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What we love about the Minya
Carries only 14 guests, a sweet spot between intimacy and a little extra cabin choice.
Four twin cabins, two double cabins and one suite make rooming more flexible than on many dahabiyas.
Sails without an engine on board and uses solar power alongside generator electricity.
The captain shops locally, so food stays connected to the river towns you pass.
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Dahabiya Minya is the kind of Nile boat that makes the river feel close again. She carries only 14 guests in four twin cabins, two double cabins and one suite, all with private bathrooms and air conditioning. The interiors are simple and warm, with wood, light fabrics and enough comfort to sleep well without turning the boat into the main event. The shaded deck, salon and rooftop lounge are where Minya earns her place: open views, low noise, meals in the breeze and time to watch the Nile change from farmland to villages to desert edge.
Minya is especially good if you want the traditional dahabiya feeling but need a little more cabin flexibility than the very smallest boats offer. The route typically connects Luxor/Esna and Aswan, with temple visits, island stops, village walks and quiet moorings that larger ships cannot use in the same way. October to April is the easiest season; summer is possible but hot. Choose Minya for real sailing rhythm, local food and low-key comfort. It is not for travellers who want a pool, spa, lift, several restaurants or a ship-first holiday.
Air conditioning & private bathroom
All meals
Eco friendly
English guides
Hot water
Internet/Wifi
Observation Deck
Observation Lounge
Restaurant
Food on Minya is a genuine strength because the kitchen is small and close to the places the boat passes. The captain shops daily for fresh fruit and vegetables in local markets. Lunch often leans vegetarian, while dinner may include beef, chicken or fish depending on what is available. Meals are generous, unfussy and best taken on deck when conditions allow. Tell us dietary needs early; on a small boat, good preparation matters.
Minya has one of the clearer low-impact stories in this group. She sails without an engine on board, uses solar energy alongside generator electricity, carries only 14 guests and keeps food sourcing local where possible. Waste reduction is part of the operating philosophy. The result is not a technical eco showcase, but a quieter and more human way to move through the Nile Valley.
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