Monday, February 19, 2007

A year's wrap up - Oz via Egypt

After I left Morocco, I met up with Matt in Cairo. He has been travelling with his family (which is 11 people mind you!) around the world. No mean feat! It was good because it meant that we were our own tour group, but it also meant we had to be organised to get around.

We plunged head first into ancient Egypt with a tour of the Cairo Museum, which is stuffed to the rafters with all sorts of Egyptian goodies like mummies (including cats, scarabs, dogs, horses and even a massive crocodile!), tombs, sarcophagi, statues, jewellery and implements. What I found most impressive was the display containing the entire contents of Tutenkamun's tomb. This guy certainly did well for himself for such a young-un!

The Pyramids of Giza are right near the city so we also checked them out. Pretty amazing structures, almost as amazing as the pictures! You can go inside some of them and crawl up a narrow corridor to the antechamber. Amazing that such a massive sturcture was built just for one king. The nearby 'stepped' pyramids at Saqqara are also interesting and were the 'trial run' for the Giza pyramids. They were almost better because they are more mysterious and there aren't as many tourists swanning around them!

After Cairo we took the train down to Aswan, home of the Aswan High Dam, which was built after the Aswan Dam (which wasn't big enough!). We took a felucca trip up the Nile, which was great, had dinner with a Nubian famiily, and spent too many hours on a bus heading to the temples of Abu Simbel, almost on the border with Sudan and built by Ramses II. These were fantastic. The main temple has four massive figures flanking its entrance and is ornately decorated and painted inside. The most amazing thing about it was that the entire thing was relocated, block for block, to avoid inundation when Lake Nasser was created by the Aswan Dam.

Nearby is Philae temple, which was built for the goddess Isis, and was also relocated to a lofty island site to avoid flooding. During the day it was amazing, and was one of my favourite sites; it was almost more spectacular at night, when we went to a 'light and sound show'. Sound good? Well, corny would be the word I would use. The performance was composed of lasers lighting up certain parts of the temple (great) to coincide with a story being thundered out of a loudspeaker over the site (terrible!). We couldn't help but piss ourselves laughing during the whole performance when the story being told by voices representing the earth, the river Nile and various ancient egyptians was coming up with lines like 'Isis, Goddess of Philae, my waters can no longer come in your temple and flow amongst the full breasted maidens' etc etc... hehe!

We then took the train back up to Luxor, home to 2 massive temples - Karnak and Luxor Temple, and spent the days wandering around their ruins. Karnak was particularly impressive, and so massive that I lost Matt and his brother Tim and didn't find them again until I returned to my hotel.

Not far from Luxor is the Valley of the Kings, which is famous because so many ancient kings were buried here, but in particular for Tutenkahmun, whose tomb is here too. The site is a complex maze of tombs dug into the hillside, out of the sight of marauding thieves. Many of the tombs are beautifully preserved and still have all the paintings adorning the walls and ceilings inside. Not far from here is the Valley of the Queens, which is not as famous but has a great Roman-style temple dedicated to Queen Hatsepshut.

What was interesting about many of the temples was that many of them were defaced by the Romans and English when they came, with faces of ancient kings and queens scratched off the walls and some artwork actually painted over and replaced. Some temples were even converted to churches to worship Christian figures. It was sad to see the graffiti left by soldiers and the Christian influence that destroyed some beautiful carvings and paintings.

After Luxor, and feeling very templed out, we returned to Cairo (yet another mammoth train ride). Then Matt, his brother Hugh and I decided to spend our last couple of days in Egypt in Sinai, the peninsula famous for Mt Sinai and the Red Sea. We had our sights set on scuba diving there, and stayed in a little place called Shark Bay, which was fortunately a hell of a lot less touristy than Sharm El Sheikh, which is tourist and horrible development-central. The development along the coast is absolutely unbelievable and entirely unfettered. I don't know when it will stop, or when the damage to the reefs will!

We did a shore dive on my birthday, which was pretty cool, but the diving didn't get spectacular until we took a boat out for the day to go to the islands in the Straight of Tiran. There are some amazing shipwrecks there and the reefs are absolutely beautiful; long vertical walls of coral, fish and plenty of things I'd never seen before. We dived at Woodhouse and Jackson Reefs.

Unfortunately poor Matt got ill and was unable to come diving with Hugh and I, so he just slept on the deck of the boat all day! Fortunately by the afternoon he was feeling better and able to snorkel a little. It was a great day out, the weather was great, the instructors were champs and now I'm keen to do a diving course when I get home!

But all good things had to come to an end, so we cruised back to Cairo and after a massive argument with the hostel management, parted ways, me off to Paris for the last week of my holiday and the Haskett clan off to Tunisia for some more adventures.

In Paris I spent my week just wandering the city with my jaw trailing behind me at all the grandeur of the architecture after being in Africa (and drooling all day because on every corner there is a bakery, cafe or patisserie!).

It was cool to visit Place Concorde where the second obelisk, removed from Luxor Temple and given to the French by the Egyptian Mohammed Ali as a present, is located, after seeing the other one first in Luxor. I didn't really do much touristy stuff but just enjoyed wandering the city, window shopping and enjoying being back in a bit of normality again. One thing worth mentioning is the Georges Pompidou centre, once a train station but now a cool modern art museum, complete with TinTin exhibition :). It's a work of art in itself!

I also befriended a couple of Moroccan guys who couldn't speak much English, and with my limited French the conversations were quite amusing! Let's just say we both improved our relevant languages. Hung out with a few other backpackers and spent some nice nights up at the Sacre Coeur looking over the city and drinking wine.

So then I returned home, first stopping off in Melbourne for my Red Cross debrief. I caught up with some of my good mates, and spent the weekend with my buddies from school. They had fortuitously organised a bit of a reunion which coincided with my arrival, so it was great fun!

We went to Daylesford where two friends have just bought a house and spent the weekend basically just eating, drinking and enjoying the goodies that beautiful Daylesford has to offer (it is a spa town after all!). Then after a few days at home I went to Canberra to visit some mates from work. We took a road trip up to Sydney, where I am now. Today I'm just cruising into the city to meet up with another friend I met on my travels in Cambodia many years ago. So all up it's been great fun, cheers to everyone that made it so excellent.

So back to reality; when I return home I need to get my life in order again, including finding myself a house, going back to work (d'oh!) and visiting all the pubs I haven't patronised for a year. Hehe! Plus its a great time to be back in Adelaide because there is lots happening events-wise such as WOMADelaide and the Fringe Festival. Should be great.

So, there it is; the end of my adventure. For the time being :)

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Surfing and volcanoes, smoking sheesha and buying carpets

Lanzarote is easily navigable in one day, being so small, so it is perfect. Its all volcanic and desolate and with the shiny white buildings and clear blue sea, it is an unusual and beautiful place of contrasts. We went to Timanfaya National Park during the day on New Years Eve; finished up at a surfie party (which sucked but we got suitably drunk) and then after recovering NY day, hit the beach for the remainder of our time to catch some totally tubular and bodacious barrels dudes.

After NYE we headed to Morocco for a few more travel adventures. Nath only had three days in Marrakech so we spent the days getting totally lost in the labrynthine streets, dodging pickpockets in the square and getting asked 500 times per minute if we wanted to smoke hash. It was very touristy and after travelling in the rest of Morocco I am glad to say it was the worst of it. A great intro to Morocco though! The city square is unreal, and the night market where you can buy just about anything for dinner are great.

Ange and I hired a car for a week and cruised around the mountains; doing a round trip up to Meknes and Chefchauen, a totally chilled out and beautiful place. In the town of Ouzarzate we came upon the Paris Dakar rally cars; we visited Todra gorge, a beautiful and massive gorge where rock climbing is the go; and the ancient roman ruins of Volubilis, which were really cool. Hiring the car enabled us to cover lots of country in a short time, which was cool for Ange. Morocco is beautiful; desert, mountains, farmland and coast, it has everything! My french has improved rapidly too :)

I am in Fes at the moment, and having a wicked time with a bunch of guys who have adopted me! We have been cruising around the city on motos, and checking out all the amazing riads, medinas and mosques; getting lost in all the souqs (tanneries, jewellery making, carpets and the like); going to the mountains, and smoking lots of shisha tobacco. Hehe! It has been a nice relaxing end to my time here in Morocco.

Ange left a few days ago. Unfortunately she had a car crash when attempting to return the hire car from Chefchauen to Marrakech; so we spent a whole day with the gendarmerie, police and tribunal. Quite a unique tour of Chefchauen if I do say so myself! Somehow she managed to find me in Chefchauen; fortuitously I was walking past the police station when she drove past!!! Fate, eh! Luckily she wasnt injured, but the moto driver coming the other way and the car came off second best. Fortunately only a fractured arm and broken rear windscreen/tail lights and a big dent in my wallet were the results. Phew!

Tomorrow i fly to Cairo, and cant wait to see matt. I have 2 weeks there before a week in Paris from the 29th Jan to 6th Feb; am catching up with a bunch of friends I worked with in Liberia, so it should be great. Anyone in the vicinity is more than welcome to join!