Saturday, 17 November 2018

Oman (4): Ibra, Birkat Al-Mawz and the Jebel Akhdar

A Sandy Desert, an Old Town Rebuilt, Date Palms and High 'Green' Hills

Leaving the Wahiba Sands


Oman
We awoke to a warm desert morning, the dunes hiding coyly in a light mist.

Finding ful beans on the breakfast buffet was a pleasant surprise. We first encountered ful, dried broad beans soaked and boiled until they start to disintegrate, in Sudan where they are eaten by all (and if you are very poor they are all you eat). In Egypt they are everyone’s breakfast. I like them best mixed with a chopped boiled egg, some fragments of feta-style cheese and chilli powder.

Morning at the 1000 Night's Camp, Wahiba Sands

We arrived in Oman with modest expectations, but had eaten well, enjoying the ubiquitous dates and their distinctive halva. We were also discovering that Omanis borrow judiciously from their neighbours; biryani, chicken curries and gulab jamun from India; ful and last night’s Umm Ali from Egypt.

We left the camp heading back towards Bidiyah, as did many others. On the way in we had climbed a dune via a zig-zag of packed sand, but leaving we made a direct descent. Y parked at the top so we could enjoy the view….

Descent in the Wahiba Sands

…and insisted in taking a photograph of us. The backdrop is a sandy waste but it is not empty, three other moving vehicles can be spotted and there is an encampment, top right. Wild camping is popular, Y told us, but some campers pack their rubbish into black plastic bags and leave them in the desert. He found it incredible that anyone who appreciated this landscape would do such a thing - and so did we - but they do, as we saw later.

In the Wahiba Sands

In days gone by, Bedouin nomads led their camels and goats across these sands as they did across the Empty Quarter. Modern borders dividing Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman and the UAE cramped their style and then they discovered the settled life was much easier. Today many live round the desert fringes, still keeping their camels….

A camel waits patiently in the Wahiba Sands

….and their goats, but driving out to provide such feed as these resourceful animals cannot forage for themselves in this barren land.

Goats on the outskirts of Bidiyah

Back in Badiyah Y had the tyres re-inflated for our return to tarmac. We would first drive to Ibra near the sands’ north-west corner and then continue in roughly the same direction, along the yellow line below.

Today's journey roughly follows the yellow line from the Wahiba Sands to Ibra and continuing to Birkat Al-Mouz and the Jebel Akhdar

Ibra

Ibra is 40km along the main highway from Badiyah. It is an old town, pre-dating Islam, but on aerial photographs it looks like any other Omani town, low-density buildings strung out along a series of branching roads with no apparent pattern. On the ground it made a bit more sense and could be split into three.

New Ibra, is very modern and largely under construction along the highway; it detained us little.

The Souk

Off the main road we visited the souk area, not quite so new, but hardly ancient. There was little activity, though we would have expected Saturday, the second day of the Omani weekend, to be busy. The pavements were arcaded to protect shoppers against the sun. In summer the average daily high exceeds 40º, in mid-November, a time the locals call ‘winter’, the temperature was barely 30.

Souk area, Ibra

The fish market was behind the main market. Perhaps most activity here was earlier in the morning.

Ibra Fish Market

Shark is popular in Oman, and although we have seen and eaten shark in various places (shark steaks occasionally feature on English menus) I had never before seen hammerhead sharks. Perhaps these relative tiddlers would have been better left in the sea.

Hammerhead shark and other fish, Ibra fish market

Outside the fish market an elderly man had laid his meagre wares on the ground. Y decided to purchase a small knife; maybe he needed one or perhaps it was a small act of charity.

Y buys a knife, Ibra

Old Ibra

Ibra’s old town is not far away, and it is falling down. The old Souk is empty…


The Souk, Ibra old Town

…the streets are deserted…

The deserted streets of Ibra old town

….and the buildings crumbling.

Crumbling buildings, Ibra old town

The government has built nice new homes for all Ibra’s residents, spacious, air-conditioned and with drinkable running water, so no one wants the old buildings anymore - though there are signs that many of them had some modern facilities.

Crumbling buidlings with satellite dish

These buildings have only been abandoned in the last five to ten years, but without constant maintenance mud-brick houses fall apart quickly – and this is happening in towns all over Oman. Public buildings are maintained, like this mosque….

Well maintained mosque, Ibra old town

…and gardens are looked after…

Garden, Ibra old town

…but the only living soul we saw was a young man transporting a lawns-worth of grass on his pushbike.

A load of grass, Ibra old town

The locals are missing a trick. Later, in other places, we would see mud-brick houses restored for use as tourist attractions and boutique hotels. They may no longer be good enough for locals, but foreigners lap them up.

Picturesque enough for tourists? I think so. Ibra old town

Birkat Al-Mawz

Camel for Lunch

We left Ibra, heading for Birkat Al-Mawz (spellings vary) 120km north-west along a good road through country that was largely flat and always arid.

On the road from Ibra to Birkat Al-Mawz

On the way we talked about food and the subject of camel meat came up. We told Y we had never eaten camel. ‘Do you want to?’ he asked. ‘We’re always happy to try something new.’ ‘There’s a Yemeni restaurant, near here,’ he said ‘it usually has camel.’

A little later we parked in front of a restaurant, one of a line of businesses apparently sitting alone in the desert, though they were much closer to Birkat Al-Mawz than we realised.

Restaurant near Birkat Al-Mawz

This day’s fare was laid out cafeteria-style. There were two camel options, a stew and cubes of spicy camel meat. We tasted one of the cubes expecting it to be tough and strong, maybe even gamey but it was tender, gently spiced and delicately flavoured.

We lunched on spicy camel, a couple of slabs of chicken, biryani rice and salad with a mildly-spiced tomato-based sauce to help the rice down. And would we eat camel again? Definitely, though it was the texture and spicing that made it so moreish, a distinctive ‘camel flavour’ was harder to detect.

Spicy camel, near Birkat Al-Mawz

The Date Palms of Birkat Al-Mawz

A short distance down the road Y suddenly swung into what appeared to be the yard of a roadside business and then up a steep stony hill with a telephone mast on top.

Uo to the viewpoint, Birkat Al-Mawz

There had been no signs, but several cars were parked by the mast, and the reason was obvious. The valley below was filled with date palms, by far the largest, expanse of green we had seen in Oman. The modern town was out of sight to our left but, as at Ibra, the two mud-brick settlements on the far side of the valley are deserted and crumbling.

The date palms of Birkat Al-Mawz

Another car arrived, a four-wheel drive containing two European tourists with no local driver. Y looked at them open mouthed. ‘How did you get here?’ he asked as they got out of the car. ‘We have an ap,’ was the swift (and slightly smug) response. ‘Well done, you,’ I thought; Y looked impressed too, but maybe he was also seeing a threat to his livelihood.

Y drove us down into the valley and through the palms. They are all irrigated from one stream, and the owner of each plot has a designated time each week when the water is directed to his trees. In November the date season is drawing to its close, but well over 30 different varieties are grown in Oman, all fruiting at different times in the season, so fresh dates are available for six months of the year. Each tree produces 60-70 Kg a year, so the produce of this one valley is mountainous.

Down among the dates, Birkat Al-Mawz

Falaj Al-Katmeen

The irrigation system is known as a falaj (literally: 'split into parts') and this falaj, the Falaj Al-Katmeen, is one of five Omani aflaj (plural of ‘falaj’) which together make up a UNESCO World Heritage Site. We drove into Birkat to look at the origin of the water which gushes along a channel in the village centre.

The Falaj water gushes through central Birkat

It is not just the sharing of the water that makes the system special. From a water source far inside the mountain a gently sloping underground channel was dug almost sideways until it emerged into the light. To build a 2.5km channel under a mountain, vertical shafts had to excavated every 20-30m along the course.

Yep, it's a World Heritage Site

This system of transporting water by gravity - generally known as ‘qanat’ - is very ancient and tunnels can exceed 50km in length. The system was developed some 2,700 years ago and gradually spread across the world’s arid regions.

In 2008 we visited such a system in Turpan in the Taklamakan desert, western China. They called it ‘karez,’a Uigher word, rather than Chinese but they claimed it as a Chinese invention; the Chinese invented much, but not everything. It was generally accepted as a Persian idea, but evidence now suggests some qanats in the south-east of the Arabian Peninsula are just as ancient. Possibly (or probably?) qanats were developed independently in two centres; the idea travelling east along the Silk Road from Persia to Pakistan, Afghanistan and China, and west with the Arab invasion of North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula. The Spanish subsequently introduced the technology into South America.

The emerging water is clean enough to drink and close to the exit washing and paddling are strictly forbidden (the English version of the notice actually forbids swimming, which would be an interesting challenge). Omani tap water is safe to drink, but desalinated seawater never quite tastes right. Bottled water is widely available, but people come here to fill their bottles for free. ‘It tastes sweet,’ Y said, slurping it up. We checked, it does (and we came to no harm).

Lynne conducts an organoleptic examination of the falaj water

Jebel Akhdar

The Al-Hajar mountains form a high rocky crescent following the shape of the coast but 50-100km inland. Our journey from Muscat via Sur had brought us round their southern tip and we had spent today on the elevated inland plain behind the mountains.

Birkat Al-Mawz is the gateway to the central Jebel Akhdar section of the Jebel Al-Hajar and it was time to head for the hills.

A police check point sits at the bottom of the mountain road. The police are less of a presence in Oman than in some middle eastern countries and, according to Y, are reliable and honest. Keeping to that approach, the check was for safety, not security. They were only permitting four-wheel drive vehicles up the road and offering advice on mountain driving.

They were being over-cautious. The Jebel Akhdar road is new, wide, well-maintained and relatively gently graded.

The road up to Jebel Akhdar

The mountains do not have towering peaks but form a high rocky plateau riven with deep valleys. Our hotel on the edge of the village of Saiq, stood high on the plateau overlooking one such valley and we had time to contemplate the view and visually plot the three villages walk we had neither the time nor the energy to complete.

Our hotel in the Jebel Akhdar

Jebel Akhdar means ‘Green Mountain.’ It may not look very green to a British eye, but at this height there is sufficient rainfall to support shrubs and trees and for the locals to grow crops on the terraces visibly in the picturesm though many are no longer worked as people seek an easier life in the lowlands.

Villages in the Jebel Akhdar

Darkness fell, and with it the temperature. We sought out the warmer clothes we had put away at Manchester airport, unsure of exactly how high we were, but suspecting it was above 2,000m, (6,500ft).

Looking into the valley from our hotel in the Jebel Akhdar

During a shivery sundowner on our balcony we recalled how cold we had been at this height last November at San Cristóbal de las Casas in southern Mexico. On descending for dinner (we were on half board as there was nowhere else to eat) we found the restaurant was heated – that never happened in San Cristóbal! After a large camel-y lunch we did not do the buffet justice but we enjoyed the first lamb we had encountered on this trip.

Village in the Jebel Akhdar

Later we wrapped up and went out to look at the stars, but knew it was a fool’s errand even before we saw the clarity of the moon shadows following us round. The moon was not yet full, but it was far too bright for stargazing.

18-Nov-2018

Only in the morning did we spot the hotel’s viewing platform on the edge of the valley. The photos above were all taken in the early morning from that platform.

Viewing platform at our hotel in the Jebel Akhdar

We had breakfast - I was delighted to find ful again, Lynne seemed more excited by the Rice Krispies – and then headed back down the mountain to the welcome warmth of the plain.

Friday, 16 November 2018

Oman (3): Wadi Bani Khalid and the Wahiba Sands

Swimming in a Wadi and Glamping in the Sands

Leaving Ras al Hadd

Oman

The breakfast buffet provided further support for Y’s statement that Europeans sit out in the heat while Omanis sit inside in the air-conditioning. It also allowed us to look along the start of the turtle beach which swings right at the horizon and continues for another hundred desolate kilometres.

From Ras Al Hadd the turtle beach strecthes into the distance

At check-out I was presented with the 4 rial (£8) bill for last night’s beers, for which I had paid cash. I pointed out the error and asked for my 5 rial room deposit, which, I was told, had been given to Y.

Outside Y agreed that his 10 rial deposit (two rooms, his and ours) had been returned, but I remembered paying a deposit, too. I counted my money – the only cash I had spent thus far was on lunch and beer yesterday and I was definitely 5 rials short. Back in reception they agreed the bar bill had been settled but were adamant that I had paid no deposit. Y arrived and he too was sceptical - ‘paying deposits is my job’. I stood my ground, I had a clear memory of taking the money from my wallet. The receptionist suggested we look at the CCTV – whose existence I had not even noticed. "That'll prove me right," I thought. Standing in the backroom with Y and the receptionist, I watched as we arrived. In crystal clear pictures I saw myself hand over our passports and take them back once they had been photocopied. Y took the deposit money from his wallet and then I was given a key and left. I had handed over no money. I still distinctly remembered doing so, but had to accept what I saw. Fortunately, I had remained calm and polite, so I could back down without total humiliation, but I left with the worrying thought that I had a clearly recollection of something that had not happened – was I losing it? A milder concern was that my cash supply was 5 rials short.

Through Sur and into the Interior

We drove back over the stony desert and crossed the neck of the lagoon into Sur.

The new bridge into Sur meant we did not have to drive all the way round the lagoon

This time we encountered something resembling a town centre...

Sur

...Before heading into the interior towards our destination for the day, the Wahiba Sands.

From Ras Al Hadd, through Sur then down to the Wahiba Sands

Our journey started on Highway 23, yet another sparsely travelled six-lane dual-carriage way. Less stony and desolate here, the softer landscape allowed scrubby vegetation to eke out a precarious existence.

Highway 23 from Sur

Highway 23 will eventually be like this all the way to Ibra, but for moment the section nearest to Sur is complete and the next under construction. We were soon on a two-lane road and even passed through the occasional village.

Village on Highway 23

Then we turned off and headed into the hills towards Wadi Bani Khalid.

The road to Wadi Bani Khalid

Wadi Bani Khalid

You know you are nearing the wadi when you find the road lined with parked cars, particularly on a Friday, the first day of the weekend

Y parked and we walked along the concrete edge of the canalised stream, though the concrete was not continuous and a little jumping, and occasional paddling was required.

Reaching the main swimming area, we walked to the far end where there was a bridge and café. Few were swimming (none in my photo, though there were some later) perhaps because modesty is the rule here. An official from the Ministry of Tourism sits in his little gazebo (right, far end of pool in picture) waiting to take offence at the slightest glimpse of female flesh - the perfect job for a pervert.

The main swimming area, Wadi Bani Khalid

The wadi enters the pool through a deep-water channel where swimming is not permitted.

Deep-water channel above the main swimming area, Wadi Bani Khalid

Following the channel upstream involves a clamber over the rocks (hard work in the hot sun), but eventually leads to an alternative pool where European style swimming costumes are acceptable.

Standing above the alternative swimming pool, Wadi Bani Khalid

Here too swimmers were thin on the ground - or in the water. Several local lads were jumping in from the rocks but there was also one young man who was fully dressed and with no intention of swimming. Perhaps he had come to watch European women in skimpy bathing suits, but if so he was only an amateur pervert, not a professional like the chap in the gazebo downstream. He was not having much luck and declined to watch me floating in the pool, but more people were arriving by the minute.

As I float in the Wadi Bani Khalid the ogler turns away in digust

Another deep-water channel came in from the right and I swam some fifteen metres along it before rounding a bend and meeting a rock wall. To its right the stream entered the channel in a tinkling rapid, even its greatest fan could not call a waterfall. By the time I returned to the main pool it was crowded and there was plenty for the ogler to ogle.

I had been dried by the sun long before we re-joined Y at the café. He suggested we eat there but they offered only a buffet so we asked about alternatives. Y looked please and said,‘I know a much better place.’

It was after one when we left the wadi and started our descent back to Highway 23. On the way up we had not noticed the greenery marking the line of the wadi, even where there was no surface water.

Spotting the line of the wadi on the descent to Highway 23

Bidiyah

Y had failed to mention that his chosen restaurant was over an hour away and we were hungry by the time we reached the village of Bidiyah (spellings vary). There is little to see on the main road, but we could hardly miss the restaurant bedecked in National Day bunting.

The restauarnt in Bidiyah

Again two portions between three was more than adequate, and again biryani rice was the main staple. In place of yesterday’s tuna we had chicken, pleasingly immersed in an Omani curry sauce. Southern Pakistan and the Indian state of Gujarat are just across the Gulf of Oman/Arabian Sea and the trade winds have been enabling commerce since the invention of the sail, so Oman inevitably picked up a curry habit. Omani curries are less complex than the best of India, and a little lighter on the chilli, though a bottle of chilli sauce sits on every table for the desperate. Omani lunch usually also includes a salad – mild red onions, tomatoes, cucumber and a wedge of lemon – similar to salads we would later encountered in Gujarat, though nowhere else in India. Chapatis and the inevitable dish of dates completed our repast.

While paying the modest bill, I discovered the missing 5 rial note that had concerned me in the morning, stuck between our passports in my ‘inner wallet’. Further proof I had a memory of an event that never happened

Omani chicken curry in Bidiyah

Well fed Y drove us off the main road and into the village which is more nucleated than most Arab settlements. Bidiyah is on the edge of the Wahiba Sands and before venturing off-road we stopped to have the tyre pressures lowered.

Getting the right tyre pressure for driving on sand, Bidiyah

Into the Wahiba Sands

South of central Bidiyah the tarmac comes to a stop. The village continues for a while…

The last gasp of Bidiyah village

…and then we were out in the sands.

Into the Wahiba sands

The Wahiba (or Sharqiyah) Sands, 50km wide and 150km long, are a system of parallel dunes running NE-SW. We were heading for the 1000 Night's camp, one of Wahiba's ten or so permanent camps and the deepest into the desert.

We made good speed, the sand shushing away from the tyres generally gave a comfortable ride, but occasionally the mass of tracks going one way creates a series of narrow, lateral indentations (as in the photo above) which shake the car about. We endured the same phenomenon in the very different surroundings of the Mongolian steppe in 2007.

We encountered an impromptu dune bashing contest. Two cars were involved, accelerating in turn towards the base of the dune and competing to get as high as possible before forward motion ceased and their spinning wheels did nothing but throw sand into the air. We watched four attempts and all petered out roughly where the gulley on the left joins the ‘piste’. On one attempt the car slewed round as it stopped and came closer to tumbling down the gulley than was comfortable.

Dune bashing in the Wahiba Sands

At Bidiyah a sign to the camp had pointed into the desert and we followed the designated groove between two dunes for several miles until the tracks swung left and zigzagged up the side of the dune. No road existed as such, but the sand here was hard-packed and half way up there was another sign.

There is no road, but there is a road sign
On the way to the 1000 Night's camp, Wahiba Sands

Once over the top we continued along the next groove. I began to wonder if it was just a matter of following the tracks; Y had done this journey many times before but could anybody do it? I would not, I decided, like to try. Tracks lead in all sorts of directions, wild camping is popular and you could find yourself following tracks to a camp site deserted days before. Unless accompanied by someone with Y’s expertise, I would not attempt this without GPS.

1000 Night's Camp, Wahiba Sands

The camp had a stone-built reception area, dining room and pool, and a collection of huts tricked out to almost resemble a tented encampment. We were shown into a ‘tent’ that was as hot as an oven. The windows and shutters were thrown open and with a through breeze the temperature soon started to drop. At night, we were told, it would be cool and comfortable without air-conditioning - and so it was.

Not quite a tent, 1000 Nights Camp, Wahiba Sands

We went to inspect the camp’s oryx. The Arabian Oryx once roamed all over the Arabian Peninsula but overhunting led to it being declared extinct in the wild in 1972. There are now some 7,000 breeding in captivity and releases have allowed the wild population to top 1,000 - with every prospect of increasing further. It is, so far, the only species to have its threat level downgraded from ‘extinct in the wild’ to ‘vulnerable’.

Arabian Oryx, 1000 Nights Camp, Wahiba Desert

It was suggested we might like to climb the dune and watch the sun set into the desert. After wading through deep sand in pursuit of turtles last night and clambering over the rocks at Wadi Bani Khalid this morning, our legs wanted a rest so we gave it a miss this time.

Dinner was the hotel buffet – there really was nowhere else to go and anyway it was already paid for.  Lynne had fish, vegetables and a pappad, I went for a vegetarian curry with biryani rice, pickles and a chapati. It was pleasant enough but the desserts were spectacular and I tried all three (glutton!). Gulab Jamun (always my favourite Indian dessert), Umm Ali (an Egyptian version of bread and butter pudding, but so much better) and Omani Halva (an extraordinarily sweet, red, gelatinous grain rather than nut based halva.)

With a clear sky and minimal light pollution we had been looking forward to viewing the stars, and wandered out to find a spot well-hidden from what little artificial light there was. Sadly, we had forgotten to check the phases of the moon when booking this trip and the waxing moon was far too bright for star-gazing.

Thursday, 15 November 2018

Oman (2): Sur and Turtles

A City that Built Dhows and Traded Slaves and a Beach where Turtles were Laying their Eggs

Muscat to the Bimmah Sinkhole

Oman

After leaving the Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque (previous post) we set off towards Sur. The road climbed into the barren hills bounding Muscat’s landward side opening up views across the unusual city; discrete blocks separated by roads, undeveloped areas and low ridges of bare rock.

Looking over Muscat

Sur is 200km southeast of Muscat.

Today's journey, Muscate to Sur and then to the turtle beaches of Ras Al Hadd;

After a short detour to stock up on water we joined Highway 17 which first ventures a little inland before returning to the coast for the second half of the journey. The light traffic moved freely on a well-made dual carriageway, speeding us through through an uncompromisingly arid landscape.

Highway 17 southeast from Muscat

Bimmah Sinkhole

The highway re-joins the coast at the small town of Dibab. Between Dibab and Bimmah is the Hawaiyat Najm (lit: Falling Star) Park, its centrepiece a huge water filled depression once believed by local people to be a meteorite crater. Its alternative name, ‘Bimmah Sinkhole’, is geologically accurate, if geographically odd as it is much nearer Dibab.

Bimmah Sinkhole - the sea is visible at the top of the photograph

A sign by the steps announces that the Muscat Governorate takes no responsibility for whatever befalls anyone swimming in the sinkhole. Perhaps that means the water is polluted or currents might suck you into inescapable underground streams, maybe dangerous creatures lurk in the depths – or is it just that the water is 20m deep and there are no lifeguards or lifebelts? Who knows, but there were plenty of swimmers, mostly from an Italian coach party, so why not me? I picked my way gingerly through the stony shallows…

Sharp stoney shallows

…and then struck out through the warm, salty water towards the other side. I did not get there; I have a (probably irrational) fear of rock faces that plunge beneath the water where I can no longer see them, so I floated about in the middle where I felt safe. ‘The Sinkhole is linked to the sea,’ Y said, explaining the saltiness, but that would also result from evaporation being the only outlet. Unconvinced the water circulated enough to be healthy, I did not stay long (though I came to no harm).

I am going to stop well before I reach that rock face, Bimmah Sinkhole

Wadi Shab

Further south we again left the dual carriageway to visit Wadi Shab. An hour’s walk upstream leads to a good swimming area (I have read), but visiting the Grand Mosque first left us time only for a look at the Wadi and the boats for hire and listen to the grumbles of the boatman about how bad business was.

Wadi Shab

Sur

Lunch in Sur

Sur is a city of 120,000 but like Muscat - though not quite as extreme - it straggles thinly along the coast and it is difficult to see where all the people are.

Sur

Y took us to a restaurant by the beach – not that Omanis are remotely interested in beaches except as places to park fishing boats. A table was available, but everyone else sat on the floor, so we did too, though I do not fold up well.

Remembering the size of last night’s biryani we quickly agreed when Y suggested ordering two meals between three. It was more than enough; the tuna was excellent, the biryani rice – which appears in many Omani meals – was mountainous and replete with flaked almonds and tiny sultanas, and the lightly spiced sauce was delicious. Omanis traditionally eat with their fingers and although that is still the way for many older people, spoon and fork is gaining popularity.

Lunch in Sur, Tuna, rice, Omani curry sauce, salad

We were not the only westerners there, but when I popped in to wash my hands I, discovered that all the inside diners, sitting on the floor and leaning on cushions, were locals. ‘Of course,’ Y said, ‘only Europeans would sit out in the heat. Omanis prefer the air conditioning.’ There were exceptions to this rule (two sat behind us) but the validity of Y’s observation would be demonstrated time and again over the coming days.

Lunch for three cost 3 Rials (£6), less than the cost of one Biryani in last night’s hotel. Small local restaurants offer cheap, wholesome and tasty food throughout Oman. Water is the usual drink – excellent fresh fruit juice is available but more pricey. Alcohol can be found (at a hefty price) only in foreigner orientated hotels – and not all of them.

Sur, Slavery and Dhows

Sur became rich from slavery. From the start of the 18th to the late 19th century Oman either ruled over or had great influence in Zanzibar (in the 1840s and 50s the Sultan even moved his capital from Muscat to Zanzibar). Slaves acquired on the African mainland were shipped through Zanzibar to Sur and from there to the rest of Arabia, the wider middle east and beyond. The British pressured Oman to put an end to the slave trade, but it did not stop until Zanzibar became a British Protectorate in 1890. This was bad for Sur, but good for the human race. Slavery was not abolished within Oman until the present Sultan took the throne in 1970.

Sur’s less reprehensible way of making a living was shipbuilding but only one yard still produces wooden dhows.

Dhow under construction in Sur

They currently have two on the stocks. By modern standards, wooden dhows are too slow and too heavy for transporting cargo but this pair will become floating restaurants in Qatar, where their weight and speed will not matter.

Dhow under construction in Sur

The basic dhow design remains functional, but most working dhows today are fibre glass like the boat anchored off-shore in the Sur lagoon.

Fibre glass dhow in Sur Lagoon

The boatyard has diversified into making models – this one is for the reception area of a new hotel – but the boatyard's days are probably numbered.

Model Dhow, Sur

To Ras al Hadd

Crossing the bridge over the mouth of Sur’s lagoon took us into the barren stony desert that is Oman’s western extremity.

The road to Ras Al Hadd

Ras Al Hadd is a small, hook shaped peninsula 40km from Sur, and our hotel was on its tip. The designer may have envisaged a comfortable beach resort, but despite efforts to create a garden and put out sunbeds, it looked like a building site – and so did the rest of the vast plain stretching 40km or more to our south and west. Some deserts are sandy, some even have waves of majestic dunes - and Oman has its share of sandy deserts - but this was a stony desert and it looked like a neglected building site, as all stony deserts do.

On the plus side, we had a comfortable wooden cabin…

Our Cabin at Ras Al Hadd

…with a veranda that looked perfect for drinking a sundowner, so we broke out the duty free and did exactly that. No doubt an Omani would have stayed in the air-conditioned interior.

Sundowner at Ras Al Hadd

While we sipped, the sun set and, as the whole country was now west of us, it set over the Omani desert.

Sunset as Ras Al Hadd

Our two-portions-between-three lunch had been substantial and as we had to go out early we made our way to the bar, acquired a couple of cans of beer (at £4 each!) and perused the snack menu. Our order was met by bafflement – bar snacks were off, we could have the buffet dinner or nothing. We chose nothing.

Ras Al Jinz Turtle Sanctuary

The Ras Al Jinz Hotel, gateway to the turtle sanctuary, was 15 minutes’ drive away. After their own guests, the 'turtle safari' was first come first served, but arriving before 8 for the scheduled 8.30 start we found the lobby crowded and were disappointed to be placed in group seven.

It was well after 9 before our group was called. We had a brief talk about not using flash or standing in front of turtles before setting off along the rough path to the beach by the light of a pocket torch. One adult fell over on the 20 minute walk and several small children started whingeing.

Reaching the edge of the sand we could see the shadowy figures of the earlier groups but could not make out what they were doing. Our guide went to consult with his colleagues.

He returned and told us that in the summer dozens of turtles came every night, but in winter (at 10pm the temperature was hovering in the mid 20s so ‘winter’ has a different meaning here) nothing was guaranteed. I was beginning to think we had been wasting our time, until he said ‘there is a turtle over there; follow me and keep together.’

Walking through the deep, steeply sloping, soft sand was difficult. but we followed diligently until coming to a halt 5m behind another group who were apparently staring at the sand. We waited with as much patience as we could muster.

Eventually it was our turn and we moved forward to form a semi-circle behind the turtle. She was lying in the hole she had scraped out and we watched as she laid the last of her eggs. I felt we were intruding on a deeply personal experience, but I doubt the turtle saw it that way. She was bigger than I had expected; green turtles are typically 1.5m long and weigh around 100Kg, though the biggest recorded was a massive 395Kg.

We moved on to let another group look and watched a different turtle returning to the sea after laying. Their bulky bodies are poorly adapted for moving on land and it was a slow, difficult process requiring frequent rests.

Turtle track on Ras Al Jinz beach

A new hatchling popped out of the sand almost at our feet. Heading for the nearest light it set off inland. ‘We are not allowed to touch the turtles,’ our guide said gently turning the hatchling round ‘but under the circumstance…’ Amid the torches and the confusion I doubt (s)he made it, but only one hatchling in a thousand reaches adulthood.

New hatchling, Ras Al Jinz Beach

We returned to the turtle that had now finished laying and was burying her eggs, using her back and front flippers to throw sand over them. It looked another arduous task and she stopped frequently to regather her strength.

Green turtle, Ras Al Jinz beach

Perhaps the photographs above are not the world’s best, they were taken using a handheld camera in pitch darkness lit only by a pocket torch. Well done the Cannon Powershot G7X.

We left the turtles in peace and headed back up the path. It had been a long evening with much hanging around, particularly at the start, but it had all been worth it. Still feeling the glow when we returned to our hotel, I even forgot I had missed my dinner – not many experiences can do that!