For some reason, I liked this pyramid more than the others. There's some kind of energy there.
The only big disadvantage is that no one bothers to feed or water the dogs living next to the pyramid. I saw a tourist walking, eating a sandwich and chasing away a skinny one like a puppy's skeleton.
I gave him the rest of the dry bread that I had lying around, so he ate it along with the sand. Dear fellow countrymen, do not be lazy to take a piece of sausage or cheese with you from breakfast. Or even better, a disposable plate and a bottle of water. It's impossible to watch them suffer from hunger and thirst there.
The oldest pyramid in Egypt is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
In 2020, it was reopened to tourists after 14 years of restoration work.
You can get inside, walk through the numerous corridors and even visit the inner burial chamber.
It is an energetically very strong place, and I recommend visiting it individually.
We didn't go inside, but there were enough impressions from the outside. In the room, located at an angle, there is a statue of Pharaoh Djoser. And she looks at the lower star of the Big Dipper.