Egypt Rediscovered
Egypt Rediscovered
Egypt Rediscovered
14 Days Starting and ending in Cairo, Egypt
Visiting: Cairo, Giza, Luxor, Dendera, Edfu, Aswan, Abu Simbel, Alexandria
Tour operator:
Tour code:
815
Guide Type:
Fully Guided
Special diets catered:
Vegetarians
Tour operated in:
EnglishTrip Styles:
Interests:
Activities:
Tour Overview
- Explore the Egyptian Museum
- Admire the Pyramids of Giza, Sakkara and sites of Memphis
- Visit Medinet Habu and the tombs workers village, Deir el-Medina
- Discover the ancient temples of Dendera and Abydos
- Enjoy a 4 night Nile Cruise exploring both the East and West Bank
- Fly to Abu Simbel
- Take a camel ride to St. Simon Cave Monastery
- Venture through the catacombs of Alexandria
- Visit Abu Makar and El Baramous monastery for lunch with the monks
Rediscover one of the world's oldest civilisations. Home to some of the most enduring historical and colossal monuments on the planet, timeless treasures of temples and pyramids representing a lasting legacy of one of the most fabled periods of human history.
Explore bustling medieval bazaars, noseless Sphinxes and Agatha Christie-era exoticism. The heat, sight and the light of the desert invigorate. A romantic cruise along the world's longest river dazzles the senses. A country that never fails to astonish that is full of character, colour and fortitude. No place has the magic, mystery and pleasures of Egypt. Travel to Egypt with Crooked Compass to discover a world of wonder.
Highlights
Itinerary
Day 1 - Arrive Cairo
Location: Cairo
Accommodation: Hotel
Welcome to Egypt! You will be met upon arrival at Cairo’s International Airport and transferred to your hotel. The remainder of the day is yours at leisure to explore this bustling city. At first glance, the city appears dirty. Its busy, crowded and the smog can make your eyes water. Beneath this haze you will see the cities true colours. The call of prayer echoes through the streets, the energy of local life buzzes and is addictive. Street food aromas will overload the senses and a hidden charm shines through. Grand palaces and mosques are to be explored and the pyramids of Giza overlook the modernising city from a distance, providing the perfect mix of bygone eras and eclectic styles.
3 nights Kempinski or similar
Distances and journey time: 35 minutes (18km)
Day 2 – Old Cairo
Location: Cairo
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch
Following breakfast in your hotel, you will be transferred to the impressive Egyptian Museum. The Egyptian Museum in Cairo contains the world’s most extensive collection of pharaonic antiquities; no visit to Egypt is complete without a trip through its galleries. Bursting with over 170,000 artefacts covering 5000 years of Egypt’s past. Your Egyptologist will escort you through the museum explaining the most important possessions before allowing you free time to explore and discover yourselves.
Following your time at the museum, you will visit the citadel of Mohamed Aly and Salah El Din mosque followed by visit to the old part of Cairo (hanging church and synagogue). Here you will end the day at the famous old bazaar – Khan El Khalili Markets, a charming labyrinth of narrow alleyways. You will be transported back in time to an old Arab souk. Shop owners calling you to their stalls, the scent of spices, the hustle and bustle of trade, and the many beautiful objects that can be purchased, will have you lost amongst the alleys for hours. Put your haggling skills to the test when buying statuettes, spices, souvenirs, silver jewellery, t-shirts, galabiyyas, belly dancing costumes, or anything for that matter. And just in case you didn’t eat enough at lunch time, you will have the opportunity to taste some of Egypt’s best street food during your walk. (B,L)
Day 3 – Giza
Location: Giza
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch
Today you will visit Giza. Located on the outskirts of Cairo, overlooking the buzzing city, the Great Pyramids and the Sphinx date back to over 3000 years. The Pyramids of Giza are the last of the original Seven Wonders of the World. Your Egyptologist guide will provide a fascinating introduction to all three pyramids here: Cheops, Khafre and Mekahaure. Whilst here, you will also visit the enigmatic symbol of Egypt, the Sphinx. With the body of a lion and the head of a king, this creature is surrounded by mystery, including the unanswered questions of who built it and why.
Your lunch stop will be in a local restaurant (either Andrea restaurant or Saqqara country club) and afterwards, you will discover Memphis and Sakkara, two of Egypt’s most important archaeological treasures. Sakkara is home to the oldest pyramid in Egypt, and Memphis was the former capital founded in 3,100 BC.
Memphis is the legendary city of Menes, the King who united Upper and Lower Egypt. Early on, Memphis was more like a fortress from which Menes controlled the land and water routes between Upper Egypt and the Delta. Having probably originated in Upper Egypt, from Memphis he could control the conquered people of Lower Egypt.
Sakkara, home of Egypt’s oldest pyramid was built by Imohotep for pharaoh Zoser in 2650BC, the famous Step Pyramid is well preserved. Sakkara is one section of the great necropolis of Memphis, the Old Kingdom capital and the majority of the kings of the 1st Dynasty as well as that of the 2nd Dynasty are buried in this section of the Memphis necropolis. Three major discoveries have recently been made at Sakkara, including a prime minister’s tomb, a queen’s pyramid, and the tomb of the son of a dynasty founding king. Your visit will also include the amazing Serapeum of Saqqara, an ancient Egyptian temple dedicated to the god Serapis where it housed sacred bulls and served as a centre of worship and learning in the Hellenistic period. (B,L)
Day 4 – Cairo To Luxor
Location: Luxor
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast
Enjoy a leisurely breakfast at your hotel this morning before you are transferred to the airport for your flight to Luxor. Luxor, once an Ancient Egyptian capital, is known today as the world’s ‘greatest open-air museum’. From the tomb of Tutankhamen in the Valley of the Kings and the magnificent sunset views at the majestic temple complexes of Karnak and Luxor, this city is the perfect choice for culture vultures.
Luxor is divided by the Nile into two areas commonly called the East Bank and West Bank which were considered in Ancient Egyptian times as symbolizing respectively life and death.
While the East Bank has grown to become a modern city, it has retained its lush green setting, its traditional bazaar and stunning view of the Nile. The West Bank is known for its necropolis and mortuary temples: the Valley of the Kings, the Valley of the Queens, the Workers Village, and the Temple of Medinet Habu are the highlights of Luxor’s West Bank. In Ancient Egyptian mythology the setting sun to the west symbolised the journey to the afterlife, so it was fitting symbolism to bury the dead west of the Nile.
This afternoon, you will visit Medinet Habu and the tombs workers village on the West Bank. Medinet Habu is the Arabic name for the Mortuary Temple of Ramses III, a huge complex second only to Karnak in size and better preserved. Medinet Habu is among the least visited of the major sights at Luxor.
The ancient village of Deir el-Medina, known as the tomb workers village, is situated in a small valley on the west bank of Luxor in Upper Egypt in a desert area, just south of Thebes in a valley behind Gurnet Murai hill. The remaining foundations of this village have been well preserved, and it has been concluded that the village was in use for about 500 years during the period of the New Kingdom (18th to 20th Dynasties). Deir el-Medina was first thought to be started by the pharaoh Amenhotep I and his mother, Ahmose-Nefertari. They established the village in order to have sufficient housing for the tomb workers that gave their labour to the Valley of the Kings. This was its only purpose. (B)
2 nights Sofitel Winter Palace – Pavillion Wing or similar
Distances and journey time: 1hr Flight to Luxor
Day 5 – Dendera And Abydos
Location: Dendera
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast
This morning you will visit Dendera. Dendera is located about 60 kilometres north of Luxor on the west bank of the Nile River opposite the provincial modern town of Qena.
Ancient Egyptian Iunet or Tantere, known to the Greeks as Tentyris, was the capital of the 6th nome of Upper Egypt and a town of some importance. Today, we know it as Dendera, though the population of the town has, since antiquity, moved to Qena across the Nile on the east bank. Now, the ancient temple lies isolated on the desert edge. Along with the temple itself, there is also a necropolis that includes tombs of the Early Dynastic Period, but the most important phase that has been identified was the end of the Old Kingdom and the 1st Intermediate Period. The provinces were virtually autonomous at that time and, although Dendera was not a leading political force in Upper Egypt, its notables built a number of mastabas of some size, though only one has any decoration apart from stelae and false doors. On the west end of the site are brick-vaulted catacombs of Late Period animal burials, primarily birds and dogs, while cow burials have been found at various points in the necropolis. Of course, this was a significant site for the Hathor cult, whose forms included a cow.
Continuing on, you will also visit Abydos Temples. Abydos was the epicentre for the pharaoh’s cult worship of Osiris and became the most important burial centre in ancient Egypt. Here, Seti I raised a glorious temple dedicated to Osiris and a pantheon of other gods that remains a beautiful and unique central point to this necropolis. For travellers interested in the artistry of the Pharaonic period, the Temple of Seti I’s colourful wall and ceiling paintings and sculpted column work are a highlight of any Nile temple itinerary and shouldn’t be missed. (B)
Distances and journey time: Luxor – Dendarah (78km): 1.5hrs, Dendarah – Abydos (105km): 1.5hrs
Day 6 - Luxor
Location: Luxor
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
You will embark onto your Nile River cruise in time for lunch on board. Following lunch, you will explore the East Bank and discover the Karnak and Luxor Temples. Walk along the Avenue of Sphinx to enter Karnak Temple as your guide explains how the massive façade was constructed. Upon entering the Temples of Karnak, you will see each legacy left by the various pharaohs as the complex grew even larger. The deeper you go into the complex, the further back in time you will travel, with the oldest ruins dating back over 3,000 years.
Walking through the Great Court into the Great Hypostyle Hall, it’s hard not to be overwhelmed by the 134 columns towering above you like an ancient forest. At the rear of the complex you will find the sacred lake where centuries ago pharaohs and their offerings to the gods were purified. After a tour of the complex, you will have additional free time to explore at leisure.
Continue to Luxor Temple which was once joined to the Temples of Karnak by a two-kilometre long Avenue of Sphinx, a portion of which marks the entrance to the temple. Dominated by statues of the great warrior pharaoh Ramses II, Luxor Temple has survived Nile floods, foreign invasion and thousands of years exposed to the elements.
A pure Egyptian temple, the inner walls and columns are decorated with intricate hieroglyphics which your guide will help you decipher. Find out how Alexander the Great wrote himself into Luxor Temple’s history, and see one of the original pair of obelisk, the second of which now stands on the Place de la Concorde in Paris.
Afternoon tea will served back on board as well as dinner. The evening is yours at leisure to relax in your cabin or explore Luxor a little more. (B,L,D)
4 nights on board the Movenpick MS Hamees in a Superior Cabin
Day 7 - Luxor
Location: Luxor
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Breakfast is aboard the ship this morning followed by a visit to the West Bank. There is an optional early morning hot air balloon ride for those who are interested over the Valley of the Kings as the sun rises. It is truly spectacular as you witness the changing colours of the valley below.
Your visit to the West Bank this morning will include a visit to the Valley of Kings and Queens which is the burial site for almost all of the Kings (pharaohs) and Queens. You will also visit the Temple of Queen Hatshepsut at El Deir.
Hatshepsut was a rare female pharaoh. The Temple of Deir El-Bahri is one of the most characteristic temples in the whole of Egypt, due to its design and decorations. It was built of limestone, not sandstone like most of the other funerary temples of the New Kingdom period.
It is thought that Senimut, the genius architect who built this Temple, was inspired in his design by the plan of the neighbouring mortuary Temple of the 12th Dynasty King, Neb-Hept-Re. The Temple was built for the great Queen Hatshepsut (18th Dynasty), to commemorate her achievements and to serve as a funerary Temple for her, as well as a sanctuary of the God, Amon Ra.
Later in the morning you will visit El-Bahari and the Colossi Memnon before sailing onto Esna.
Lunch will be on board as you cruise down the Nile, soaking in the beautiful scenery.
A Captains Welcome Cocktail party will take place following dinner this evening. (B,L,D)
Day 8 – Edfu And Kom Ombo
Location: Edfu
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
This morning your cruise will sail to Edfu whilst you enjoy breakfast on board. Upon docking, you will have time to visit the Horus Temple in Edfu.
Dedicated to Horus, the falcon headed god, the Temple of Horus in Edfu (also known as the Temple of Edfu), is considered the best preserved cult temple in Egypt. Partly due to the fact that it was built later than most (in the Ptolemaic era from 237 to 57BC). It is also the second largest temple in Egypt following Karnak Temple.
Despite its later construction date, it reflects exact traditional pharaonic architecture and so provides an excellent idea of how all the temples originally looked.
Lunch is back on board the ship as you continue sailing to Kom Ombo. This afternoon you will have the opportunity to go ashore and visit the Temple shared by two Gods, Sobek and Haeroris in Kom Ombo.
Dinner on board this evening is followed by an Egyptian Galabia party. (B,L,D)
Day 9 – Aswan
Location: Aswan
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Today, you sail to Aswan. Upon arrival, you will visit the High Dam and Philae Temple.
Although it was constructed several millennia after the majority of Egypt’s iconic landmarks, the High Dam is equally as impressive. A miracle of modern engineering, the dam is 110m high and spans for over three kilometres and contains eighteen times the material used to build the Great Pyramid of Cheops. Once, the largest rock-filled dam in the world, today the dam provides irrigation and electricity for the whole of Egypt.
Regarded as the prettiest temple in Egypt, the Philae Temple was dismantled and reassembled on higher ground after the completion of the Aswan High Dam threatened its existence, the temple is dedicated to the goddess Isis and is set on its own island.
Lunch is on board before spending the afternoon lazing on a felucca around Kitchener’s Island and visiting Botanical Island.
This evening on board, enjoy an Egyptian Folkloric Show with belly dancer. (B,L,D)
Day 10 – Aswan
Location: Abu Simbel
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast
This morning you will enjoy your last breakfast on board before disembarking and transferring to the airport for your flight to Abu Simbel.
The Temples of Abu Simbel are among the most interesting in Egypt. Located close to the southern border with the Sudan, the temples are 280km south of Aswan and consist of two rock-cut chambers, which date back to the reign of King Ramses II (1290-1223 BC). Unfortunately, they were damaged by the rising water of Lake Nasser while the High Dam was being built. Other countries, with the help of UNESCO, assisted Egypt to save them. After visiting these amazing temples, you will return back to Aswan where the remainder of the afternoon is yours at leisure. (B)
Overnight Anakato Hotel or similar
Distances and journey time: 45 minutes Flight to Abu Simbel
Day 11 - St. Simon Monastery
Location: Aswan
Accommodation: Lodge
Meals Included: Breakfast
Today you will travel by motor boat from your hotel to Aswan’s west bank and enjoy a short camel ride to St. Simon Cave Monastery on the west bank. Simon the Tanner was a craftsman saint who lived during the 10th century and the cave church that was dedicated to him seems as though it might last for 10 more. Using a pre-existing cave and the slope that led into it, the current monastery seats 20,000 people around a central pulpit.
After your visit, camels will take you to Nobles Tomb for short visit before returning to your hotel by motor boat. Later this afternoon, you will be transferred to Aswan airport and fly to Cairo (approx 90 min flight). Upon arrival in Cairo, you will be met and transferred to your hotel. (B)
Overnight Villa Belle Epoque or similar
Day 12 - Alexandria
Location: Alexandria
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast
After breakfast, you will depart for Alexandria where you will experience a trip into the catacombs (Kom el Shoqafa), where the early Christians were buried; and Pompey’s Pillar, the biggest memorial column in Egypt, made of red granite and standing about 28 metres high, with a base diameter of 2.7 metres. The Alexandria National Museum, built in a former palace and now housing almost 2000 artefacts, which tell the story of the city, including the recent finds from the sunken part of the city; the Citadel of Qaitbay, where in about 1480 AD the Mameluke Sultan Al-Ashraf Qaitbay fortified the site that held the ruins of the Alexandria Lighthouse, and with successive improvements it now stands as a very prominent Citadel on the Mediterranean coastline. Time permitting, you may also have the chance to visit the WWII battlefield sites and Australian cemetery. (B)
Overnight Cecil Alexandria or similar
Distances and journey time: Aswan – Alexandria (260km): 3.5hrs
Day 13 - Wadi El Natroun Monastery
Location: Alexandria
Accommodation: Hotel
Meals Included: Breakfast
This morning you will visit the New Alexandria Library, with shelf space for eight million books and the main reading room on 11 levels as well asthe Roman Amphitheatre, which every town in the ancient Roman Empire had.
On the way back to Cairo, you will stop at Wadi El Natroun monastery and visit Abu Makar monastery and El Baramous monastery where we will try to arrange for a light lunch with the monks – this is dependent on their study schedules. Wadi Natroun is known for its Coptic monasteries where thousands of Christians escaped from Roman persecution in the 4th century. Of the 60 or so original compounds in the valley, only four remain. These monastery buildings are impressive, as they were fortified after Arab raids in 817. The area was also important to the ancient Egyptians because the valley’s salt lakes dry up in the summer and leave natron, a substance crucial to the mummification process. (B)
Distances and journey time: Alexandria – Cairo (127km): 2hrs
Overnight Le Passage Hotel or similar
Day 14 – Departure
Location: Cairo
Meals Included: Breakfast
This morning following breakfast, you will be transferred to Cairo Airport for your onward flight to your next destination. (B)
What's Included
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9 nights hotel accommodation
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4 nights on board the Movenpick MS Hamees Nile Cruise including all shore excursions
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13 Breakfasts, 6 Lunches, 4 Dinners
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Private English speaking guide
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Resident guide on board cruise
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All entrance fees to all mentioned sights and monuments including the Mummies Room
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Transportation as per itinerary
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Domestic economy flights Cairo/Luxor - Aswan/Cairo
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Abu Simbel by air
What's Not Included
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International flights
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Visas
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Gratuities
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Travel and medical insurance
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All services, meals other than those indicated above
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Any changes to the proposed and confirmed program.
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All items of a personal nature e.g. drinks, laundry, telephone calls, tips etc
Check out our Q&As
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What type of accommodation is provided during the tour?
The tour includes 9 nights in luxurious hotels such as Kempinski and Sofitel Winter Palace, and 4 nights aboard the Movenpick MS Hamees Nile Cruise, offering superior cabins and all shore excursions.
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Are meals included in the tour package?
Yes, the package includes 13 breakfasts, 6 lunches, and 4 dinners.
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Is there a guide provided during the tour?
Yes, a private English-speaking guide is included in the tour, and there is also a resident guide on board the cruise.
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What kind of transportation is used during the tour?
The tour includes private transportation as per the itinerary, domestic economy flights between Cairo, Luxor, and Aswan, a flight to Abu Simbel, and a 4-night Nile Cruise.
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Are entrance fees to attractions included in the tour?
Yes, all entrance fees to the mentioned sights and monuments, including the Mummies Room, are covered.
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What activities are included during the Nile Cruise?
During the 4-night Nile Cruise, you will explore both the East and West Bank, visit the Karnak and Luxor Temples, and enjoy a Captains Welcome Cocktail party and an Egyptian Galabia party.
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Is there an opportunity to visit Abu Simbel during the tour?
Yes, the tour includes a flight to Abu Simbel where you will visit the Temples of Abu Simbel.
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What is the highlight of the visit to Alexandria?
In Alexandria, you will explore the catacombs, Pompey's Pillar, the Alexandria National Museum, and the Citadel of Qaitbay.
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Will there be any unique experiences during the tour?
Yes, you will have a camel ride to St. Simon Cave Monastery and the opportunity to have lunch with monks at the Wadi El Natroun monastery.
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Will the accommodation included meet local health and safety regulations?
Yes. Focusing on providing authentic experiences where ever you are in the world, Crooked Compass has access to a vast array of accommodation styles. From boutique properties in larger cities to local guest houses and home stays within small villages. Crooked Compass ensures that local authenticity flows through your accommodation throughout your tour without compromising standard.
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What sort of transportation is used for your tours?
Transportation utilised on a Crooked Compass escorted small group tour is a combination of a private air conditioned vehicle and local transport where appropriate. This may include a local bus ride, use of the cities metro system, a domestic flight to another city or overnight train ride.
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What Ethical Travel credentials does the tour company have?
Crooked Compass strives to be a leader in sustainable tourism. Crooked Compass is firmly committed to the principles of ethical travel. Our comprehensive Sustainable Tourism Practices policy summarises our commitments and actions. Although the very basis of our ground operations lends itself to the ethos of sustainable tourism, this policy re-iterates our commitment to: Use locally owned hotels Use locally owned ground agents Use local guides and drivers Promote community tourism projects from homestays to craft shops Support charities that work within the destinations that we travel to Carbon offset our travels
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Who runs your tours and are they experts in their fields?
Crooked Compass works with the worlds best operators who are specialists in their country, region and cities providing you with in depth local knowledge. We use local guides who live and breathe the areas they work in, making sure you experience their region, their way. We believe it is far better to have a local guide who knows a lot about a little than a text book trained Western tour guide who knows a little about a lot. Using local guides also ensures that money stays within local communities and supports the regions we visit.
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What can I expect from a Crooked Compass tour that I wouldn't get from travelling with an alternative company?
Crooked Compass provides a sensory way to understand the world – we help you live like a local, eat like a local, do what the locals do and seek the faces behind the places whilst discovering untouched lands and natural beauty. Crooked Compass tours delve deep into the heart and soul of a destination ensuring you get out of your journey all you intended and much, much more. Our intriguing itineraries have been created by travellers for travellers. Steering travellers to follow a different path, Crooked Compass’ itineraries allow you to experience the world’s most fascinating destinations in ways you never dreamed possible. It brings to life those ‘bucket list’ experiences you have yearned to do and separates the travellers from the tourists. Crooked Compass tours are culturally rich, reward travellers with unexpected encounters and uncommon rendezvous, creating truly unique, authentic travel experiences.
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Who do your tours cater for?
Crooked Compass escorted small group tours cater for those who are well travelled seeking the what’s next and what’s new. Our travellers are curious minded soft adventurers who want to uncover something more than the mainstream tourist trail. Crooked Compass tours draw travellers with an interest in sustainable tourism and conservation for the areas they visit. A Crooked Compass traveller is someone who is seeking something fresh and unique, who has a yearning for authenticity and discovery, with an appreciation for cultures, tradition and the natural world. We call them Cultural Purists.
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I am concerned about my impact on travelling through untouched regions. Can I offset?
Yes. All travellers on Crooked Compass tours have the option to offset their part of their tour’s carbon footprint by donating $4AUD (tax-deductible) at time of booking. 100% of these funds are donated to Greenfleet, an environmental non-profit organisation dedicated to protecting our climate by restoring our forests. By partnering with Greenfleet, we are confident that our carbon offset program provides genuine and lasting environmental benefits. Your offset donation funds plant trees and restore permanent native forests in Australia and New Zealand. As they grow, these forests provide many community and environmental benefits by absorbing carbon emissions, protecting our unique biodiversity, restoring habitat for native wildlife, preventing soil salinity and erosion, improving water quality and much more. If you’d like to find out more and offset the rest of your carbon emissions, visit www.greenfleet.org.au
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Low Deposit
Crooked Compass requires a minimum deposit of 20% or the full booking value, whichever is less, with the final balance not due until 60 days before departure.
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Cancellation Policy
We don't charge a cancellation fee, here is a summary of crooked compass charges.
Up to 61 days before tour starts: Forfeit 100% of deposit.
At 60 days before tour starts: Forfeit 100% of booking price.