A quick day-by-day photodiary of our trip to Oman with
Wild Frontiers.
Day 1 - Arrive Muscat
We all gather together for the first visit of the trip: the Grand
Mosque. Tour leader Phil is on the left, then we have Sarah, Nabhan
(chief driver/guide), Idris (driver), Jenny, Nawaf (driver), Bill,
Michael, Kate (Michael's wife), and Amanda. Out of shot is Bill's
wife Daphne, and the final member of the group, Jerry, is yet to
arrive. Turns out he made a simple mistake in dates when booking his
flight!
Pictures can't really do this thing justice. It looks like an alien
spacecraft crossed with a Disney castle and it's about the size of
one too. Eight tons!
The whole mosque is like this: biggest/tallest/whateverest,
although the dastardly crew in Dubai have grabbed some of their
records now.
Some of you may know of last year's Surrey Cow Parade; well this is
roughly the same thing transferred to Arabia and a Muscat Goat
Parade. There are loads of them in the grounds of a museum we visit.
And our first Omani meal. We have a 'family room' at the restaurant,
because women don't normally eat with strange men. Obviously I'm
not a strange man, but I can't speak for the others... Although this
is not Saudi Arabia by any means, Omani culture is still very
conservative.
Oman was a major trading nation in ancient times and has a large
immigrant population today, so the food is a mixture of North
African, Greek, Arab, Indian, Pakistani and doubtless others.
There's nothing obviously endemic and it's not challenging to the
modern Western palate, unless you're Jenny (top right), who doesn't
like spicy food. Despite this, she's travelled extensively in lands
where spicy food is the norm!
Day 2 - Muscat to Al Hamra and "The View"
At Wadi Bani Awf - "Snake Canyon" - a bunch of locals are
out for an afternoon's fun. On the hillside opposite, a couple of
others are putting up targets for them to shoot at. This is not
private land, and the safety precautions seem to be roughly "don't
get in theĀ line of fire". Quite how many laws they'd be breaking by
doing this in good old Blighty is hard to imagine!
And now for some slightly less dangerous fun with the dressing-up
box. Nabhan explains the various costumes and then we try some of
them on.
The girls do rather better in the shiny department. I'm wearing the
brightest thing I can find on the male side and the other two aren't
even trying!
Day 3 - "The View" to Nizwa
That's the eponymous view behind us!
I was trying to look up a village name or something, but there isn't
one. This place really is in the middle of nowhere and it must have
been quite a gamble to build it, but it seems popular and
successful, with plenty of other guests apart from our group.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0276jjh
do you think?
There used to be a lot of hand-made pottery workshops in the town of
Bahla, but this is the only one still operating today. He makes it
look so easy!
Day 4 - Nizwa to Camp 1 (dunes)
It's been made very clear to us that we should ask before taking
obvious pictures of people, so it comes as a bit of a surprise to
find people asking me to take their picture! Amanda and I
are standing in a bit of open ground when we have to move out of the
way of a pickup truck, but the guy stops and gestures to me to take
a photo please. I oblige, then show him and the kids on the camera
screen, and they all seem very pleased. They're not the only ones,
either. Some lads running a stall in the fish market are dead keen
to be models too.
Perhaps they think I'm a professional photographer and they'll
become world-famous when I publish these shots. Err, sorry...
Now there is a happy man!
We've just collected the alcohol supply for our camping nights. It's
been a bit of a surprise to find that even hotels catering to
Westerners mostly don't have licences, and there's definitely been a
bit of an air of black market skullduggery about obtaining a few
bottles and cans. Even Sweden doesn't make it quite this
hard to rot your liver. (Aside: I used to have a T-shirt that said,
"The liver is evil and must be punished!")
We visit a Bedouin camp, and this lady is one of the few who are
willing to have their photo taken - although possibly a small tip
from Phil is what makes the difference. Then again, when we arrived
and I said "Salaam alaikum" to her, she gave me her hand to shake,
which I thought was a definite no-no in their culture.
And so to our first campsite, in the dunes of the desert. As is the
way with deserts, the temperature drops sharply at night, so the
fire is most appreciated.
Our tents don't have fly sheets, so initially we're really
struggling to get everything in without touching the sides, but then
we think: hold on, desert - it ain't gonna rain here! So we
just shove everything in and forget about it until we all discover
in the morning that there's been a really heavy dew, and all
the tents are soaking wet! Indeed, many of us (including me) are
startled into premature wakefulness by our very own internal
raindrops falling on our head.
Day 5 - Camp 1 to Camp 2 (beach)
Well here's a road sign we don't see in the Home Counties.
At the beach, fishing boats are pulled up onto the sand. Probably in
Sinbad's day they used pure muscle power, but now they have jeeps
which they cake in oily tar to protect them from the salt water.
"I suddenly remembered my Charlemagne." One for the Indiana
fans, although I'm pleased to be able to report we weren't being
strafed by a Nazi fighter plane. Oh, and it seems that Charlemagne
never actually said the words attributed to him by Dr Jones, Sr, it
was a pure invention of the scriptwriters. But who cares! If the
Many-Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is correct, there is
another universe in which he did say it.
A room with a view.
Day 6 - Camp 2 to Camp 3 (beach)
Our second beach camp is a bit disappointing after the first, simply
because of the volume of garbage washed up on the beach. Much of it
comes from local fishermen just chucking stuff overboard, but also
from as far as the other side of the Indian Ocean. It only takes us
half an hour or so to make this pile. Nabhan says that the local
municipality is supposed to organise cleaning the beach, but they
often don't bother. He asks me to send him this picture so he can
use it to put pressure on them.
A brief dip to satisfy honour is plenty for me, but there are braver
souls among our number. To be fair, it's not that cold, but
I'm not particularly fond of swimming for the sake of swimming,
especially when there are waves. Give me a coral reef to go
snorkelling around and I'm yer man, but that's for another time and
place.
There are strange little tracks all around, and at first we can't
quite figure out what they are. Rodent? Snake? Nothing seems quite
right. And then we spot a Hermit Crab - caught red-handed! Well,
footed.
Day 7 - Camp 3 to Camp 4 (Empty Quarter)
This camel has just given birth, and its owner is encouraging and
helping the calf to drink.
As well as what one traditionally thinks of as camel-coloured
camels, the region is also home to unusual black camels.
Tonight, we camp in the Rub' al Khali - the 'Empty Quarter'.
This is the largest sand desert in the world (650,000 square
kilometres according to Wikipedia!) and although we haven't
travelled very far into it, we can easily believe it. That little
dot is Kate.
4WD cars, a few tents, and ...well... sand.
Day 8 - Camp 4 to Camp 5 (Empty Quarter)
Amanda decides she'll go for a run first thing. "How are you going
to not get lost?" I ask her. She mumbles something about running in
circles, but I'm not convinced. OTOH, there's no point trying to
stop her. Years of experience have taught me that years of
experience have taught her nothing in this regard.
A couple of hours later, we're pretty sure she's lost. Phil and I
each choose a dune and climb to the top but can't see her anywhere.
Nabhan goes off in the jeep but comes back alone. He's followed her
trail easily enough, but she's gone into an area where it's not safe
to drive alone, so he needs another car. I jump in with Nawaf and
off we go.
We reach a point where the cars just can't continue, so Idris gets
out and starts following on foot while we circle back to approach
from another direction.
Finally we see her, or at least Nawaf does, and our lost camel is
returned to the fold and everyone breathes a huge sigh of relief!
She's a bit dehydrated, but no worse than she gets running back home
sometimes.
Rehydration therapy. She says she knows I was really worried because
I forgot to bring my camera!
Phil says she's going to be included in his briefings for future
visitors!
This is what happens when you're out in the desert for too long...
We're on our way to an artificial oasis. Oil prospectors found water
instead, and they installed some pipework to a make a thermal spring
and create a little patch of green and a hot bath!
Jenny washes her hair!
Most of the rest of us strip to swimming costumes and jump right in,
as it's the perfect bath temperature. Unfortunately, it's a bit
sulphurous and smelly, though by no means as bad as some spas, and
the stone surfaces are very dirty. Most of you gets clean (well,
cleaner than before), but not any parts touching the sides or
bottom. Soap would probably solve the problem, but we don't have any
to hand right now.
"Help! Let me out!"
Phil climbs a dune to be silhouetted against the Moon as it rises,
but none of are expecting quite such a perfect alignment.
Theoretically, yesterday was the actual full moon, but you'd be hard
pushed to tell the difference.
Day 9 - Camp 5 to Salalah
Just after sunrise.
Rather a long time after sunrise! Phil was helping Nabhan dispose of
a quantity of whisky and vodka that was too much for the rest of the
group to drink last night, and the effort seems to have worn him
out. We've actually been quite impressed by the amount of noise and
kerfuffle he's managed to sleep through.
But he's a nice lad really, so I shall exclude this picture from the
version I send to Wild Frontiers :-)
And here we are, the motley crew in full!
Back row, L-R: Amanda, Bill, Michael, Kate, Jerry, Jenny, Daphne,
Steve
Front row, L-R: Idris, Nawaf, Nabhan, Phil, Sarah
I should perhaps point out that the reason I'm standing slightly
apart from the rest is not because I don't want to be associated
with them, but because I've just run back from pressing the timer
start button and haven't had time to pose more carefully.
As we leave the desert, the boys want to have a little fun. I'd
quite like a go myself, as it happens, and I don't think I'm the
only one.
Day 10 - Salalah
It's hard work walking into the wind, so Daphne calls for assistance
from Nabhan who then needs assistance himself from Nawaf. Or, well,
maybe, this is just a touch playing to the gallery :-)
See, it's not all desert! This is a rare example of a wadi
with water in it that isn't the result of a flash flood.
Day 11 - Depart Salalah
We have to depart at 3am for a 5am flight to Doha (in Qatar) where
we change for Heathrow. You've all seen airports often enough, so
there are therefore no particularly interesting pictures to be had
until we finally get to London.
We're nearly there... No we're not... Yes we are... No we're not...
Well we made it in the end. Time to start planning another trip!
Love to all,
Steve
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