8 Days Best of Sudan Safari to Karima and Bayuda Desert
8 Days Sudan Safari begins from Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, where you will be met by our guide and transferred to the Karima desert for a camel ride to Bayuda Desert. You will spend 2 nights there in a tent. 8 Days Sudan Safari is a fully-guided tour covering Khartoum, Karima, and Bayunda Desert.
Every Journey we create at Kabira Safaris is custom (BESPOKE). Use this Safari Journey idea as inspiration to let us create your trip of a lifetime
Safari Highlight – 8 Days Sudan Safari
- Day 1: Corinthia Hotel, Khartoum
- Day 2: A Khartoum City Tour
- Day 3: Nubian Rest House, Karima
- Day 4: Nubian Rest House, Karima
- Day 5: Meroe Tented Camp, Bayunda Desert
- Day 6: Meroe Tented Camp, Bayunda Desert
- Day 7: Corinthia Hotel, Khartoum
- Day 8: Departure
Every Journey we create at Kabira Safaris is custom (BESPOKE). Use this Safari Journey idea as inspiration to let us create your trip of a lifetime
Gallery: 8 Days Best of Sudan Safari
Safari by day Itinerary – 8 Days Sudan Safari
Day 1: Corinthia Hotel, Khartoum
Arriving at Khartoum Airport you will be assisted in your transfer to the Corinthia Hotel in downtown Khartoum. On the first night, we would suggest that you settle in and orientate yourself for the hustle & bustle to come.
Day 2: A Khartoum City Tour
This will start with a visit to the Archaeological Museum that, as well as the beautiful ancient artefacts, this also hosts the exhibition of two temples relocated by UNESCO when the LakeNasserarea flooded. You will then cross the Nile, over the confluence of the Blue and the WhiteNile to reach Omdurman&visit the Khalifa’s House Museum. The afternoon will consist of a to visit the colourful souk and then at sunset visit the tomb of Ahmed AlNil to attend a ceremony of the Whirling Dervishes (only on Fridays).
Return to the hotel.
Day 3: Nubian Rest House, Karima
After breakfast at the hotel and you begin the journey northward through the Western desert. With any desert
landscape, the 360-degree views are awe-inspiring and there will be plenty of time to appreciate the vista. The journey will be broken at one of the many”chai houses” or tea houses on the Wadi Muqaddam, this is one of the original watercourses of the WhiteNile, surrounded by many acacia trees, daily life will unfurl around you. you can expect this journey to take around 6 hours before arriving into OldDongola.
Here you will be greeted by the ruins of a Christian Coptic church with amazingly well-preserved marble columns as well as several other churches of interest on the banks of the Nile. After this, life of the Nubian people becomes more apparent with picturesque villages, many of the houses have intricately painted doors depicting the flowers and significant patterns of the area, you will also visit the stunning village of Gaidar before arriving in Karima.
Suggested overnight at Nubian RestHouse just at the feet of Jebel Barkal.
Day 4: Nubian Rest House, Karima
Some 400 km from Khartoum and standing at 94 metres high – Jebel Barkel has long been held as an ancient landmark for trader sand navigators across the centuries. At the foot of this wonderful and isolated red sandstone mountain, considered holy since the ancient times, there is temple, dedicated to the Pharaohs of the new Reign and to their patron, Amon. Amon’s ancient “Pure Mountain”, the Olympus of the Nubians, was the religious Nubian heart for more than 1000 years. Besides the ruins of the temple there are still several sculptured granite rams, that are thought to border an avenue that probably led to a pier on the Nile.
The Jebel Barkalarchaeological sites are on the WorldHeritagelist. The Royal necropolis of the ancient city of Napata, the Nubian capital(from 800 to 400 B.C.) before the Meroitic period, had a large number of pyramids, located in three different places: few hundred metres north of Jebel Barkal; a dozen kilometres southwards from the holy mountain in El Kurru & in Nuri, which is located on the opposite bank of the Nile.
After lunch, you will move southwards to the village of El Kurru where there is one of the necropolises of the ancient capital, Napata. Here you can visit a tomb, which is excavated in the rock under pyramids – partially collapsed – and it is decorated with images of the Pharaoh, of the gods and multicolour hieroglyphic inscriptions. The trip goes on with the visit to a site, rich in fossil trunks in the desert.
In the evening return to Karima
Day 5: Meroe Tented Camp, Bayunda Desert
A quick crossing of the Nile to briefly visit the archaeological site of Nuri where you will see many pyramids among
which there is also the one belonging to the great Taharqa, there will be time for a walk in the area before you enter the Bayuda Desert. This desert is an area bounded by the loop that the Nile forms between the 4th and the 6th Cataract’s and is characterised by sharp black basalt mountains, most of them volcanic and typically cone-shaped. The area is dramatic and varied with level pebble stretches giving way to valleys crossed by dry wadi’s with little vegetation around.
Here will be your first encounter with the Bisharin nomads, who live in familiar groups in small huts made of intertwined branches close to the rare water wells, with their caravans and herds of camels and donkeys. After a picnic in the desert, you will continue to the town of Atbara, located on the confluence between the Nile and the Atbara River,crossingtheNilefor the final time. As if by magic the barren landscape opens up to a sight of more than 40 pyramids, located on top of a hill, some of them perfectly preserved that belong to the Royal Necropolis of Meroe. Arrival at the permanent tented camp of Meroe, with a beautiful view onto the pyramids.
Accommodation in comfortable and fully furnished tents, dinner and overnight stay.
Day 6: Meroe Tented Camp, Bayunda Desert
This morning is dedicated to the pyramids. The RoyalNecropolis of Meroe is located at about 3 km from the Nile on
hills covered by yellow sand dunes. Several pyramids stand out with their sharp shapes against the clear sky. Each one has its own funerary chapel with the walls fully decorated with bas-reliefs depicting the King’s life and offers to the gods. Lunch at MeroeCamp. In the afternoon you will drivealongtheNileto visit the ruins of the Royal city. The excavations confirm that the town of Meroe used to cover a large area and the Royalcity was located in a central position, surrounded by suburbs and a boundary wall. Most of the area where the city is located, formed by many small hills covered by red clay fragments, has still to be excavated by the archaeologists.
Dinner and overnight stay at the permanent Meroe Camp.
Day 7: Corinthia Hotel, Khartoum
After breakfast, you will head south to Mussawarat, also known as Al-Musawarat Al-Sufra, is large Meroitic temple complex in modern Sudan, dating back to the early Meroitic period of the 3rd century BC. It is located in a large basin surrounded by low sandstone hills in the western Butana, 180 km northeast of Khartoum, 20 km north ofNaqaand approximately 25 km south[1]east of the Nile. With MeroëandNaqa, it is known as the Island of Meroe and was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2011. Constructed in sandstone, the main features of the site include the Great Enclosure, the Lion Temple of Apedemak and theGreat Reservoir. Most significant is the number of representations of elephants, suggesting that this animal played an important role at Musawwarates-Sufra.
The Great Enclosure is the main structure of the site. Much of the large labyrinth-like building complex, which covers approximately 45,000 m2, was erected in the third century BC. AccordingtoHintze, “the complicated ground plan of this extensive complex of buildings is without parallel in the entire Nile valley”. The maze of courtyards includes three(possible) temples, passages, low walls, preventing any contact with the outside world, about 20 columns, ramps and two reservoirs. There were many sculptures of animals such as elephants and most of the walls of the complex bear graffiti and masons’ or pilgrims’ marks both pictorial and in Meroitic or Greek script. The scheme of the site is so far, without parallel inNubiaand ancient Egypt, and there is some debate about the purpose of the buildings, with earlier suggestions including a college, a hospital, and an elephant-training camp. According to the scholar BasilDavidson, at least four Kushite queens —Amanirenas, Amanishakheto, Nawidemak and Amanitore—probably spent part of their lives in Musawwarates-Sufra.
Thisareaiscovered with temples dating from around the 1stCentury AD, one of the best-restored examples was restored by a German archaeological mission – dedicated to the god Apedemak, it is a beautiful example of the area. The site of Naga has located about 30 km to the east of the Nile and it is one of the two centres that developed during the Meroitic period. InNaga, in a typical Saharan environment with rocks and sand, we find a temple dedicated to Apedemak: a wonderful building with bas-relief decorations depicting the god with a lion’s head, the Pharaoh, noblemen and several ritual images. A few metres away there is small and odd construction with arches and columns, named “kiosk”, in which we can notice Egyptian, Roman and Greek styles, all at the same time. Arriving into Khartoum in the evening for your final evening in Sudan
Day 8: Departure
End of the 8 Days Sudan Safari
Every Journey we create at Kabira Safaris is custom (BESPOKE). Use this Safari Journey idea as inspiration to let us create your trip of a lifetime
Essential Trip Information
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Every Journey we create at Kabira Safaris is custom (BESPOKE). Use this Safari Journey idea as inspiration to let us create your trip of a lifetime