lauriegene > The twin temples at Abu Simbel, built by Ramses II for himself and Queen Nefertari. In the foreground are Grady and Etta. Apologies to Nohah for cutting her in half.
lauriegene > Before dawn over Luxor.
lauriegene > The endless beach volleyball game at Hurghada
lauriegene > In the words of Ogden Nash, "Landscape simply socko," from the barren wash at the foot of the Great Pyramids toward the edge of Cairo.
lauriegene > Bill giving some perspective to what 27 meters of solid granite atop a 6-meter base looks like.
lauriegene > Dawn over the Valley of the Kings at Luxor.
lauriegene > The Sphinx gazing toward Cairo.
lauriegene > The Great Pyramid, with an unfortunately modern research facility at its base. At least the lights in the foreground are wrapped in a rock wall.
lauriegene > The Egyptian National Museum in Cairo, established in the 19th century by a French archeologist. The cow-goddess Hathor, with her crown of cow horns and a sun, graces the entry archway. Egyptian goddesses portrayed in the Greco-Roman stayle flank the classical facade.
The twin temples at Abu Simbel, built by Ramses II for himself and Queen Nefertari. In the foreground are Grady and Etta. Apologies to Nohah for cutting her in half.
lauriegene > The twin temples at Abu Simbel, built by Ramses II for himself and Queen Nefertari. In the foreground are Grady and Etta. Apologies to Nohah for cutting her in half.
The twin temples at Abu Simbel, built by Ramses II for himself and Queen Nefertari. In the foreground are Grady and Etta. Apologies to Nohah for cutting her in half.
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