Safaga and Hurghada, Egypt
- Wednesday 11th April
Safaga is
the second largest port in Egypt
but not very pretty. You would think
that as tourism is the second largest source of income for the country (after
the Suez Canal) there might be some attempt to clear up the rubbish, and make places attractive but everywhere we
went - even miles from the town – there
was rubbish dumped. Lucky that the
Pharaohs built such nice long-lasting attractions 3000 years ago or no-one
would visit Egypt.
The main reason
to stop at Safaga on the Red Sea is for
people to make the 3.5 hour coach journey to Luxor
to see the temples and Valley of the Kings. We have seen all this on a Nile Cruise so
decided not to make the trek. Instead we
opted for a day trip to Hurghada, 40 miles north, which is a holiday destination that we had
previously thought of visiting for some winter sun. We were taken to a resort hotel and expected
to go snorkelling over the reef as advertised in the tour guide – unfortunately
at this particular hotel there was no reef and no fish – Keith swam quite a
long way out on the instructions of some of the hotel staff but found nothing
except jellyfish! We are currently
trying to get our money back!
The journey
to Hurghada showed numerous half-built hotels and apartments with no sign of
any ongoing building activity – reminded us of Spain – it is sad to see this which
must be the result of recession and people worried about the unstable political
situation. In the town itself there were
lots of closed shops and not many people going to the ones that were open. We ended up buying some shirts from one young
man in an empty shop because we felt sorry for him!




Keith takes the best photos. Tho' Safaga's obviously worth revisiting (with a scrap metal truck)
ReplyDelete