Tim Hames
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Dubai is a place that plainly believes that size really is everything. It already has the largest airport in the world. The tallest building in the world is almost ready, and the largest shopping mall in the world is under contruction. It has the only “seven-star” hotel on the planet (the Burj Al-Arab) and has such resources to spare that it boasts an enormous camel-racing track which holds precisely one event a year. (In a surprisingly liberal shift, the camels are no longer ridden by children but by robots.)
A quarter of all the cranes existing on the globe are beavering away in this emirate, such is the building that continues apace. Which, allowing for half the earth’s crane supply currently being at work in China, does make one wonder how any of the stadiums promised for the 2012 London Olympic Games will ever be constructed. Dubai has the indoor skiing, the Wild Wadi water park – and Dubailand is forthcoming. In places, it is Disney in the desert, though with a coastline. Hundreds of thousands of British citizens visit every year. One question remains: is there anything authentic here?
The answer is yes, but you have to make sacrifices to find it. This means abandoning the beach, whether it be the Jumeirah strip or Jebel Ali, which feels halfway to Abu Dhabi (because it is). Authentic Dubai is alive, well and even thriving despite the competition from concrete everywhere else, clustered around what is described as a “Creek” (although it is much larger than the sort of trickle in which you might play Pooh Sticks) and which is home to the most fantastic, credible, not-made-for-Western-tourists-alone collection of souks that this part of the Middle East has to offer.
Lots of people come to Dubai “for the shopping”, but what they often mean is trips to vast retail outlets full of chain stores familiar from home, except with much more square footage. Dubai’s existing malls (never mind the monster shortly to emerge) are what Bluewater or Lakeside might look like if they inhaled some mind-altering substance. These institutions are, however, about as Arabian as fish and chips wrapped in newspaper. Comparing a mall to a souk is like arguing that the only difference between a Big Mac and fillet steak is the bun.
For a start, malls do not smell (except of disinfectant). The spice souk to the east of the creek smells divine, as does the perfume souk near by. The gold souk manages to smell, too, which is strange since you would not think that 400-odd entrepreneurs, all seeking to sell an odourless metal, could affect the nostrils. Even the textile souk has a certain smell.
Then there are the fish, meat and vegetable souks, which have the disadvantage from the tourist’s point of view that it is not terribly practical to cart any of their wares home, although they make a good free outing. I think the electronics souk is a bit of a bore (couldn’t smell a thing), but I suppose those sad souls who crave computer equipment at a discount might beg to differ.
But if this is the Dubai that would turn you on, there is not much to be won by coming in from miles away on official excursions and hoping that you will encounter it. You have to be ready to stay in the old business district where the hotels are magnificent affairs even if they are not built in the shape of waves or sails. From this district the intrepid can walk towards the Creek (not wise between May and September when the temperature can top 40C (105F), unless you are looking to visit the hospital souk). Or take a short, inexpensive taxi ride to one bank or the other to souk up the atmosphere (sorry), crossing the river as locals (well, local in the sense of Indians, Pakistanis, Iranians and others from this melting pot which even contains some natives) would do. On an abra, you cut across the water past dhows which look as if they have been around for decades, all for one dirham (less than 15p).
Staying in the same part of town means that you can hear the call to prayers ringing hauntingly from surrounding mosques while seated by the hotel swimming pool. It is not necessary to abandon luxury to acquire an idea of authenticity. It seems a shame that so many Brits travel to be in Dubai and never hear, see or smell it.
Need to know
Kuoni Travel (01306 747008, www.kuoni.co.uk)
offers seven nights’ B&B at the Shangri-La Hotel, Dubai, including
flights with Emirates Airlines from Gatwick, from £1,058 per adult and £539
a child, based on two adults and one child sharing.
What’s new in Dubai
Old-school glamour
The first Raffles property in the Middle East opens next month in Dubai.
Designed as an homage to the Egyptian pyramids, the triangular structure has
248 rooms, a spa and a champagne bar on the top floor with sweeping views of
the city.
Details: Five nights at the Raffles Dubai costs from £899pp, including
flights, transfers and B&B accommodation through Kuoni (01306 747002, www.kuoni.co.uk).
Desert storm
The Al Sahra Desert Resort, which opened earlier this year, offers a sound and
light show each evening in a memorable setting. The resort is built in the
style of an ancient Arabic settlement, with its own date plantation, farm,
camel and horse stables and a 1,200-seater amphitheatre.
Details: 00 971 4 367 9500, www.alsahra.com.
Sail away
Opening in November, the Emirates Marina is an apartment-style hotel perfect
for families, as each suite has a kitchen, babysitting service and a
children’s play area and pool, as well as views across the water. When
completed in 2009, the new project will be the largest man-made marina in
the world.
Details: A three-night break costs from £680pp, room-only, including
flights through Emirates Tours (0870 128 6000, www.emiratestours.co.uk).
Old and new
Abercrombie & Kent has a new ten-night trip for 2008, combining its
Signature Tour of Jordan itinerary, which includes time at Jerash and Petra,
with a three-night stay in Dubai at the Mina A’Salam hotel. Transfers and
flights between Dubai and Jordan are included, and a city tour of Dubai can
be added.
Details: The trip costs from £1,949pp including B&B
accommodation and a guide in Jordan, through Abercrombie & Kent (0845
618 2200, www.abercrombiekent.co.uk).
In the swing
Opening in November, the Dunes golf course designed by Ernie Els in the heart
of Dubai Sports City (due for completion in 2010), is destined to become the
region’s most popular – at least until Tiger’s opens in 2009. The course
will also have a Butch Harmon School of Golf.
Details: www.dubai
sportscity.ae.
Cruise control
New for the winter 2008 season, Costa Cruises’ Costa Romantica and Costa
Europa will sail out of Dubai to Oman, Bahrain, Fujairah and Abu Dhabi. The
Jewels of the Emirates Cruise offers plenty of shore excursions and a
dolphin-spotting trip by speedboat around Muscat.
Details: A week’s cruise costs from £449pp, excluding flights (020-7940
5398, www.costa cruises.co.uk)
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I am taking my three children to Marrakesh for New Year. Ages 21, 19 and 15. Do you have any ideas on what we can do to celebrate New Year's eve there? Or indeed any ideas for how to spend our 10 days there. Would be grateful for any help.
Jennifer Ward, Sonning, UK
If you want to find out about the real Dubai then grab a copy of the Dubai Explorer, a complete residents' guide. This 600 page guide as a must for anyone who wants to know everything from shopping secrets to working and living in Dubai (www.explorerpublishing.com). And Mike I'm sure has been off into the deserts and wadis with his UAE Off-Road Explorer.
CE, Dubai, UAE
Your reporter has clearly been to Dubai. But he did not mention the deserts that have a beauty of their own, the mountains, the wadi tracks and the eastern coastline which I thought was almost like the south of France when I first saw it (although it is now being spoilt with new hotels). The northern emirates of Sharjah, Ajman, Umm Al Quwain and Ras Al Khaimah are very different to Dubai and well worth a visit as indeed is Al Ain. In such places the old way of life is not extinct and the architecture is very different. You can go on organised trips and see all of the above but really you need a knowledgable Resident guide to go seriously off road. A road trip to Kassab in the Musandam (Oman) offers stunning coastal scenery and is well worth the drive. Interestingly most of the expat residents of Dubai are similarly ignorant, spending their 2 years or so here propping up bars and never seeing the real UAE.
Mike Anthony, Dubai, UAE
Hi all,
I recently saw a website with photos from Dubai 1975-1980: http://www.anitavanderkrol.com/index.php
As for the entertainment: some restaurants & hotels reviews, safari trips and other attractions are here:
http://chilloutdubai.blogspot.com/
The daily news on investments & finance goes here: http://www.dubaichronicle.com/
That's already plenty of info & I hope it will be useful for some.
ED, Dubai,