It depends on where you were departing from in Turkey and what part of Egypt you were arriving in.
Almost all direct paths would take you across the Mediterranean Sea, which is southwest of Turkey and north of Egypt.
You could take an all-land route from Diyarbakir, Turkey to Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. However, any water-route between the two countries necessarily requires passage through the Mediterranean Sea.
If you are taking an all-water route between Istanbul, Turkey and Hurghada, Egypt, you would need to start at the Bosporus to the Sea of Marmara to the Dardanelles to the Aegean Sea to the Sea of Crete to the Mediterranean Sea to the Suez Canal to the Gulf of Suez to the Red Sea.
Mediterranean Sea
Mediterranean Sea
The Mediterranean Sea
This would be the Mediterranean Sea. It touches Egypt, Israel, and Turkey.
pee water punk
At first look, the Meditteranean sea borders all of the countries. Travel blogs recommend going either way. As a crow flies, the direction would be generally north or south. From Egypt, you would first take a ferry across the Aqaba Gulf between Jordan's Aqaba and Egypt's Nuweiba near the Sinai Peninsula. After that, the route becomes problematic as you would travel to Lebanon and then get a boat from Beirut to Cypress and then on to Turkey. Border passage and available transportation in wartorn areas would, in the end, make it better to fly there. There may be cruise ships or freighters in the area.
That depends on where you start.
The North Atlantic Ocean
Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea
The material that was used for writing purposes in Egypt was the Papyrus stalk. Strips were cut and glued together with Nile water. They were then cross layered and dried in the sun.
be creative. Egypt have a very small amount of water.
No a paranah cannot eat horses. For one horses are not usually near water unless they arre going to swim to cross or if they are going to get a drink of water. if a horse somehow fell in the water and got stuck yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa