A New Day, A New Year

Sparky thinking inside the box

Sparky thinking inside the box

New Year’s Eve will come and go, but the year will take its time, as it does every year, as the Earth makes its way around the sun, and as the planets travel towards their destiny in space and time. People will go on living, some will make temporary adjustments, and others changes that last a lifetime. I’ve been blogging since June 2011 and have made some resolutions of my own – some small, some personal, and others that I thought were meant for another lifetime, or someone else.

sipping bubbly in the shade with friends by the canal

sipping bubbly in the shade with friends by the canal

Here it is, the end of 2014. I’m 28 years old and some days I still feel 18. Caleb has noticed a lot of changes in me since we’ve been together and recently mentioned one that stuck with me. In 2005, I was eating meat, drinking beer, and smoking cigarettes. Here I am almost ten years later after being a vegetarian for five years and going a year without drinking. I quit smoking in 2009, but still try cigars and sheesha.

Piggy enjoying her favourite pastime

Piggy enjoying her favourite pastime

I’d like to think that each change has been in the right direction, making me a better person, and improving those around me. These were never intentional changes in the beginning, and none were made to start in the new year. My main goal as a child was to move out of my mom’s house and far away – and I have definitely accomplished that. I’ve grown a lot in the last few years and it has helped my emotions significantly to realise that things in the past can stay there, so I can move forward.

Caleb eating sideways at Lilou's

Caleb eating sideways at Lilou’s

The further I’ve gotten from the dramas of high school and the navy, the more I appreciate the time spent there, but also the ability to not dwell there. I’m no longer ‘friends’ with people, for the most part, that don’t have a positive influence on my life. I don’t need to know that I once knew someone who doesn’t make a difference in the world – for those that make a difference in mine: thanks, gracias, danke, shukran. I would prefer to meet people who live a life of selling fruits and offering kindness and coffee to travellers – those are people worth knowing.

#TheYearOfTheSelfie

#TheYearOfTheSelfie

My last few years’ resolutions have been to Do More: biking, reading, knitting, language learning, SCUBA, traveling, improving, experiencing, and to be more productive. I’ve read 28 books this year (of which a review will be later). I still haven’t found my incomplete socks that I started knitting in January as part of my resolution. And instead of continuing to learn Spanish, I’ve now taken on learning words and letters in Arabic to help me adjust to my new home in Bahrain (a place I never heard of before being told I was going to live here – I too had to use Google Maps).

Sparky being questioned on his YouTube selections

Sparky being questioned on his YouTube history

I thought seeing the United States was going to be a difficult task itself, and it’s still proving so as I have yet to visit Hawaii. I never thought I’d get the chance to go back to Mexico, to go to Canada three times in one year, and then move to another country across the Atlantic. I’ve met some amazing people who share the same goals as me – learn, travel, enjoy. I’ve been too busy having fun to keep up with my blog, let alone try online school for a program that won’t transfer (still need to do more research in overseas programs), and definitely don’t feel like working – I have yet to get bored enough.

walking with the sun on my face and sand in my teeth

walking with the sun on my face and sand in my teeth

We should finally be getting scuba certified in February (when the next available class is), if Caleb isn’t underway, so we can scuba around Bahrain and Oman and see the shipwrecks. Then we can travel to Australia and Indonesia to see their incredible reefs.

What do I want to set as my goals for next year?

1. take a bike tour, and ride down to the Tree of Life
2. read the books on my shelves, and add to my list
3. finish my orange socks and learn to card weave, so I can finish my camera strap
4. learn to not say no so quickly, and to do the same with yes
5. try new foods and improve my Arabic vocabulary and spell my name
6. travel to three new countries, couch surf Germany and meet bloggers in China
7. keep my mind and body in shape, and set my soul free
8. continue to fill my passport with visas, and get lost.

And Caleb: ride my bike more, read more books, and stop being sick.

I suppose we have similar goals, and Caleb has a simpler way of stating them. I want him to have a life outside work, to be closer to family, and nicer to friends; to sit less and walk more; to learn something new every day; to appreciate what we have – legs, eyes, voice; and to be grateful for our history and what the future brings – a year of change, breaking rules, causing international incidents, and ignoring resolutions on weekends and holidays and vacations – because life is about taking chances, being outside your comfort zone, and living for the moment – because it might be all you have.

Posted in Animals, Education, Fiber Arts, Holidays, Marriage, Photography | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

An Adventure Is a Wish Your Feet Take

sunrise panorama from Royal Grand Suites

sunrise panorama from Royal Grand Suites

We decided to sleep in, hitting snooze on my alarm, and going back to sleep for thirty minutes. We were ready to go by 7 am. I didn’t feel like a shower, and even put on the same skirt, and skipped the steam room. Caleb bathed and we packed the new purchases into our bags before driving the car downstairs, and turning in the room key.

The attendant asked if we were settled on breakfast (checking out before the buffet opens) and while Caleb waited on them to check the room and get the receipt (another one), I went upstairs to get a view from the pool – the one I wanted since we arrived.

Heritage Village

Heritage Village

We drove to Heritage Village, that opens at 8:30a, and got there at 8am. We walked along the water taking in the architecture, flowers, camels, clouds, shadows, cats, people, and all the details from the sea-life on the water’s edge to the different cuts of wood on the balconies, doors, and dhows that make this part of the city such a great morning destination. We find a sign that says doors don’t open until 4:30p on Saturday’s. I guess we will have to enjoy the wonders of an afternoon here on another visit.

We drove to Century Village (a gathering of eateries) for two coffees, a croissant, a muffin, and a lemon water at Costa with a kids’ tennis team – so we sat outside to lessen the noise and Caleb eavesdropped on the conversation at the next table about how Dubai used to be. I wonder how much cheaper a quick breakfast was – as today’s would cost us $25.

Century Village

Century Village

We made it to Sharjah National Park at 10 am and though our tickets said entry was 2 Dhs we were charged 5 Dhs each – what’s another 80 cents when we’re helping preserve a green oasis among the desert and the city to give locals and tourists a place to relax and play. We passed the kitty train driver for the pink and white ride headed to nap town – as that’s where him and his assistant already were.

We walked down the long tunnel of pillars and flowers with a wooden trellis overhead and a metal fencing over that so that the shadows could fall, but not the plants causing them. I admired the lines, and the bright pinks and yellows… and chipmunk! I’ve adapted to the lack of animals, certain foods and traffic laws, so I was excited to see something scurrying after having gone months without – that, or Sparky has me trained well.

Sharjah National Park

Sharjah National Park

We go over the hill, enjoy the view, and down to the bike rental shop. The employee is lounged in the grass and gives us a tandem – thirty minutes for 30 dirham. It’s a good thing we didn’t rent for longer as the bikes are only allowed on this small portion of the park that’s filled with trees, sprinklers, sunshine, a closed tunnel; and birds with bright blue, indigo, and turquoise feathers seen in flight – known as an Indian roller.

We walked by the teacups (Caleb’s favorite carnival ride) among others that had cats hidden in them, and a replica-looking Ladies Mosque, and a large set of swings – they’ve got the right idea in the Middle East – not skimping on things wanted or needed. We walked between wall and trees on one side and grass on the other looking at flower bushes and trying to capture a picture of the elusive Indian roller – so fast, so beautiful, and perched so high.

Indian Roller

Indian roller

After all this beauty came the smelliest and brownest toilet I’ve been in, and used, since my arrival in the Gulf.

Caleb said we were headed to a surprise and then told me to take a quick right off the highway. The Sharjah Car Club & Museum… not my idea, but it would be a treat for him that he noticed on the map in time. I would have to wait for mine. There were enough cars in the lot to satisfy my curiosity, but we went inside and spent an hour looking at 72 years worth of fancy older versions of cars – some I like better than their modern ones. We put together a large magnetic puzzle and then got our picture taken in a Corvair.

cruising in a Corvair

cruising in a Corvair

Caleb wandered around back to find the stash of other cars left in the sun covered in dust waiting for the day they can shine again. I went to our car to eat. We had leftover rice and I used a drink lid as a feeding scoop which turned out to be more fun than it was messy.

My surprise would be the Eye of the Emirates, a Ferris Wheel and the only ride Caleb likes at carnivals. It’s five dirham to ride and we got to rock at the top while people boarded. I think the wheel is more picturesque than the view it offers of the skyscrapers/water on one side and skyscrapers/dirt on the other, but it’s nice and I want to come back at night.

Eye of the Emirates

Eye of the Emirates

We went to O’ My Buns (Idiocracy reference?) for drinks and a bun. The guy had trouble understanding our order even after he wrote it down, he didn’t serve us the carrot juice I wanted, and didn’t have change or a toilet, but the bun was new and the green tea latte and saffron tea worth waiting for while watching a toddler interact with his parents and make faces at me. These are the joys of traveling and what make my stories worth telling.

Next was the Heart of Sharjah. Caleb wanted historical looking and museums and this place is full of both. We already want to come back to the UAE. We thought the place might be closed and deserted, but when we saw the bus load of tourists we knew we were in the right place. We had the Heritage Museum to ourselves for five dirham each – full of clothing, pearls, pottery, and a courtyard that leads up to a roof with a view.

sippin on bun and juice

sippin on bun and juice

Soon we were in the Asra Souq looking at old Emirati coins with different designs on the back commemorating events. We walk along the harbor, boats on this side with sleeping crew and ships on the other, and on the rolling sidewalk that seems as if they laid bricks on the terrain without any forethought. They did a good job though and I appreciate the texture it gives to the area and its relative smoothness that could be appreciated on a bike compared to some of the cracked sidewalks I’ve been on in California.

With two hours before going back to Bahrain we drive to Irish Village. I stop for petrol where they have nine-piece firewood stacks and three-pack tissue sets, both in bulk for those impulse buyers. I take a u-turn instead of a left, but it’s only a ten minute delay. We arrive and parking is still free. We’ve gotten lucky with that because of the holiday. I order a Bailey’s and mint shot and a Wagner’s and Guinness drink and we go outside to watch the ducks and the three little girls in pink dresses. Caleb is the one to notice all the people with luggage (the ones that took cabs and will be leaving here less than able to drive).

Heart of Sharjah

Heart of Sharjah

We dropped the car off at National with no issue and were climbing in the back of a partially pink cab at 5:30. I should’ve done a better job of exchanging bills for change, they charge 25 just to get in the car. We had to wait on her to get change while the guy behind us honked at her blocking traffic. We got through passports and security within 30 minutes and I got a laugh out of the English guy, drunk from Irish Village, who thought I was Russian or Canadian and go to Aspen every year to ski.

We found a seat and then a guy moved for us so I could plug my phone in and try to update it. I didn’t think I would need a coffee, but I started to feel sleepy, so I went to the Dunkin Donuts stand for two lattes with a shot of espresso in each. Check out was harder than watching the drunk guys order a box of donuts. We saw the line form for Bahrain and then saw Natalie, our neighbor, when Caleb got up to throw away his cup. She was trying to get her parachute (she’s a serial skydiver) on the plane and they made her check it.

Scottish Courage - for all at Irish Village

Scottish Courage – for all at Irish Village

She had row 7 (lucky enough to pick her seat) and we had row 28, so we loaded from the rear of the plane. I don’t know why more flights don’t do this. She was able to jump six times in two days and had an absolute blast. She wanted to hear all about our trip. I went to her seat and got into the one in front of her to take a selfie – like my dad running into a friend on a plane, but not as photogenic.

We lifted off at 8p and landed at 8p. It took us 45 minutes to get through passports, have Natalie offer us a ride, pay for long-term parking, and be on the road home. We arrived to happy dogs – happy we were home to walk them and feed them twice. I’m happy there’s not a bag of pee on the table. My throat started hurting on the plane and I thought it was the perfume. Now my nose is running too. I hope it’s just trying to clean out the mess and that if I am getting sick that I’m better before our next trip – that I still have to plan for.

Posted in Animals, Art, Cycling, Food, History, Marriage, People, Photography, Plants, Travel, Water | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

When I See a Sun Rise

6:15 am, view from Burj Khalifa

6:15 am, view from Burj Khalifa

This morning came too early, but I wasn’t going to let being tired get in the way of our vacation. I showered and heard Caleb moving around when I opened the door to let the steam out. We left the room at 5:30 with a 20 minute ETA on the map. We got to the Dubai Mall with no problems and definitely no traffic, but had a hard time navigating the large parking area. We asked two attendants for directions and then Caleb pointed left.

We went inside and there are guys spaced throughout to help point tired people in the right direction. At one point we went up the wrong escalator and had a couple follow us as they had tried using the elevator without luck. You park in cinema parking, P2, M and then walk all the way to the end, with signs guiding you, and stop when you reach the shiny counter with the hard to read sign that says At The Top.

Souk Al Bahar

Souk Al Bahar

We were on our way up at 6:03 and I wanted to come back for the sunset as our ticket tells us it can be seen from the bottom of the building and then again from the top – two sunsets in one day! There is a long moving walkway full of screens and mirrors with the history and extravagance of this place. I didn’t realize the work and brain power that went into such a structure – and I thought I had been to some tall buildings. This thing is art, science, and technology. There are more screens, hallways, and steps leading to the elevator with more screens and lights that will take us to the top.

We are led out on to a balcony with a hole between glass and concrete at our feet and another one between glass panels so we can feel the wind and the height better – perfect for acrophobics and those willing to put their cameras out there unknowingly. This also allowed better pictures without a reflection in the glass, but I didn’t see a net for dropped items, but I suppose that’s what the fountain is for below.

Burj Khalifa

Burj Khalifa

We are impressed with the view in the dark at 6:14 and it continues to get better as the crowd begins to thicken to watch the city come alive. We let some people enjoy our viewing spot for a moment, but were sure to claim it for the money shot – the reason we paid to come at this hour. The city becomes clearer for a moment before the pre-sunset fog blankets the view, only to be warmed away at 6:52 when the sun begins to peek through the clouds that have delayed the gratification of the crowd.

This is all I had planned for today, so I feel accomplished – it’s the little things. After getting my necessary retina burning done for the day, I can make my way through the crowd to photograph them taking selfies and take in the rest of the view that this height has to offer – Burj Al Arab standing alone with Jumeirah and possibly Jebel Ali in the distance. In the gift shop, we bypass the 400 dirham golden plate, the snow globes, pencils, keychains, mugs, and 120 dirham shirts. What we want isn’t for sale – the viewing lens with day, night, live, and historic options – and I’m sure it wouldn’t work the same in our living room.

Dubai Dino

Dubai Dino

We take the lift (elevator) down at 7:13 and wave goodbye to the sun – physically and metaphorically as we make our way down another hallway informing us of all the wealthy people who were in charge of the workers safety and accounting for the millions of man hours it took just to put in all the windows when the weather would allow. Another walkway with more screens will deliver us out of Burj Khalifa in search of coffee inside a very large mall in the Middle East where nothing opens till late.

The architecture is beautiful, inside and out, and though I’m concerned with capturing the light in my lens I also have a strong desire to give my body energy. The only places conveniently open by 8:15 (when I felt like passing out after walking around for an hour) were Caribou Coffee and Tim Horton’s (an American and Canadian company) – where we got drinks, a cranberry-sesame muffin, and a cinnamon raisin bagel with cream cheese.

the proof is in the architecture - Dubai is a city built on outdoing itself

the proof is in the architecture – Dubai is a city built on outdoing itself

During that hour we saw a window display that smokes, moves, and plays music – it was fantastic – and the best one in the mall out of the others we would see. We walked by the second largest indoor aquarium, able to hold ten million liters, with the world’s largest acrylic panel. And we discovered the Dubai Dino, a Diplodocus longus that is over 150 million years old that made its way to the Middle East from Dana Quarry, Wyoming. The body is 80 feet long and 25 ft high, and has 90% of its skeleton, the most intact of its kind, which at first appears headless.

After breakfast, we explored the many fancy shoe displays and happened upon the hockey rink – in mid-game, complete with referees, seating for 400, and a VIP section. Though I believe sitting in the white leather chairs just on the other side of the glass would be more thrilling and comfy. We passed the Souk inside the mall which compares to the Souk Al Bahar (meaning market of the sailor) in size, outside the mall with over a hundred shops – one of them being Icon Coffee Couture that serves kopi luwak from 7 to 11 in the morning, but that just happened to be closed today.

man fountain

Dubai Mall Waterfall

We should’ve gone to the Underwater Zoo when we had the chance, but we either left something to come back for, or the opportunity to see one when visiting another country. It took us a while to find The Waterfall, an indoor fountain that spans all four levels of the mall adorned with fibreglass divers, not just one of the other two ordinary fountains inside, let alone the outdoor one that’s supposed to be 25% larger than the one in Las Vegas that sprays water and spreads joy in the evenings.

We passed KidZania, with the ticket booth set up in the fashion of an airport, on our way to SEGA Republic, so that Caleb could ride his first indoor roller coaster. We put all our stuff in a locker (so no video footage) before climbing on with two kids. Under my screams, Caleb could hear one of them joining in to add to the noise of the experience. They got off playing it cool because they get to do this every weekend. I’m grateful my first ride was laughing in fear as Priya made sure Dana Mall heard the terror in her voice.

beach next to Burj Al Arab

beach next to Burj Al Arab

We happened into a Tempurpedic Mattress store where I had to have my arm twisted to lay down on a $5,000 Cloud. I would’ve given the ok to buy, but ours at home has only reached its half-life, and I’d hate to think it was ok to throw me out at 50 just because something comfier has been found looking soft and unused under incandescent lights. The sales associate urged me to take off my shoes and grab a pillow. I don’t think she understood our need for coffee, though I could’ve crossed off a nap on a public bed while on vacation off my bucket list.

Before I could earn my coffee, I had to spend 40 minutes in the dressing room trying on things with and without sleeves. Caleb was smiling as he imagined me on the next billboard ad for barely there clothes. An agreement was made, some things were bought, and a yummy chocolate-swirled, whipped-cream topped beverage was given to me with a straw. I appreciate the lid for added content, but always take it off to make a mess first.

Dubai from

Dubai as seen from Meydan Golf Course exit

We left the mall at 2pm and went to the public beach next to Burj Al Arab. There was more skin here, on the sand in the Middle East, than food served at an Indian festival or at Grandma’s during the holidays. I didn’t bring my itsy-bitsy teenie-weenie pink polka-dot bikini, but I brought an appetite to fill it, so we thought we’d go to Heritage Village to find a large serving of traditional Emirati food.

We got detoured by Qube’s Inferno Burger that needs a waiver and has a thirty minute eat and it’s free time limit. It’s located 20 minutes out-of-town at the Meydan Golf Course, but when we get there at 3:30, after reaching a dead-end and finding another route, we find out that they stopped selling it months ago without telling anyone because a customer fainted or something – isn’t that in the fine print, and another reason to add your name to the list of attempts.

to art, or to eat, that is the question - at

to art, or to eat, that is the question – at Qube’s

We order a Heineken and some fries while playing a game of pool – no point in coming out here for nothing. The place looks like a nice hang out, but besides the old guy in the corner, we’re the only customers in the place, but that’s because we didn’t look on the green for Tiger Woods practicing his swing.

It’s a good thing we got something to eat because Kate awakens from her weekend shenanigans to the picture of the flip-flops she was looking for that I sent her hours ago. She asks for two pairs of Havaianas, so we return to Dubai Mall at 4:00 to spend 240 dirham on shoes. We get to watch the sunset on the way to dinner at Hot & Spicy restaurant. We get there at 5:45, order rice with peppers, a roll (chicken shawarma in a paratha), and Marsala fries with three dips. We didn’t have to sign a waiver, but we got to sit outside, enjoy the food, and people watch.

to work, or to fly, that is the question - at construction site

to work, or to fly, that is the question – at construction site

I tried going to the petrol station before dinner, but missed the curb-less spot along the road. I u-turned to try again only to be faced with a cliff and rocks leading into a dirt lot. I kept driving and took the exit from the highway to wait in line to pay our 53 dirham to fill the car with Super. This will give us the gas needed to get back to the room, across towns, and run around tomorrow. I step on the gas and make the car beep once before keeping it at 100 kph, the speed limit.

We get to the room at 7pm and are excited for sleep, but my writing keeps both of us awake and we remember the gym/sauna/pool, and Caleb brought shorts this time, so we go upstairs to find out the pool closed 45 minutes ago (at 7p) and the gym closes in 15 minutes (at 8p) and that my computer is still on Bahrain time (7p). It’s now 8pm and we plan on sleeping in tomorrow, eating or skipping breakfast, and maybe going to the sauna.

Posted in Animals, Art, Entertainment, Food, Friends, History, Photography, Travel, Water | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

I Can Show You Dubai

driving into Dubai

driving into Dubai

Alarm at 5:50 going off in the bathroom (only 110v outlet in the room) forces me out of bed. Caleb brought an adapter with one plug ensuring his phone was charged so we had GPS available. I laid down on the other bed (as not to disturb Caleb) and was about to fall asleep, so I got up to wash my face and the other alarm went off.

Caleb got up and handed me a second Swiss chocolate roll, the first one came last night with the coffee – wife treats to keep her happy, as if that’s an issue when traveling – even when things might look rough to others – that’s where my stories are – the ones that intrigue some and scare most others.

Dubai Museum in a fort

Dubai Museum in a fort

It’s 6:30 now and the light from the sun has arrived. Good to know that I missed watching it from the pool (that is still closed) but that when we get to the Burj Khalifa tomorrow morning at 6:00 am we will be on time. Bring on the day!

The breakfast buffet doesn’t open till 7:30, so we wander down the street for some date milk and a Boom Boom (Arabic version of Red Bull from Jamaica). On our way past the mosque, with design and details we both love, what surprises me is the large post box – something I have yet to see in the Middle East as they all upgraded to online when camels became more of a tourist attraction than a main staple in business and leisure.

inside the fort walls of Dubai Museum

inside the fort walls of Dubai Museum

Some things are familiar – dusty cars with dirty messages, cats rummaging through rubbish, people scurrying to prayer, workers running across the street, and magazines with awesome images in a language we don’t understand. Others still have the ability to surprise me – like the makeshift outdoor elevator instead of the shoddy scaffolding found outside of most construction sites with their mandatory crane.

Breakfast at 7:30 is not impressive in the bakery department, but the tomatoes, pineapple, and oatmeal with my cup o’ tea will do the job of staving off hunger for a couple of hours. The Jumeirah Mosque tour doesn’t start till 9:45, so we have time to go back to the room and look at the event books for the area, whatever we didn’t look at the night before.

piecing the past together, Dubai Museum

piecing the past together, Dubai Museum

I thought Abu Dhabi had greenery, especially on the drive from the airport to the corniche, which would otherwise be just natural desert, but Dubai puts lots of effort (and water) into maintaining a lush appearance throughout the city. The morning drive out of Sharjah, and at night going into, can be a bit much for a beginner, but I’ve driven in Miami, Phoenix, New Jersey, and DC, so I have a bit of practice at the magical lane dance or merging and reappearing constantly.

Once we are more downtown the cars will thin out as people find their way to the office or coffee shop or mosque. There seems to be just as much construction here as in Bahrain, but it seems neater and more organised. It would be nice if developers would finish investing in the buildings that went broke instead of using the half-hazard bricks as temporary shade for the new workers.

Jumeirah Mosque

Jumeirah Mosque

We find a mosque and I park our tiny car across the street from it in a shopping plaza among delivery trucks. While we wait for it to open in an hour, we go to the Dubai Museum (fort) which opened ten minutes ago, and pay our three dirham each to get inside. There are dhows in the courtyard surrounded by walls of a style I have yet to see. It’s like in cartoons: brick, slather mud, brick, but they did slanted rocks, slop some mud, and put more slanted rocks on the wall. It has a holy appearance, but has withstood the test of desert living.

I feel like we might’ve missed out on part of the fort as we followed the arrows inside directing our eyeballs towards instruments and guns (another surprising find in the Middle East). I see the AK-47s (or similar) on the guards in Bahrain and expect it now, but my impression of the Arab region makes seeing guns in Bedouin hands as foreign as it must have been for Crazy Horse to see his first rifle.

Caleb in front of the Rehlatna Open Museum

Caleb in front of the Rehlatna Open Museum

We spend the hour looking at birds, pottery, dhow construction, and the shift from pearling to oil to tourism in Dubai and the effects these changes had on population and wealth through the Great Depression and World Wars. A surprising fact: the first school for girls didn’t open until 1959. It’s comforting to know that we were repressed worldwide, but sad to think about how many women still don’t have equal rights as others globally, not even concerning the issues with men (though that might be all of them).

Anyways, in the gift shop you can browse for poetic literature; golden cups, plates, hookahs, and camels; and I Heart Dubai mugs and ashtrays (as people here love to smoke and drink dirt aka Turkish coffee – just my opinion). We look at another branch of the museum, dedicated to pottery, before making our way to the car. I put on my abaya and hijab and as we make our way around the building I feel we are closer to an Indian temple than a public entrance to this mosque.

viewpoint in Rehlatna Open Museum

viewpoint in Rehlatna Open Museum

Back to the car, and the map, and we notice we are at the wrong mosque. There are plenty to choose from (so Caleb chose one) and this one doesn’t stand out like the one in Abu Dhabi, so a mistake could easily be made. We arrive 15 minutes late (thank you relaxed Arab time system) to free parking for the National Day holiday weekend (thank you Sheikh Maktoum) and I see others only wearing a hijab (thank you modest clothes) as I try to cover my hair and cleavage as we step inside what we think is the holy sanctum.

The tour is cheap at ten dirham each, but the coffee with camel milk is not at 22 each. We need it anyway. The tour starts at 10:05 with our tour guide showing us the process of ablution – wash to elbows three times, feet three times, face three times, etc. to make sure they are clean enough to pray to Allah. The hundred people in the crowd watch the three men and one woman who volunteered to show us this process. Washing the desert off in a separate room ensures a cleaner carpet for all, so that prayers can continue without the interruption of a vacuüm.

Burj Al Arab

Burj Al Arab

We are led inside ten minutes later, while the immodest men and women are offered pants and abayas, before being let in the door. My first impression is “this isn’t as grand as the one in Abu Dhabi,” but that’s a terrible mindset as each mosque has something to offer and this one is still beautifully built for what the local budget could afford – as is the building guidelines for each mosque. There are comfy chairs for the elderly, so that they may still lower their bodies (just not kneel on the floor) and show that their heart is in the right place as they place themselves below Allah.

I was nervous that the speech would be the same one we got in Bahrain about the history of Islam, as Abu Dhabi’s mosque is all about the building, but the company Centre for Cultural Understanding is more about bridging the gap of misunderstanding between religions and backgrounds and what makes the news. Our guide is funny and informative. She talks about the traditional dress: the batoola is not a metal plate as it would burn the ladies faces, but a shiny protective visor against the sun’s harsh rays.

girl enjoying a bell pepper snack reminds me of Sammi our niece

girl enjoying a bell pepper snack reminds me of Sammi our niece

She tells us about the five pillars of Islam and people focus their questions on Hajj – who, when, where, why – they want to know. She answers that it’s a dangerous enough event, with deaths recorded in recent years, having over two million people now all doing the same thing – wearing two pieces of Ihram white cloths (with no hems to discern between people) and praying towards the Kaaba (an empty box). And to have a tourist there trying to take pictures would be hazardous and an uneducated move – just as the ladies question next to us was.

Wouldn’t it be more rewarding for Muslims to watch non-fasters chow down on food in front of them? (I’m paraphrasing).

The guide answered this with kindness and added that even if in America if you were to see someone fasting it would be kind to at least turn away from them, and not rub it in their face that they’re abstaining and that there’s a conflict of morals, as 16 hours can be a long time between meals when still having to perform daily tasks. She noted that a faster’s schedule shouldn’t change, and perhaps historically it didn’t, but luckily there are more non-muslim workers available now to cater restaurants to expats by hanging black curtains and/or offering take away.

driving on the west

driving on the west wing

Then she brought out her humorous side, “If all Muslims believed in the suicide reward, then there wouldn’t be 1.6 billion of them (23% of the world’s population) worshiping today.” I agree. She finished by telling us that this mosque might not look as fancy as others, but it’s not for looks, it’s for being closer to your creator and your fellow ‘brothers’ which includes all people. And fit in another, “Mohammed, peace be upon him” before releasing us into the sunshine at 11:20.

Time to drive around and pull over when we see a sign that says beach, but also one for World’s Longest Graffiti Scroll at 2.18km, and in the shape of the UAE. We spend thirty minutes taking pictures of contrasting images and colors, made by over one hundred artists, that display the history and future of the Emirates. There’s a platform set up that allows us to see the upper half of the cities skyscrapers looking inland, and part of the sand on a sliver of beach looking northwest.

complimentary lotion room

complimentary lotion room

I wonder where all the tan particles of rock and sediment are that reflect the sun light making the beach appear more white, and easier to walk on barefoot. It’s covered in a layer of black felt which may not be the best color choice for summer, but it helps the art to stand out and brings warmth on this chilly 27 degree (80 Fahrenheit) winter day in the desert. It also makes it feel more like the outdoor museum it is, Rehlatna Open Museum, and it’s fun to play with, like the world’s largest towel at the beach, as I take my shoes off to feel it with my toes.

Before heading to Atlantis, The Palm, we pass by the entrance for Burj Al Arab. I’d been to a seven-star hotel in Abu Dhabi and some warned that I might have to make a reservation for a tea service (these can be pricier than they sound) and I was ok with that. I thought this would be similar, but at the Welcome Centre aka security gate/turn away shack I was asked if I had a room, or plans to get one, for a measly $2,039 per night. As I turned around, I stopped before reaching the street to get out of the car and take a picture along with the crowd on the sidewalk doing the same.

view from Jumeirah Beach

view from Jumeirah Beach

This isn’t the first time that I’ve been denied something, but usually things come with options and always a cost (whether physically or ethically, etc.), and I wasn’t offered that. Though I wonder if I had money like that if I would want poor people paying $500 to have tea in the same hotel as me. They might offend me with their rental cars that aren’t handmade and clothes that cost less than a dinner that will include at least one of the following: wagyu beef, mattake mushrooms, almas caviar, white alba truffle; and a bottle of Chateau Petrus to wet the palate.

The drive to Atlantis, once off the mainland, is on a road surrounded by off-white buildings and shadowed balconies that all look the same. On the palm, we drive with the Palm Jumeirah Monorail above us and varying flora and architecture beside us until we get to the tunnel that will take us under the ocean and deliver us to the crescent on the other side. We planned to get out here, but near the asymmetrical building were lots of cars and pedestrians and we decided to pass them and go to the west wing where we would have more unobstructed viewing opportunities, even if it they come without an archway.

Caleb pampering me on the beach

Caleb pampering me on the beach

We get hungry at 1:00 pm and drive to Dubai Marina Mall for lunch. Walking past the grocery store and bakery – I wouldn’t mind having a pineapple with a croissant – I take a toilet break, and I wouldn’t bring it up, but there is a room full of complimentary hand lotion and plenty of mirrors – like a moisturizer trial room. And of course I did what any wise child would do – I took a sample from each to soften my hands, my un-burqa’d face, and any other skin those angled reflections would let me see.

We reach a corner, somewhat of a deadend, and have two restaurant choices – Little mOre Cafe with a neat bookshelf around the kitchen or Yo! Sushi with a conveyor belt delivering awesome! We chose the more technologically advanced food distributor and took two seats at the bar. I picked four bowls off the belt while Caleb bothered looking at the menu. He wanted a bowl of hot to go with his three bowls of sushi containing three pieces each. I wanted a kettle of hot green tea to go with my two bowls of sushi, bowl of salad (seaweed, edamame, carrots), and bowl of chocolate dorayaki with raspberry sauce.

one of the many reflective skyscrapers in the city

one of the many reflective skyscrapers in the city

The bowls are priced by color and there’s a large red button at each table – the press for emergency, or your waiter, button. We push down, and like a ninja, a man with a calculator appears to add up our appetite. A card transaction later, and we pass a book store with a collection of the 501 Series of cars, cocktails, and cities. We think about buying some until we pick one up. This is not something we want to be carrying around, and we are able to find them for a fifth of the price on Amazon.

This saves us the money needed to get me another manicure set at Mall of the Emirates that sounds expensive and large, and even has a Mall View Restaurant with a grocery store next door, located across the street. And though it’s only half the size of the Bahrain City Centre, it has an indoor ski slope. Luckily the NISA sets are cheaper here than in San Diego, and they were having a special, so we got three.

Dubai Marina

Dubai Marina

Around 4:00 pm, we went to Jumeirah Beach and found a parking spot in front of the park (that was closed), so we asked the guard how much further till it opened. He told us 3 km, but it didn’t feel that far before we were at the art installation again heading to the free beach between a couple tanning and another one watching their son play in the surf. We sat there for thirty minutes while Caleb did my nails and then we went to look for more coffee for half an hour while walking around the marina. In my search, Siri told me, “Sorry, Jessica, I can’t look for restaurants in the United Arab Emirates.”

We wanted to try fugu – the Japanese word for puffer fish (or collect Caleb’s life insurance after he ate) so we went to Oberoi Hotel, with free valet, only to find out that it’s not in season yet – two more weeks. We went across the lobby to the Indian restaurant and didn’t feel like paying $30 for curry so we headed to a café for kopi luwak (coffee berries that have been pooped out by an Asian palm civet), but it was closed, so we went to Chill Out, inside Times Square, for a 160 degree beverage in a 21 degree room. We were determined to find an experience that I could cross off my bucket list – even before it was added.

Santa frozen in Chill Out

Santa frozen in Chill Out

We are given a coat, socks and boots, gloves and a hat, and a bin to put all our stuff in. It’s the world’s largest walk-in freezer with a castle, a racecar, and benches inside covered in traditional pillows. The chairs have blankets that look like the hides of polar bears draped over them. There are sculptures, statues, and things frozen in ice. There are chocolate bars and boxes of juice for sale. I order tea with milk. Our favorite part is the room full of saws hanging from the ceiling with blocks of ice on the floor waiting to be carved.

It’s great fun in there and we left with someone’s forgotten monopod (after our waitress showed us how to take a selfie) when my fingers started to get numb after 15 minutes. We recycled our winter socks to be washed and reused and hung up our coats. We went through Adventure HQ, but Caleb didn’t feel like toting a standup paddle board home, and I didn’t feel like waiting in line at the chance to walk on tires and poles in the air because you have a time limit and three kids were taking their time in front of us.

our reactions to hot tea in a frozen environment at Chill Out

our reactions to hot tea in a frozen environment

When Caleb thought he had missed one opportunity, he got another. The man from the falcon exhibit (for the holiday) was sitting outside and Caleb got to take a selfie with and pet the bird. We still hadn’t eaten dinner and getting lost wasn’t helping. I had to use the toilet and we stopped in a shopping plaza where after asking inside a grocery store and barber shop for a proper place I took matters into an unused corner beside some stairs and behind a water bottle storage rack.

When I stood up, I noticed two kittens cuddling in another corner, witnesses to my weak but full bladder, and I laughed. I had tears coming down my cheeks when I saw Caleb’s face as he tilted his head in a questioning manner as to what just happened. I got in the car to drive away, but had to get myself together first and attempt to share the moment with Caleb as I stomped on the gas before anyone else got curious.

the cuddling kitten witnesses

the cuddling kitten witnesses

We found the Danish Nadeem Restaurant for Indian and Pakistani food after driving backroads towards the room/mall. Caleb read the reviews that warn, “you’ll have to argue with the waiter and get what he serves you,” and they are right. We tried ordering two kinds of bread and he wasn’t having it. He wouldn’t give us spicy food either, but we were pleased with the dal (split lentils) and spinach with potatoes. He brought out another piece of roti so we could finish our meal. It was delicious – and 9:30.

This would give us the energy needed to go across the street after dropping bags off in the room and buy me a Hello Kitty jacket and some new pajamas – for when we couch-surf in Doha. We were out till 10:40 when the mall started to turn its lights off. I was excited about sleep, but was still up an hour more before plugging my phone in to charge.

Posted in Animals, Art, Food, Forts, History, Holidays, Travel, Water | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

We’re Off to See the Emirates

airport art near Terminal 17

airport art near Terminal 17

I spent the morning cleaning and picked Caleb up from work at 11:45. We left the house after 2p so that we could get Caribou Coffee before leaving Bahrain – Caleb’s request. I’ve become more familiar with Bahrain since my last trip to the airport three months ago and have no trouble finding a parking spot in Lot D close to the one I used last time. I’m grateful to have learned something, if not more of the language, which I’m lacking.

a toilet for babies... or breastfeeding

a toilet for babies… or breastfeeding them

We tried checking in at 2:30, but it becomes available three hours before departure at 3:15,  or 24 hours in advance online. Caribou happens to be on the other side of security, so Caleb will have to settle for Seattle’s Best downstairs, along with Papa John’s (my first time in Bahrain), and Cinnabon for 10.8 dinars, not bad for airport food.

me and three other women in the airport

me and three other women in the airport

Rhea, woman who volunteered her daughter, messages me that she will drop Annie, her daughter, off at 5pm. That’s the last I will hear from them. We ordered the veggie pizza with spinach Alfredo sauce, garlic-parmesan bread sticks, raspberry syrup coffee and a cinnamon roll flavoured one that was mostly caramel, and two mini-chocolate buns. I got mine heated and they boiled the toppings in the microwave.

me and two other women on the bus to the plane

the two other women on the bus to the plane

We went back to check-in at 3:30, at booth 20, thanks to the guy at the other end of the airport. He gave us a sticker to approve our carry-on without checking the size or weight. We went through the passport section just as quickly and then security. Caleb had to throw away the last slice of pizza and we were on our way. We walked to Gate 31, as written on our ticket, but when I came back from the toilet the gate had changed. It would move again while I napped for an hour. Caleb would use my shut-eye time to buy a water and some Swiss chocolates to hide in his bag – as wife treats during the trip – until they melted.

a menu (no free water or snacks) and a folding tray - less leg room and more tummy space

a menu (no free water or snacks) and a folding tray – less leg room and more tummy space

We board the bus from Gate 33 at 6p and get driven to the covered steps of our plane. Seat 22 B and C would have us next to a lady that ate some nuts and played on her phone before passing out for the remainder of the flight – so much for the window seat. She asked if we had been on holiday in Bahrain. I told her that was home. We are on holiday now. At 6:30p, the safety video came on – once in Arabic and again in English. Caleb thinks a language option would help speed up the process, but I wonder if that would also change the characters on-screen.

FlyDubai's safety video

FlyDubai’s safety video

We get to Dubai at 8p, an hour ahead of Bahrain, and it takes two seconds to get through customs. I answered the questions for Caleb – no we don’t have a visa yet, yes this is ‘our’ first time using a passport and flying in. Caleb has been here before, but was delivered by boat with a military ID.

the fast lane through Dubai International Airport

the fast lane through Dubai International Airport

I’ve been to lots of airports, some more than others (Chicago, Phoenix), and hadn’t noticed how themed they were until landing in Miami, Las Vegas, and Dubai. I think it makes guests feel more welcomed and gives us an idea of what to expect in the city – lots of flags, lights, colors, and hospitality.

historical monument in a modern airport - in remembrance of travel via camel, not Boeing

historical monument in a modern airport – in remembrance of travel via camel, not Boeing

We get pointed in the right direction each time, but it takes us a while to find a cab (like the fancy ones my Grandma drives) that would take us to Terminal 3 from 1. I should’ve known the Lexus without the cheap looking cab sign on it would cost more. Our ten minute ride (how big is this airport?!) cost us 70 dirham with enough time to read the comics and horoscopes provided – Something new and exciting is a pleasant diversion.

only closed roads are emptier and friendlier than this in the Middle East

only closed roads are emptier and friendlier than this in the Middle East

I was going to argue with the guy and wanted to question him when he wondered why I would need change – because I carry exact cash for your cab buddy. He showed me the meter from his cell phone and said it was company policy to charge this much. I know. It’s my fault for getting into a vehicle with someone in a suit, instead of a uniform or jeans. We stop for coffee at Costa to give us the energy, and mind power, needed to keep going to get the rental car and find our hotel room. Two coffees will cost us 34 dirham.

a checklist - Sharjah's way of nailing everything down

a checklist – Sharjah’s way of nailing everything down

Only an hour and a half in the country and we’ve already spent $28 or 10.5 dinars. I’m thankful for the exchange rate and Mom is curious about how much it cost us to fly out here. It was $188.50 each, like going from Austin to Houston, only half the price for the flight and petrol to get there, and 2.5 times cheaper for daily parking fees. Just another reason I love living and traveling in the Middle East.

our hotel is on 11 Arabic Renaissance Street

our hotel is on 11 Arab Renaissance Street

It’s already 8:45 by the time we reach National Rental Car – across the street and down to the left, near entrance one. We got dropped off at 3. The guy made a copy of my passport, driver’s license, and credit card (that he held 1000 dirham on), and gave me the key to a white Ford Figo. He gave me a gate key and led us out of the parking lot, so I could return the key. I like the size of the car and the easy manoeuvring, i.e.. short wheelbase. 

because even Aaliyah and Sumaiya deserve to have flat padded rears under their abayas

because even Aaliyah and Sumaiya deserve to have flat padded rears under their abayas

Caleb has found directions to the hotel, but we are slow-moving in merging traffic, especially when we need to go straight and see arrows to turn on the street. There are still plenty of signs in English to appease my American mind and we find the Royal Grand in Sharjah (another emirate) after only missing one right turn. We can’t park in the hotel garage until we have a room key. I find a spot in front of the tailor shop and we use that to check-in.

it grows and shrinks when you do, or maybe it's a Sleep Number Bra

it grows and shrinks when you do, or maybe it’s a Sleep Number Bra

The guy doing our paperwork at 10p asks where I’m from in America. Before he saw my passport he thought I was Russian. I thank him in Arabic which impresses him. More copies of my records are made and I’m handed the key to room 509. We’re escorted to the parking lot where I see numbered spots and try to find one with our room number. I stop at car spot 705 and the attendant has followed us to show us our room and indicate what the letters mean in the elevator – R for restaurant and Gym for pool and massage also.

a shopping selfie, though next time I'll try on the undergarments

a shopping selfie, though next time I’ll try on the undergarments

We put our bags down at 10:30p and a woman knocks on the door to check the contents of the mini-bar, sans alcohol. We go downstairs to visit the market/mall across the street. The market has groceries on the bottom floor and clothes on the top floor. The mall on the corner has two floors up and two down. The shops started closing and the lights turning off at 11:30, regardless of where customers were, otherwise we would’ve explored longer.

stretchy decorative fabric for Dubai's 43rd National Day

stretchy decorative fabric for Dubai’s 43rd National Day

We spent most of our time in the Hello Kitty section. I wanted to buy the pajamas, the one-piece swimsuit, and the jacket in the 10-14 year old section. There is also lots of shiny things, jewelry, and sunglasses to try on. The pool is closed on our way up. I’m hoping for an awesome panorama later. Back at the room and we’re both exhausted, but awake enough to take a peek at the Sharjah booklet, and seeing what this emirate has to offer, before turning out the lights. 

Posted in Art, Food, Travel | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments