if you are a woman, just a dress. Now, many people think galabayas are only for Ray Ban sporting oil sheikhs, and peasant farmers. Not true. The secret is, they are great for travelling. It all comes down to comfort, dignity and style.

Galabayas are incredibly comfortable, and the ultimate lounging attire. If you don’t fancy getting dressed up to mooch around your hotel or hostel, you don’t have to. You can sleep in it (and won‘t have to worry about your modesty if you need to leg it to the toilet in the middle of the night). If it’s cold, you can put one on over your other clothes as an extra, efficient layer of insulation. If it’s hot and sweaty, and you’ve been slapped on the inner thigh with a bout of prickly heat, the last thing you want is clothing that’s going to chafe you raw. Slip on your galabaya, and let it all hang loose.

Galabayas are also great for helping to preserve your dignity. You can use it as a top layer that allows you to get dressed or undressed in public, without flashing your privates everywhere. If you are in the great outdoors and need the toilet, you can squat down and do your business without anyone copping an eyeful. (Note, remove your underwear first!) If you are at the beach, or by or on a river or lake, you can stick your swimming stuff on underneath. Whip your galabaya off when you want to jump in the water, and put it on again when you get out and want to cover up. Note, a sarong is emphatically not as good as a galabaya for this. Sarongs – take it from me – fall down. Galabayas don’t.

Finally, how many times have you been on the road, and ended up getting dragged along to some impromptu fancy dress party? Come on, we all know it happens. Well, with a galabaya, you’ll never be stuck for a costume again. The Moroccan style ones with a hood are best. Monk, wizard, Jedi knight, ghost… the sky’s the limit!


So there you have it, three cats out of three bags. Make the most of them.

Oh yeah, I need to pass on the Tripbase secret baton. So I tag:

aric with an a
Canvas of Light
cult of travel
Fevered Mutterings
Rerunaround

Go on – you know you want to!

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{ 12 comments… read them below or add one }

FrancoiseNo Gravatar March 3, 2010 at 21:03

Great tips…I really want to check out the solar Cities project next time I’m in Cairo.

Abydos is most definitely one of the best kept secrets when it comes to ancient Egyptian temples. Managed to get there on my own (avoided the convoy crowd) a few years back and only had to share the place with 4 others. Looks a bit dumpy on the outside, but it makes up for it with the amazing atmosphere inside.

Galabayas are always cool in my book. Probably even more versatile than the classic sarong.

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SabinaNo Gravatar March 4, 2010 at 00:34

It sounds like you are quite the fan of the galabaya! Who knew? (I didn’t even know what it was called.)

This is a very clever list. It’s great that you included number two. And it’s great that you included a photo of yourself in a galabaya.

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Michael LynchNo Gravatar March 4, 2010 at 15:06

No way I’d try and outdo you on secrets so I whacked ya with all my Ninja tools; some twice. Tell me if it drives anyone to watch you squat in yer nitties. ThumbsUp, Nick !

Cheers,
Mike

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SophieNo Gravatar March 6, 2010 at 00:51

Great secrets, Nick. Abydos sounds very interesting. I’ll have to go down rather than up river from Luxor next time.

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Leigh ShulmanNo Gravatar March 21, 2010 at 17:51

The word of the day is most definitely galabaya. Fantastic.

Thanks for the illustration of how to use it too. Seems like you can pretty much put it on at the beginning of the week and wear nothing else for, well, as long as it takes for you to feel the shame of a dirty galabaya?

Thanks for the tips, Mike. You’ve reminded me, too, that I need to write my own Tripbase three tips.

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NickNo Gravatar March 21, 2010 at 18:07

Glad everyone is jumping on the galabaya bandwagon! For the record, no matter what state it’s in, it is categorically not possible to feel shame whilst wearing a galabaya. Unless you stole it from an old lady. Or get someone’s name wrong ; )

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PresNo Gravatar March 24, 2010 at 04:53

Wonderful article! Thank you for expanding my vocabulary with “galabaya.” =)

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Migration MarkNo Gravatar July 7, 2010 at 09:52

When I visit Cairo I am definitely going to check out the solar CITIES project and walk through Islamic Cairo. Thanks for the tips! Like everyone else, I am loving the galabaya. I have a similar all purpose robe/skirt called a malong from the South of the Philippines. I’m all about loose fitting robes, got to get a galabaya.

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LorettaNo Gravatar August 4, 2010 at 14:22

These are great secrets you’ve shared with us, Nick! That gabalaya looks good on you! I love historic places so I might as well try Abydos temple.

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JFNo Gravatar August 12, 2010 at 02:18

Hmm, the galabaya looks like a kurta but perhaps more loose. Looks good, will try a few when in Egypt.

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AnnaNo Gravatar January 30, 2011 at 02:24

Great article! I was just wearing my Galabaya at the Travel Show all day today, just love it! Really the most comfortable clothing there is. I always love when I get to lead in Egypt, most comfortable! Thanks for the information on the solar project I will definitely check it out.

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GirlNo Gravatar March 31, 2011 at 11:54

Love this blog ! Well-written, intelligent, interesting… great !…:)

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