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Egypt & Jordan Travel Deal Vacation Package

 
Photography by Ben Hall
 

Walk like an Egyptian in just 18 days with Gregor & Lewis
 
Gregor & Lewis, one of Australia’s most renowned bespoke travel agencies, is hosting an exclusive trip to Egypt and Jordan from 5 - 22 May 2011.
 
Escorted by Melinda Gregor, G & L’s Managing Director and Middle East-specialist  (who lived in and led groups around Egypt for three years), this 18-day trip covers the greatest hits of these spectacular countries and at the best time of year in May.
 
Only a small group (maximum 24) will have the opportunity of travelling through these ancient lands with accommodation at five-star properties. The tour, in conjunction with Abercrombie & Kent’s Egyptian operation, includes a five-star, four-night cruise on the Nile aboard the Nile Adventurer, the amazing Abu Simbel, Valley of the Kings and Karnak Temple, and in Jordan, the rose-red city of Petra and four-wheel driving in the Wadi Rum desert.
 
This once-in-a-lifetime tour includes:
·   Return international economy airfares ex-BNE, SYD or MEL with Emirates
·   Accommodation in five-star hotels with private facilities
·   Meals as indicated
·   Flight from Cairo to Amman and all domestic flights in Egypt
·   Transport by air-conditioned vehicles, plus meet and greet service and transfers
·   Comprehensive sightseeing with English speaking local guides and Egyptologists
·   Five-star deluxe Nile River cruise

 

Priced from AU$11,990 per person, twin-share with single supplement $3000 per person. Land content only from AU$9250 per person, twin share.
 
Gregor & Lewis is a Noosa-based travel business with a loyal client base throughout Australasia. It is managed by Melinda Gregor, a dedicated and award-winning travel professional who has more than 20 years in the industry.
 
In December 2008, G & L was voted Top 5 Travel Agency in Australia by Luxury Travel Magazine and Melinda honoured as Queensland’s best travel consultant at the AFTA Awards.  Earlier this year, Gregor & Lewis hosted the first bespoke tour to Bannister’s on the NSW south coast to dine and cook with celebrity chef Rick Stein.
 
Places are limited so book now exclusively through Gregor & Lewis Bespoke Travel on +61 (0)7 5447 4666 or by emailing melindagregor@gregorlewis.com.au. Full intinerary available on request.

 

 

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Check out our Travel Review on the Pyrmaids of Giza:

 

IN THE LAND OF THE PHARAOHS

It’s one of the great archeological sites in the world and the Pyramids of Giza have had a powerful effect on all who’ve stood in their shadows for the past five thousand years. 

I’m looking through the lens of a camera at one of the Great Pyramids of Giza, trying to fit its vast expanse into a single frame when the fast clip-clop of hooves warns of possible danger.

From behind, a camel is being driven towards me at speed. I quickly move forward to let it pass; the beast and its animated rider, who’s been touting for tourist dollars in exchange for photo ops, are being chased by a policeman also atop a camel.

Minor drama averted, I return to my “spot” only to find it’s been occupied by half a dozen other camera-toting visitors, who spend the next 10 minutes enjoying essential Kodak moments in front of the only remaining one of Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

Patience is a virtue, however, and after a week of intensive sightseeing at some of the world’s most important ancient archaeological sites, I’ve learned that it pays to take a relaxed outlook on life when things get a bit hectic on the tourist trail.

Despite the heat, the dust, the chaos caused by the crowds and camels - and the attempts at crowd and camel control - this is one of those experiences which is simultaneously uplifting and humbling.

With the Great Pyramid of Giza, also known as the Pyramid of Khufu, on one side and the slightly smaller Pyramid of Khafre on the other, this is the epicentre of ancient Egyptian culture which is defined by these fantastic feats of engineering.

The entire Giza pyramid complex, which covers just under one square kilometre, is believed to have been completed by five pharaohs in under one hundred years by around 2650BC. In the past century, intense scientific and historical research still hasn’t revealed exactly how these great structures were built. Many theories, credible and otherwise, have been offered but there is still no definitive answer.   

The pyramids, and the Great Sphinx, grab all the attention because of their sheer size but closer to the ground there’s also a complex system of causeways, temples, tombs and cemeteries. Most people mistakenly believe that Giza is a remote location, but it sits on a limestone cliff with the bustling city of Cairo as a dramatic backdrop - as if it really needs it.

Naturally, the best starting point at Giza is the Great Pyramid which has confounded scientists and engineers with both its size and mathematical precision. It’s been estimated it contains 2.3 million stone blocks with an average weight of one and a half tons each and the four sides of the pyramid are perfectly oriented to the main points of a compass. Each side is 230 metres long and the pyramid is now 136 metres high and viewed up close it seems impossible it could have been built nearly 5,000 years ago. It was built predominately as the tomb for the Pharaoh Khufu.

Just a few hundred metres away is the Pyramid of Khafre, named after Khufu’s successor, which is often mistakenly identified as the Great Pyramid as it sits on bedrock 10 metres higher giving it the appearance that it’s bigger. The third pyramid in the Giza complex is Menkaure’s which is about half the height of Khafre’s at 62 metres with a base of 103 metres.

Walking around the bases of the pyramids is an exercise which takes a lot longer than most people anticipate and gives an appreciation of the scale of the construction. The general consensus among Egyptologists seems to be that the Pyramids were not built by slave labour, as originally thought, but by paid workers who were motivated by their loyalty to the kings. The actual construction is believed to have been carried out with the aid of massive rollers and ropes and levers with a sloping embankment up to the pyramid and estimates of the numbers of workers involved at any one time range from 20,000 to 100,000.

While the mystery of the pyramids has kept scholars busy for many decades, the Great Sphinx also holds its own secrets and is the unofficial national symbol of Egypt. The huge royal sculpture, with the head of a pharaoh (believed to Khafre) and the body of a lion has stirred the imaginations of writers, poets and adventurers - not to mention the millions of tourists that stand in its shadow each year.

The Great Sphinx faces east to greet the rising sun and has a temple in front of it. The depiction of a pharaoh’s head on a lion’s body was used to symbolise power and strength with the intelligence of a king - there are other sphinx’s throughout Egypt but this is the one that features as the “face” of the country, both past and present.

For most of its life, the Sphinx has actually been buried in sand and even when Napoleon arrived in Egypt in 1798 it was covered up to its neck. For the next century several attempts to dig the Sphinx out were aborted because of the sheer weight of the sand but in 1936, the beast was finally revealed in its full glory, complete with surrounding walls and a moat.

Its aura lends weight to the belief that these fantastic monuments of Giza were conceived and built as a result of man’s first realisation of the magical concept of eternity.

And as an Arab proverb states: “Man fears Time, yet Time fears the Pyramids.”

 

 

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FAST FACTS

Getting There:

Emirates fly twice daily from Perth to Dubai with daily connections to Cairo. Visit www.emirates.com/au or call 1300 303 777.
 

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