Siwa OasisBlogs we like

  1. 19 – Travelling in Egypt – Alexandria, Marsa Matrouh and Siwa – Podcast

    Blog: Heather on her travels - 7 December 2011

    In Travel Podcast Episode 19 I visit Egypt where I spent a week travelling with a friend who lives in Alexandria. I took a walking tour of the city where many of the houses are crumbling away and where we bumped into a wedding procession hooting horns and letting off fireworks. We drove west to [...]

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  2. Walking on the Mountain of the Dead in Siwa – video

    Blog: Heather on her travels - 6 November 2011

    To add to the sci fi landscape of the Shali in Siwa Oasis, I must mention Gebel Al-Mawa or The Mountain of the Dead which I visited while I was in Egypt spring. This ancient Greek and Roman graveyard of Siwa is a hill where the soft sandstone rock is pockmarked with hundreds of holes [...]

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  3. A sci-fi film set or lunar landscape? The Shali in Siwa Oasis, Egypt – video

    Blog: Heather on her travels - 17 October 2011

    Sometimes when I travel I come across a place that is so cinematic or downright wierd that I think it could be the perfect location for a sci-fi movie – Star Wars or perhaps James Bond. I feel sure that the Shali, a ruined fortified town in Siwa oasis in Egypt, would make an excellent [...]

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  4. The Siwan Oracle and Cleopatra's Bath

    Blog: Knocking About Egypt - 27 February 2010

    The next morning, I wanted to take in some of the sites outside of town, most of which were clustered around the village of Aghurmi, five kilometers to the east of Siwa. For someone more used to the bitter cold of Brooklyn, it was way too hot to walk; and unlike the previous day, I didn't have the luxury of waiting until the late afternoon, as I had to catch the 8:00 bus back to Cairo. I would have to find some other means of transportation.

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  5. Walking to Fantasy Island

    Blog: Knocking About Egypt - 25 February 2010

    I woke up late in the afternoon with a plan to walk to Fatnis Gezeera, which translates as "Fantasy Island." This was an ambitious name for what in reality is a short peninsula poking into a shrinking brine lake. The walk isn't any more than 6km and is well marked - at least if you can read Arabic. Learning the Arabic alphabet before traveling to Egypt isn't a bad idea, actually. It's not so difficult and is very handy in situations just like this.

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  6. Arrival in Siwa

    Blog: Knocking About Egypt - 23 February 2010

    On the way down from the acropolis, I met a Siwan woman wearing her traditional costume. Before I could practice my Siwan "Hello! Good Morning!" with her, she lowered her head, ducked against a wall and didn't move again until I had moved further down the path. I guess I was terrifying. I'd have loved to take a picture, but besides whatever psychological damage I surely would have caused, I understand that it's taboo to photograph the Siwans. The men might grant a request, but you shouldn't even ask the women.

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  7. Bussing it from Cairo to Siwa

    Blog: Knocking About Egypt - 21 February 2010

    The next northbound train with available seats didn't leave until 8:00 p.m. This meant that I would miss the last bus to Siwa and would have to spend the night in Alexandria. I hadn't arranged a place to stay, so I'd wind up knocking on pension doors that had already been bolted shut for the night. I also knew that I'd feel guilty enough about waking someone that I'd probably take the first place with a bed, no matter how nasty.

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