Here are some kids doing what kids do
best: burning stuff in the street. They were out front of my hotel in
Luxor all the time (The Happyland Hotel sign is visible down the
street a little) looking for stuff to burn and achieving quite a bit
of success. Here they've found some plastic pipe, which both burns
AND MELTS. Tough to beat. Nobody really minded because most buildings
are made of hideous non-burning mud-brick, and kids tend to do what
they like anyway. Four-year-olds go shopping and so on. The banners
across the buildings are for Ramadan. There's a cheapo plastic lamp
up there too, sort of a christmas-light equivalent. Many of those
beep out awful tunes: anti-Israeli marching anthems, and, strangely
enough, christmas carols.

The view from the bar at The Venus
Hotel, which has some issues involving ants, roaches, bedbugs, and
other insects. I figure it was a plague sent from the Lord, that
being the area for it. The Venus Hotel was on the market street.
Canny sellers would move their carts into the middle of the street to
obstruct traffic and extort their way to profits. The little van down
there goes from town to town. Cheap transport if you know how to
negotiate.

This is easily the most impressive
piece of technology on display in the streets of Egypt. Pour some
goop into the hopper and it streams out of a series of little holes
onto a rotating grill, then it gets scoured off by a blade. The
result tastes like shredded wheat.

Coming over another hill to Deir El
Medina, the ruins of a Christian monastery that surround an Egyptian
temple. This is in the area near the Valley of the Kings, another
good area for hiking that nobody takes advantage of. Up the mountain
to the right is the aforementioned Valley. Sissies take donkeys, and
I don't even want to discuss the rubes in the buses.

Hatshepsut's mortuary temple. A
wide-angle lens makes this way smaller than it looks...the scale is
insane, and a lot of it is carved right out of the mountainside. Also
near the Valley of the Kings; just a hop over that mountain
there.

Down there is the Valley of the Kings.

Down there to the left is the Valley of
the Artisans. That white path is concrete stairs, a fairly punishing
climb. Farmland in the distance.

Karnak is a huge temple that was once
at the end of a three km road of sphinxes that connected it to the
temple in Luxor. The scale is ridiculous. Those high pillars just
visible at the vanishing point of the photo originally held up piers
for a second floor.

The lotus was the symbol of Egypt; the
stem is the Nile, the flower is the Delta. They're washed out in this
photo, but the tops of these lotus pillars are painted red and
blue.

More bits and pieces of
Karnak.

Karnak doesn't end.

Luxor Temple. The locals were so bored
with the ruins in the sand that they built a mosque on top of 'em.
Now the mosque's too important to be moved. Christians and Moslems
both spent a lot of time vandalizing the most amazing
things.