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What we love about the Nora
Carries only 12 guests, keeping the boat intimate while offering unusually generous cabins.
Four cabins and two terrace suites suit couples, friends and some family setups.
Terrace suites have private balconies overlooking the Nile.
The Esna-Aswan route favours smaller moorings, villages and long quiet stretches of river.
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Dahabiya Nora is the Djed boat to look at if cabin comfort matters, but you still want the small dahabiya rhythm. She carries only 12 guests in four cabins and two terrace suites, all outside-facing, air-conditioned and ensuite. The cabins are generous by dahabiya standards, with louvred French windows and flexible twin or king-bed setups. The two terrace suites sit at the stern, where the private balconies make the Nile feel almost within arm's reach.
Nora follows the Esna-Aswan river road, where a dahabiya can slow down for Edfu, Kom Ombo, villages, riverbank walks and quieter moorings away from large-ship traffic. October to April is the most comfortable season; summer is much hotter and should be chosen knowingly. Transfers usually connect from Luxor/Esna or Aswan depending on direction. Nora is a strong fit for couples, friends and some families who want a bit more cabin ease without losing the small-boat feeling. It is not for travellers who want a pool, spa, elevator or several onboard venues.
Air conditioning & private bathroom
All meals
Bar
English guides
Hot water
Internet/Wifi
Observation Deck
Observation Lounge
Private Balcony
Restaurant
Food on Nora follows the best part of the Djed dahabiya style: full-board meals cooked on board for a very small group, with Egyptian dishes, fresh bread, vegetables, fruit, tea, coffee, mineral water and soft drinks included. The point is not restaurant choice. The point is eating simply and well, often on deck, while the river and village lights carry the evening.
Nora keeps the footprint modest through scale and pace: only 12 guests, local crew, small moorings and a sailing dahabiya format that avoids the feel of a conventional Nile cruise ship. The sustainability strength is practical rather than flashy. Fewer people, slower movement and smaller landings mean the journey can stay quieter and closer to real river life.
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