When we got to the boat there were guys out there waiting to take our luggage.
Never to be seen again...
We went up to the top inside floor into the cocktail lounge and they served us some Hibiscus juice. It was very tasty.
It looks a lot bigger on the inside than I thought it would be, from the outside photos.
I took pictures of the room quickly while they brought our bags in, since this would be the tidiest that it would ever be!
Looks pretty nice! I love the teak floor in the bathroom.
Putting a verandah on it would have just made the inside space smaller.
Huh. I hadn't thought of that, but... makes sense.
a green herb. I asked what it was and they told me the name in Arabic. I asked if he knew the English name.
This got a bunch of different people involved and finally one of the servers told me that it was "green vegetable."
Another way of saying... "I know the word for 'green' and 'vegetable' and that's as close as I can get."
This was what I got. It needed more sauce.
Looks like it.
Many of the desserts had coconut. Jill forewarned me. I just had a few.
I would've had none. Nope!
They climbed into the van and introduced themselves. Hey wait? I thought we were supposed to be having a private tour?
Not just any Mickey Mouse, but Mickey the adventurer, his dad pointed out.
Ah! One must be accurate with your Mice.
The Early morning and the heat really started to hit me. At first I was like, I don't think I'm going to make it through this."
Uh oh...
I remembered the heat stroke incident at Disney two months before and began to power down on the water.
Glad you did that. I'd hate for you to have another episode while on vacation.
“Don't look at them, don't talk to them, just ignore them. If you show a little interest, they will follow you and they won't give up.”
Approximately thirty pharaohs contributed to the buildings,

Whoa!
Talk about dedication!
Many of the main roads which lead to the temples of Thebes (modern Luxor) used to be continuously lined with sphinxes.
That must've been quite a sight. Actually... can you imagine what the complex must have looked like when it was completed and intact?
Carvings were on the walls everywhere and very intricate.
Stunning.
The roof, now fallen, was supported by 134 columns in 16 rows; the two middle rows are higher than the others. It’s pretty impressive.
Just... amazing. My mom talks about Karnak to this day... and she visited over 40 years ago.
You can see our guide, Fayed, sitting in the corner of this photo.
Red pants?
the second biggest of all the ancient Egyptian obelisks. Made of one single piece of pink granite,
!!!
Moving that must've been.... incredible to see, let alone
do.
Now to give you an idea of how large this complex is, I’ve enclosed this photo from of the Temple Complex from 1914 from the Cornell University Library.
Thanks for that. Puts it into perspective for me.
Here is the sun setting over that pond.
Pretty shot.
He pointed out this Obelisk and if you circled it a number of times, good fortune would come to you. I was too tired to bother, but Jill circled it the prerequisite number of times while I waited
So........ has Jill had better luck than you since then???
How these people can drink a hot beverage in such a hot climate is beyond me.
I get that, sort of.
My dad, who worked in construction all his life, would drink hot coffee on his break, regardless of how hot it was. I could never understand it. He claimed that drinking something hot, made your body cool. Don't see how, myself.
The whole getting up at 4:30 thing and climbing in and out of the balloon basket was really starting to hit me. We still had Luxor Temple to visit.
