HURGHADA:
The
long stretch
Hurghada was once just a tiny fisher village, with a
location that seldom brought strangers here. Even in late 1970's this was the
situation, but with the nature around, the clarity of the water, and the endless
opportunities for divers, Hurghada was destined to become an Egyptian centre for
pleasure tourism.
Today,
the result is a stretch of 20 km with beach hotels. Most of these hotels are
organized in an attractive way, but far from the true Egypt of great
monuments, traffic jams and mud brick houses.
But this makes Hurghada a successful tourist resort for divers and
swimmers. Huge crowds of Egyptians, Saudis and other Arabs have since long
joined the stream of Europeans and Americans coming here throughout most of the
year.
There are a couple of drawbacks, though. Non-hotel beaches
are not terribly great, but often crowded. While the fish life is just what you
hoped for right off the beach, there are no corals here anymore. This can only
be discovered by joining one of the many boat expeditions out to the nearby
islands. Giftun is the largest, and lies about 10 km from Hurghada.
Hurghada is in reality three main centres and numerous
self-contained tourist villages now growing into one body. To the north, lies
the place that is closest to being a town, Ad-Dahar, which has more than half of
the total local population, and the the most price worthy hotels and
restaurants. A couple of kilometres south, comes Sigala, a place that suffers
from being between Ad-Dahar and New Hurghada a few kilometres more to the south.
There are some hotels here, some restaurants, but relatively few tourists. In
New Hughada total tourism comes alive, offering every amenity a visitor is
looking for.