All posts by Paul Goldberg

A Birthday Blog

We left Rochester on Sunday heading for Pittsburgh PA to visit Carol’s VSW (Visual Studies Workshop) classmate Cynthia and her husband Jay. After threading coach and Jeep through some of the narrowest, windy, hilly streets – Pittsburgh – we have encountered we entered the Elks parking lot to find them waiting. This was more awkward then usual since we had not really stowed stuff carefully on departure and setting up while being observed can lead to stupid mistakes. We were lucky not to make any. Since they had met us, we had no need to disconnect the car which was a blessing. After a lovely dinner and a tour of their incredible home and art collection we returned to the coach and slept soundly.

We rose to set off for Columbus OH just 2 or 3 hours down the road to spend time with Lee and Tinya, he was one of my college roommates and also a classmate from Temple B’rith Kodesh so we have a long history. We pulled out of Columbus the next morning and headed to Nashville. The usual places we have stayed were either full or had such horrible reviews I could not abide stopping there. We found a place – Safe Harbor RV – that met our needs and had a space for us. It was the most expensive campsite we have ever had outside of Jersey City across from Manhattan. It was worth it. The area is lovely, the location was central and staff were pleasant. Our first night was a shopping expedition with an accidental excursion into the heart of Nashville . Carol says to blame the GPS, I am inclined to take the blame for operator failure. The next day we toured The Hermitage, President Jackson’s home and then headed into Nashville for a dinner to celebrate my birthday knowing there would be no decent restaurant at our next stop in Red Bay. Rolfe and Daughters had ambiance, common tables and a bit too much noise, service and food. I have never had a chicken dish that tasted so wonderful , I seldom order it, but it was recommended. Carol’s food was also very good. We would go back. Next we drove to Broadway, the entertainment heart of Nashville. After parking we strolled a couple of blocks before walking in to Legends on the Corner where a group called the Scalawags was playing. After a bit Carol got into the music and  this link tells the story.

A half a day’s drive along the Natchez Trace Parkway brought us to Red Bay. We stopped at Bird Song Overlook where we spent a day and a night in a blizzard in 2003. If you are interested in that story and other tales from ’03 https://goldberg-online.net/journals-blogs-whatever/cross-country-2003-xc2003/ will take you to the entire winter blog with the tale of Natchez Trace after the first —break—

I feel very loved with phone calls, texts, emails and FaceBook regards. Thank you all.

A Jumble

That is about where my head is, so here is a bit of this and a bit of that.

I seem to have stopped writing as we left Egypt. To recap, it was a fantastic trip. We saw what one would expect and hope to see when dreaming about Egypt. We also saw and experienced much more than the “normal” sites one goes to Egypt to see. We experienced so many modes of transport, from camel back to tuktuk to pickup truck and a variety of boats that we had disagreements about how many modes we experienced. The count got about 10 easily. We met people from large cities, Cairo, and small villages along the Nile. We had meals in private homes and in grand restaurants. The most consistent and only complaint was too much food at every meal and the flavors were so interesting we mostly couldn’t pass on a course. If you are thinking of going to Egypt call Overseas Adventure Travel and book now, 2020 is filling if not full. If you go in September as we did expect to be HOT.

We paused overnight in NYC on our return to have dinner with the Ornati branch of our family at Lee and Alice’s place in Williamsburg. We had a delightful evening, brushing off jet lag and sitting around a glorious meal and catching up from too many years between visits. Thank you to Molly, Susan, Lee and Alice for taking the time and to Lee and Alice for preparing a wonderful meal. we will try to make the gap between visits shorter. 

In Rochester we have been catching up with friends and family and conquering the remains of jet lag. We arrived two days before Rosh HaShana and Carol managed to pull together a meal before services for six of us. We have also been doctoring, mostly in preparation for leaving Rochester for the indeterminate future. Our current extended plan is to drive to Alaska one more time next summer. We have made this plan before without accomplishing it so stay tuned.

Saturday was an insane day. Carol found a listing for a free chamber concert at Hatch Auditorium at 11 AM that was too good to pass up. After lunch we stopped at RoCo (Rochester Contemporary Art) to see the current show, especially the work of Michael Goldman, son of our friends Roz and John.  Following some errands we were driving by GEVA Theater and noted that LaCage aux Follie was on stage. We had no plans so I called and got two tickets for the performance that night. It is a brilliant performance of a wonderful fun musical. 

Plans; following Yom Kippur we will prepare GeeWhiz for travel to Jojoba Hills SKP Resort in Temecula CA departing on Sunday. We already have the first two stops planned. We will head out to Pittsburgh first to see Cynthia and Jay, friends from Carol’s VSW days. Then on to Columbus OH to spend some time with my Brown roommate Lee and his wife Tinya. The plan looses form at that point but we know that Livingston TX, Las Cruces NM and Flagstaff AZ are on the list as of now.  Timing for anything west of Livingston is open. 

Watch this space for more information. If you are anywhere along the route (250 mile deviations are within reason) let us know and we may be able to arrange a visit.

One Fun Day

After about an hour on the bus we passed through Rashid otherwise known as Rosetta on the way to the fort where the Rosetta Stone was found. If you don’t remember, the stone contains the same document in Greek and 2 different scripts in Egyptian language of the day. The stone itself was found by the  French but removed to England when they defeated the French and the local population. Anyway on our way to the fort we stopped to visit a brick making factory..

We then toured the fort near the mouth of the Nile’s Western branch. We were disappointed that the stair to the upper deck with a view of the mouth of the Nile was closed and locked. Caroline had the bus drive us out to the mouth itself where we could see the river flow into the Mediterranean. I commented “It is better to be at the end than to see it.”

Our Security Team enjoying the visit to the mouth of the Nile
The Officer riding the bus with us getting in his own selfie

We returned to Rashid to see a governor’s house converted into a museum with an interesting miscellany of fighting implements, household article and copies of original documents, particularly the marriage document of the governor who converted to Islam to marry his first wife and later converted back to Christianity (?) after his divorce. Half the document appears to be scratched out as if the wording needed to be changed.

The base of the table is derivative of . . . This was found in the Governor’s Office during the French period.

We proceeded from there to walk in the market which was just outside the door. We were treated to a variety of snacks from several vendors to stave off starvation as we were driving back to King Farouk’s Palace grounds in Alexandria  for lunch. It was a late lunch, it was a large lunch, it  had an incredible assortment of deserts included. It is usual to get in at least one “food porn” shot, I was a bit late taking this one. It is 9:30 PM as I write this and I just ate a snack bar for “dinner.”

I must make a note about security. We have almost always have an armed security guard with us, provided by the Ministry of Tourism. Today we had a motorcycle police officer leading us through Rashid and and a truck with several armed men behind us . WE have come to rely on the security officer to ease our crossing of busy roads and to know there was always someone behind the last of us to see that we didn’t get lost or hurt. It is reassuring, but a bit sad to know that this is more necessary than we might have thought before reading of the resumption of protests against the current very strict government in today’s NYTimes

Caroline is not used to wearing this item 🙂

After exploring the Palace from the road we returned to the hotel. Caroline had a mission to buy an outfit for a friend and offered to lead us through the local market in search of the necessary objects. Most of us tagged along. We lost 3 participants in the market crush. We completed the purchases and returned to the hotel to find our “lost” travelers. 

It was a great day!

An End and a Beginning

We flew back to the Marriott Cairo for one night and a farewell dinner for six of our party. We had time on our arrival for a tour of houses of worship in Old Cairo. In the Hanging Church our lessons in Coptic Christianity, which includes 20% of the Egyptian population. Caroline, our Tour Leader is a Coptic Christian. “Coptic” means Egyptian. The Hanging Church is built over the foundation of a temple and has no foundation of its own. From there we moved onto the Ben Ezra Synagogue, now an  Egyptian Antiquarian site. It’s major claims to fame are its location where Moses was found in his basket in the Nile and the contents of the geniza which provides a rich documented history of the Jews up until  the first World War. (a geniza is a storage place for documents and books containing the name of G-d which are no longer usable). 

The next morning the rest of us were up and on the bus by 9 to head to Alexandria. The ride of about 3 1/2 hours was broken up by a stop at the Bishoy Monastery

Our docent Father Nicholas

which has many claims to fame ranging from its age to the body of Saint Bishoy which is in its casket in a totally uncorrupted state, as we were told. Its a long story but some time in the 4th century Saint Bishoy unknowingly carried Jesus up a long steep hill. Also two recent Egyptian Popes rose from the among the monks. The most recent died 12 years ago. There have been 118 such popes.

Some characters we recognized in an icon

Arrival in Alexandria at the Steigenberger Cecil Hotel was in time to refresh with showers and relax a bit before Dinner.  Our room has a plaque reading Mohamed Ali Clay on the door and a picture of Mohamed Ali in the room, no further information.

From our 4th floor room.

 This is another of the classic old hotels with open cage elevators and rooms that open on to balconies over the Mediterranean. Fortunately the windows have been modernized and do a good job of keeping out the street noise. A late departure gave us a relief form the busy touring schedule. Our two stops were the Jewelry Museum where the wealth of the King Farouk and his royal predecessors is on display. The building housing the display is itself a lavish display of wealth and the jewelry and other articles on display  speak to a gilded age of royal wealth beyond any understandable bounds. Here is a link to several pictures  The last stop of the day, following lunch, was the Alexandria Library. This is not the famous library that was burned down centuries ago, this was completed 2002. It is near where scholars think the original was located. Rather than my raving on about this institution here is the English language version of the website be sure to click on the photo gallery link to view this exquisite complex.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In Egypt from the Nile to Aswan.

I promise to post a lot of pictures when I have high speed internet. For now , words

As we cruised the Nile for 5 days we mostly moved with a tow boat pulling the Asyia which is mostly a barge with two masts, one in the bow and the other in the stern.  Altogether a strange looking craft. The days generally started no earlier than 8:30 or 9 following a sumptuous breakfast buffet. WE would make a landing or debark from where we had landed the previous night and visit a village, or a site that seldom sees any visitors since there is no landing stage for the big boats. Often we would be met with a smaller boat to convey us to shore or walk a plank from Asyia to the shore. Each day had several hours of cruising, time to read, converse, watch the shore go by. The activities ashore usually required that we shower upon return to the boat, the heat has been in the 40 C range except for evening when it drops into the high 20’s ( 40 C= 104 F 25 = 77 F).  We are content to sit out the midday sun in the shade of the boat or even in the air conditioned lounge. One day they put up the sails and we boarded the tow boat to get pictures of Asyia under sail. This link should get you those pictures.

Upon landing in Aswan we debarked early with our luggage, underway by 7 AM. This gives the crew the time to ready the boat for the down river cruise boarding later that day, and gets us under way to Abu Simbel, a 3 hour drive, in time to see it before the worst heat of the day. The usual tour is a a 2 or 3 AM departure, maybe 2 hours at the site and immediate return to Aswan. We stayed over at an Eco lodge, Esakel,  And were able to return to Abu Simbel at sunset for the sound and light show. 

A word about accommodations. The Cairo Marriott is a grand old hotel with new wings and clearly isThe  among the top hotels we have stayed at. The Winter Palace in  Luxor is a reminder of the era of travelling English Lords and Ladies. The corridors are wide, the rooms most pleasant the lifts are old fashioned but the grand staircase makes up for them. The public rooms have sign admonishing that proper dress is required, no casual wear, certainly not shorts. We avoided them! The boat was far more comfortable than I expected, of course having opted for the “Suite” we had plenty of space and were able to entertain our entire entourage on our aft deck. We all agreed that the stay at Esakel of one night was enough. It was at the primitive end of the spectrum with only 10 rooms and limited resources. We do hope they succeed and continue to provide a fine service permitting groups to stay over in Abu Simbel. Our current hotel, The Old Cataract in Aswan is in a class by itself. When t, incdluding Agatha Christyhe y renovated the building we are in they converted three rooms into one. The basic plan is approximately 35×40 feet  and incorporates 5 rooms! plus q split bathroom, one is just double sinks with room to dance and the other houses a large tub, a shower room and a separate room for the toilet.  This is about the square footage of our apartment in Rochester. The grand halls in the main building amagnificent and later today we a invited to a private tour of the antique rooms where the greats stayed including Agatha Christy.

I seem to have run on a bit, but locomotion has also been varied. The common has been boats, buses and planes. We have also traveled by Tuk-Tuk (three wheel motorcycles with a cab for 2 -4 passengers) Pickup truck, horse drawn cart, and just today camel back. All that remains is the train from Alexandria to Cairo at the end of our trip.

On the Nile

From Luxor we boarded Asiya Dahabya for the 190 kilometer journey to Aswan. Unlike the large river cruise boats we see we are able to stop at many small places along the river to meet the people ans see sites that are otherwise very difficult to see. One example is the quarry where the sandstone for the temples and tombs of the kings was quarried. Note the pyramids are limestone, a softer material than sandstone. 

At our various stops we have traveled from Asyia by boat, horse drawn carriage and tuk-tuk, so far. Some pictures are missing because the computer has chosen not to download them from the card I was using. I expect I will recapture them later since they are still on the card. here are some of the photos I can use from our recent stop in Fares were we met a man who makes boxes for mangoes from palm fronds. He had a bit of help. 

We are currently under sail for the second time in this trip. After our visit to the box maker we have been at leisure until 4 when we will have another adventure ashore.

Firsts

I am somewhat limited in ability to upload pictures from the Asiya Riverboat. They have asked us to limit wifi use from uploading all our pictures. I’ll see what I can do later.

Although the flight on the Boeing 777 -300 was not a first for the plane, it was a first for us on a B777, so I will start with that. Our Tour Leader, Caroline, is back from the cancellation of all tours following the revolution in Tahrir Square and this is her first tour of the season. We boarded an Egypt Air flight from Cairo to Luxor and found ourselves on an A220. Never hear of that plane from Airbus. The captain announced that this was the first commercial flight of the A220 on Egypt Air and this was the first A220 in the fleet. A double first.

We are sailing on Dahabia Asiya on the Nile. This boat was out of service for 7 years following the revolution and after a first season last year it has been completely renovated and we are the first group to travel on her. Caroline says it was not a very comfortable boat before although it was always a welcoming boat by the crew.  It is now a very comfortable boat with a very warm and welcoming crew. When we booked I chose the Suite option. Little did I know at the time that this is the entire stern of the boat. It is very spacious and we have the only access to the lower aft deck. Pictures when I can.

Sites seen since Karnac; Hotshipsut Temple, the Valley of the Kings with five tombs including Tutankhamen, Ramses VI and 3 others. OMG the colors in the Ramses Tomb are hard to believe and Tutankhamen’s mummy still resides in his tomb, well nearby in any event. Pictures were not permitted except for 10 pound baksheesh. Will post them all as a gallery. Luxor Temple late afternoon. and then today we took a balloon ride at 5 AM to greet the sunrise. After breakfast we boarded the bus to stop at a “small temple” then we boarded Dahabia Asiya for 5 days travel up the Nile to Aswan. I’m sure I missed something but will have plenty of time to make it up as we sail.

Cairo to Luxor

The Giza Plateau with the Great Pyramid and the others is breathtaking and is on so many bucket lists. I am not sure we believed we would ever see it with our own eyes. Naturally once there it opens new challenges and expectations. Not the least was to actually enter the burial chamber high in the center of Pyramid.  From our group only Carol and I and four women ventured up the steep ramp to the center [picture]. The climb was strenuous. The ramp must be at 30 degrees with cleats on the walkway to prevent slipping .The overhead is so low that I was bent over at the waist for most of the climb. A taller person would have an interesting time. In both directions we passed other groups going the other way on this narrow path. ALthough the diagrams show ventilation shafts became instant friends. There was no sense of any air movement and it was hot.

 

Carol climbing above me
Our group following UP
Cheops Sarcophagus – and me
Carol by the sarcophagus

Upon exiting we were greeted by a very smooth, aggressive salesman, one of several hundred it seems who make their living hustling tourists. Carol wanted to play along and in the end I was grateful to get clear for 200 Egyptian Pounds (about $12) and nothing to show for it except some fun pictures.

For this I paid good money? Don’t tell my Financial Planner

From there we drove around to the  Solar Boat. This wooden boat was built to take the spirit of the Pharaoh to the afterlife after which is was dismantled  and stored in a deep long pit (some 45 meters) and buried in sand and rubble. There it rested until the 1950’s when it was exhumed and 10 years were spent reassembling it. It is stitched together with cordage. The original cordage survived,  but not condition for reuse. The only nonoriginal parts are the cordage and one steering oar. The solar part is that it was considered to be dedicated to the Sun God and is so marked.

Collapse! The heat had been in low triple digits and the sun was merciless. Also we had a 7 AM flight to Luxor which meant a 3:30 wake up to be on the bus by 5:15 to get to the airport and clear security.  We were in bed by 8:30 with full stomachs from too much dinner. One hour flight to Luxor and on to the bus to begin touring Karnac by 9. We were among the first groups in and although the sun was already hot it continued to raise the temperature as the  morning progressed. I am not sure words or pictures can do justice to the largest religious structure in the world. The 134 columns alone are a massive construction, but they are merely a part of this group of temples built over 1000 years. 

Collapse! We stopped someplace for lunch and checked into the hotel early. Unpacked, showered and flat out slept until late afternoon. The temperature in the garden when we awoke was 104 
F. Very slow movement.

To be continued.

Cairo

We flew in from NYC on a direct flight on Egypt Air. Maybe the roughest first couple of hours I can remember on any flight in many years. The next 9 hours were just fine. Got a reasonable nights sleep and decent food. On landing it took almost an hour for our luggage to come down the carousel. Then  our first venture into Cairo traffic. Our transfer guide suggested that any painted line markings were strictly for decoration.It proved so, even our driver was straddling lines most of the way. We arrived safely at the Cairo Marriott and found a  nice room waiting for us. 

We wandered around and met Caroline Fayez , our OAT Tour Leader, who gave  us some suggestions of places to wander if we felt up to it. Our first challenge was finding our way out of the hotel onto the street we wanted to see “26th of July” the day Mubarak was turned out of office in the beginning of the revolution in 2011.  Later we joined up with 12 of the remaining 14 of our group for an orientation walk in the area. On the way back Carol and I stopped at Thomases Pizza, a highly recommended pizza place not more than 5 minutes walk from the hotel.

In the morning we did our first touring at the Egyptian Museum. This was a 2 1/2 hour guided tour by Caroline that really covered the highlights of the collection. We had another hour to explore on our own and get into the King Tut Room and the Jewelry Room as well as the Mummy Room. Clearly no pictures allowed in any of these and pictures in the main galleries, while permitted are poor as the lighting is inadequate to show any more than you can find on the web. The repeated comment on the museum is that the collection is incredible, wonderful, priceless and enormous. The museum is in lousy condition, the lightning is poor and the labeling approaches nonexistent, so it requires a knowledgeable guide to help understand what you are seeing. The new museum will open in 2020 plus unknown extensions. In the mean time they are putting nothing into the old even though they plan on keeping it open.

In our rest time we walked to a nearby (?) garden  where met several locals and then took a walk to the Cairo Tower. Someday I must write a blog about using Google Maps in a foreign city with no wifi and a tired brain trying to get around. We hired a taxi for the last lap to the garden and then Google maps took us to the closest point of the grounds of the Tower while failing to note there was no access from that spot. We had to walk around 3 blocks to get to the entrance. It was worth it. The pictures from the top – some 62 stories above ground – would be magnificent if the sky were not cloudy with vapor and pollution.  

In the morning we head fro Giza and the Great Pyramid, the first we will see on this trip.