Danger Travelling in Egypt

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Last week I posted on the Facebook page that we’d just been involved in a very dangerous situation while travelling in Egypt. We were still in Egypt then. It was scary, too close for comfort, and we had a very lucky escape. I thought we’d all handled it pretty well as we carried on enjoying our few days of luxury and comfort of the Egyptian Red Sea coast.

This is what happened to us on that day, one of many experiences of note on this month long trip. Don’t get me wrong, we love Egypt and this wasn’t our first time visiting, we will return. But this dangerous incident was something we’d never experienced before in all our years of travel. Our travel horror stories are published elsewhere, maybe we should add this one!

“This just happened.
We were not far from the Marriott, walking up the street with an employee who was helping us find a restaurant. The tanker was coming down a steep side street. We heard shouting, a guy was running alongside the tanker. Our escort shouted, “RUN!” We ran.
Luckily the kids were trailing behind us a bit, I was ahead, the tanker swerved, hit a car, rolled, and crashed into parked cars. It was exactly where I was standing. Liquid sprayed all over me, James, and the employee, the kids just got a big splash. It was in my eyes, in my mouth. I ran. I lost a shoe, turned an ankle, and kept running. It was a massive relief to find the liquid was dirty water, not petrol.
I feared another deliberate truck attack, but it was certainly an accident.
The kids did exactly what they should, ran, and didn’t look back.
We’re back in the hotel now, showered, disinfected, and getting our clothes washed. My day pack is soaked, my camera, papers, everything.
Hopefully none of us swallowed any.
We’re all a bit shook up but OK.
There was nobody in the parked cars and I think both drivers are OK. Cops were there immediately.
Wow. Not our day to die. #Hurghada #Egypt #Crash

truck crash egypt hurghada
We’d be dead right now if we hadn’t moved fast.

It was a random accident but I think the above experience made me think deeply and maybe shook me up more than I thought.

Over our next week in Egypt, as we faced the usual trials and tribulations of our travelling lifestyle After the oasis-like luxury of the Hurghada Marriott, instead of rolling with the punches I started to struggle and see things differently.

Coptic Cairo after bombings
We were in Egypt just a week or two after the bombing in Coptic Cairo (The ancient Christian area) and in Alexandria. We visited both. In Coptic Cairo, we felt safe among the pilgrims after passing through security and metal detectors.

That’s not like me. I laughed off our felucca problems and bantered with the constant touts, but problem after problem over those few days wore me down as I found the inequalities of the world more and more unsettling.

Our bus journey from Hurghada to Cairo was long but I set off with the right attitude and enjoyed the hours of desert and Red Sea views taking delight in spotting hundreds of dolphins playing along the coast and managing to ignore the driver’s race track speeds along the dusty roads.

The bus was new, the air-con worked and the kids slept most of the way. We arrived back in Cairo feeling good.

Egyptian bus
A luxury VIP Egyptian bus, they’re superb, and to tourists, cheap.

My final day in Hurghada had been a tiresome hunt for accommodation in Cairo and then in Alexandria while Chef and the boys splashed about in the Red Sea.

There was little available and none of it was ideal, but after a full morning of searching, I eventually booked a couple of hotels.

The downtown Cairo hotel was fairly horrible, but we treated ourselves to dinner at the Intercontinental on the Corniche and went to bed well-fed and happy.

We were getting blazé about travelling in Egypt so the next morning we just turned up at Cairo’s main Ramesses station to catch the luxury 11.15 train to Alexandria that we’d spotted online. We’d booked all previous train tickets in advance, we’d recommend you do the same.

red sea egypt
Life in a bubble. The Red Sea, it’s not red.

After a chaotic taxi ride through the very worst and noisiest of Cairo’s traffic, we tumbled past the metal detectors into the faded glory of the station and tried to buy our 1st class tickets. 1st class is cheap, everything is cheap here if you have tourist dollar and it’s worth paying for.

Unfortunately the 11.15 we’d found online didn’t exist.

This wasn’t the first time we’d come up against non-existent trains in Egypt so, although frustrating, it wasn’t a massive surprise.

We settled on the 12.15 but this one wasn’t the luxury version, it was one of the old Spanish trains and we knew that meant filth.

We had a coffee and a couple of plates of fries to while away the extra hour. I watched, vaguely horrified, as the chef moved from handling raw meat to placing handfuls of fries on our plates. Hygiene was not a strong point, but our young waiter was really sweet and the coffee was decent, we smiled and tipped.

Cairo Main Station Rameses
Cairo’s main train station is rather spectacular, but don’t trust the timetables or the chef.

Imagine a post-apocalyptic TV series set in a future where society and infrastructure have collapsed and trains have sat unused and neglected for decades. If you imagine what a modern, 1st class train carriage would look like under those circumstances, you’d probably be underestimating the levels of filth on this next train.

They seem to have a total block with cleaning sometimes in Egypt and the levels of dirt are far worse than India or Cambodia, our two grubbiest countries to date.

But only sometimes, other trains in Egypt were absolutely immaculate.

Other than having to peel ourselves off the seats in Alexandria, the ride was fairly comfortable and the changing scenery interesting.

Our next disappointment was an Alexandrian hotel that, despite being the cleanest we’ve seen and having the best wi-fi, saw us approaching Booking dot com for a refund.

They agreed when we told them of late-night noise, screaming toddlers and cigarette smoke leaking in from the corridor. Add to that the horrific Alexandria traffic and general lack of charm and we’d had enough.

Throw in Chef feeling unwell ( an accidental hangover, not his fault after 1 can of dodgy beverage), followed by being ripped off over coffee at Alexandria bus station by a grinning, rotten-toothed scum bag, and our run of crap luck continued.

Egyptian Man Pyramids
Abdulla was our minder in the village in the shadow of the pyramids. It was good to see him again. Chef is 6 foot, Egyptian men are often really tall, they say their height is passed down from Ramesses the Great, he had over 200 children.

So we fled back to Cairo to the shadow of the pyramids and our favourite guest house, enjoying this crazy little village full of cowboys and con men. They know us now, we are welcomed by genuinely smiling faces and that’s always lovely, even if, after coffee, they take us to their cousin’s gift shop.

Our journey from bus station to Sphinx took 4 times as long as it should, our taxi kept overheating forcing us to stop every few minutes for our driver to release the steam and top up the water.

We were probably the only customers he’d had all day so we stuck with him and paid him a little more than the agreed price.

2nd pyramid Khafre or Chephren Cairo
On our last morning in Egypt we took a walk around all 3 pyramids, insisting on feet rather than skinny horses or camels. Above is the 2nd pyramid, of Khafre or Chephren, the Pharaoh who gave his face to the Sphinx. The haze to the right is Cairo, the pollution was particularly bad that day.

We left Egypt on a 2am flight via Germany the night before last and were thankfully granted a very late check out so we could enjoy comfort, wi-fi and the nightly sound and light show from our rooftop rather than sitting out in the dust, grime and heat.

Another ancient car and older taxi driver took us to the airport. The older ones are, we hope, the more sensible drivers, they’ve survived.

Ibrahim drove us for 3 days but his eyes weren’t good enough for night driving, so Mohammed had been summoned for our airport run. Over an hour in the worst traffic you can imagine, the most dangerous roads and with eye-stinging pollution.

Mohammed assured me we’d be safe, he was a steady driver, everything would be fine, but I was terrified on that highway. I’ve lost my nerve.

Driving with Ibrahim Cairo driver taxi
Ibrahim, another older, steadier, driver. Approaching the red pyramid, south of Cairo.

On the highway I noticed  young mum, perched sidesaddle on the back of a scooter holding her precious baby. Trucks (like the one with no brakes above) screamed past her on either side, boy racers in modern luxury cars weaved through the chaos like madmen. She and her child breathed the toxic air that is their daily reality. It’s not fair.

We met so many lovely Egyptian people, like Mohammed, Abdulla, Ibrahim, Gouda and the random boy on the train who asked me to hold his baby son. Their lives are so freaking hard.

They have to live there, we can leave, they struggle to make a dollar out of cynical, often rude tourists, when there are ANY tourists.  

They put their lives on the line to get on a bus or even cross the street, their eyes are sore from pollution every day and they can’t escape from it. Their children grow up surrounded by filth.

It’s just not fair and I hate it. I’ve had enough of the crap in this world, of corrupt governments, of inhumanity, of rich selfish fools lining their pockets and shopping for recreation while the poor suffer.

Pokemon go at the pyramids
Pokemon Go at the pyramids. We’re so lucky to be tourists, not locals trying to make a living under these conditions. I never saw a local with a smart phone, my 10 year old has his own bought purely to catch imaginary creatures all over the world.

It’s been an amazing trip with a wealth of learning for all of us, but don’t let anyone tell you travel in Egypt is easy. We had incredible experiences visiting all of the big ancient Egyptian sites you know about, plus a few more. Posts on Ancient Memphis, the Saqqara Stepped Pyramid, Luxor, Karnak, Aswan and Abu Simbel are still to come.  The pyramids and the Egyptian Museum in Cairo are already published.

Egypt is truly one of the most spectacular countries on Earth. We loved Egypt despite the hiccups and we’re so grateful to have had this opportunity but it’s left me with too much to think about. I’m still processing, wondering if there is anything I can do to help.

I’ll do my best, possibly the only thing I can do is to tell you to go and spend your tourist dollar in supporting the Egyptian people.

We felt perfectly safe with regard to terrorism and “trouble”, security is good. We visited Coptic Cairo just days after the most recent bombing and felt completely safe.

Cairo airport had the best, most thorough security I’ve seen anywhere in the world. The roads are another story, but you, as a tourist, can take safer forms of transport.

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Learn About Egypt Before You Travel

We highly recommend the Lonely Planet guide books for learning about the history and culture of a country before you leave home. You can use it to figure out where in Egypt you want to go and learn the basics of the language, a few pleases and thank yous are always welcome. It’s also a good idea to learn numbers 1-10 in Arabic, we’ve found this very useful.

If you'd like to hire a car during your stay, use this car rental comparison tool to find the best deal!

We also suggest you take a look at this company to get a quote for all kinds of the more tricky adventure or extended travel insurance.

Try Stayz / VRBO for an alternative way to find rentals on homes/apartments/condos in any country!

About the author
Alyson Long
Alyson Long is a British medical scientist who jumped ship to chase dreams. A former Chief Biomedical Scientist at London's West Middlesex Hospital she started in website creation and travel writing in 2011. Alyson is a full-time blogger and travel writer, a published author, and owns several websites. World Travel Family is the biggest. A lifetime of wanderlust and over 6 years of full-time travel, plus a separate 12 month gap year, has given Alyson and the family some travel expert smarts to share with you on this world travel site. Today Alyson still travels extensively to update this site and continue her mission to visit every country, but she's often at home on her farm in Australia.

16 thoughts on “Danger Travelling in Egypt”

  1. I identified with this experience so much! I had very simillar feelings when visiting Sihanoukville in Cambodia; the incredibly generous, kind local people we met everywhere had such hard lives and often lived in squalor beside massive foreign built casinos for the super rich. It can be really tough sometimes to concile our privilege with the difficulty of their everyday lives. I just tried to tip as often and generously as I could and my Mum and I also bought period packs from an amazing little NGO which provides period education for girls in rural villages (among other things) which made me feel like I was contributing positively in some small way!
    We’re planning on visiting Egypt next year so thank you for all the awesome information you’ve provided! I’m a chronic over-researcher so reading your expereinces has been very helpful 🙂

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  2. I love your courage ! I have been dreaming of travel to Egypt but can’t find anyone to go with me…..too afraid, they say. I think you would be very popular if you’d convene a group of women solo travelers from around the world to meet you in Egypt for a few days . I’d sign up for it !

    Reply
    • I would LOVE to do that! But how to organise it with insurance and all that stuff, It would be hard. How many days would you want to spend in Egypt? The other alternative is a group tour, that’s how I met my husband, on a 1 week tour of Egypt, solo, with a group.

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      • Well, I think everyone arranges their own travel , insurance etc., you are the leader and important in that you know the lay of the land, you tell us where to go and what’s worth seeing. Everyone signs waivers , of course ! I hope you consider something along these lines. If not possible, I would love to talk to you more about a small group (me) trip . Cheers !

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  3. I don’t know how I missed this blog post, but what an incredible read. Egypt seems like a beautiful but tough country, I’d love to go. I’ve read a lot of posts about Egypt from solo travelers, and some mention sexual harassment is a problem. The grime and filth I could work around, but the harassment concerns me as I often travel without a male companion and with my soon to be 18 daughter.

    I often sit and wonder what I can do to make the world better. Life for some people is just so cruelly unfair. Good food, clean air, reasonable accommodations, and access to healthcare are just basic human rights we all deserve. I was lucky enough to be born in the USA and that makes me lucky, but at the same time I know that my country and corporate greed are responsible for the poverty in less fortunate countries. “White guilt” is a term I dislike (besides I’m not even white, I’m a black American) but that’s the closest I can describe when I see something that reminds me how unfair life is for some, and how its all so stupid, unfair, and corrupt. Glad you wrote this, as always thanks for sharing.

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  4. This is one of the best blog posts I’ve read to date. I love the honest recap of the end of your trip. I get so sick of the sanitised write ups that most people have – nothing is perfect. Your frankness and truth is a breath of fresh air. Thank you for sharing your story, and I hope that you will continue to travel and share, both the good and the bad 🙂

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  5. I’m glad you are all ok. I totally understand your feelings, such an experience, as with the truck, can take a while to recover and feel safe again. Especially when you have kids. Seeing the poverty and the life of these people…this reminds me of when I came home from my first 6 week long backpacker tour from India. A few days after I got home I had to travel to Vienna, also to the city centre…I was so shocked! I felt like I was on a different planet.
    I’m waiting for your other posts, I haven’t read about Egypt for a while.
    Take care,
    Sz

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  6. Sorry for the disappointing things you had to go through, but I’m hoping ull keep the good memories and filter out the rest. I just want to add that most tourists who choose to visit Egypt come via organised pre-booked tours, and thankfully don’t have to go through the hassle of using the local buses, taxis or trains. They are not tourist friendly (nor are they local people friendly)… I know that tour agencies isn’t your style. I’m just saying so that your followers would know.. you can enjoy the sights of Egypt without the negative points if you were to go through a pre-organised trip

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    • Yes but this is a website about travel, not package holidays. As I say above ( did you read it?) that isn’t the point I’m making at all. I also say that we’ve done it that way previously, I met my husband in Egypt on a group tour some 20 years ago. We saw a lot more and had a far more authentic experience travelling independently. We want to see the real country, as do the majority of our readers, not a sanitised version. I also say that we had a fantastic time, the above describes just a few days out of almost a month in Egypt and the post isn’t about having a bad time. There are no ” bad memories” but that truck has really unsettled me on roads now. We love to travel, if we didn’t, we wouldn’t do it, and the above is what travel is really like, you take the rough with the smooth. Being almost hit by a truck with no brakes could also happen to a package tourist, we were in a very touristy area when it happened, right outside the Marriott. Meeting the local people, like those I mention above, would not happen to a package tourist. We met some really interesting people, also travelling independently in various guest houses so there are other travellers there. We avoided the coach parties of tourists. Most that we saw were Chinese. Overall there were very, very few tourists.

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  7. Great read . We are embarking on a world trip in November and still planning places to go . Although I’d love to see the pyramids I think I might give it a miss … I don’t think I’m as brave as you !

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  8. I loved reading your extremely honest review of the experience your family had in Egypt. So often I feel travel bloggers sugar coat things for fear of sounding negative I guess, or getting backlash. Thanks for the reminder to always write it like you see it. I know everyones experience can turn out different. But that’s the story each and everyone should be telling. Glad everyone is Ok.

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  9. Whew! That’s quite a wrap-up, Alyson! I’m so happy you’re all okay and that all in all, it was still a positive trip!

    Reply

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