For transportation and for trade route purposes.
The important thing thing was the Nile River. With out the Nile River they couldn't send messages or sail down tho find food
Actually they did sail the Nile river for thousands of years and still do.
Because you will run into the Aswan Dam.
Yes, the type of stone that was used to build the Sphinx was from a lower part of the ninle river almost into Nubia near the 2nd cataract. The stone was quarried and loaded onto ships to sail up the nile to the sphinx location.
the answer is really impossible to answer who knows?
Rivière St-Laurent.
The Aswan Dams stop watercraft..
There is no record of this nor is there likely to be
The direct object of the verb 'sail' is barges.
In hieroglyphs, signs for boat are either sailing upstream or downstream on the river Nile (not on the ocean). The Egyptians certainly had ships capable of sea-going voyages, but their ships and boats were mainly used as river vessels.A sign showing a boat with its mast taken down and sails furled is the determinative for "to sail downstream"; a boat with mast erect and sail billowing is the determinative for "to sail upstream". Neither of these signs would be used on their own, but would be accompanied by sound-signs spelling out the appropriate verb.
Well. There is water. People drink water. People drink water from the river. Also. There is water. People sail boats on water. People sail boast on the river.
Boat races were companies race each other with sail boats. The River Nile freestyle festival which is using kayaks and such