REVIEW · HURGHADA
Hurghada: Sunset Camel Ride with Dinner
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by scorpionsafari · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Desert sunset hits hard, fast. This Hurghada night outing strings together camel ride at sunset and guided stargazing with a telescope, plus a real taste of desert life beyond the hotel strip. You also get the fun, bouncy change of pace from jeep off-roading before you reach the oasis camp.
What I like most is how the night doesn’t feel like one long ride. You stop for photos and a breather during the camel ride, then you get dinner back at camp with a proper after-dinner sky lesson led by the guide.
One thing to consider: this trip is not suitable for pregnant women, wheelchair users, babies under 1 year, and it has a 254 lbs / 115 kg weight limit.
In This Review
- Quick Hits Before You Go
- Entering The Desert: Pickup, Jeep Off-Roading, and the 17 km Run
- Camel Ride at Sunset: One Hour Between Valleys
- Camp Welcome: Bedouin Tea, Desert Stories, and Practical Culture Stops
- Dinner Under Desert Skies: What’s Served and Why It Works
- Stargazing With a Telescope: Star Groups and the Calendar Setup
- Tree Planting and Hands-On Farm Work: The Rural Side of the Night
- Price and Value: Is $52 a Fair Deal in Hurghada?
- Logistics That Actually Matter: Transport, Toilets, and Group Feel
- Comfort and Readiness Tips: What to Bring and How to Act
- Who Should Book This, and Who Should Skip It
- Should You Book Hurghada: Sunset Camel Ride with Dinner?
- FAQ
- What’s included in the tour?
- How long is the camel ride?
- What happens after dinner?
- Is this tour suitable for wheelchair users or pregnant women?
- What languages are available?
- Is there a weight limit?
Quick Hits Before You Go

- Camel ride for about one hour between desert valleys with sunset timing
- Star watching with a professional telescope, with targets chosen based on the calendar
- Jeep off-roading (including a 17 km desert run) that turns the transfer into part of the experience
- Bedouin-style camp time with welcome drinks and desert culture explanations
- Dinner buffet with Indian rice, grilled chicken, meatballs, vegetables, salads, fruits, and cola
- Rural add-ons in the program such as tree planting and hands-on farm work
Entering The Desert: Pickup, Jeep Off-Roading, and the 17 km Run

Start times depend on your hotel, and you’ll be collected for transfer to the meeting point. From there, you head into the desert in an off-road adventure jeep for 17 km, with the kind of road that feels like a roller coaster on sand and track.
This part matters more than it sounds. The jeep stretch builds excitement early, and it also gets you deep enough into the area for stargazing to feel worthwhile later. If you like rides that are active but not technically demanding, this is a good match.
Along the way, you should expect basic route and safety instructions from the guide. The camp area is also described as monitored by cameras and aligned with international health and safety standards, which helps you relax when you’re in the middle of nowhere.
A few more Hurghada tours and experiences worth a look
Camel Ride at Sunset: One Hour Between Valleys

The main event is the one-hour camel ride, and it’s built around timing the sunset. You’ll ride through the desert between valleys, with guided pacing that gives you time to enjoy the view without feeling rushed.
There’s typically a photo stop plus rest time during the ride. That means you’re not stuck balancing a camera while the ride keeps moving, and it helps if you’re a first-timer on camels.
At the sunset point, you can also get a non-alcoholic sparkling drink described like champagne, and the night usually includes a chance to ride horses in some form depending on the setup. If you’re the type who likes options, this is a nice bonus.
Tip: sunset can cool quickly in the desert. Wear layers you can pull on without slowing everyone down.
Camp Welcome: Bedouin Tea, Desert Stories, and Practical Culture Stops

After the camel ride returns you to the oasis, you’ll eat and then shift into the sky portion. Before dinner, the flow often includes a welcome talk and time to settle in with cold water and a clear feel for the site.
One review highlights learning about traditional Bedouin culture like flatbread making and herbs used as medicine in the desert. Even if you’re not hunting facts, these small culture stops help the night feel grounded, not just scenic.
Guides can make or break the vibe here, and the names you’ll hear in this experience include Medhat, Nasser, Ibrahim, Mohamed, Arabi, and Marshmallow. It’s a strong sign the guides are used to explaining things in a friendly way, from animal care to the night-sky lesson.
Dinner Under Desert Skies: What’s Served and Why It Works

Dinner is part buffet and part comfort-food payoff after sun, sand, and slow camel time. The menu is described as Indian rice, grilled chicken, meatballs, vegetables, salads, fruits, and cola, served in the camp atmosphere.
What I like about this setup is how it lands right after the activity. You’re not waiting forever in a bus to eat, and you’re not stuck on snacks only while everyone else gets a full meal.
You may also find vegetarian options. At least one person who requested vegetarian food reports they had plenty to eat, which is exactly the kind of practical detail that matters on a desert outing.
There’s also an advertised farm-to-table lunch experience and hands-on farm work as part of the broader program. Even if your night focuses on the dinner and stars, the rural angle is a big part of why this tour feels more than a quick show.
Stargazing With a Telescope: Star Groups and the Calendar Setup

After dinner, the guide explains star groups and you get star watching in a truly dark sky setting. The standout here is the inclusion of a professional telescope, not just a casual look-and-point moment.
Targets are described as depending on the calendar, which is a smart way to keep the astronomy lesson relevant. Instead of generic constellations only, you’re more likely to see what’s actually available on that particular night.
If you like the practical side of science, this is a great format. A guide walking you through what you’re seeing turns the night into something you can remember, not just a pretty sky.
And yes, the desert helps. With less light pollution, the moon and stars look sharper, so the telescope feels worth using instead of feeling like a gimmick.
A few more Hurghada tours and experiences worth a look
Tree Planting and Hands-On Farm Work: The Rural Side of the Night
This experience isn’t only riding and eating. The program is advertised with tree planting and hands-on farm work, plus that farm-to-table theme.
This matters if you’re tired of tours that only extract photos. Rural activities can add a sense of purpose, and they help the evening connect to real desert livelihoods rather than staying purely in tourist mode.
Because the exact timing isn’t spelled out step-by-step, treat it as an extra block within the overall outing rather than a guaranteed minute-by-minute schedule. Still, it’s clearly part of what this tour tries to deliver.
Price and Value: Is $52 a Fair Deal in Hurghada?

At $52 per person, you’re paying for more than a camel ride. You’re getting hotel pickup, an off-road jeep transfer (including a 17 km run), a guided one-hour camel ride, dinner, and a telescope-based stargazing session with star-group explanations.
That package is where the value lives. Many desert activities sell one highlight at a time, and the rest is leftover time. Here, the night is built as a full sequence: transfer, animal time, dinner, then a guided night sky program.
Also, there’s no hint you’re expected to skip meals or “upgrade” for basics. Dinner is included, and welcome drinks are part of the camp flow.
One small note: this is a set experience, not a pick-your-own schedule. If you want flexible timing above all else, you might find it less satisfying than a self-guided plan.
Logistics That Actually Matter: Transport, Toilets, and Group Feel

Pickup and drop-off happen based on your hotel location. The transfer is handled back to your hotel after the jeep ride returns you to the meeting point.
During the camp stop, toilets and water are part of the setup, which is a comfort point when you’re out in the desert with children-free timing. It’s not glamorous, but it keeps the night stress-free.
Group size can affect your experience, and at least one person notes it felt like a small group. When groups are smaller, you tend to get smoother camel handling, easier photo moments, and less waiting around.
If you don’t love crowds, this tour’s format sounds designed to keep things moving rather than lingering.
Comfort and Readiness Tips: What to Bring and How to Act

You’ll be on camel and in off-road vehicles, so wear practical clothing. Choose shoes that won’t slip on uneven ground, and bring a light layer for the night air.
Bring a camera and charge it fully. Photo stops happen during the camel ride, and the sunset cliff viewpoint is made for pictures. You’ll also have the telescope phase, but remember you’ll be working around other people and the guide’s timing.
Don’t forget sun protection earlier. Even if the night is the headline, the desert day to sunset stretch can be strong.
Finally, listen carefully to safety rules before riding. Even if you’re comfortable on animals, the guide’s instructions help you avoid awkward moments.
Who Should Book This, and Who Should Skip It
This fits best if you want a classic desert evening: off-road jeep time, a real camel sunset ride, dinner, then stargazing with a telescope.
It also fits couples and small groups who like calm, atmospheric experiences rather than fast sightseeing. If you’re the type who wants to learn a little under the stars, the star-group explanation makes it more than a photo stop.
Skip it if you’re dealing with limitations listed for the tour: pregnancy, wheelchair use, babies under 1 year, or if you’re over 254 lbs / 115 kg. Camel riding and desert ground make these restrictions sensible.
If you’re traveling with mobility constraints, it’s better to choose a different format that doesn’t involve camel time or uneven terrain.
Should You Book Hurghada: Sunset Camel Ride with Dinner?
Book it if you want a full desert evening that actually connects the dots: camel sunset, camp dinner, and real astronomy time with a telescope. The structure is built for value, with pickup, off-road transfer, and a guided night sky segment that you can’t replicate easily on your own.
Don’t book it if you’re looking for a gentle, fully accessible outing, or if your plans can’t work around the camel ride and desert conditions. The restrictions are clear, so check them early.
If your priority is “one ticket, one night, real desert memories,” this is a strong pick.
FAQ
What’s included in the tour?
The tour includes the camel ride, a guide, and dinner.
How long is the camel ride?
The camel ride is scheduled for about one hour.
What happens after dinner?
After dinner, the guide explains star groups and you enjoy star watching with a professional telescope, with targets chosen based on the calendar.
Is this tour suitable for wheelchair users or pregnant women?
No. It’s not suitable for wheelchair users and it’s not suitable for pregnant women.
What languages are available?
The tour is offered in German, French, English, Russian, Arabic, and Spanish.
Is there a weight limit?
Yes. It’s not suitable for people over 254 lbs (115 kg).































