Now that you’ve seen the pyramids and the Sphinx there’s no reason to keep reading. But just in case a few of you still find us mildly interesting, I’ll keep posting. Here’s our version of “the Egypt experience” for today.
Josh went to the embassy to check on the status of our stuff and our car. Our stuff has left customs and is now hanging out in limbo in the hands of some entity called “the Egyptian ministry.” We had a To Be Delivered date of No Later Than December 20th, but when this was pointed out to the person “helping” him, it was met with an “oh well.”
No word on our big shipment yet. Maybe it will arrive in time for us to turn around and send it home. Meanwhile, on the Amazon front, I had 7 packages delivered today. We now have new toys for the baby, an Egyptian pyramid for the boys to play with, new knives and cutting board for Josh to play with and I think I only have 2 packages that are still floating around out there, waiting to be delivered. It’s about time to order some more stuff so the fun never ends. Take that, Egyptian ministry.
Now for car news. We had our car shipped from Richmond and it made its way across the country to sit at the port in Baltimore until we arrived in country. Once we arrived here then our car was put on a boat and it will arrive in Alexandria and then be driven to us. Or not.
Josh found out today that when he checked in on December 2nd and filled out the paperwork to send our car here, that the guy actually forgot to let the people in the states know that we had arrived. Whoops! So since everyone there is out of the office for the Christmas/New Year holiday, the process can’t be started until everyone in America is back to work. Add on another 3-4 weeks for shipping and our car may be arriving right around . . . when we’re in Morocco.
Now Josh was really irritated, but soothing his pain is the fact that we have a car that we are borrowing right now, so we’re not stranded or anything. And when we have to turn that car over to our friends who are arriving in a week, we will have this beauty to drive:
It’s a Pajero — the European version of Josh’s Montereo. But it’s not actually sand colored, it’s emerald green. You’re just seeing 6 months of Egyptian sand that has embedded itself into the paint.

If you enlarge this picture and zoom in you can see the small line I made in the dirt on the hood so the green shows through. I have never seen a car this dirty before. It’s been sitting in the commissary parking lot for 6 months, but surprisingly it started right up. We’ll be riding Egyptian style since it only seats 5.
Stay tuned for my adventures in driving since I will have to drive to get it home from the commissary. I think the Egyptians will be safe for a few days though, since I need to mentally prepare before I attempt it.