Ferries to
Egypt
Travel to Egypt by
Ferry
There are a number of ferry routes in and around Egypt that are
open to passengers.
Ferries within
Egypt
Hurghada – Sharm El Sheilh: The catarmaran that runs between hurghada and Sharm el sheikh makes a
useful shortcut between mainland Egypt and Sinai. The journey takes
just one and a half hours (although delays are common), and makes a preferable alternative to the 12 hour bus
journey. For more details including
schedules
There was some talk of a ferry from Taba to Aqaba but as of yet
this option has not materialised. Some tour operators charter small vessels that make the journey but you would
need to book as part of a return package through a travel agent. This is the route of choice for operators that run
day trips from Sinai to Petra .
Ferries to/from
Egypt
To Sudan - Nile River Valley Transport
Corporation operates a weekly ferry between Aswan ( Egypt ) and Wadi Halfa ( Sudan
). Read more about the ferry Egypt to Sudan
Nuweiba ( Egypt ) – Jordan (Aqaba): Ferries in
Egypt also travel between Egypt and Jordan across the Gulf of Aqaba
from Nuweiba. The journey takes between 1 hours or 3 hours depending on
which ferry you take (slow or fast). For more details including schedules click here.
From Europe – There is now a brand new ferry
set to sail its maiden voyage in May 2010 from Venice to Alexandria. Although schedules are yet to be published,
the jouney should take approximately three days and will be the only Europe to Egypt ferry in operation. For more
info see: http://www.visemarline.com/
Disappointingly the only other boats currently making the
journey between Alexandria and Europe are cargo boats only not
open to passanegers. If you want to overland it from Europe to Egypt you can either take a ferry from Italy to
Tunisia (http://www.cemar.it/dest/ferries_tunisia.htm ) and then travel through Lybia. Or alternatively, travel clockwise
through turkey, Syria , Jordan and then across the red sea to
Sinai. Both are potentially life changing trips but not for those with time
constraints.
|