I am a 63 year old mother, of 2 adult boys. In March to August 2018 I completed my goal to visit every USA state by driving 30,000 kilometres solo. I am now continuing documenting my local and other country adventures.
Well another gem. I came here for 7 days and stayed 3 weeks and only leaving because I have some other places to get to. I have been looking for an “Under the Tuscan sun” or my own “Shirley Valentine” place and this is it! My hotel apartment with views of the Mediterranean and the sound of crashing waves, lying next to the pool,walking down to the beach, or sunning on my sunbed I didn’t want to do much more than this. The food is delicious, I didn’t experience any bad food, the people are friendly, the bus transport is easy to get around. I actually didn’t do as much touristy things as I normally do as it was just lovely to enjoy where I was staying. The Helios Bay Hotel is a family run place which has lots of Greek heart. I walked through the 5 star resorts nearby, they are lovely and modern but cannot compare to the family style hospitality of Helios. I found it difficult to leave to do much exploring.
I did manage to explore the Tomb of the Kings which is a short bus ride down the road from my hotel.
I hired a car for 2 days to do some of the areas which are accessible by public transport but can take up to 2 hours in different directions. So I had 2 full days of exploring the changing landscape. A trip of 3 hours took me 7 hours as I was forever stopping to take photos but I have added just a sample here.
Rock of Chasampoulion LimassolDown stream of Tzelefos BridgeTzelefos BridgeTimios Stavros Monastery OmodhosTimios Stavros Monastery OmodhosTimios Stavros Monastery Omodhosview from Mount OlymposView from Mount Olympos View from OmodosView of Kourion beachView from PissouriSanctuary of ApolloSanctuary of ApolloSanctuary of Apollo
This spot is Aphrodite Rock. There is a legend that if you swim around the rock you will have eternal youth. I don’t want eternal youth, now if you can guarantee eternal mature age with my energy minus the aches and pains, maybe. Note the sign to drive on the left. The only place I have seen a sign such as this is in Australia on the Great Ocean Road where there are many right hand drive tourists who do not remember to drive on the left.
Famagusta is in the Turkish occupied zone of Cyprus. This is so hard to understand that Turkey are the only place who identify the North of Cyprus as part of Turkey. There is a UN peace keeping force in the area, there is a border check when crossing into Famagusta. I was on an organised tour as I wasn’t even sure if my travel insurance covered me for anything in this zone. At the border our passports were collected and then returned by a Turkish Government offical who remained with our tour as an “escort”. Interesting how the people live “normally” on this side, there are lovely restaurants, shopping malls, boutiques, same as any other area but it left a bad taste in my mouth. St Nicolas Cathedral is now used as a mosque and is relatively free of any icons other than prayer mats throughout. The houses which were abandoned are a constant reminder of the invasion of 1974.
Some of the ruins of the Salamis Ancient City
I did much more exploring than expected as all I wanted to do in this beautiful island was just lie next to the pool or enjoy a beach or stroll the promenade in Chloraka, a much less touristy and less commercial area than Paphos itself.
A bus ride from Krakow takes you to this fascinating salt mine discovered in the 1300s and is now UNESCO Heritage listed. The tour takes you down to the first level of 320 steps or 40 flights of stairs. The mines have caverns and corridors hand carved out dating back to the 1300s. There are 240 km of corridors and the tour of 2 hours only incorporates 2% of the salt mine. There are beautiful statues carved out of salt and chandeliers made of wood and salt crystal.
All the statues are created by miners. The floors are salt tiles. The lakes inside the cavern are spectacular and have a higher salt content than the Red Sea. So you really would float easily.
The highest chamber is 36m high and has been used for bungee jumping.
Chapel built in 1800 took 70 years to carve. Floor tiles are made of salt100m below ground. Chandelier wood andsalt crystal. Miners create all the statues Highest chamber is 36m high They use it for bungee jumping
You can ask why would you go to this place of horrific history, you can go to pay respects, to learn of history or not go. I have been drawn to visit this place for quite a long time. I have watched many Holocaust documentaries, movies, visited resistance museums. Nothing compares to walking this place. Can you try to imagine walking to a gas chamber thinking you were going to have a shower, being separated from your children, husband, parents. Being experimented on because you are a twin or just because they could do whatever their sick minds decided to do back in the 1940s. There are not enough words to explain what it feels like walking through Auschwitz Birkenau. It is not for everyone. After leaving this death museum, I am finding it more and more difficult to process what went on there. Hug the people you love and be grateful for our freedom.
I am not one for organised tours but I found this tour of Scotland which incorporates a few spots I wanted to explore. I do not have a car for this trip and doing all possible by rail or bus. Timberbush Loch Ness Glencoe and Highlands tour is 12 hours in a coach and I got to see some of the famed scenery of this beautiful country, with the best tour bus driver guide, Jamie, and a very reasonable $100AuD (£55). Jamie had a music playlist which included music that matched the emotion of the stories and places we passed through. Lots of photo stops with great commentary. We passed the Kelpies in Falkirk. 30 metre stainless steel sculptures. Read about Duke and Baron
Passed by Doune Castle the setting for Outlander, Game of Thrones and Monty Python and Stirling Castle childhood home of Mary Queen of Scots.
So much to see but cannot do it all. Our first stop was Kilmahog, known as the gateway to the highlands to meet a couple of famous Highland Coos, Hamish and Honey.
We passed through the areas of the children of the mist from the Macgregor Clan, the cemetery with Rob Roy, then to Crieff, the birthplace of Ewan Macgregor. The highlands are very popular for hikers.
Glencoe is in scenes from Harry Potter and James Bond, Skyfall. There is so much history and so many sad stories such as the massacre of Glencoe. There is so much beauty also in this wild craggy land. Lochs are lakes and Bens are mountains. We stopped at Fort William at the base of Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in Scotland, and part of the Three Sisters. (not to be confused with the Three Sisters of the Blue Mountains of Australia).
Fort WilliamBen Nevis
Fort Augustus is the gateway to Loch Ness.
DrumnadrochitDrumnadrochit
And then we were on a boat on Loch Ness looking for “Nessie”. The boat was a good way to travel on the Loch and get some photos of the Urquhart Castle ruins.
We found this crazy Dutchman, going for a swim, looking for Nessie. The water temperature was 5C 41F. It was the closest we got to the Loch Ness monster.
Drove through Inverness
Our final stop for the day was the cute town of Pitlochry.
I had to take a pic of this in Pitlochry
It was a very enjoyable trip, although long, well worth doing. Left Edinburgh at 8am and arrived back at 8:30pm. I ended the day with a lovely minestrone at Vittoria on the Bridge.
Walked to Princes Square to get a bus back to my hotel and cannot walk without taking some snaps.
Edinburgh Castle magestically looking over the town
Just spent an hour in a most magical place.I was fortunate to get a ticket for the Special Circle Experience which limits 30 people onto the sacred site. I wasn’t expecting anything like the energy I felt. I was asked by a couple of my wiccan friends to send some affirmations and I was overwhelmed. Stonehenge a manmade circle of stones and the world’s most famous prehistoric structure. It is still a place of worship where the eqonox and solstice are celebrated to this day. There were people from USA and me and we all felt something. Some people were fascinated by the archaeological information, others sat and meditated or walked around in awe. I did all. I am a member of the English Heritage and this experience cost £38. I would return.
After the dirty, polluted, uncivilised Egypt, it was so refreshing arriving in Salisbury at 6:00pm after arriving at Heathrow at 1:30pm. Took the Heathrow express to Paddington station, then a tube to Waterloo and then a fast train (GWR) to Salisbury. The train conductor was very helpful and took my bags from me and stored them. It was so lovely not to tip anyone. My accommodation Peartree Serviced Apartments are a 2 minute walk from Salisbury station. This accommodation is beautiful. It is a 10 minute walk to the centre of town. My first walk through town and it was such a contrast to where I had been for the last 9 days.
Day 2 I walked and chatted to several tourists from London and Scotland. All enjoying the beautiful weather. It was 20 Celsius!! I went to the Old Mill Hotel, Salisbury Cathedral and enjoyed the meadows. I found a ladies toilet and it required 50pence to open the door. I forgot to swap my change from Egypt to UK but there was a kind park worker who opened up the bathroom and allowed me to use for free.
Met this trout fisherman. He wasn’t catching much as at this time of year you cannot use bait.
I enjoyed a lovely afternoon tea in the Salisbury Cathedral grounds. The Cathedral holds one of the originals of Magna Carta, an 800 year old symbol of social justice, inspiring human rights legislation.
Where to start. I warn you that some of what I write below may offend. I normally complete an entry for each day, but I got a little behind in my blog as the cruise I did before Egypt had limited wifi as did Egypt. I left Egypt feeling very happy to leave. Sadly my anger at how women are treated and repressed here made me not enjoy this country as I was hoping I would. My knowledge of how women are treated in this part of the world, did not prepare me for how I would feel and react. I enjoyed the River Nile cruise on the MS Emilio. It was a fascinating way to travel to the historical areas of this country. The cruise was for 7 nights. There were around 80 people on board, mostly from Germany, a handful of Brits and me the only Aussie.
We started in Edfu with horse and carts ready to take tourists into town. I found it hard to reconcile the intelligence of the historical Egyptian people to the way they currently live. They have rich history of buildings which cannot be built the same way today with all our technological advancements, and yet this country has not advanced. Then there is the contrast of the arid desert of the West bank to the green oasis of the East bank.
Our first historical stop was Kom Ombo.
My favourite was the Philae Temple. We took a bus and then a boat ride out to the island where this temple was moved to. It was on another island which had flooded and the temple was moved out of flood area. I had a scary moment when I asked a police officer to have a photo with me. (I do this in every country in the world I travel to and only had China and Belgium police decline). The Egyptian officer and his colleague took me to a spot on the island which I figured he chose as it would not be identified in photos. It was my first lesson that if you ask for a photo with someone or ask them to take a photo in Egypt that you have to pay them. I paid the fellow in the photo and his colleague got angry that I didn’t give him money. I quickly got out of the way and let them sort it out between them. I didn’t think I needed to pay someone who wasn’t in the photo. This was one of many instances where my Western ways did not understand the ways of this country.
An additional part of the trip which cost extra was the trip to Abu Simbel. Many people recommended I do this 7 hour bus trip even though you only spend one hour on site. I highly recommend this trip. On the way we had a bit of excitement as the bus broke down in the middle of the desert. It was amusing to see all the German engineers and mechanics providing advice on how to get the bus going again. It was obvious this happens often as the bus driver put some sort of patch on the radiator and we were on our way. While we all off the bus waiting for the radiator to cool, someone pointed out that we had a “tourist police” on board. The man with the blue suit, you will see is carrying an uzi. This reinforced the dangers of travelling in this country. Within 20 minutes of us breaking down, the police were on site to see what was going on. They know where everyone is. Every vehicle goes through checkpoints at each tourist destination. There are dog squads, police check under vehicles for bombs, passports are checked.
Abu Simbel is somewhere to be experienced. Photos do not do it justice.
In real this temple is much smaller than the Ramses Temple above.
My small contribution to making women more prominant is to include the womens as the larger photo.
I thoroughly enjoyed the Nubian Village. As in most societies, the indigenous in Egypt, the Nubians, have long been marginalised. In recent times they have been moved from their lands twice. We were invited into a Nubian House and introduced to their pets.
The homes are in a beautiful part of the River Nile. We had a lovely cup of hibiscus tea and were shown around their home.
I cooled my feet in the Nile
The highlight of my trip was a hot air balloon ride over the Valley of the Kings and Hatshepsut, Colossi of Memnon and Luxor. I wasn’t worried unti I got in the basket with 23 other people from USA and Spain. Then thought “what the hell am I doing”. It wasn’t long before I was mesmerised by the view and the silence in between the burner activating. The pilot was wonderful.
Colossis of Menmon
Valley of the Kings has several tombs and I got to look into KV 6, KV 8 and KV11.
In KV8 I bumped into an Aussie who lives 10 minutes from me in Sydney and then I bumped into him in Luxor airport.
The temples of Esna were under mud for 3000 years. Fascinating how a city was built on top of this historical ruins. They were discovered 200 years ago and archaeologists are still uncovering treasures. Houses built on top of the ruins are slowly being acquired and people are being relocated. A bit like how people in Sydney have had their homes purchased by the government to build roads or airports. It is amazing how this workmanship has lasted 3 millenia and the colours, although faded, are still very visible. How have the colours of the work lasted so long!
Civilisation Museum in Cairo
What a magnificent museum. One floor holds most of the mummified kings and Queens of Egypt. They were very tall. Unfortunately you aren’t permitted to take photos of the mummies but the top floor has some beautiful artifacts. Highly recommend attending.
Hanging Church in Old Cairo
Built by the Romans in the Old Cairo district, this church is constructed on top of columns and is a Coptic church.
The alabaster pulpit
The finale of Cairo, the Giza Pyramids and Sphinx
In summary of this once in a lifetime trip, I wanted to capture exactly how I feel immediately after this trip, not some time down the track when I can romanticise the trip.
This trip to Egypt has been a mix of emotions for me. I do not wish to offend anyone, this is what I feel and think. Perhaps some of it is due to some historical events in my life but it is how I felt here. I have travelled the world extensively. I have been to some very dangerous cities and villages. I have lived in the midst of poverty and corruption. I have never felt the fear, discomfort, anger, frustration and other emotions in one place as I experienced in Egypt. I think it is mostly due to the repression of women. The boat on the Nile doesn’t have any women working on the boat. I saw women in Cairo but in Luxor, Esna and the other areas it is rare to see women. I was travelling as a solo female with other tourists who were couples and I was treated differently to the other females who had male partners. When I travel I prefer to stay in the areas of the locals, not in 5 star hotel resorts. The hotel I stayed in Giza had police presence outside, armed guards inside with metal detector and bag check at entry. The town looks like it has been bombed. The pollution is so thick that it was worse than a bad fire smoke day during bushfires in Sydney. I always go with my gut feeling and this part of Egypt was not one I felt comfortable to walk around. In Luxor, Cairo and all along the River Nile, I found the loud speaker call to prayer five times a day at around midnight, 3:30am, 6:00am, 3:30pm and 6:00pm very discomforting. There is nowhere you cannot hear it. Interestingly I tried to compare it to monks chanting but their prayer feels calming to me.
In summary, I am so glad I did this trip. I loved the Civilisation Museum, the River Nile cruise, all the history, the hot air balloon over Luxor but unfortunately the fear and anger I felt about how women are treated, is enough for me not to want to return. Many people speak to me about how safe they feel on this trip, but I think it is because they stay in 5 star accommodation which is far from seeing what the real Egypt is.
I would recommend any solo females to do the trip with a reputable company, stay in 5 star accommodation. This is the most expensive and over priced trip I have ever done. An example, the hotel I stayed in costs £80 per night, the travel agent charged £480 for 2 nights. This is what all agents charge. You will pay quite a lot of money for the trip and an exorbitant amount during the trip paying tips for everyone from the driver you have already paid for in your “all inclusive trip” to paying for 5 sheets of toilet paper you are given if you use a toilet in museums you have already paid to enter. As I said earlier, I do not wish to offend anyone, this is my experience and how I feel. I hope this can prepare others.
Four sea days turned into 7 days at sea due to 6 metre swell cancelling our Ponta Delgado, Azores stop. So first stop after Bermuda was Funchal. This is my second time here and it is a very pretty island. It is a very popular tourist island. Friendly people, delicious food, lots to explore. I love the old town with its alleys of restaurants and bars.
I love the door art.
And the sculptures, with the most important one being of the great soccer player, Ronaldo and you can see what part of his body is favoured.
The most fun and crazy thing to do is the basket toboggan ride. Think billycart for 2 down a steep mountain road shared by pedestrians and cars, with 2 men using their feet for brakes and control. It is a must do.
4 April 2022 Arrived in Bermuda but I will not get off the ship as I need some recovery time next to the pool. Yay!! Sun bathing weather!! I will take it easy as we have an overnight stay here. We are the first cruise ship to arrive here since the pandemic. The locals are very happy for the return of tourists. There are pretty beaches and lots of fancy golf clubs which I went to last time here in 2018. The jacuzzi is calling.
I boarded the Epic around 1130am on 2 April. Bliss!!! It has been 2 years and 5 months since my last cruise which was on the Norwegian Jewel Transpacific from Honolulu to Sydney from 2 November to 3 December 2019.
Due to Covid and as this trip is what is known as a relocation cruise, it normally has fewer passengers. This cruise has 1300 passengers 1400 crew. So a luxury of 1 crew per passenger. Normally this ship takes 4000 passengers and 2700 crew.
This sailaway party is the first time I have danced with people since November 2021. Really danced. As we sailed out of New York said goodbye to the grand lady Statue of Liberty.
On to warmer weather please. I would like to enjoy my balcony