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asala1121

Red Sea Holiday Guide, Egypt, North Africa - 3 views

  • The air temperature in this region ranges from about 30°C in May (26°C at night) and water temperature of 24°C, to 20°C in February (16°C at night) and water temperature of 20°C.The hottest month - uncomfortably so, is August, 42 °C in February (33°C at night) and water temperature of 28°C .
  • gets almost certain sunshine all day long, some warmish waters, world-beating Red Sea coral and marine life
  • the sand is coarse and beaches tend to be small. The best beaches are artificial and mostly on the mainland (Hurghada) side.
  • ...6 more annotations...
    • asala1121
       
      potential for development- perhaps larger beaches and more in quantity
    • asala1121
       
      Background- the weather. How it attracts tourists (sunshine, moderate temperatures, etc)
  • On the west (mainland) coast of the Red Sea lies relatively old and touristy Hurghada (not a pretty sight) and a cluster of new resort towns that are resolutely inward-looking and uncultured
    • asala1121
       
      Criticism: 1) Not a pretty sight 2) inward looking and uncultured
  • no urban heart
  • it will be good value, the sun will doubtless shine all day every day and the diving/snorkelling will be superb,
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    Is this the only article out of the group? Should be two more. Did everyone take the very first article found on the first search? Maybe you should get a number of sources up -- and watch where they're coming from. At this point you probably want something from a .gov or a .org. I would search: red sea mainland egypt development; or drop the development. Then you could check: red sea mainland egypt environment; then add problems to another search and see what you get.
asala1121

Tourism in the news: Egypt's electricity crisis threatens to leave tourism sector in th... - 0 views

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    Ministry suggests alternative energy sources to combat crisis as hotels fear heavy losses due to blackouts The electricity crisis set to hit Egypt this summer has been described by those working within Egypt's tourism sector as a "death blow", considering the already fragile state of the country's tourism industry.
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