Sharm El Sheikh

05-Sharm El-shiekh-alsahaba-mosque-Location-Fun-Trip-Travel-sinai-egypt
Sunset at the beach with palm trees, parasols and sunbeds. Family Holidays at Sea.

The Sinai Peninsula
Is a popular tourist destination in Egypt, covering an area of 64,000 square km. The Sinai Peninsula is an ideal location for sun, sea, and adventure. Sinai is home to many of Egypt’s most popular and least developed beach resorts, providing travellers with ideal lodging and relaxation. Sinai is also known as Egypt’s scuba diving capital, with canyons and mountains for trekking, rock climbing, mountain biking, camping, and even space for rides in desert dune buggies and safari adventures.

EXPLORE. CONNECT. CREATE MEMORIES.

Sharm El Sheikh
At the southernmost point of the Sinai Peninsula, there is a beach that goes for more than 20 km along the coasts of the Suez Gulf to the west and the Aqaba Gulf to the east, between Tiran Island and Ras Mohammed National Park. This beach has some of the most beautiful underwater scenery in the world. This place is perfect for scuba diving because the water is so clear and there are so many exotic fish darting in and out of the coral reefs. Sharm El Sheikh has a great location and focuses only on sun-and-sea vacations with a family-friendly vibe and all the comforts of a resort, as well as world-class diving. Travelers from all over the world, particularly from Europe, visit Sharm El Sheikh for a wonderful vacation to enjoy the wonderful sandy beaches, warm weather, numerous hotels and facilities, and the exotic, diverse nightlife that Sharm El Sheikh has to offer all year.

National Park of Ras Mohammed
Located about 20 km west of Sharm El Sheikh on the road from Al Tor, was named by local fishermen after a cliff that resembles a man’s profile. The waters surrounding the peninsula are regarded as the Red Sea’s crown jewel. More than 50,000 visitors visit the park each year, drawn by the prospect of marvelling at some of the world’s most spectacular coral-reef ecosystems, which include a plethora of coral species and teeming marine life. The park’s waters are home to most, if not all, of the Red Sea’s 1000 species of fish, including sought-after pelagics like hammerheads, manta rays, and whale sharks.

Nabq Protectorate
Located just north of Sharm el-Sheikh (about 20 kilometres from the central Naama Bay area), is a coastal desert landscape of arid beauty and home to the world’s most northerly mangrove forest. This nature reserve’s landscape is a vista of sand dunes, lonely beaches, and arak bushes, and it’s one of Egypt’s most important protected wilderness sites, with a plethora of birdlife, as well as endemic gazelles and ibexes. The beaches here offer pristine reefs easily accessible from the shore for snorkelers, while hiking and cycling trips are also available inland.