Dubai and the UAE
Dan and I are early in our journey and have arrived in
sunny, muggy Brisbane. The pretty, green and very muggy Brisbane. I loved it
instantly. The city and the nephews that come with it: introducing 4-year-old
Finn and 6 –year -*cough* excuse me- 6-and-a-half-year- old Nick. But more
about Australia and the 2 cutest boys in the Universe later.
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Nick and Finn |
Australia is the second stop of our 6-month adventure. We
arrived in the United Arab Emirates to visit our friends and wonderful hosts
Jacqui and Oliver on a 96-hour transit visa staying for 3 days. And boy is Dubai a strange place!
During my three full days in the UAE, I met only 2 locals or
“Emirati’. One at the passport control into the country, and one on the way
out!
And ‘met’ is a little too strong a word. Essentially Dubai
and the rest of the UAE is run by foreigners- waitrons, shopkeepers, bus
drivers, gardeners, petrol attendants- you name it- they’re from somewhere
else. This makes one feel like a permanent outsider- a feeling shared by many
of the foreigners working and living in the country. As a friend of ours, John, who has been
working and living in the UAE for 5 years puts it, “If you’re living in Dubai
you’re here for the money.” And that’s a shared sentiment amongst friends in Dubai
and the people we met along the way most of whom are pretty jaded with the
place.
To understand what drives the country and the sentiment, a
background understanding is key. Luckily, we had pretty amazing tour guides and
a well-informed Oliver Jackson who provided us with ample information creating a textured backdrop on which to piece together the story of the UAE.
Some of the information shared here is from his very smart
head in the form I remember his sharing it. Some I “researched”. I’m on holiday
so think Wikipedia and don’t quote me. ;)
The UAE is made up of 7 states or emirates- Abu Dhabi (the largest), Dubai, Sharjah,
Ajman, Fujaurah, Ras al-Khaimah and Umm al-Qaiwain. While there is a federal
president and prime minister each emirate has a Sheik who owns everything and
overseas the local government. The state
is socialist in nature (for its citizens at least)- all medical care and
education (even overseas universities) is paid for.
Before the 1960’s the region now known as the UAE was poor relying on fishing. farming, camel herding and pearling for its income. With the discovery of oil in the 1960s, all of that changed.
Now the country is super rich but oil only contributes to
30% of its GDP. With the previous Sheik’s foresight that the oil is finite, a massive drive to create a real-estate based economy has been pursued.
There are business incentives and job opportunities and there
is a lot of money to be made here. Development is huge and contributes to the
pretty impressive skyline in Dubai. But now I’m sounding like a press release.
So what did we do!?
We arrived at 2 AM on Friday morning
(weekend starts here Thursday night). Ollie and Jacqui picked us up and gave us
a middle of the night tour of the city centre. It is very shiny in Dubai city
centre. In fact people were cleaning the marble on some of the streets and
pillars as we drove up. The Burj Khalifa is the tallest building in the world
approximately 800m tall. It is ridiculous.
After a night’s sleep and a delicious champagne breakfast we headed out to Abu Dhabi and visited a water theme park. Because that’s what this place does- it builds shit. There is a ski ramp in the middle of the city for example (remember this is the desert). We roller-coasted, jumped down giant water-slides, ate lunch served by someone NOT from the UAE, and body boarded on a standing wave. Amazingly, to South African readers, we also left our stuff in a pile for a couple of hours and it was still there when we came back.
Most memorable quote of the day goes to Dan who upon
complimenting my new bikini added, ‘at least this one doesn’t pop off and show
your boobs!’ which earned us both the biggest skeef I have ever received from a
local conservatively dressed Emirati lady.
Ironically, my new bikini DOES come off with quite a surprising ‘’POP’
when not paying attention. For instance when breathing or moving my arm up and
down. Excellent.
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Burj Khalifa on the left - compare its size to the other (tall) buildings that make up the Dubai skyline (camera phone in moving car) |
Me on an Eski |
After a night’s sleep and a delicious champagne breakfast we headed out to Abu Dhabi and visited a water theme park. Because that’s what this place does- it builds shit. There is a ski ramp in the middle of the city for example (remember this is the desert). We roller-coasted, jumped down giant water-slides, ate lunch served by someone NOT from the UAE, and body boarded on a standing wave. Amazingly, to South African readers, we also left our stuff in a pile for a couple of hours and it was still there when we came back.
Dan on an Eski |
Most memorable fashion item: The burkini (a burkah come swimming ensemble)
Most memorable moment: Getting to hang with some camels on the side of the road. They’re awesome.
Look at those teeth! |
Getting Ready |
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On the boat |
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Hanging out under water |
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Pretty mountain view |
On our final night Ollie and Jacqui took us to the creek- one of the most beautiful parts of Dubai. We walked through the shuks (markets) and Dan and I were both reminded of our times in the Middle East- mine in Israel and his in Egypt. “What do you want- handbag, scarf, bag, dress. jewellery camera…” We passed by another camel (happy days), took boats across the creek, and ate a delicious traditional dinner.
Danny hanging with J and O |
All in all, my experience in the UAE was interesting and eye opening and really fun! Despite the bizarre strangeness of the place, and losing our two “waterproof” cameras to water damage, we had a great time, largely due to the oft-mentioned J and O who took us to parts of Dubai we could never have gotten to on our own. Shout-out to them. And while I wouldn’t recommend Dubai as place to visit (I’m just not that into my Bentleys and 7-star hotels), if you have friends there, and you’re stopping over on your way, take the opportunity to pop on in.
Lovely to hear about your travels, Kim and Dan. Please keep posting so I can travel vicariously through you!
ReplyDeleteWill do. Thanks for reading :-D x
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