13 Mart 2011 Pazar

Egypt: On the Road

Views along the coastal road linking Cairo and Alexandria

I have no delusions that a tour bus ride on the 130 or so miles between Egypt's two largest city provides great insights, but it does offer snippets of life along Egypt's north coast. Here are some random images:

Just getting out of Cairo (population about 18 million and growing fast) takes some time -- little wonder with crowded roads (below):

In a country fabled for antiquity, the capital is growing, growing and growing, as evidenced by the buildings under construction in the distant outskirts (below), some legally built and others illegally erected on designated agricultural land:

Surprisingly mixed in among the buildings are farm fields (below) that are still being worked by hand:

As our bus passed a moving open-bed truck, I was able to snap this picture of a barefoot man (below) squatting atop a load of bundled brochures. A guy doesn't need a seatbelt when he's not on a seat:


Fanciful Euro-Ottoman-inspired wedding cake building (below) on the outskirts of Cairo:


Large and small mosques dot the route. All are topped with a dome, and some (like the one below) have one minaret, others two, occasionally three:


Housing construction is making a sprawling city even 'sprawlinger" -- and Western-style real estate sales are taking hold (three images below):


The farther we rolled on from Cairo, the more pick-up trucks we saw (two images below) -- loaded with cargo, fruit, people, whatever. I saw one with washing machine, one with a cow and a calf, and one with a motorcycle. Chevrolet trucks are surprisingly common, even though Toyotas, Hyundais and Hondas seem to prevail in the car category:
The round-topped towers below are not Angkor Wat wannabes but pigeon houses:
At the Master rest stop (below)...

...there stilll is service, includng hand car wash (below):

There's a lot of roadside junk (below): crumbling buildings, broken-down cars, small businesses, stacks of tires and litter, lots of litter:


The eastern reaches of Alexandria display that city's first fanciful buildings, like the one below signal the approach into Egypt's second (and most European) city:

Hiç yorum yok:

Yorum Gönder