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Care Packages

A few folks have asked us what we miss and could they send things in a care package.

Well, we do miss somethings

  • Half-n-Half
  • unsweetened, all natural peanut butter
  • chicken broth (I am used buying canned broth. here it is either boullion cubes or make your own)
  • good beer. that will be another post entirely…

But the problem is that packages to egypt all go through customs and they get opened. Expensive items have a tendency to disappear. Interesting items have a tendency to disappear. (For purposes of this conversation, “interesting” means anything you can’t get here. And since no one would send items that you can get here, just about everything in the package has the potential to disappear)

So, thank you to those that have asked, but the only way to really get anything is to carry it on the plane with you, either in carry-on or checked luggage.

Note: The university has several nice services.

For about LE100 you can have a car and driver pick you up or drop you off at the airport. (Thats about $18).

For an additional LE60 (about $10), you can get “clearance services”

This means a nice man will waiting for you with your name on a sign BEFORE you get to passport control or customs.

He take’s your passport and disappears for a few minutes, then you are whisked through passport control.

Then again with the whisking through customs.

At least that is how it worked for us: we didn’t stand in line, nobody asked us any questions and nobody even looked at our luggage.

We plan on hiring clearance expeditors when folks come to visit.

Note: Our air freight shipment arrived yesterday. These get somewhat special treatment in that the theft is less than average stuff that gets shipped. One of the new faculty had an iPod stolen.

We had something stolen as well: a box of Immodium. 9 boxes, 650lbs, ~$9k in declared value, and we are missing a box of Immodium.

I’ll take that and say Shukran!

Categories
Politics

Americans beautiful!

We were riding in a taxi yesterday going to the big bazaar.

Everyone here asks “where you from”.

If it is just someone on the street, you can be sure he is trying to start a conversation so he can drag you into his store.

We got dragged into a perfume shop this way. Live and learn.

Children on the street will say “Welcome to Egypt. Where you from”. It is unclear if they have something to sell or are just practicing their English.

2 hijab-ed women, one wearing a niqab (a veil that covers the entire face but leaves the eyes visible) were walking down the street and as they passed us, one of them said “Welcome to Egypt” and kept walking. Slightly odd.

Anyway, the taxi driver asked “Where you from” and I replied “America”

His response was

“Americans beautiful! Very good people… Bush, no good!”

I agreed and we laughed.

I wonder how the conversation would have gone if I tried to disagree with him, and had a command of the language to do so…

Update: Had the same thing happen the other day at the meat counter. Nice man asked us where we were from, we replied Amreeki (america in Egyptian Arabic).

He said “Americans very nice. Bush no good”

Seems to be a common sentiment.

Categories
Out and about Photographs

KHAAAANNN!

Today we visited the Khan al-Khalili, also know as the Turkish bazaar.

It is a combination tourist trap and marketplace.

The main “streets” through the Khan are full of tourist crap and ENTHUSIASTIC hawking. Calling out to obivous tourists in several languages until you respond. Stepping in front of you in an attempt to direct you into the store.

One humours exchange I had was:
Hello sir, good prices come see.

La, shukran. (no, thank you)
What are you looking for?

Nothing

Sir! I have nothing! come see…

Answering to any of these questions or comments will result in lots more questions:

Where you from?

What are you looking for?

Come see. Totally free!

To answer any of these will result in further high pressure tactics.

However, if one ducks down an side street, it is more for the locals. One gets away from the constant hucksterism. It is stil there, but they won’t actually follow you down the street trying to get you to turn around and come in. It is more of a

“hey, look sir! come in”

Ignoring then works.

I seem to gather a LOT of attention, looks, smiles and even laughter and pointing. It is a combo of the hat and the pony tail that seems to draw the attention.

Today I was addressed as:

Cowboy! where is your horse? no horse?
John Wayne

Hulk Hogan (?)

Ali Baba and Alexander (while making beard motions with their hands)

Women seem intrigued by the hair, mostly giggling about it.

The bazaar is divided into sections. We stumbed from one to another.
We went through

  • fabrics
  • clothing
  • shoes
  • industrial metal working: spools of wire, blacksmiths, men completely covered in coal dust working the furnaces
  • art/decorative metal working: cupolas with the crescent etc, wall hanging
  • rugs
  • crystal
  • furniture
  • pots and pans
  • jewelry
  • food, prepared and groceries

The crush of humanity in some of these areas was intense. There were men and boys pushing carts through the tight alley ways, rolling over the feet of people that were not quick enough to get out of their way.

Today was a reconnaisance mission. We did not buy anything.

We will go back.

There are a handful of photos taken today here.

Categories
Cultural Differences

Waiting for the courier.

There is a magazine called Egypt Today. It is an English language magazine dealing with news and politics. It also has a really good directory of restaurants and shops. This directory is sold for 60LE. Or for about 10LE more, you can subscribe to the magazine and get the directory. We decided to subscribe.

So I went online and filled out a subscription form. It says on the form that they do not accept credit card payments electronically, and that a member of the subscription department will be in touch.

I submit the form and we get an email back confirming our contact info.

The next day the phone rings, and it is a nice lady from the magazine explaining their subscription options.

I pick a 1 year subscription and was asked:

When would you like the courier to come?

Excuse me?

Labo(u)r is cheap in this country. I believe that the official unemployment rate is around 40%. I have heard unofficial rates as high as 70%.

What that means is that everywhere you go, stores, restaurants, hotels etc, there are 6-8 guys standing around. It is unclear whether they all work there, or are just hanging around.

Buying something in a store involves picking out what you want with one guy, who gives it to another guy who writes a receipt. You take that receipt to the cashier, pay him/her. Take the receipt back to another guy, who hands you your purchase.

Any job that is labor intensive and can be done with locally produced materials is extremely cheap. Anything that requires imported materials is expensive because of duties and taxes.

This is one of the reasons that EVERY place delivers. Restaurants, kebab stands on street corners, markets, dry cleaners, makawagis, everybody.

As an example:

We bought 2 cases of 1.5L bottles of water. To get them home, 2 delivery boys from the market put them in a shopping cart, carried the cart up the stairs to street level, followed us the 3 blocks home. Then carried the cases of water to our apartment. We gave them 2.50LE each. That’s about $0.45. It was a generous tip cause it wasn’t that hot and they had the cart, so they didn’t have to carry the cases the entire way.

It was surreal, and a little uncomfortable, to have 2 men following us through the streets of Cairo with our groceries. It felt decadent and almost colonial. I have been told we will get over that. I kind of hope that we don’t.

Back to the courier:

Egypt Today doesn’t really take credit cards at all. They are sending a courier today, Sunday, to pick up our payment and give us our first copy and a receipt.

Categories
Cultural Differences

Bukra

The other day, I had several errands I wanted to do:

  • get copies of our apartment key made
  • drop off some clothes at the tailor for alterations
  • do some minor clothes shopping

We got up, we went to the local coffee shop for a coffee and pastry to start the day around 9am.

Kaddee got called by a colleague and ended up meeting her to go into school so she could show her around the department, so I was on my own.

I finished my coffee and headed out. It was 9:30-ish. It was a Thursday. Friday & Saturday is the weekend.

So, I strolled towards Brazil St (which is where the tailor is) in a zig-zag fashion, attempting to stroll by the various clothing stores I had seen in previous walks.

None were open yet. Hmmm.

I get to the tailor’s shop.

I need to digress a moment about the “tailor”. Our orientation buddy had introduced me to this man. He had used him for some simple alterations: pant’s hemming, replacing a button etc. Good for simple work, cheap. I would not go to him to have him make me a suit, most likely, but I needed my pant’s hemmed and the sleeves on a jacket shortened. This gentleman is perfect for that kind of work.
The tailor’s “shop” is an 6×12 foot stall with a rollup metal door. about 80% of the shop space is heaps of bags of clothing and fabric in plastic bags.

The tailor sits on a chair on the sidewalk, sewing by hand. I see no evidence of a sewing machine, nor even electricity in his stall.

This is “the tailor”.

So, I get to the tailor’s shop, and his metal store is rolled shut and locked. Hmmm. It is about 10:15.

I go to the key making stall. He is open! Praise Allah! I have some keys made.

I remember now that I had been told that things get moving around 11am-noon. I have at least 45 minutes to kill.

Ok, I find a restaurant that is open and have a late breakfast/early lunch and read the Herald Tribune.

I finish lunch and strike out again.

By now it is really heating up. I find the tailor, give him my clothes and head back to the apartment.

It is too warm now to entertain the thought of clothes shopping and trying on clothes in a cramped dressing room. I go home.

In every other “hot” country I have been in, people tend to get moving early-ish (not 6 am early, but 9am early) to beat the heat of the day. Here, nothing really gets going till 11 at the earliest. Just in time for the heat to really pick up.

Egyptians on the whole seem to be really late night people. There are several bars that don’t get going till 1am and are open 24 hours.

Most of open air concerts and entertainment venues (of which there are many) list showtimes of 11pm and midnight starts are far from uncommon.
Having dinner before 8 or 9 is kinda like the “early bird special” in places that have a large retirement community in the US.

All this translates into very quiet mornings for sleeping in.

Which works for us, mostly. Except when “we have stuff to do” and want to get going.

I have been told, repeatedly, by people here that:

The American way is to make a list of things you want to do today and check them off as you go

The Egyptian way is to have a list of things you need to do, and a time at which you will quit for the day. When that times comes, you’re done. The rest can happen Bukra. (Bukra is egyptian arabic for “tomorrow”. It has the same meaning as “manana“. It doesn’t really mean tomorrow, it just means “not today“)

It’s gonna take some getting used to…

Categories
Out and about Photographs

TGIT

Since the weekend in this part of the world is Friday and Saturday, Thursday night is the “yea! it’s the end of the week” night. (Well at least for western-style employees. Most egyptians work 6 days a week, with their day off either Friday, is they are Muslim, or Sunday if they are Christian)

Anyway, one of the faculty members organizes a moving TGIT(Thank God It’s Thursday!) happy hour.

Last night was the first of the semester. It was at the roof top bar at the Nile Hilton.

It was a gorgeous sunset.
sunset
From the rooftop you can see the pyramids. I did not bother taking a photo, because they would be practically undetectable because of the haze. They might be visible if I had the big camera with the UV and polarizing filter, but I doubt it.

It was a lovely couple of hours sitting high above the Nile, looking out at the Cairo Tower (shown in the photo above) and The Citadel, and down on all the felucca’s and floating restaurants and pleasure craft on the nile. There is a nice breeze up there that nicely moderates the heat.

The beer is overpriced and really not that good, but it is worth the trip for a sunset every now and then.