Early in the morning (again) me and Laura were up having our boring included with the price breakfast (again). Got I taxi to the bus station bus the next bus would leave only at 5pm, we couldn’t afford to wait so we negotiated a taxi to take us.
My big dilemma was that technically I can’t get a visa at the border cuz both Brazil and Italy has Syria representative so I should get at the embassy, but I decide to try my luck anyway, the worst that could happen (and that would be very bad) was for me to be sent back to Amman having to buy a 375 US flight ticket from Tel Aviv in Israel to Istanbul.
We passed the border control and headed to the immigration office. Laura and I were in the same situation cuz Australia also has a Syrian embassy. She decide to try first, and apparently the officer didn’t know the fact that Australia had Syrian representative. He told her to go to the cashier, pay 74 U$ and go back there. Unfortunately I didn’t have the same luck, instead he gave me a transit pass which allowed me stay only for 3 days after that I would have to leave no matter what. It turned out just fine cuz I was only going to go to Syria to reach Turkey, and my visa cost me only 10 U$.
We reached the hostel around1pm, so we checked in and went in search food. Middle East cuisine has guaranteed the second spot in my list of favourite foods since I stepped in Egypt. Hummos, Baba ganoush, pita bread ( what in Brazil we call Syrian bread). Funny thing about this bread. The people here eat more pita bread than they breathe air. You can find it in the most odd places, I wouldn’t be surprised if I find a drugstore selling the taco-shaped-like bread.
At night we tried to mingled with the locals having a cup of tea and some narguile. Its was long day and before the clock stroke midnight I was fast asleep in my bed.
terça-feira, 21 de julho de 2009
Bobbing in the Dead Sea
Early in the morning as usual I was up to take the only bus to Amman. Had my boring included inthe price breakfast and got into the bus that leaves everyday from the very hostel I was staying. In the back of the mini bus I sat next to this aussie girl and a big group who seemed to be travelling together. Laura was her name and she was actually by herself by she ended up hooking up with that group which also had been formed of different people travelling together.
When we reached Amman we all decided to go to the same hotel. Laura had plans to go to the dead sea in the same days, and since the only reasons I was in Amman was to go the Dead Sea I decided to join her. In the end we where four, Me, Laura, Fernando ( a Brazilian guy who was part of the group and Hama (an aussie chick who by coincidence was staying in the same hostel and had been on a tour in Egypt with Laura..
After lunch we negotiated I cab to take us to the Dead Sea and back again. 30 JD which in roughly 30 euro, which again was not so bad considering the Dead Sea was more than an hour away from Ammam.
The taxi driver dropped us in a private resort where we could have access to the beach and all its facilities for only “12 JD”, but the place was really nice with a massive swimming pool. Lot of people say that the Dead Sea Water and the mud found deep in the ocean can make wonders with your skin even though the water in made by 70% of pure salt.
Floating in the water like a piece of cork was really couple I had the feeling I was in space, gravity zero. We took some of the cliché pictures of us reading a book while floating and covered our bodies in mud, we were told to be 10 minutes in the sun with the mud so it could do any good. 10 very long minutes I might add. All that salt was making my skin burn like hell but later my skin was softer than a baby’s bottom. I strongly recommend!
In the evening we all had dinner together right before I crumbled in my tent in the rooftop (again).
When we reached Amman we all decided to go to the same hotel. Laura had plans to go to the dead sea in the same days, and since the only reasons I was in Amman was to go the Dead Sea I decided to join her. In the end we where four, Me, Laura, Fernando ( a Brazilian guy who was part of the group and Hama (an aussie chick who by coincidence was staying in the same hostel and had been on a tour in Egypt with Laura..
After lunch we negotiated I cab to take us to the Dead Sea and back again. 30 JD which in roughly 30 euro, which again was not so bad considering the Dead Sea was more than an hour away from Ammam.
The taxi driver dropped us in a private resort where we could have access to the beach and all its facilities for only “12 JD”, but the place was really nice with a massive swimming pool. Lot of people say that the Dead Sea Water and the mud found deep in the ocean can make wonders with your skin even though the water in made by 70% of pure salt.
Floating in the water like a piece of cork was really couple I had the feeling I was in space, gravity zero. We took some of the cliché pictures of us reading a book while floating and covered our bodies in mud, we were told to be 10 minutes in the sun with the mud so it could do any good. 10 very long minutes I might add. All that salt was making my skin burn like hell but later my skin was softer than a baby’s bottom. I strongly recommend!
In the evening we all had dinner together right before I crumbled in my tent in the rooftop (again).
Indiana Jones
Local: on the bus in Antakya in Turkey on the way to Askara.
Time: 10:32
A lot has happened since my last post. For the past year and the half of my life nothing excited happened for months, my life was nothing more than gym, work, home and so on. But now, just yesterday I’ve been in 4 different cities in Syria, why the rush? Later you will understand.
Okay, last time I was about to have a shower to wash off the sands from Wadi Rum. The next day early in the morning in the rooftop of the hostel where me and Marielle spent the day I got my things ready, said good bye to Marielle and headed off to Petra, the rose stone city created by the Nabatean who carved the own homes in the mountains. Petra became considerably famous after the blockbuster Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, where the last part of the movie was shot in Petra, showing “The Treasuary” a more than 20 metres high palace CARVED into a massive mountain. Its really a mind-blowing piece of art that took more than 25 years to be fully complete. But don’t be fool by the movie cuz the insides of the palace you see in the movie is not what you get in real life, what you find is three massive empty rooms, but even that diminishes the splendour of the Treasury.
Me and two German guys who were also sleeping in the rooftop were the first ones to get to the ticket office in the Petra early in the morning. Venturing through the ancient city just by yourself without the hordes of tourist makes the experience much more enjoyable.
Petra is so big that is impossible to see everything in only one day even though I tried to see the most of it. At one point I found a detour and decided to pick up the trail. The path started to get narrower at the step, until I reached a massive wall made up of big rocks, I could see the top and could stop wondering what the view from there would look like. I dropped my bag to give me more flexibility I started climbing, when I reached the top I found another track. I decided I would keep going cuz eventually I would end up somewhere. Went back to pick up my bag and moved on. After 20 minutes almost crawling I found myself in a cliff, couldn’t go any further. My prize was the relaxing absence of noise. Just the wind and the birds help me to regain my forces after a quick nap.
Back to the tourist trail I headed to the monastery, the I couldn’t reach after facing thousands of endless stones steps up to the highest mountain. When I reached the top I realized the every single step was worth. My jaws had already dropped when I saw “ The Treasury”, But there I was breathless and jawless facing the monastery. Another masterpiece carved into a mountain, that made the treasury look like a doll house. After a couple of minutes in awe I explored some of the amazing views you couldn’t get after climbing thousands of steps.
Back in the hostel I had an amazing all you can eat Bedouin barbecue, smoked some arguile and watched Indiana Jones and the Last crusade which the hostel plays non stop every single day of the week.
Time: 10:32
A lot has happened since my last post. For the past year and the half of my life nothing excited happened for months, my life was nothing more than gym, work, home and so on. But now, just yesterday I’ve been in 4 different cities in Syria, why the rush? Later you will understand.
Okay, last time I was about to have a shower to wash off the sands from Wadi Rum. The next day early in the morning in the rooftop of the hostel where me and Marielle spent the day I got my things ready, said good bye to Marielle and headed off to Petra, the rose stone city created by the Nabatean who carved the own homes in the mountains. Petra became considerably famous after the blockbuster Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, where the last part of the movie was shot in Petra, showing “The Treasuary” a more than 20 metres high palace CARVED into a massive mountain. Its really a mind-blowing piece of art that took more than 25 years to be fully complete. But don’t be fool by the movie cuz the insides of the palace you see in the movie is not what you get in real life, what you find is three massive empty rooms, but even that diminishes the splendour of the Treasury.
Me and two German guys who were also sleeping in the rooftop were the first ones to get to the ticket office in the Petra early in the morning. Venturing through the ancient city just by yourself without the hordes of tourist makes the experience much more enjoyable.
Petra is so big that is impossible to see everything in only one day even though I tried to see the most of it. At one point I found a detour and decided to pick up the trail. The path started to get narrower at the step, until I reached a massive wall made up of big rocks, I could see the top and could stop wondering what the view from there would look like. I dropped my bag to give me more flexibility I started climbing, when I reached the top I found another track. I decided I would keep going cuz eventually I would end up somewhere. Went back to pick up my bag and moved on. After 20 minutes almost crawling I found myself in a cliff, couldn’t go any further. My prize was the relaxing absence of noise. Just the wind and the birds help me to regain my forces after a quick nap.
Back to the tourist trail I headed to the monastery, the I couldn’t reach after facing thousands of endless stones steps up to the highest mountain. When I reached the top I realized the every single step was worth. My jaws had already dropped when I saw “ The Treasury”, But there I was breathless and jawless facing the monastery. Another masterpiece carved into a mountain, that made the treasury look like a doll house. After a couple of minutes in awe I explored some of the amazing views you couldn’t get after climbing thousands of steps.
Back in the hostel I had an amazing all you can eat Bedouin barbecue, smoked some arguile and watched Indiana Jones and the Last crusade which the hostel plays non stop every single day of the week.
Head Sanded
Head Sanded
Place: At the Valentine hostel in Petra sitting in the lounge.
Time: 12:15 local time
After the sun cooled down a bit Hali got our camels ready to go. For our luck its wasn’t a really hot day, even so I was prepared, wearing my gallapea and my Arafat ( sort of a man dress who covers pretty much your whole body and a bandana who covers all the rest) we headed to the desert. After around half an hour on the Camel we were totally emerged in the desert scenery, but not that stereotype version of desert with miles of sand and endless dunes that go until your sight can reach. Instead we had lots of mountain carved by millions of years of cutting glass wind filling the background. On the way to the camp we stopped at a sand dune which alone was worth the trip. Every step you take your legs can be buried almost all the way to the knees. Not to mention the colossal effort that takes only to only a couple of meters up the dune,
We also got the see some Nabateans inscription painted in my mounts, all well as the Lawrence’s house used on the movie.
The camp wasn’t nothing fancy, actually just a couple of mattresses and pillows in a tent. Our bags were already there waiting for us cuz they came by jeep that takes only 20 minutes to reach the site unlike the slow-paced camels that make all the muscle of your butt endure almost 3 hours of pain.
I finally got a chance to place with my Frisbee, while we watch the sun go to bed in between the mountains.
The sun left the picture andthe most amazing army of stars crowded the sky leaving barely any room left. Unfortunately was impossible to take any picture so you guys have any idea what I’m talking about, that’s when Marielle said that the best things in life can’t be capture in a picture, which if you think about its kind of true.
I was so starving when he reached the camp, that when I realized that our last meal had been in the hotel in Aqaba, BREAKFAST!! And it was already 21h o’clock. We had some pitta bread and baba ganoush, ( what we call Syrian bread in Brazil, and eggplant puree) and of course, tea.
The moon was nowhere to be seen which made the desert almost pitch black, but that didn’t stop us to go for a walk in the black desert, we laid in the middle of the dune counting shooting stars when we had the amazing idea of sleeping right there with the stars as our roof. We grabbed some blankets for the tent cuz it can get very cold during the night in the night especially cuz we were in a high place.
That was the most memorable experience so far in my trip, as I type I still got sand deep down in my scalp, butt crack, ears. It was so windy during the night that we were almost buried in sand by the morning.
We woke up at 5 to see the sunrise and cuz our bus to Petra was schedule to 8h30. While we were preparing the breakfast me, in my starvation as usual went straight to the pitta bread, something ready to be eaten. But where was it? We looked everywhere but couldn’t find it only to realized that the desert foxes had stolen it after we saw the footprints on the sand. Motherfuckers!! So we had to go back to the village and finish our breakfast there.
A quick ride brought us to Wadi Musa where the bus driver recommended this hostel where we are at the moment. Marielle went after a ATM to get the money to pay me since here card was blocked in Aqaba. But bad news were ahead, the whole city was out of internet and all the ATMs were out of service. Poor little girl, she had only today to see Petra and didn’t even have money to pay for the entrance, neither did I, so couldn’t help even myself. Now I’m going to have to stay one more night here since the bus to Amman leaves only in the morning..
Now I need to have a shower to get rid of have of the desert off my scalp.
Salamaleico!
Place: At the Valentine hostel in Petra sitting in the lounge.
Time: 12:15 local time
After the sun cooled down a bit Hali got our camels ready to go. For our luck its wasn’t a really hot day, even so I was prepared, wearing my gallapea and my Arafat ( sort of a man dress who covers pretty much your whole body and a bandana who covers all the rest) we headed to the desert. After around half an hour on the Camel we were totally emerged in the desert scenery, but not that stereotype version of desert with miles of sand and endless dunes that go until your sight can reach. Instead we had lots of mountain carved by millions of years of cutting glass wind filling the background. On the way to the camp we stopped at a sand dune which alone was worth the trip. Every step you take your legs can be buried almost all the way to the knees. Not to mention the colossal effort that takes only to only a couple of meters up the dune,
We also got the see some Nabateans inscription painted in my mounts, all well as the Lawrence’s house used on the movie.
The camp wasn’t nothing fancy, actually just a couple of mattresses and pillows in a tent. Our bags were already there waiting for us cuz they came by jeep that takes only 20 minutes to reach the site unlike the slow-paced camels that make all the muscle of your butt endure almost 3 hours of pain.
I finally got a chance to place with my Frisbee, while we watch the sun go to bed in between the mountains.
The sun left the picture andthe most amazing army of stars crowded the sky leaving barely any room left. Unfortunately was impossible to take any picture so you guys have any idea what I’m talking about, that’s when Marielle said that the best things in life can’t be capture in a picture, which if you think about its kind of true.
I was so starving when he reached the camp, that when I realized that our last meal had been in the hotel in Aqaba, BREAKFAST!! And it was already 21h o’clock. We had some pitta bread and baba ganoush, ( what we call Syrian bread in Brazil, and eggplant puree) and of course, tea.
The moon was nowhere to be seen which made the desert almost pitch black, but that didn’t stop us to go for a walk in the black desert, we laid in the middle of the dune counting shooting stars when we had the amazing idea of sleeping right there with the stars as our roof. We grabbed some blankets for the tent cuz it can get very cold during the night in the night especially cuz we were in a high place.
That was the most memorable experience so far in my trip, as I type I still got sand deep down in my scalp, butt crack, ears. It was so windy during the night that we were almost buried in sand by the morning.
We woke up at 5 to see the sunrise and cuz our bus to Petra was schedule to 8h30. While we were preparing the breakfast me, in my starvation as usual went straight to the pitta bread, something ready to be eaten. But where was it? We looked everywhere but couldn’t find it only to realized that the desert foxes had stolen it after we saw the footprints on the sand. Motherfuckers!! So we had to go back to the village and finish our breakfast there.
A quick ride brought us to Wadi Musa where the bus driver recommended this hostel where we are at the moment. Marielle went after a ATM to get the money to pay me since here card was blocked in Aqaba. But bad news were ahead, the whole city was out of internet and all the ATMs were out of service. Poor little girl, she had only today to see Petra and didn’t even have money to pay for the entrance, neither did I, so couldn’t help even myself. Now I’m going to have to stay one more night here since the bus to Amman leaves only in the morning..
Now I need to have a shower to get rid of have of the desert off my scalp.
Salamaleico!
the Bedouins
Place: in a bedouin village in the middle of Wadi Rum desert
Time: 12:46 July 15th
What was supposed to be an hour ferry ride to aqaba turned out to be the most excruciating trip ever. The ferry, meant to arrive at Aqaba at 5pm docked at the port around 10 o’clock. Its was too late to try to get a bus to Wadi Rum so Marielle and me decided to spent the night in Aqaba. Us and the Danish couple were the only ones who didn’t give the passport to the official to collect the visa so when we were leaving the boat the police collected ours. We were dropped off the the middle of the port with no signs were to go at this point all the other tourist had disappeared, its was only Marielle and me wandering through the docks. Every now and then we passed by some Jordanians sitting around having tea and smoking who pointed the right direction to us. After a unpleasant 10 minutes stroll we found out that we had missed the shuttle to the Arrival building. We sat there for a while until I went to the immigration office to ask about our passports, there was no signs of our passports and we started to get worried cuz the Canadians and Americans already had their passports there. The officers were really nice and said they were going to check and told us to wait for a while.
After a couple of minutes the Danish couple walks in also looking for theirs, but right after comes one of the police officers who were in the boat with all ours passports telling us to follow him. When we were in his office the other guy who I had asked about the passports came to check if we were okay. They were the nicest police I had ever met in my life, actually all Jordanians so far were really sweet. After we got ours visas sorted we got a cab and headed to the Hotel, and finally I had a long hot watered showered.
In the morning after breakfast we head to the bus station but the bus to Wadi Rum it was going to leave only and 1pm so instead of wait 3 hours the took I cab for 15 JD.
At this moment I sitting in a Bedouin village wait for the sun calm down a bit so we can go for a Camel ride through the desert. The funny thing is that our is in a book of a famous Dutch writer who travelled around Syria and Jordan and wrote a book about, he was only 12 back then and the even more impressive is that his grandfather played a small rolled in the movie Lawrence of Arabia!! How cool is that!!
Now if you excuse Im going to show some card trick to the Bedouin kid who sitting right next to me attempting to make a rock disappear in his hand.
Time: 12:46 July 15th
What was supposed to be an hour ferry ride to aqaba turned out to be the most excruciating trip ever. The ferry, meant to arrive at Aqaba at 5pm docked at the port around 10 o’clock. Its was too late to try to get a bus to Wadi Rum so Marielle and me decided to spent the night in Aqaba. Us and the Danish couple were the only ones who didn’t give the passport to the official to collect the visa so when we were leaving the boat the police collected ours. We were dropped off the the middle of the port with no signs were to go at this point all the other tourist had disappeared, its was only Marielle and me wandering through the docks. Every now and then we passed by some Jordanians sitting around having tea and smoking who pointed the right direction to us. After a unpleasant 10 minutes stroll we found out that we had missed the shuttle to the Arrival building. We sat there for a while until I went to the immigration office to ask about our passports, there was no signs of our passports and we started to get worried cuz the Canadians and Americans already had their passports there. The officers were really nice and said they were going to check and told us to wait for a while.
After a couple of minutes the Danish couple walks in also looking for theirs, but right after comes one of the police officers who were in the boat with all ours passports telling us to follow him. When we were in his office the other guy who I had asked about the passports came to check if we were okay. They were the nicest police I had ever met in my life, actually all Jordanians so far were really sweet. After we got ours visas sorted we got a cab and headed to the Hotel, and finally I had a long hot watered showered.
In the morning after breakfast we head to the bus station but the bus to Wadi Rum it was going to leave only and 1pm so instead of wait 3 hours the took I cab for 15 JD.
At this moment I sitting in a Bedouin village wait for the sun calm down a bit so we can go for a Camel ride through the desert. The funny thing is that our is in a book of a famous Dutch writer who travelled around Syria and Jordan and wrote a book about, he was only 12 back then and the even more impressive is that his grandfather played a small rolled in the movie Lawrence of Arabia!! How cool is that!!
Now if you excuse Im going to show some card trick to the Bedouin kid who sitting right next to me attempting to make a rock disappear in his hand.
On my own but not alone
Place: on the ferry from Nuweiba to Aqana in Jordan
Time: 18:29 July 14th
Salam everyone! I’m finally on my own after I said goodbye to Norman and the rest of the group from my tour. After not heading back to Cairo when we stop at Hurghada, Norman and I decided to stay with the half of the group who was going to Dahab as part of extension of the tour. Norman came up with the idea cuz heading back to Cairo would be just a waste of time since he was heading to Sharm el Sheik which is 1 hour from Dahab and I would going be going to Nuweiba which is also an hour way from Dahab.
So we talk to Hany our tour leader if would be okay to stay in Hurghada with the rest of the group and then go together to Dahab where we would be in our own. The plan turned out to be perfect. We got to climb the Mount Sinai to see the sunrise and chill a couple of days in the beach resort Dahab.
Today I was woken by the furious wind breaking the window open a couple of times i my room. 10h30 my bus to Nuweiba would leave and at 9:45 Norman had to be at the Al Capone restaurant to be picked up by Hany to go Scuba Diving with the rest of the group. We packed our things, went to the reception to see if he could get keep the room for a cheaper price since I was leaving and he was not going to go to Sharm el Sheik anymore. After the bargain we head to market to get some breakfast, I said go bye to him and went to bank to get some US dollars since the ferry in Nuweiba only accept dollar as told in my guide book. It was around 9:45 and I still need to find my way to the Bus station, I ended up getting 500 Egyptian pounds only to the cashier telling my he didn’t have any US dollars. I didn’t have much time so I decided to go to the bus station anyway, it didn’t take long until I was hailed by a pick-up taxi in the main avenue. For 10 pounds I hopped in the back and after 10 minutes in the cool breeze I was at the bus station with half an hour to spare but no US dollars in my pocket.
I found a place to wait for my bus next to this girl with a backpack next to her. I didn’t say hello but we exchanged respectful fellow backpackers look. But on the bus I stroked up a conversation it turned out she was a Dutch girl travelling by herself named Marielle, she was on the bus cuz her bike had broken and her plan was to travel all around by bike, which I considered an insane idea when your backpack weighs 20kgs and you have an freaking hot sun above your head the whole day.
After an hour on the bus we got to Nuweiba and found the ticket office without any problem, in there we found some others backpackers, 2 American girls, 2 Canadian, a Danish couple and another British. The guy accepted my Egyptian pounds just as well. It was around half past one and the ferry was supposed to leave at 15h30 ( at this very moment I’m on my seat and its 7 o’clock I we still haven’t moved an inch). We got our ticket head to the port and a deva ju scene of the airport on my arrival came up. The absence of a queue or any form of organization and consideration to the others were driving me crazy. Everyone trying to get through the immigration before everyone else. From the lobby we had to take a bus all the way to the ferry and face another conglomeration of people so the guard could check our ticket and passport. We got into the ferry, dropped our back where all the cars were parking and went to another “ I want to see your passport and ticket “ checkpoint so we could go up to the sitting area. A funny thing that happened was that when everybody got off the bus and sprinted to the Ferry where the guard was waiting when the guard saw the Danish couple he made everyone wait and waive them through and the same happened with me and Marielle. VIP treating nice!! But at the same time I felt that was and discrimination to the Middle Easterners, but when we got our seats ( by the nice the ferry was really nice something that resembles the executive class of most of the air companies) we, the tourists, were all spread along the ferry, and somehow we all ended up sitting in the last room of the ferry, the room with no windows, cuz we were told by the ferry crew that would be better for us to sit in the back, cuz it would be nicer. BULLSHIT that was the shittiest room in the ferry and the Egyptians got the best seats, the reason for that I still don’t know. Well, now we are heading to Aqaba, Marielle decided to go with me to Wadi Rum, the desert where part of Lawrence of Arabia was shot, the place its supposed to be one of the most beautiful and safe desert scenery to visit, crib of the Bedouins famous for their hospitality..
Later I tell you how this shambolic ferry trip ended.
Salamaleico!
Time: 18:29 July 14th
Salam everyone! I’m finally on my own after I said goodbye to Norman and the rest of the group from my tour. After not heading back to Cairo when we stop at Hurghada, Norman and I decided to stay with the half of the group who was going to Dahab as part of extension of the tour. Norman came up with the idea cuz heading back to Cairo would be just a waste of time since he was heading to Sharm el Sheik which is 1 hour from Dahab and I would going be going to Nuweiba which is also an hour way from Dahab.
So we talk to Hany our tour leader if would be okay to stay in Hurghada with the rest of the group and then go together to Dahab where we would be in our own. The plan turned out to be perfect. We got to climb the Mount Sinai to see the sunrise and chill a couple of days in the beach resort Dahab.
Today I was woken by the furious wind breaking the window open a couple of times i my room. 10h30 my bus to Nuweiba would leave and at 9:45 Norman had to be at the Al Capone restaurant to be picked up by Hany to go Scuba Diving with the rest of the group. We packed our things, went to the reception to see if he could get keep the room for a cheaper price since I was leaving and he was not going to go to Sharm el Sheik anymore. After the bargain we head to market to get some breakfast, I said go bye to him and went to bank to get some US dollars since the ferry in Nuweiba only accept dollar as told in my guide book. It was around 9:45 and I still need to find my way to the Bus station, I ended up getting 500 Egyptian pounds only to the cashier telling my he didn’t have any US dollars. I didn’t have much time so I decided to go to the bus station anyway, it didn’t take long until I was hailed by a pick-up taxi in the main avenue. For 10 pounds I hopped in the back and after 10 minutes in the cool breeze I was at the bus station with half an hour to spare but no US dollars in my pocket.
I found a place to wait for my bus next to this girl with a backpack next to her. I didn’t say hello but we exchanged respectful fellow backpackers look. But on the bus I stroked up a conversation it turned out she was a Dutch girl travelling by herself named Marielle, she was on the bus cuz her bike had broken and her plan was to travel all around by bike, which I considered an insane idea when your backpack weighs 20kgs and you have an freaking hot sun above your head the whole day.
After an hour on the bus we got to Nuweiba and found the ticket office without any problem, in there we found some others backpackers, 2 American girls, 2 Canadian, a Danish couple and another British. The guy accepted my Egyptian pounds just as well. It was around half past one and the ferry was supposed to leave at 15h30 ( at this very moment I’m on my seat and its 7 o’clock I we still haven’t moved an inch). We got our ticket head to the port and a deva ju scene of the airport on my arrival came up. The absence of a queue or any form of organization and consideration to the others were driving me crazy. Everyone trying to get through the immigration before everyone else. From the lobby we had to take a bus all the way to the ferry and face another conglomeration of people so the guard could check our ticket and passport. We got into the ferry, dropped our back where all the cars were parking and went to another “ I want to see your passport and ticket “ checkpoint so we could go up to the sitting area. A funny thing that happened was that when everybody got off the bus and sprinted to the Ferry where the guard was waiting when the guard saw the Danish couple he made everyone wait and waive them through and the same happened with me and Marielle. VIP treating nice!! But at the same time I felt that was and discrimination to the Middle Easterners, but when we got our seats ( by the nice the ferry was really nice something that resembles the executive class of most of the air companies) we, the tourists, were all spread along the ferry, and somehow we all ended up sitting in the last room of the ferry, the room with no windows, cuz we were told by the ferry crew that would be better for us to sit in the back, cuz it would be nicer. BULLSHIT that was the shittiest room in the ferry and the Egyptians got the best seats, the reason for that I still don’t know. Well, now we are heading to Aqaba, Marielle decided to go with me to Wadi Rum, the desert where part of Lawrence of Arabia was shot, the place its supposed to be one of the most beautiful and safe desert scenery to visit, crib of the Bedouins famous for their hospitality..
Later I tell you how this shambolic ferry trip ended.
Salamaleico!
segunda-feira, 13 de julho de 2009
Hora: 14:14
Local: No onibus saindo de Hurghada rumo ao monte Sinai, 14 horas de viagem.
Salam Habib!!! Galere lo siento muito mas foi impossivel de pstar qualquer coisa nesses ultimos dias. O tour foi bem corrido e mal tive tempo livre pra escrever qq coisa, tbm uma piscina num calor de 40 graus o que vc acha eu ia fazer?.
8 dias se passaram desde que comecei meu tour pelo Egito, eramos um grupo de 16 pessoas: Nicole, Krista,Norman,Ivan, Ana, Francis, Marak, Michael, Angela, Suzanna, Eusebio, Amy, Vicky, Fabien, Natalia, eu e o nome tour lider, o fiiguraca do Hanny. O grupo todo se deu muito bem, permanecemos unidos o tempo tempo. E apos muitas shishas tragadas e brejas bebidas escondina no quarto de hotel ontem nos despedimos de metade do grupo se foram de volta pro Cairo, E o resto ficou em Hurghada. Na verdade era pra eu e Norman voltar pra Cairo mas numa mudanca abrupta dos planos decidi ficar mais uma noite aqui e seguir pra Nuweiba pra divisa do Egito e Jordania. Essa ultmina semana foi perfeita, 3 dias num cruzeiro, piscina, jacuzzi, festas, templos milenares.,
Nesse momento estamos rumando ao monte Sinai. Se vc nunca ouviu falar dele talvez vc tenha ouvido de um certo cara chamado Moises, aquele que abriu o mar vermelho pros judeus fugirem pra terra prometida, ou talvez vc tbm ouviu falar dos 10 Mandamentos que Moises escreveu dps de bater um papo com Deus. E pra ter essa conversa com o Todo Poderoso Moises teve que chegar bem perto do ceu e pra isso ele escalou o MONTE SINAI Pois bem, vamos chegar no monte Sinai por volta das 22h da noite, vamos subri ao topo e ver o nascer do sol, ai que coisa mais romantica!
Ver o nascer do sol em um lugar especial com alguem especial eh um dos itens da minha “Coisas pra fse fazer antes de morrer”, bom o lugar especial eu encontrei, pena que nao estou com a pessoa especial.
Galera....mil desculpas mas tah dificil pra mim escrever....to pensando em ingles ai nao consigo me concentrar em escrever algo descente em portugues..jah faz duas semanas que nao falo portugues....
Vou assisitir um filmizinho agora....teh mais!
Local: No onibus saindo de Hurghada rumo ao monte Sinai, 14 horas de viagem.
Salam Habib!!! Galere lo siento muito mas foi impossivel de pstar qualquer coisa nesses ultimos dias. O tour foi bem corrido e mal tive tempo livre pra escrever qq coisa, tbm uma piscina num calor de 40 graus o que vc acha eu ia fazer?.
8 dias se passaram desde que comecei meu tour pelo Egito, eramos um grupo de 16 pessoas: Nicole, Krista,Norman,Ivan, Ana, Francis, Marak, Michael, Angela, Suzanna, Eusebio, Amy, Vicky, Fabien, Natalia, eu e o nome tour lider, o fiiguraca do Hanny. O grupo todo se deu muito bem, permanecemos unidos o tempo tempo. E apos muitas shishas tragadas e brejas bebidas escondina no quarto de hotel ontem nos despedimos de metade do grupo se foram de volta pro Cairo, E o resto ficou em Hurghada. Na verdade era pra eu e Norman voltar pra Cairo mas numa mudanca abrupta dos planos decidi ficar mais uma noite aqui e seguir pra Nuweiba pra divisa do Egito e Jordania. Essa ultmina semana foi perfeita, 3 dias num cruzeiro, piscina, jacuzzi, festas, templos milenares.,
Nesse momento estamos rumando ao monte Sinai. Se vc nunca ouviu falar dele talvez vc tenha ouvido de um certo cara chamado Moises, aquele que abriu o mar vermelho pros judeus fugirem pra terra prometida, ou talvez vc tbm ouviu falar dos 10 Mandamentos que Moises escreveu dps de bater um papo com Deus. E pra ter essa conversa com o Todo Poderoso Moises teve que chegar bem perto do ceu e pra isso ele escalou o MONTE SINAI Pois bem, vamos chegar no monte Sinai por volta das 22h da noite, vamos subri ao topo e ver o nascer do sol, ai que coisa mais romantica!
Ver o nascer do sol em um lugar especial com alguem especial eh um dos itens da minha “Coisas pra fse fazer antes de morrer”, bom o lugar especial eu encontrei, pena que nao estou com a pessoa especial.
Galera....mil desculpas mas tah dificil pra mim escrever....to pensando em ingles ai nao consigo me concentrar em escrever algo descente em portugues..jah faz duas semanas que nao falo portugues....
Vou assisitir um filmizinho agora....teh mais!
Date: July 4th 2009 15:08h
Place: Restaurant at the Indiana Hotel
I just checked in the hotel where my tour starts, so far it seems Im the first one to arrive, but nothing is planned for today cuz we have to way everyone to arrive. Yesterday I spent pretty much the whole day walking..and boy I’ve walked, walked for hours, took pics of some boys jumping off the bridge into the Nile, very nice kids, they were so excite to pose for the pics. On the way back I turned into this street and after a couple of miles it turned out it was a dead end, the only way was through this 5 star hotel, I didn’t even think twice, put on a posh face and walked in as if a were a customer. Ended up running into the Hard Rock and since its easy to find beer around here I didn’t hesitate, walked right in and ended up splurging 300 pound s for a meal. Oh that Stella (not the Artois, but an Egyptian one), never in my life a beer went so smoothly down my throat, it was like a massage in my larynx.
After a couple o days here I realized that 9 out 10 Egyptians that strikes up a conversation with you are trying to sell you something. I met this boy, seemed like a nice guy, he asked about where I was from, told he had a gallery and him and his family did all the painting, and me trying to be a nice guy said – That’s cool, where is your gallery? – And his gallery was conveniently down the street. He introduced to his brothers and sister offer me a couple o tea. And all this time I’m thinking “Boy, Egyptians are really nice people. They were asking about my family and blah, blah, blah. In the end he pushed my 3 of his painting were he wrote my mom and my dad’s name. What happened? I didn’t buy, he asked to choose the paintings I like but I told him I didn’t want, and I kept asking about the price and he kept saying “Don’t worry a about price, money is nothing”. He tried to sell me all the three painting for 300 pounds, but I had only 90..hehe. Ended up leaving the store with a smaller painting for 90 pounds, and the original price was 80.
In the evening me, the aussie guy and the American went out to this terrace restaurant on a rooftop of hotel. Nice place, quiet, couple of alcohol drinking Arabics. We had a couple of beers, one shisha each cuz a guy misunderstood us, talked some shit and called the night.
Place: Restaurant at the Indiana Hotel
I just checked in the hotel where my tour starts, so far it seems Im the first one to arrive, but nothing is planned for today cuz we have to way everyone to arrive. Yesterday I spent pretty much the whole day walking..and boy I’ve walked, walked for hours, took pics of some boys jumping off the bridge into the Nile, very nice kids, they were so excite to pose for the pics. On the way back I turned into this street and after a couple of miles it turned out it was a dead end, the only way was through this 5 star hotel, I didn’t even think twice, put on a posh face and walked in as if a were a customer. Ended up running into the Hard Rock and since its easy to find beer around here I didn’t hesitate, walked right in and ended up splurging 300 pound s for a meal. Oh that Stella (not the Artois, but an Egyptian one), never in my life a beer went so smoothly down my throat, it was like a massage in my larynx.
After a couple o days here I realized that 9 out 10 Egyptians that strikes up a conversation with you are trying to sell you something. I met this boy, seemed like a nice guy, he asked about where I was from, told he had a gallery and him and his family did all the painting, and me trying to be a nice guy said – That’s cool, where is your gallery? – And his gallery was conveniently down the street. He introduced to his brothers and sister offer me a couple o tea. And all this time I’m thinking “Boy, Egyptians are really nice people. They were asking about my family and blah, blah, blah. In the end he pushed my 3 of his painting were he wrote my mom and my dad’s name. What happened? I didn’t buy, he asked to choose the paintings I like but I told him I didn’t want, and I kept asking about the price and he kept saying “Don’t worry a about price, money is nothing”. He tried to sell me all the three painting for 300 pounds, but I had only 90..hehe. Ended up leaving the store with a smaller painting for 90 pounds, and the original price was 80.
In the evening me, the aussie guy and the American went out to this terrace restaurant on a rooftop of hotel. Nice place, quiet, couple of alcohol drinking Arabics. We had a couple of beers, one shisha each cuz a guy misunderstood us, talked some shit and called the night.
E por ai vai
Apos uma bela noite de sono mesmo sob um calor de 30 graus em plena madrugada eu e os coreanos fomos em busca do almoco. Perambulamos um pouco pelo centro ateh encontrarmos um KFC. Ateh hj nunca tinha dado muita importancia pro ar condicionado, mas assim que as portas do KFC se abrirarm.....MEUS DEUS....DEUS abencoe o homem que por sua vez criou o ar condicionado! Me despedi dos coreanos pq tinha que ir em busca de um albergue para ficar e eles estavam em procura de estaca o de onibus para ir pra Aswan, sul do Egito. Acabei por ficar no albeurgue Lialy por 40 libras egipcias. Pra minha sorte esse albergue fica apenas alguns metros do Dahab. Fiz o check in e fui buscar minha mala que tinha deixado no Daha e sai pra explorar a cidade. Fiz o que sempre gosto de fazer, nada de mapas, nada de pontos turisticos, fui virando em cada esquina ao meu bel prazer, e por sinal fui parar num lugar nada turistico pq em todo o percurso e fui o unico turista que eu vi. Como disse antes Cairo lembra muito o centro da cidade de Sao Paulo, mas apos esse meu pequeno passeio sinto que tenho que reformular o que disse, Cairo lembra muito o centro de Sao Paulo......apos o holocausto. O transito era absolutamente caotico, buzinha pra tudo quanto eh lado, pedestre andando no meio da rua, eh um jogo de vida ou morte andar pelas ruas de Cairo.
Passei por uma loja onde um rapaz estava servindo um bebida pros clientes, e parecia ser bem popular, resolvi experimentar, imergir na cultura arabe, agir como um egipcio. A bebida custava apenas 1 libras egipcia, o que em libras esterlinas eram apenas 11 centavos....hehe..I love the exchange rate....antes de dar o primeiro gole perguntei o que era a bebida e o cara me lanca – Its sugar cane juice. E pra quem nao sabe iss o se traduz em “Caldo de Cana”. Porra....eu querendo experimentar algo totalmente novo e acabo bebendo caldo de cana..haha...logo apos eu acabei entrando num beco....totalmente populado....era um mercado labirinto....se vendia de tudo...e quase fui atropelado por um cara de moto.....estava borestando olhando uma barraquinha...se tivesse demorarado mais 1 segundo o cara tinha passado por mim...por mim e mais three hundred, mas pelo visto isso era normal..pq no caminho passei por mais uns tres andando de moto por entre aquele beco cheio de gente.
Outra coisa interessante que notei eh o nivel de higiene da galera. Pelas ruas perambulam uns caras com um o que parece ser um galao com alguma bebida, e outro galaozinho com agua e uns copes de VIDRO (muita atencao para este detalhe, de vidro nao de plastico) ai alguem vai..dah umas moedinhas pro cara, o cara servi a bebida no copo, o cliente bebe, vai embora, ai o cara enxagua o copo com agua, chacoalha e por de volta de bandeja.....urhhhhhhhhh...nojento.
No momento estou sentando no Hard Rock Cafe que acabei encontrando apos andar por horas no calor, entrei esse hotel.....e dentro do hotel encontrei o hard rock...e como por aqui eh absolutamtente dicidil de encontrar cerveja nao pensei duas vezes.....ah...nunca uma cerveja tinha descito tao redondo quanto esse......tente andar num calor de 41 graus e dps beber uma bohemia trincando...rs
Galera..desculpa se nao estou detalhando bem minha viagem, pq estou escrendo em ingles e portugues...enntao acha saco....e eu nem to revisando nada....escrevi tah “escrevido” nem “checo” nada....mando direto pro blog.
Entao tah....teh mais entao...e se ngm comentar nada eu paro de escever’
Fui!
Apos uma bela noite de sono mesmo sob um calor de 30 graus em plena madrugada eu e os coreanos fomos em busca do almoco. Perambulamos um pouco pelo centro ateh encontrarmos um KFC. Ateh hj nunca tinha dado muita importancia pro ar condicionado, mas assim que as portas do KFC se abrirarm.....MEUS DEUS....DEUS abencoe o homem que por sua vez criou o ar condicionado! Me despedi dos coreanos pq tinha que ir em busca de um albergue para ficar e eles estavam em procura de estaca o de onibus para ir pra Aswan, sul do Egito. Acabei por ficar no albeurgue Lialy por 40 libras egipcias. Pra minha sorte esse albergue fica apenas alguns metros do Dahab. Fiz o check in e fui buscar minha mala que tinha deixado no Daha e sai pra explorar a cidade. Fiz o que sempre gosto de fazer, nada de mapas, nada de pontos turisticos, fui virando em cada esquina ao meu bel prazer, e por sinal fui parar num lugar nada turistico pq em todo o percurso e fui o unico turista que eu vi. Como disse antes Cairo lembra muito o centro da cidade de Sao Paulo, mas apos esse meu pequeno passeio sinto que tenho que reformular o que disse, Cairo lembra muito o centro de Sao Paulo......apos o holocausto. O transito era absolutamente caotico, buzinha pra tudo quanto eh lado, pedestre andando no meio da rua, eh um jogo de vida ou morte andar pelas ruas de Cairo.
Passei por uma loja onde um rapaz estava servindo um bebida pros clientes, e parecia ser bem popular, resolvi experimentar, imergir na cultura arabe, agir como um egipcio. A bebida custava apenas 1 libras egipcia, o que em libras esterlinas eram apenas 11 centavos....hehe..I love the exchange rate....antes de dar o primeiro gole perguntei o que era a bebida e o cara me lanca – Its sugar cane juice. E pra quem nao sabe iss o se traduz em “Caldo de Cana”. Porra....eu querendo experimentar algo totalmente novo e acabo bebendo caldo de cana..haha...logo apos eu acabei entrando num beco....totalmente populado....era um mercado labirinto....se vendia de tudo...e quase fui atropelado por um cara de moto.....estava borestando olhando uma barraquinha...se tivesse demorarado mais 1 segundo o cara tinha passado por mim...por mim e mais three hundred, mas pelo visto isso era normal..pq no caminho passei por mais uns tres andando de moto por entre aquele beco cheio de gente.
Outra coisa interessante que notei eh o nivel de higiene da galera. Pelas ruas perambulam uns caras com um o que parece ser um galao com alguma bebida, e outro galaozinho com agua e uns copes de VIDRO (muita atencao para este detalhe, de vidro nao de plastico) ai alguem vai..dah umas moedinhas pro cara, o cara servi a bebida no copo, o cliente bebe, vai embora, ai o cara enxagua o copo com agua, chacoalha e por de volta de bandeja.....urhhhhhhhhh...nojento.
No momento estou sentando no Hard Rock Cafe que acabei encontrando apos andar por horas no calor, entrei esse hotel.....e dentro do hotel encontrei o hard rock...e como por aqui eh absolutamtente dicidil de encontrar cerveja nao pensei duas vezes.....ah...nunca uma cerveja tinha descito tao redondo quanto esse......tente andar num calor de 41 graus e dps beber uma bohemia trincando...rs
Galera..desculpa se nao estou detalhando bem minha viagem, pq estou escrendo em ingles e portugues...enntao acha saco....e eu nem to revisando nada....escrevi tah “escrevido” nem “checo” nada....mando direto pro blog.
Entao tah....teh mais entao...e se ngm comentar nada eu paro de escever’
Fui!
sexta-feira, 3 de julho de 2009
Salamaleico a todos!!!! Primeiro dia conquistador com sucesso. O voo foi um pouco atrasado mas pelo menos cheguei inteiro, assisti dois filmes durente o voo, Dragon Balls Evolution ( uma bosta) e I love you Man ( comedia que vale a pena ver). Logo na chegada no aeroporte de Cairo ja senti o baque, pra quem sai de Heathrow o aeroporto mais busy do Planeta e entra no aerporto de Cairo a diferenca eh imensa. O duty free parecia mais uma loja de artigos usados da Santa Efigenia, serio, eles estavam vendendo fogao, microondas usados...haha. Preenchi um mini formulario sobre minha saude, coisa basica e tbm passei por uma camera que medi a temperatura corporal, talvez por causa da gripe suina. Como um bom paulista eu nao deixer de notar a ausente habilidade dos egipcios de nao formar fila. A maior zona, quem for mais esperto eh atendido primeiro, fiquei quase 2 horas pra passar pelo Controle do Passaporte, nao fila conheci um koreano que tbm estava viajando e na conversa vem, conversa vai decidios dividir um taxi ateh o centro com o amigo dele. No fim acabaos pegando um quarto triplo no meu albergue.
E assim acaba o primeiro de muitos dias da minha jornada.
E assim acaba o primeiro de muitos dias da minha jornada.
quinta-feira, 2 de julho de 2009
So it begins
Salamaleico everyone!!! I made through the first day. The flight was a “bit” delayed but I had a pleasant time, there were heaps of movies, tv shows to watch, they even had Flight of the Concords!
I ended up watching dragon balls (bullcrap by the way) and I love you Man (worth watching). As soon as I step out of the aircraft I could already feel the difference, I mean going from Heathrow Airport to the Cairo one....my God tremendous difference, the duty free shopping looked more like a second hand good store, seriously, they were selling second hand oven, microwaves no kidding. I had to fill some forms about my health, passed by a camera that checked my body temperature..maybe all that cuz the swine flu...but nothing worrying. Other thing worth mentioning is their sense of organization, at the passport control there was no such thing as a queue, more like a gathering of people facing the facing direction. It was so freaking irritating, whoever can squish the most will be first. And I, being such a nice guy only took me an hour and a half to get through. I met this Korean guy in while waiting and he was also travelling and since it was late and he had no place to stay planned he decided to checked my hostel. We ended up sharing a taxi with his other friend after minutes of negotiation with hundreds of pushy taxi drivers.
The ability of the Egyptian people to form queues reflects directly on their ability to drive. Forget about lanes or indicating when you are changing lanes, those stripes on the asphalt are merely decorative, cars were zigzagging like crazy motherfuckers. Weirdly I felt at home in the streets of cairo, even in Cairo itself, the wide lanes, the light poles, the dirtiness. It kind of resembles the center of Sao Paulo.
When we got to the hostel I felt I was in a horror movie stage, the whole building was falling to pieces and they had the most ancient elevator I’ve ever seen. The first room we got the fan was broken and insanely hot so we talk to the guy in the reception and he changed our room.
And thats how my first day out of 153 ends.
See ya!
I ended up watching dragon balls (bullcrap by the way) and I love you Man (worth watching). As soon as I step out of the aircraft I could already feel the difference, I mean going from Heathrow Airport to the Cairo one....my God tremendous difference, the duty free shopping looked more like a second hand good store, seriously, they were selling second hand oven, microwaves no kidding. I had to fill some forms about my health, passed by a camera that checked my body temperature..maybe all that cuz the swine flu...but nothing worrying. Other thing worth mentioning is their sense of organization, at the passport control there was no such thing as a queue, more like a gathering of people facing the facing direction. It was so freaking irritating, whoever can squish the most will be first. And I, being such a nice guy only took me an hour and a half to get through. I met this Korean guy in while waiting and he was also travelling and since it was late and he had no place to stay planned he decided to checked my hostel. We ended up sharing a taxi with his other friend after minutes of negotiation with hundreds of pushy taxi drivers.
The ability of the Egyptian people to form queues reflects directly on their ability to drive. Forget about lanes or indicating when you are changing lanes, those stripes on the asphalt are merely decorative, cars were zigzagging like crazy motherfuckers. Weirdly I felt at home in the streets of cairo, even in Cairo itself, the wide lanes, the light poles, the dirtiness. It kind of resembles the center of Sao Paulo.
When we got to the hostel I felt I was in a horror movie stage, the whole building was falling to pieces and they had the most ancient elevator I’ve ever seen. The first room we got the fan was broken and insanely hot so we talk to the guy in the reception and he changed our room.
And thats how my first day out of 153 ends.
See ya!
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