The next day we took off to check out some of the sites around Alexandria like the Catacombs and the reconstructed fort with the notable lighthouse along the Red Sea. We got the Catacombs and found a guy offering a tour which we initially dismissed but after talking to him he seemed rather helpful and cut his price by like 60% for a private tour for us. It turned out to be a great choice for us as he had a tremendous amount to tell us about these Catacombs and the funny story of how a donkey literally fell onto them and that is how they were discovered. There was a unique combination of Roman and Egyptian culture as certain sculptures and drawings depicted Egyptian gods in only human form as Roman’s rejected the idea of idolizing animals. This was one of the few tours we took where we felt we got great value for our money and would recommend it to others. We then made our way to the fort with the lighthouse only to be disappointed and learn that the fort had been entirely reconstructed and that the lighthouse that it was famed for is no longer there. It was still cool to walk through and it had great views from on top of the exterior walls, but a shame that it lacked any real historical value.
The walk back to our hotel along the Red Sea was great as we stopped a few times along the way and one place had a delicious dish we could not pass up. It was similar to a pizza as it was dough then on top stuffed with meat, peppers, tomatoes, cheese, and then dough on top and with peppers and cheese again on top and baked for like 15 minutes. It was my favorite Egyptian dish and one of my favorite dishes now in general. We continued to walk and stopped off to play some backgammon and have some tea. Some nice but rather strange man saw us on the street and then came and sat at our table with us as we played. We were not sure what was going on for a bit but it seemed that he was just being friendly and chatting with us with the limited English he knew. It was nice for a while until he suggested we go with him to this place we were not sure where he was describing and we had to make up some lame excuse to get out of there before it got too awkward.
That night for dinner we went to a place called the Fish Market which was completely catered to tourists and rather expensive in comparison to other restaurants but we had heard it was worth it. So once again letting our stomachs order we each got a fish and split some seafood pasta, and to our luck they brought out a wrong fish order that we sampled so they let us keep that for free too. We had an upstairs sea view table with 3 fried/grilled fish and a bowl of seafood pasta and bread for 2 people for a bill that came out to like $20. There is no denying that even in the most expensive cities in Egypt that it is still very affordable. The walk back this time to the hotel along the Sea was a bit different as Egyptian people lined the Sea front wall and every single person it seemed stared at us like we were in a zoo and especially for Liz as guys would just gawk at the fact a woman was not in burqa. It went on like this for the entire 25 minute walk as it would get uncomfortable at times but we never felt like we were in any danger which was nice.
I would say that Alexandria was my favorite Egyptian city that we visited as it was a very manageable 75-80 degrees and was much cleaner and safer feeling than the previous cities we had visited. It had a very relaxed feeling to it as we were not clearly the only tourists and therefore were able to more freely roam around without being harassed. I would certainly like to visit again and hopefully stay more than 2 nights.
The final day we had to do the whole stowaway on the train again but eventually made it to the capital, Cairo.
The first fish place
Fish counter at the end of the night at Shaban
The fort
The delicious pizza thing!
Jeff, I can't believe after spending 8 days with 2 Canadians that you weren't more comfortable posing as one of us. Sounds like an interesting place. I'm jealous of all of your travels. Looking forward to reading more.
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O.k. I just noticed the date at the top of the entry. It's hard to pose as Canadians when you haven't met them yet. Duh! Sorry.
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