Very early this morning we arrived at Port Said and the
gathering place for our transit through the Suez Canal. We weren’t up for that; it was around
1:30 AM! We heard from some of our
new friends that just before we made our entrance there was a little event as a
small boat approached us and was run off by a police boat. There was evidently a lot of
shouting. We also were advised
officially that the ship had taken on security for the duration of the
cruise. Someone told us that we
took on 12 former British special forces people. That’s quite reassuring considering the waters we’ll be
sailing.
So when we awoke we were in the Canal. Unlike the Panama Canal this is a sea
level one with no locks. It was
built by the French and completed in 1869. Interestingly, though, the first attempt at a canal in this
area was done by Ramses II back approximately 1200 BC. He attempted to build a canal from the
Nile to Lake Timsah, which is part of the present day Suez. Around 600 BC another Pharaoh began
building a canal from Timsah to the Red Sea. After some 120,000 people died in the process of building
it, work was stopped after an oracle said it should be ended.
The canal is 117 miles long and traffic goes in north and southbound
convoys. We were in a convoy with
just one other ship, a freighter carrying large private yachts. The shoreline was not at all what we
expected, or I should say, the west bank was not. The west bank had greenery and towns and cities along most
of the way. The east bank was more
what we thought we’d see. It was
barren desert and sand dunes with frequent guard posts. That side is the Sinai Peninsula. Around 11:30 AM we arrived in Lake
Timsah, one of two places where convoys wait so the traffic bound in the other
direction can pass. The other lake
is the Great Bitter Lake further south.
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This guard tower reminded me of something from Lawrence of Arabia |
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A larger outpost. Notice the gun emplacement in the right-hand corner |
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This lonely soldier didn't even have a flagpole for his Egyptian flag |
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On the way to Timsah we passed this community with a mosque(white building far left) and church with a cross on its little steeple right next door |
We spent several hours anchored in Timsah just off the large
city of Ismailia. During the
course of those hours a parade of ships heading north passed us. There were all
kinds of freighters, container ships and tankers. In the waters around us were lots of little fishing boats
which had either sails or oars or both, no motors. If a boat came too close to us, the police boat would come
racing up with lights flashing. At
one point a very crowded tour boat came by with loud Arabic music playing. We were evidently the entertainment for
the afternoon.
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Our traveling companion southbound transporting private yachts |
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Parade of northbound freighters (perhaps 50 passed by) |
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We were the main attraction for this tour boat |
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Fishermen casting their nets |
Around 4PM we upped anchor and headed south. As we sailed along we could see massive
trucks moving mountains of sand along the Sinai side. We don’t know what the purpose was but it looked like a big
project. All along our path there
were more of the little fishing boats.
As we passed they would throw out their nets. We figured that our wake must have been stirring up the fish. As night fell they were still out there
and we could hear whistling and some yelling as we sailed by. It would have been interesting to know
what they were saying, but perhaps we’re better off not knowing. As the moon began to rise over the
Sinai it was blood red and quite spectacular to see.
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Sand moving project |
Around 8 PM we finished our transit and entered the Red
Sea. We ended our day with a
lovely dinner at Restaurant 2, the alternative dining venue. It has a sort of tasting menu which was
splendid. All in all it was a nice
day. Oh, I forgot to say that we
had our second trivia game at noon.
The real matches begin after we finish our visits in Jordan and Egypt. It’s a good thing since our team
actually ended with a negative score!
3 comments:
Sounds like an interesting day. You need your old Trivia teammates!
The photo of the fisherman looks like a scene you could imagine from hundreds of years ago. Looks like going through the Suez Canal was an interesting experience!
Hope you have better luck (or more favorable questions) in the next trivia sessions.
That's interesting about the fishermen. I imagine you don't have that in the Panama canal, the locks probably keep the fish population to a minimum. Well, so I imagine. What the heck do I know about canals?
I hope the trivia situation improves, sounds like things are going well other than that!
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