Cultural Delights & Advice For Future Travelers
Ami: Can you talk for a minute about the food? I know you mentioned that the food was something different. What is the food like in Egypt?
Jasmine Bhatt: Oh, it’s so good. It was a lot of meat, rice, pita bread, and different sauces that I don’t even think you could go to an Egyptian restaurant in the US.
And my favorite was the coffee. I love the coffee there. I couldn’t even start the day without a lot of coffee and I’m not really like that here. I drink coffee, but I’m not somebody who needs coffee to start the day. I unfortunately drink too many energy drinks instead.
But we would make stops just along the way, and there would be some vendors on the side of the road that our Egyptian tour guide would know. That had to be my favorite.
Ami: Given the benefit of your experience now, what advice would you give to someone considering going to Egypt to explore?
Jasmine Bhatt: One thing I wish I had done a little bit more of before I went was a little bit more research into the history. Dave gave me some really good resources to look at and I looked at some, but not all of them. And I wish I had just dug in a little bit more so that when I was on these tours I would be able to absorb them even more.
But even despite that, I think that triggered the desire to dive into the history a little bit more going forward. So I think it would be really good advice for somebody who’s planning to go to take a minute to look at what you want to see and the history behind some of these places.
I would just say go. I think that would be my advice: go and don’t be scared to go. I also want to mention that I felt very safe. I do think that having a guide who I trusted because I knew Dave had worked with him before really made me feel safe. It made me feel like he was family.
Also the passes, Dave told me before going that you’ll get these gold passes where you can skip lines or go at a particular time of day when there aren’t a lot of people. And that was the best thing because when we went to these different places where we had the entire place to ourselves.
Ami: That’s great advice. Do you feel like it would’ve been difficult without a guide? Would you have had a hard time navigating the language barrier and other things without a guide?
Jasmine Bhatt: I do. Especially if you’re going to multiple places. I think if you just stayed in Cairo or you just went to Luxor, then it’s doable, but the experience would be different. But the language barrier I do think might have been difficult in some of these smaller areas.
Understanding the culture and what’s acceptable, what are the best places for food, the best time of the day to go to different attractions, etc. For those, I think having a guide was crucial.