Ancient Thebes has become Luxor home to Luxor Temple along with many other attractions for the visitor to Egypt.
Later in the afternoon after lunch had settled we headed to shore through the lobbies of the eight boats between the Queen of Hansa and the shore. Naturally I counted the intervening boats so I would know when I reached the Queen of Hansa when we returned. What would become even stranger was that on our return the Queen of Hansa was only the third boat from the dock. Staying to watch the intervening boats’ elimination could have been as interesting as visiting the temple, but I digress.
A bus was waiting above the dock to whisk us to the Luxor Temple and “whisk” is the best word to describe the trip since the temple was just down the street from where the Queen of Hansa was docked. It was late in the day by the time we left the temple grounds and some of the pictures had to be retouched because they were too dark.
Somehow many of us had the feeling that Luxor Temple was not such a big deal, since we had been prepared for the BIG ones tomorrow: the Valley of the Kings, the Valley of the Queens and the Temple of Karnak. A fascinating sidelight of the trip to Luxor Temple and tomorrow’s trip to Karnak was that a ceremonial road lined with sphinxes linking the entire distance between Luxor temple and Karnak temple was month-by-month being more excavated and restored (there are a few pictures of a part of it at the end of the Luxor temple pictures). Mosques, apartment houses and stores are being relocated by the Egyptian Department of Antiquities to allow the restoration of the highway of the sphinxes.