Egypt Day 2

Today was incredible in every single way. For our first real day out and about-I couldn’t be happier and I have memories to last a lifetime.


I was wide awake at 4:30 and there was no going back to sleep. I was just too dang excited! I played on my phone and laid quietly, so I wouldn’t wake up Mom.. and then around 6 I got in the shower. She got up just before 7 and got ready, too, even ironing my shirt for me.


We made it to the restaurant breakfast around 7:45. It’s a breakfast buffet deal, reminding me of the way cruises set up their meals. We had eggs and Arabic bread with fava beans and some other random things. I enjoyed it, although I do think I like it more than everyone else in our group.


Like 8 cups of tiny coffee and entirely too many fava beans for me later, the four of us met Sherif in the lobby. The owner of our tour company was chatting with him when we walked up, and so we were all introduced and then we were on our way. We had a calm introduction yesterday morning into the traffic of Cairo and Giza. Today-we were thrown into the thick of it.. and apparently this is “nothing” because today is a holiday or something like that.


Three lanes of traffic, five cars wide-cars included an array of vehicles and animals: donkeys and horses pulling carts of stuff and people behind them, pick up trucks, old 1990s style cars, and-wait for it-pedestrians. How in the hell did our driver manage to bob and weave and never once even tap someone else? I’m shocked! We’d be riding along at 60 mph and then suddenly after some maneuvers we’d be almost at a dead stop to go over a random speed bump! Just-WOW. It was like a dance that everyone knew the steps to but us.. but our driver never once slammed on the brakes! He was seriously smooth.


Our first stop was an archeological site in Saqqara. Forgive me if my details and facts are ever incorrect, it’s not intentional, I’m just going off of what I remember our guide telling us. Anyway-this was the first ever multistory building created in the world, dating back to over 4,800 years ago. The king was building his tomb, and it’s layers of rock stacked on top of each other in the pyramid shape, covering his tomb below ground-they believed that once you die, your spirit goes into the sky, and years and years later when it returns to your body, it needs to be preserved so that it can find you and take you to the afterlife. Everything found with you when your spirit returns gets to go too.


So, the pyramid is like steps to sky, and the hieroglyphs on the walls of the tombs show how great the person buried was, pictures of how tall and brave they were, (so they will be tall and strong in the afterlife) the fish and birds they’d want to take with them.. I’m doing a terrible job explaining, but it was truly magical. We saw the outside of that first pyramid, the places built to mummify the body after death, as well as the tombs of some noblemen, too.


To get down into one of them, Andrea and I had to creep down a slab of wood with metal “steps” to keep our feet from sliding as we were crouched low not to smack our heads. Once inside, it opened up in a few places. We got to see the sarcophagus and the etchings all over the walls. It was seriously neat. People get degrees in this field of work, so there’s no way I’d understand it all in a few minutes, but it was truly magnificent.

Sherif took us into his favorite tomb of a nobleman. The details in the carvings in this tomb were simply spectacular. The color in some places still showing up today, some 4600 years later. The fact that what they built that long ago is even still here at all is completely unreal. I still can’t get over it. And seeing Sherif’s excitement as he explained things to us, showed us tiny details our untrained eyes would have never noticed, you couldn’t help but smile. He loves what he does.

We saw so many things at that first stop that I’m sure I’m getting stuff confused. There were also a ton of street dogs.. some absolute cuties. They all seemed happy, but they were pitiful. Locals feed them, and they started a program to have them neutered and tagged, too. It was hard not to love on all of them, but I didn’t want to chance catching something.. everyone seems to ignore them, so I tried to follow suit, mostly.


We had lunch at a very cute restaurant. The main stuff was on a buffet: more fava beans and Arabic bread (I can live off of this stuff), potatoes, pasta, rice, and other things. Then, they brought out these tiny decorated charcoal grills with chicken and some type of beef cooked on top. It was neat, and I was creating my bites like building a fajita. Andrea seemed a little leary of the food, but I was all in. Let’s hope I don’t regret it later.. haha

After lunch we made it to the pyramids of Giza.. the famous three main pyramids that everyone knows and that’s considered one of the seven wonders of the world. They were massive and beautiful. How they’re still standing all of these years later is truly a wonder. Sherif told us so much about the structures as we went by the first one and got pictures. I was very grateful to have him there too, not just for his incredible knowledge, but also for his skill at keeping some local scammers from swindling us out of money. He’s a protective guy, and it’s really a great thing to feel safe when you don’t understand the language or customs. We’re learning, but not as fast as I’d like 😉


There was a little boy, maybe 10, that took the most epic pictures of us with that first pyramid. Then we went for the experience of a lifetime: a camel ride. Now, y’all. I thought we were going to pose with a camel and be done.. but Connie had other plans-she wanted a camel ride-I had no idea she was that hellbent on riding a camel! It was news to me! Ha! But what mama wants, she gets!
She got on this ginormous creature so fast and so carefree! I have a slight fear of animals that are bigger than me. I’m always cautious even around horses.. the man tells me to swing my leg over and sit on the back of this camel.. and as my butt is just sinking down onto the camel’s saddle, not even slightly situated-IT STOOD UP!


Y’all. The bloodcurdling scream I let out! I’m pretty sure everyone stopped to look at me.. every single person. I was petrified! How can I hike in the woods, alone.. sleep in the woods alone.. encounter bears, alone.. but lose my shit over a camel? Easy. Those things are huge and I was freaking the hell out! I also immediately yelled for someone to grab my phone because in the chaos of it standing with me unprepared, my cellphone slung out of its spot in my bag. Cool.


Anyway. After my heart rate lowered to like 130 instead of 190, and all of us and my phone were “secure” on these big guys-we were led around the pyramids and were stopped in random places for pictures. Mom loved every second, as did Andrea-and Terri and I seemed to be the only two unsure of these massive animals. We enjoyed ourselves, too, of course.. and the laughs that came from that 30 minutes will seriously never be forgotten!


Except our camel leader guy did leave Andrea and Terri at one point! He forgot to reconnect them! Which also led to another fit of laughter from all of us! It was so funny, and unnerving, but I’m so grateful I was able to have this experience and to share it with my favorite people. How lucky am I?


Anywho-we left the camels (I screamed when it sat down too, poor guy probably really hated me), and then Sherif took us to see the Sphinx. He told us about the history of the sphinx, the reasoning behind the body of a lion and the head of a human (strength and brains), and then we took some goofy pictures before fighting the crowd to take closer pictures. It was pure chaos in there and I think Sherif was probably just as happy as we were to get out of there!


For our last stop of the day, Sherif took us to a place where they still make papyrus paper, the first ancient scroll papers (after carving on rock, of course). He showed us the process and we walked through the gallery. Mom found a piece she couldn’t live without, so she got it.. the rest of us, while we were fascinated with the process, didn’t see anything we had to have today.


Sherif got us back to the hotel and we had drinks (well, I had wine, mom had coke, and Andrea and Terri had water, maybe I have a problem? Hmm), and got some mediocre food from the bar. Note to self: don’t get the bar food. We have another full day planned for tomorrow so I can’t wait to get to sleep so I can wake up! I think we’re all tired from a fun and busy day.
Goodnight!

4 thoughts on “Egypt Day 2”

  1. Incredible photos! My favorites are you and the pyramid and the crew on camels! I was obsessed with Egypt and pyramids as a kid. What an adventure.

  2. Enjoying your next adventure!! Finally keeping up again now that posts are coming in an orderly fashion 😆😆

  3. How exciting, riding on a camel.
    You are making “more” memories of a lifetime. Thanks for taking us along. The pics are fantastic.
    Debbie 🙂

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