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NEWS / PRESS
The New York Times Magazine
THE SOPHISTICATED TRAVELER, part 2/ November 10, 1996
Winter escapes
Cruising to the Rescued Treasures of Nubia
By Elizabeth Peters
.."The Eugenie
was the first boat to cruise the Nubian Sea, as it is
sometimes called, and it is certainly the handsomest.
Externally, it resembles an old paddle-wheeler; each of
the 54 staterooms has a private balcony, and the décor
of the public rooms ranges from the tastefully opulent
to the whimsical
..
I had the Imperatrice suite, one of the two suites on
the ship, which is purely gorgeous."
Financial Times
Weekend December 31/January 1, 1995
The forgotten desert lake
By Mark Nicholson
"But Lake Nasser is an odd, forgotten place. It yawns,
glittering and incongruous, way off into the desert...the
biggest man-made freshwater lake in the world, full of
perch and crocodiles, but by man virtually uncharted in
its 30 years. Eugenie, though, is its queerest fish. It
is an elegant, white, perky-looking craft, 73m long with
50 cabins, each with its own balcony.....The whole decorated
as if Terence Conran had designed a set for Death on the
Nile....
Beneath a Nubian sun, a low tableau of distant, mysterious
peaks and bluffs, hidden lagoons and virgin dunes glide
by....
After a day's sailing grows the odd sense that this enormous
empty expanse is a private lake for Eugenie and you....
Short guided tours at one of the stops create the fiction
of an appetite for the uncharacteristically - for Egypt
- good food at lunch.
Tea and Frank Sinatra in the lounge at five. A general
evacuation into the roomy cabins for a snooze or perhaps
a sauna or steam bath. Then dinner."
The Sunday Times
TRAVEL, 2 February 1997
The drowned world
By Anthony Sattin
.."there was little
chance that Nubia would have been drawn to your attention.
Until now, that is. For two Egyptian brothers have launched
a boat that cruises between Aswan and Abu Simbel and are
putting Nubia back on the map
..
After three days on the Eugenie, I was
beginning to find the lure of this never-ending cycle
irresistible as we spent our days in motion and our nights
in consumption (for what would an Egyptian cruise be without
significant servings of food?). So seductive was this
routine of cabin and meal, sundeck and temple, the company
of passengers and the solitude of the landscape, the desert
to the side and the empty lake fore and aft, that it came
as something of a shock, on the third night, to see lights
ahead of us
As we got closer, reality set in and I saw that these
were streetlights on the road along the top of the dam."
DIE WELT
Welt Report, Mittwoch, den 27. April 1994
Eine Nil-Kreuzfahrt wie zu Agatha Christies Zeiten
Von Peter Schmalz
"Mustafa: "Wer hier mitfaerhrt,
soll das gefuehl haben, Agatha Christie wohne nebenan."
Die 300 Kilometer nach Abu Simbel gestaltet er zum Happening.
Mit Dutzenden von Fakkeln laesst er Tempel und Festungsreste
erstrahlen, den Passagieren an Deck wehen Aida-Arien herueber,
die Ankunft in Abu Simbel ist abends, wenn die Ramses-Figuren
im weichen Licht warm leuchten. "
The Christian Science Monitor
October 7-13, 1994
Paddle-Wheeler Sails Into History
By Deborah Pugh
"This offbeat adventure is ideally
suited for the amateur or professional Egyptologist who
wants relief from the crush around the ancient sites farther
north in the Nile Valley. Here, one can explore monuments
rarely seen by the public
The décor mixes the austere designs of ancient
Nubia with the comfort of an English club, complete with
antique furniture
Nubia is a beautiful region, potentially a powerful magnet
for bird watchers and those simply looking for a restful
holiday in exquisite surroundings."
EGYPT TODAY
The Dream Boat ,September 1994
By Lee Keath
"The cruise adheres to the theme
that space is luxury, the idea that this entire empty
land is at your service. The ship takes its passengers
into the 'wilderness', but brings along an evening whiskey
and a splendid brunch buffet
.
The audience on deck applauds warmly
It's a unique
show, but the Eugenie is a unique cruise."
Al-Ahram weekly
Travel
Monthly supplement, January 2005
'Painfully beautiful'
By Fatemah Farag
"This is a trip which takes you
back in time
The Eugenie has all the
grace of old world travel... And here I must veer off
track and comment on the service. It was impeccable
we
found the people who run and staff the Eugenie unfailingly
friendly, obliging and helpful
No surprise then, when two days into our trip, one of
my companions remarked that this cruise was the only five-star
experience he had had which he felt was actually worth
the money
. So I had to agree - it does not get much
better than this."
Travel Today Arabia
January / February 2005
Sailing the Nubian Sea
By Kate Durham
"The boat's klaxon sent waiters
scurrying across the sundeck with trays of fruit juice
cocktails. As we glided across the invisible line of the
Tropic of Cancer, we lifted our glasses in a toast to
the geographic milestone. 'Tropic' and Egypt don't usually
come up in the same conversation, but there we were on
the M.S. Eugenie, one day into our lake Nasser cruise
..
We were back to the Eugenie in time to clean up for the
cocktail party, followed by the four-course dinner. The
food on this cruise is extremely good, with a variety
of salads, soups, entrees and an absolutely decadent dessert
table
.. That night, after the show, we dined by
candlelight on the open-air deck as the boat cruised back
and forth in front of the spotlit facades of Abu Simbel
The Lake Nasser cruise definitely moves the experience
up a few notches, and is one of the most relaxing ways
to sample Egypt's out-of-the-way antiquities."
Paris Match
Du 31 mars au 6 avril 2005
A bord de l' "Eugenie" et du "Kasr Ibrim"
La Nubie devoilee
Par Anne-Laure Le Gall
'Avec la mise en service de l' "Eugenie" en
1993, on a renoue avec le XIXe siecle, quand les aventuriers
remontaient le Nil, pas encore domestique, vers la frontiere
soudanaise. Dans leur sillage, les passagers de l' "Eugenie",
au charme desuet et discret, redecouvrent les rives vierges
et certains vestiges rendus inaccessibles apres la construction
du grand barrage et la montee des eaux. A bord de l' "Eugenie",
authenticite et atmosphere feutree, pour une clientele
avertie, qui fuit la foule et appreciera son service elegant,
son excellente table, sa decoration melant gravures anciennes
et velours epais.'
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