A morning drive west along the desert road to Alexandria, Egypt's second city and one of the great Mediterranean capitals of the ancient world.
The day begins at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, the modern reincarnation of one of the greatest libraries in human history, its architecture alone worth the journey, a vast tilted disc of Aswan granite engraved with the scripts of every human language, rising from the edge of the Mediterranean.
The Roman Amphitheatre follows, the only one of its kind discovered in Egypt, its marble seats still intact after nearly two thousand years beneath the city.
A walk along the Corniche, Alexandria's sweeping seafront boulevard, before lunch at a seafood restaurant on the water. Alexandria's relationship with the Mediterranean is most honestly expressed through its fish, and a long, unhurried seafood lunch here is one of the great pleasures of an Egyptian journey.
The afternoon moves to Qaitbay Citadel, the 15th century fortress built on the exact site where the ancient Lighthouse of Alexandria, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, once stood. The views over the Mediterranean from its ramparts are extraordinary.
A drive back to Cairo as the evening settles.