Neues
Angebot: Royal Cleopatra Kreuzfahrt auf dem Nil
-Luxus auf dem Nil -
Royal Cleopatra Stilvoll
den Nil befahren
Luxor
to Aswan Sailing Itinerary
Day
1: Saturday -
Add flights from Sharm
El Sheikh or Cairo ? Click here
Provide us with your arrival details into Luxor, we will be happy to
provide you with a complimentary transfer from the airport or the train
station to the cruise .
Embarkation in Luxor for a relaxing week sailing the Nile on a luxuriously
appointed Dahabbiya.
After
lunch, excursion to the West Bank for visits to the burial places of
the Pharaohs - the Valley of the Kings - where Howard Carter discovered
the tomb of Tutankhamen in 1922. Continue to the adjacent Valley of
the Queens, the temple of Medinet Habu and the Colossi of Memnon.
Overnight
moored on the Nile banks of Luxor.
Day
2: Sunday
You will visit the magnificent temple complex of Amon-Ra at Karnak,
with its vast hypostyle hall of 137 columns, followed by the imposing
28 th Dynasty Luxor Temple.
Overnight
moored in Luxor.
Day
3: Monday - Private Guide Tour Esna Temple
Today will be a leisurely day. After breakfast, commence sailing to
Esna where your dahabiyya will moor overnight. Private Guide Tour Esna
Temple
Day
4: Tuesday
This morning you will sail to Edfu to visit the wonderfully preserved
Temple of Edfu.
Overnight
moored beside a Nile island.
Day
5: Wednesday
Today you will sail to Kom Ombo visit see the Ptolemaic temple dedicated
to the crocodile god Sobek and the falcon-headed Horus, god of the morning
sun. Overnight
moored beside a Nile island.
Day
6: Thursday
A leisurely day sailing to Aswan where the dahabiyya moors overnight.
Day
7: Friday
Today you will visit the Aswan High Dam (completed in 1971); the Old
Dam (completed in 1902) and the ' unfinished obelisk', lying in situ
since the days of the pharaohs. You will also visit the Philae Temple,
dedicated to the goddess Isis, a structure rescued from the rising waters
of Lake Nasser at the time of the High Dam's construction.
Day
8: Saturday
Breakfast aboard the dahabiyya ,check-out disembarkation. Complimentary
transfer to the airport or train station or your hotel in Luxor .

Come to Egypt and enjoy your private honeymoon or Anniversary
cruise
Aswan
to Luxor Itinerary
Day
1: Saturday
Provide
us with your arrival details into Aswan , we will be happy to provide
you with a complimentary transfer from the airport or the train station
to the cruise .
Embarkation in Aswan for a relaxing week sailing the Nile on a luxuriously
appointed dahabiyya. Overnight, the ship moors on the Nile banks of
Aswan
Day
2: Sunday
Today you will visit the Aswan High Dam (completed in 1971); the Old
Dam (completed in 1902) and the ' unfinished obelisk', lying in situ
since the days of the pharaohs. You will also visit the Philae Temple,
dedicated to the goddess Isis, a structure rescued from the rising waters
of Lake Nasser at the time of the High Dam's construction.
Overnight
moored in Aswan.
Day
3: Monday
Morning sail to Kom Ombo to see the Ptolemaic temple dedicated to the
crocodile god Sobek and the falcon-headed Horus, god of the morning
sun.
Overnight
moored beside a Nile island.
Day
4: Tuesday
This morning you will sail to Edfu to visit the wonderfully preserved
Temple of Edfu.
Overnight
moored beside an island.
Day
5: Wednesday- Esna Private Guide tour Esna Temple
Today will be a leisurely day. After breakfast, commence sailing to
Esna, and onwards to Luxor, where your dahabiyya moors overnight. Private
Guide Tour Esna Temple
Day
6 : Thursday
Excursion to the West Bank to visit the great burial places of the Pharaohs
- the Valley of the Kings - where Howard Carter discovered the tomb
of Tutankhamen in 1922. Continue to the adjacent Valley of the Queens,
Medinet Habu Temple and the Colossi of Memnon.
Overnight
moored in Luxor.
Day
7: Friday
This morning you will visit the magnificent temple complex of Amon-Ra
at Karnak, with its vast hypostyle hall of 137 columns, followed by
the imposing 28th Dynasty Luxor Temple.
Overnight
moored in Luxor.
Day
8: Saturday
Breakfast aboard the dahabiyya , check-out disembarkation. Complimentary
transfer to the airport or train station or your hotel in Luxor .
Many
visitors come to Egypt to fulfill their dream of sailing the Nile on
board a private boat.
These Four Dahabbiya allow you to experience the Nile 's romance in
an intimate, privileged setting. These dahabiyas take you back in time
to a gentler, more gracious era.
With
shallow drafts, sails, and oars, feluccas could navigate not only the
great river, but the maze of canals threading through its banks, with
or without wind, reaching every part of the kingdom.
Dahabbiyas
/ Feluccas long ago transcended their role as humble transports. They
held the ancient empire together, carrying troops, decrees, and the
very mystery of the pharaoh.
Along the way, we moor on un-inhabited Nile islands, whose virgin landscapes
have hardly changed throughout millennia. Wandering the gardens and
Nile islands is an idyllic pastime, and the perfect compliment to your
visits to Egypt 's matchless monuments.
The Dahabbiyas are beautifully crafted wooden ships, outfitted in colonial
style with oriental and Egyptian touches. The interiors boast period
furnishing, and each cabin has its own distinct style and interior .
The
Cabins:
Each boat has six delightfully appointed private cabins measuring 5.75
meters x 2.50 meters . The cabins (maximum occupancy two persons) have
private bathrooms of 1.25 meters x 2.50 meters with a wc, wash basin,
shower and hairdryer. Some cabins offer two single beds and others have
a double. Each Dahabia comfortably accommodates twelve passengers sharing
in doubles . Yet of course in a lot of cases we have smaller parties
that prefer to charter the boat for four, five or six guests only .
The
cabins are named them in keeping with the ship's theme. For example,
on the Zahra ('flower') you will find the 'white lotus' cabin; on the
Nesma ('breeze') you have 'the zephyr', each with tasteful, individualized
embellishments.
Start
Weekly on Saturday:
The program starts every Saturday in either Luxor or Aswan, and the
journey lasts seven nights.
The
trip includes visits to sites in ancient Thebes (the Valley's of the
Kings and Queens), the Luxor and Karnak temples, as well as Edfu, Kom
Ombo and Philae. Entrance fees for the monuments are all inclusive.
In
addition to these historical sites, guests will visit less frequented
monuments and enjoy field excursions to villages and open countryside.
In short, we promise our guests a unique, tranquil journey on sailboats
fit for a king or a Pharaoh !
A
skilled river captain is on board at all times . A guide is at your
disposal to plan your itinerary and escort you through the sites you
choose to visit. The crew has completely separate quarters, to ensure
your privacy.
What to Pack:
Most of the year look forward to warm, even hot weather in Luxor &
Aswan, morning & evenings are cooler. For Shore excursions, we suggest
comfortable cotton & natural fabric lightweight clothing. Comfortable
walking shoes are essential. Lightweight comfortable & casual
clothing. Swimsuits, sun hat.

Come to Egypt and enjoy your private honeymoon or Anniversary
cruise
Daily
Telegraph
Peter Hughes
Saturday 13 May 2006
'Going
with the flow'
...'The
riad I found was not in the city but on the Nile. It's a dahabiya, a
traditional, two-masted Nile sailing cruiser. Anywhere else it would
be called a yacht. King Farouk had several. So if a riad is a small
princely palace on land - now given over to holidaymaking - a dahabiya
is a riad on the river...'
...'Mahogany
panelled and with two faux-glass oil lamps swinging from the beams -
a perfect touch for a sailing ship - the look was of a colonial club.
Hercule Poirot could have popped up at any moment. There were button-back
leather sofa and chairs, an antique bookcase and Scrabble, and tables
where we ate when the weather was too chilly for the deck. The food
was outstandingly good...'
...'
While the bigs ships charged by as if permanently late, the El Bey moved
at the same courtly pace as the Nile - slow enough to enable us to smell
woodsmoke from the villages and watch the kingfishers hover. Under our
isosceles sails we were as much a curiosity as the boys laying fishing
nets and the women doing laundry, the donkey carts and buffalo. But
it was the sight of some 40 huge cruise boats, moored in ranks, cheek
by gunwale up to 10 deep, at the pretty little temple of Kom Ombo that
made the greatest sense of dahabiya travel. The dahabiyas dont take
you to sites different from the norm, but they do take you in irresistibly
different style...'
...'The
greatest compliment to the El Bey was that, for all the wonders of ancient
Egypt, shown to us by our own guide, the part of the week my fellow
passengers enjoyed most was the time on the river...'
WITH
UPWARDS OF SEVENTY ILLUSTRATIONS ENGRAVED ON WOOD BY G. PEARSON
AFTER FINISHED DRAWINGS EXECUTED ON THE SPOT BY THE AUTHOR.
Amelia;s own drawing of Abu Simbel Temples in Nubia
PREFACE
TO THE SECOND EDITION
FIRST
published in 1877, this book has been out of print for several years.
I have therefore very gladly revised it for a new and cheaper edition.
In so revising it, I have corrected some of the historical notes by
the light of later discoveries; but I have left the narrative untouched.
Of the political changes which have come over the land of Egypt since
that narrative was written, I have taken no note; and because I in no
sense offer myself as a guide to others, I say nothing of the altered
conditions under which most Nile travellers now perform the trip. All
these things will be more satisfactorily, and more practically, learned
from the pages of Baedeker and Murray.
AMELIA
B. EDWARDS.
WESTBURY-ON-TRYM,
October 1888.
PREFACE
TO THE SECOND EDITION
FIRST
published in 1877, this book has been out of print for several years.
I have therefore very gladly revised it for a new and cheaper edition.
In so revising it, I have corrected some of the historical notes by
the light of later discoveries; but I have left the narrative untouched.
Of the political changes which have come over the land of Egypt since
that narrative was written, I have taken no note; and because I in no
sense offer myself as a guide to others, I say nothing of the altered
conditions under which most Nile travellers now perform the trip. All
these things will be more satisfactorily, and more practically, learned
from the pages of Baedeker and Murray.
AMELIA
B. EDWARDS.
WESTBURY-ON-TRYM,
October 1888.
Chapter
2
...................................But
the difficulties were all over now, and everything was settled ; though
not in the way we had at first intended. For in place of a small boat,
we had secured one of the largest on the river ; and instead of going
alone, we had decided to throw in our lot with that of three other travellers.
One of these three was already known to the Writer. The other two, friends
of the first, were on their way out from Europe, and were not expected
in Cairo for another week. We knew nothing of them but their names.
Meanwhile
L. and the Writer, assuming sole possession of the dahabeeyah, were
about to start ten days in advance ; it being their intention to push
on as far as Rhoda (the ultimate point then reached by the Nile railway),
and there to await the arrival of the rest of the party. Now Rhoda (more
correctly Roda) is just one hundred and eighty miles south of Cairo
; and we calculated upon seeing the Sakkârah pyramids, the Turra
quarries, the tombs of Beni Hassan, and the famous grotto of the Colossus
on the Sledge, before our fellow-travellers should be due.