Thursday, January 31, 2013

Red Sea diving

Happy Birthday, Hugo!  What a lucky kid, for his 12th birthday, he earned his PADI Junior Open Water Diver certification and discovered the incredible underwater world of crocodile fish, pajamas slugs and sea cucumbers.  Another day and then back to Turkey, the boat and cat.  We opted to skip the trip to the burning bush/Mount Sinai for a variety of safety-related reasons and watched Cecil DeMille's "The Ten Commandments" instead.  :)



   






 

Monday, January 28, 2013

Egypt - Giza, Western Desert and Luxor

Egypt makes your head spin, as every day you see both the ancient and modern life side by side.  One day, we’re leaning over our hotel balcony to watch a protest in Tahrir Square over the people who died in the 2012 Port Said stadium riot, as the mighty Nile, the lifeblood of early human civilization, flows past just beyond.  The next day, we’re wandering around 4,000 year old pyramids, with the incessant accompaniment of  countless touts trying to make poverty wages by selling camel rides to the few tourists who haven’t been scared away by the revolution, and, in Maggie’s case, patiently humoring the Muslim women who apparently love photographing themselves with little blond-haired girls.  

Then we went into the vortex of the Western Desert with a Bedouin driver and back 20 million years to a time when prehistoric shellfish, sharks and whale-like creatures swam overhead, leaving their fossils for us to find.  Then, whisk back into the present with the police escort that briefly followed us to keep us safe (a honor preserved apparently for travelers from America, Israel and Denmark?). We stopped occasionally in the oases along the way to clean off in the water being pumped from the massive aquifer under the desert to irrigate new fields.  Everywhere from Cairo through the desert to Luxor, we saw gas stations either closed, or with long lines of trucks and minibuses lined up waiting overnight for the next fuel delivery.  Makes the ubiquitous donkey seem awfully dependable.

For me, my favorite scene of the old and new Egypt will always be the man on a donkey cart, pulling a load of hand-cut Egyptian clover for fodder, talking on his cell phone.  For the kids, they’ve learned about ancient  alphabets, from the hieroglyphs on the temples to Arabic numbers around the campfire in the desert sand from our Bedouin driver, but also about the hard side of modern Egypt, seeing for their first time bands of kids living on the streets of Cairo. 

Hands down, our favorite family experience was the mind-bending experience of being in the desert, where the quiet and wide open emptiness gives you time to think, while the wind creates the best ever sand dunes for rolling down. 
We’re now in Dahab on the Red Sea, hoping to do some snorkeling and perhaps a side trip to see the site of the burning bush and Mount Sinai…but not sure given the recent flooding.
Tahrir Square protest from our hotel balcony
 
Pyramid & sphinx in Giza




Everyone wants a photo with Maggie







Maggie and Hugo run off to roll down a dune






Anyone have a shovel? 


Fossils







Cleaning off in Well Number 7, Bahariya Oasis




Donkey cart along the Nile

Temple of Karnak in Luxor
 











Thursday, January 17, 2013

Side trip to Egypt - Cairo

Flew into Cairo Egypt yesterday - what a crazy city!  The anniversary of the 2011 Egyptian revolution is on January 25th -  staying in Tahrir Square really brings the recent history alive.  Quite a day today walking the streets and especially crossing them (stand next to local, hold onto your kid with a death grip, and walk when the locals do) and then spent a fascinating afternoon with my high school French teacher and her friend - seeing the sights and hearing about the events of the past few years.  Egyptian hospitality is amazing. 

Egyptian Museum, with burned out former 
Mubarak National Democratic Party HQ behind
















Tahrir Square













Tahrir Square, getting ready for January 25














A lovely lunch on the Nile

Friday, January 11, 2013

travels around Turkey

What an amazing two weeks traveling in Turkey with our Alaska friends.  Each leg of the trip took us progressively back in time, starting from the Ottoman empire grandeur of Istanbul near the Black Sea, then back to the Christian towns of Cappadocia in central Turkey, and finally the Greek/Roman cities of the Aegean coast. Nice to trade in homeschooling books for on-the road school for a while!

Our Istanbul apartment was in the old part of town, a perfect location for exploring the mosques and palace built by the Ottomans after they captured the city in 1453 - will never forget the mosque-dominated skyline with the reverberating call to prayer from all sides (and in the background the kids singing the 1950s ditty about “take me back to Constantinople, no you can’t go back to Constantinople, now it’s Istanbul…”).  Cappadocia was like being a kid again – sleeping in a “fairy chimney” formed by erosion of volcanic tuff where the Christians lived from the 4th to 11th century, descending into the underground city where they hid from invaders, topped off with a sunrise balloon ride.  Then we rented a van for a road trip to the ancient cities of Aphrodisias, Hierapolis and Ephesus to explore the temples, theaters, stadium, library, roads and market places built as far back as 10th century BC…highlighted by deliciously fresh winter vegies and oranges straight from the fields and the scrumptious warmth of mineral springs and saunas to soak the winter chill from our bones.   

Our merry band of travelers, Christmas in Istanbul



Istanbul by night from Bosporus River














Fishing from Galata Bridge













Daily call-to-prayer times























View from our apartment overlooking Bosphorus.  Note 
mosque minaret - first daily call to prayer was 5:46 am!
Sunrise at the Blue Mosque

Mandatory headscarves in the Blue Mosque















Hiking in Cappadocia














View from our balloon ride















"Fairy chimney" housing
from early Christian communities
 in Cappadocia





















Church carved inside rocks




















Underground city to hide from invaders


















Gateway to the Temple of Aphrodite, 
pilgrimage site since 6th century BC


The kids hamming it up on stage at Aphrodisias



























Library of Celsus at Ephesus,
built 2nd century AD



Swimming over toppled marble columns
 in sacred hot springs of Hierapolis






















Enjoying the warm water running down the
mineral travertines at Pamukkale