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Middle East Topics specific to the Middle East countries, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Yemen, Oman and the Emirates
Photo by Lois Pryce, schoolkids in Algeria

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  #1  
Old 1 Mar 2009
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Alex:
We may have met the other night in the Mirage Village restaurant - I'm the American (except the other Alex from Russia, here recuperating from crashing on his enduro bike, gave me a different last name). Anyway, if you are a different Alex, then I'm still at the Mirage Village.

I was just up in Nuweiba checking into this. Actually, I tried riding to the Monestary St. Katherine, but it was raining and snowing up there and I was dressed more for conditions in Dahab then conditions up there, so that's when I headed to Nuweiba.

Ticket Office said $107 USD for me and the bike.

When you ride into Nuweiba from the south, ticket office is in a separate building on the right side of the road (water side) one block before the ferry terminal entry. You need your carnet to get the ticket (which I didn't have) - then customs and immigration are handled after they admit you into the ferry terminal loading area.

I'm leaving Tuesday for Aqaba.
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Old 1 Mar 2009
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I've never taken the ferry from Egypt to Jordan, but I've taken it twice going from Jordan to Egypt... my advice, and pay attention here because it's important, DO NOT take the "slow boat."

There are two ferries, one deemed "fast" and slightly more expensive, the other cheaper and "slow." In truth, they are both slow, and from my experience will take many, many hours more than they say they will. But the "fast" ferry is TWICE as fast as the other option, and ten times more comfortable.

I'm all about sacrificing comfort to save money, but this not the time and place to do it. (The slow boat will scar you for life.)
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Old 1 Mar 2009
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Thanks guys! I'm leaving Thursday for Aqaba too. 107$ is it price for fast ferry? I think after Wadi Halfa ferry it will be like a luxury boat!
to quastdog: Mirage Village - where is it? May be we can meet.

Alex
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Old 1 Mar 2009
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:: Welcome to Arab Bridge Maritime company website ::

the site of the company.

expensive.....

when we were there last year the timetable was not ''working'' (of course)
just turn up there and see if there is a ship.
when you ask for a ticket at the ticket office (mister in the office was not a very helpfull guy.....) they don't ask if you want a fast or slow ferry. they just give you a ticket for the first ship. no choice when we were there.
at the egyptian side you can pay in egyptian pound or US Dollars.
at the jordan side (in aqaba) you can pay in jordan ......uhm dinars?......and US dollars. (this was last summer).

if you have more question.........just ask..........

brend

sorry for my english
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Old 2 Mar 2009
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alex Rubtsov View Post
to quastdog: Mirage Village - where is it? May be we can meet.
It's a hotel along the water, north end of the main beachfront - around the corner about 300m from the main restaurant/dive shop area (past the closed down blue and white resort).
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Old 3 Mar 2009
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Only one ferry option

The fast ferry is for passengers only - no vehicles.

Today, the slow ferry leaves at 3pm - I have to report "no later than 1pm" to deal with immigration and customs on the bike.

Don't count on the ferry leaving at 3 all the time - this could be tide and port schedule dependent.
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Old 3 Mar 2009
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Hi all

I did this journey in 2007 with a car. A word of advice - get to the port EARLY to allow time for all the paperwork to be processed. It takes as long getting out of Egypt as it does getting in!

Mark
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Old 3 Mar 2009
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You're so right, Ilsemark. I got my ticket about 10 - got some tea and a bite to eat after posting my previous note, then went to the port about 11:30. The process there was just as confusing as Aswan - different buildings (traffic police and customs, immigration, vehicle inspection, and police id verification) were all in different buildings, scattered around the port facility. It took over an hour to complete the paperwork with a Tourist and Antiquities cop shepherding me through the process.

On top of that - the boat left at 2:15 - not 3 as they told me at the ticket office (2:15 was 15 minutes late for scheduled departure). Perhaps the ticket office guy just didn't know his english numbers properly - he meant 2 - said 3. I was on the boat shortly before 1pm, just before they started loading all the trucks.

The trip took 4 hours, arriving after dark. There was more confusion in Aqaba - after getting off the ferry, I stopped where police were standing and they told me I needed to go across the bridge to the arrival office for immigration and customs. About 45 minutes later, I was back at their spot to get a "screening" document that customs required. Then back again to a big shed to get my bike "x-rayed" (same shed the semis all have to go through).

Insurance was mandatory - but it wasn't mandatory the insurance guy be in his office when the ferry arrived (actually, a 2nd ferry arrived from somewhere shortly after ours, so 2 showed almost the same time). After 30 minutes wait, he finally showed to do some work. I guess he prefers there be a line waiting for him, rather than the other way around.

After getting insurance, customs will do your bike paperwork.

Insurance was 21.50 Jordanian dinars (~ $30 USD) - customs was 20 dinars. For some reason, the amount of time I was planning on spending in Amman was important to the insurance guy - don't know that I would have saved money if I told him less time (I said 5 days - I need to get a visa for Syria). So, if your good at Arabic, you might find out how the duration in Amman impacts the cost of insurance.

I finally was out of there around 7:30 - no maps, no idea of where I was going, but found my way to downtown Aqaba for food, an ATM, and a hotel room.
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