All of the cruises we use are 5 Stars Cruises,
regardless of category, feature outside Nile view cabins with private
baths, individually controlled air-conditioning, telephone, TV/video.
All meals, transfers to / from antiquity sites plus the service of a fluent
English speaking guide (unless you prefer another language. We have guides
fluent in virtually all major languages.), entry fees, service charges and
taxes.
Most visitors to Egypt make a cruise on the
legendary Nile River a requisite excursion in their travel itinerary —
sailing on the Nile River in a high standard cruise ship is one of the
most relaxing and enjoyable excursion one can take when visiting Egypt.
Be warned; the Egyptian people believe if you drink water from the Nile
River, you will return to Egypt.
The Nile, longest river in the world, located in
northeastern Africa. From its principal source, Lake Victoria, in east
central Africa, the Nile flows north through Uganda, Sudan, and Egypt to
the Mediterranean Sea, a distance of 5584 km (3470 mi). From its
remotest headstream in Burundi, the river is 6,695 km (4,160 mi) long.
The river basin covers an area of more than 3,349,000 sq km (more than
1,293,000 sq mi).
In pre-historic times, primeval forests covered the river banks when the
river was a vast swamp composed of rushes, papyrus, and weeds. However,
due to thousands of years of human intervention, the Nile throughout
Egypt flows peacefully through green fields—looking much like a rich,
well cultivated European plain.
The Delta, an area of about 10,000 square miles, is a broad swamp
intersected by canals. The Mediterranean Sea influences this region
bringing a regular winter rainy season. The Upper Nile valley is one
great waterway, with insignificantly small irrigation canals scattered
along its length. It is much drier than the Delta, with little to no
rain. The lack of seasons makes it much easier to cultivate the land in
the Upper Nile. Thus it was cultivated first and is much less swampy
than the Delta, which is still being converted into arable land |