Views over the Pyramids!
Home! There is nowhere on the planet like Giza! Whenever I’m here I feel at home and so happy. This is the view from my B&B 😍😍 Highly recommend the Great Pyramid Inn - wonderful people, super clean, comfy beds, great aircon - and pyramid view rooms. The most amazing location…. ❤️❤️❤️
Saladin’s Citadel en route to Giza from Cairo airport. A different route to normal as the Egyptian Govt is in the process of constructing a metro line from Cairo airport out to Giza. Amazing!
The children in Egypt are adorable! ❤️
Khonsu Temple Karnak
More from Khonsu Temple, Karnak, originally constructed by Ramesses III on the site of an earlier temple. The circling birds in the vid appeared from nowhere and were the exact image of a vision I had a week before coming here. You’ve called in the birds he said…
When the heat gets too much at Karnak - 111F the other day! - I head for the lake and the air-conditioned cafeteria adjacent with its little cat family. Just sitting there imagining the activity at this sacred bathing site thousands of years ago is mesmerising. Karnak Temple Sacred Lake is the largest of its kind and was dug by Tuthmosis III (1473-1458 BC). It measures 393 feet (120m) by 252 feet (77m) and is lined with a stone wall and has stairways descending into the water - where wild dogs now come to drink.
The lake was used by the temple priests for ritual washing and ritual navigation. It was also home to the sacred geese of Amun and was a symbol of the primeval waters from which life arose in the ancient Egyptian’s idea of creation.
Osiris Temple Luxor
There are many hidden away chapels and temples
to see at Karnak - the site is massive. A case in point is the magnificent Osiris Temple with its 7 doorways/gates. Ancient Egyptian mythology says that when the soul leaves the body it must pass through 7 gates to reach the afterlife. Osiris is the deity who receives the souls after they have passed through these gates. A very special place.
Avenue of the Sphinxes, Luxor
The amazing 3,000 year old Avenue of Sphinxes in Luxor, Egypt was opened to the public in 2021 after decades of restorations. This ancient ceremonial walkway is nearly 3km long and connects two of the city's greatest temples: Luxor and Karnak in what was the ancient Egyptian capital of Thebes. Known as the Avenue of the Sphinxes, and also the Way of the Rams and the Path of the Gods it is believed to be the path that pilgrims trod to visit the temples and pay tribute to their deities.
Curators at the Manchester Museum have been left flabbergasted after CCTV footage has shown an ancient Egyptian statue has began moving around all on its own. The seemingly haunted statue rotates on its base in an anti-clockwise direction, as if looking around the museum's egyptology department with it's own spectral eyes.
Artifact expert Campbell Price was the first one to notice the black statue had been moving around, but he initially assumed that another member of museum staff had been buggering about in the display case and simply nudged the effigy. It soon became apparent that the statue was moving regularly, either by someone's hand or perhaps supernatural influence.
Campbell set up a CCTV camera to monitor the statue's display cabinet and the unbelievable footage shows that the statue mysteriously moves all by itself. As you can see below.
Once we moor the dahabiya at Edfu we take a carriage ride through the streets to the fabulous Greco-Roman Edfu temple - one of my favourites! #edfu #travel #Egypt #tourleader #adventuretravel #adventure #nilecruise #dahabiya #egyptology #edfutemple #instavideo #travelegypt #visitegypt
Walking to the entrance of the ‘Bent’ Pyramid of Sneferu at Dahshur just south west of Cairo. What an incredible experience climbing inside to the very top! Join me on our 2023 tour and you could be here too!
The first pyramid to be built at Dashur, its lower courses were constructed at an angle of 54 to 55 degrees, but the upper courses at a lower angle of 43 degrees, giving it the unique shape which has led to its modern name. When it was constructed it was called “Sneferu is shining in the south” (or “Sneferu is shining”) because it was clad in polished Tura limestone. #dashur #bentpyramid #adventure #adventuretravel #sneferu #egypt #tourleader #egypttourism #travel #pyramids #egyptpyramids #egyptology