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7 Nights on the Nile
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| Text by Devanshi Mody | |||||||||||||
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Published: Volume 16, Issue 3, March, 2008
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The pyramids can wait. Gliding down the world's longest river on a luxury boat is an experience that floors the most die-hard cynic, says Devanshi Mody
Its sexy streamlined exterior stuns. The seduction continues as I enter the marble floored reception and am shown around the boat’s swank lounge and bar, up to the library and cigar lounge, down to the private theatre, past crocodile-hide coffee tables and rich cowhide carpets to my très smart suite. An air of slick sophistication pervades. Very James Bond. The manager materialises. I hiccup. He’s about 30. And the chef? He looks 16. I’m beset with trepidation. Two boys are running this boat? But these ‘boys’ are to do a splendid job. Then, it’s time for one of the day’s most sacred rituals: breakfast. I’m not a breakfast person, but the Zahra’s breakfasts with exotica like fresh guava juice and pomegranate yoghurt had me addicted. After the first day, the impressively attentive waiters remember my preferences. My favourite cheeses and fruit appear at the table as I arrive. The Egyptian sous chef tries to pile my plate insisting, “You should be fat like Egyptian women!” whilst the endearing staff joke amongst themselves about who makes the best iced coffee.
The first visit on the Luxor-Aswan itinerary is the Luxor Temple of Amun Ra, with its proliferation of statues of Ramses the Great. Clearly, Ramses loved himself. The Roman and Muslim conquests of Egypt are manifest in the frescos and mosque respectively. The same steps are repeated as we’re conveyed to and from the Karnak temple for the evening’s sound and light show, which is pretentious and tedious. But when we return to Karnak for sightseeing, we’re floored by the magnificence of this monumental construction that starred in the Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me. Even if Karnak isn’t the world’s oldest and largest temple as guides claim, it is one of the most astonishing.
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