Friday, November 2, 2012

Hatta Tour

12 Hour Extreme Hatta Safari - One of Van's weekends in the Middle East

10:00a - It was an adventure just getting started this morning to meet up with Butterfly Tours for this 12-hour Extreme Safari tour in the UAE. We left enough time to get to our meet up spot from our hotel in Sharjah, but our driver misunderstood where we actually needed to be. We were dropped off at a place that was 20 minutes or so from the correct location. Taxi drivers in this country, do not know addresses, they know landmarks. That being said, you might be hard-pressed to find an address as it is, so maybe it is good that the drivers go by landmarks. Anyway, we met up with the tour driver and are now en route to meet up with the rest of the tour in Hatta (I assume), 61km away at the time of this writing.

There is a lot of desert out here. Once you get south of the cities on the Persian Gulf - Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, etc - there is not much development. None really, but lots and lots of sand. The roads are perfectly smooth with no potholes or unusual roughness. Occasionally, we see other people with recreational vehicles or recreational toys, dirt bikes, dune buggies, etc. This is the perfect area for that kind of play. It is doubtful there is much "private" property out here.

11:00a - First oasis stop - rest rooms, a little shop, some recreation (4x4 motor bikes and camel rides). There were also some falcons that were fun to photograph. I imagine these little oases are nice to have on long drives across the desert.

11:30a - On we go to the next stop. The driver has gathered our passports for the next stop. We are told that they will check our passports 5 times before this trip is over at various different borders.

11:38a - we have now crossed the first border into Oman. No pictures allowed at the border, unfortunately. The driver tells us that the road crosses the border a couple of different times on this trip. Checkpoints are at each one.

Omani mountains

11:48p - gas stop (Shell)

12:00p - past 2nd Omani checkpoint. Here are some hills south of that checkpoint.
12:37p - end of the paved road and a stop
1:00p - No more pavement from here. Woohoo! What they don't tell you is that the reason it's not paved from here on is that it is under construction. Oh well, it is still fun to drive on.
1:15p - Back on the paved road. :-( That didn't take long.
1:30p - Coming into Hatta

Hatta Dam - the dam has been here for 30 years, but for the past 4-5 years it has not rained enough to fill the reservoir.
2:00p - stopped for lunch at a service station. I like the way they spelled teriyaki.
3:00p - Back on the road
3:30p - after two more checkpoints, we are back in the UAE. Passports are back in our possession and in our pockets, so my assumption is that we will not be back in Oman anymore today.

3:40p - reached a big sandy hill ear Lahbab in the UAE. We are stopped right now to deflate the tires a little for sandy driving.

These pics don't do the "dune bashing" experience much justice, but ... Pay attention to the horizon, it will provide evidence to how tilted the truck was on these dunes.
4:30p - Arrived at Tazeem Al Sahara - a tourist destination where we will be served dinner, belly dancing and more importantly, a drink. We have been dry since we arrived in Sharjah.
Waiting for the crowds to arrive.
Finally found a place to get a beer $7 for a beer imported from Mexico. I look a little dazed because I don't know where to look when my picture is being taken with my iPad.
7:00p - dancing started
 

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Sailing

Yesterday, Van, Vernon, Joyce, my mom and I went sailing on the Chesapeake Bay. I had bought a Google Offer for a 2 hour sailing "lesson" out of Deale, MD from the Sailing Academy. It was a gorgeous day with light winds, enough for sailing, but not enough to make it rough. It was about 62 degrees so again just about perfect for not being too hot or too cold. We had an excellent and fun captain, Angie, and I learned a few things. We all got a chance to steer the boat and to help with the lines. Van did any of the "hard" sailing stuff with Angie. Afterwards we went for an early dinner on the other side of the marina where everyone except me had seafood - crabs either in the shell or as a cake. I have a video if I can figure out how to upload it to the blog.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Shooting Sunflowers

Pam and I went shooting sunflowers today in Hess, Maryland.  Hess is way out Jarrettsville Pike, out past Loch Raven Reservoir and 5 corners.  We got a tip about this place from a friend of Pam's, who had planned to go out herself to take pictures with some models, but could not get any lined up in time.  So, Pam and I decided to go out anyway.  It was a gamble.  There was a 60% chance of rain and we drove through a doozie of a thunderstorm in Baltimore to get out there.  However, it was not raining when we got out to Hess.  It unfortunately rained on and off after we got out of the car and were snapping a few pictures.  The sunflower field is a private farm across from a Royal Farms store. There was some parking off the side of the road and it attracted quite a few people for picture snapping.  Below are some of my pictures.  More pictures can be seen at my photostream on Flickr.  Pam will be uploading some her own pictures soon.  You can see her pictures on her photostream.







Sunday, June 24, 2012

Kayaking at Big Pool

Pam and I went kayaking Saturday for the 2nd time in our new kayaks. We went up to Fort Frederick State Park in an area called Big Pool, Maryland - obviously named after the water body we were in, named "Big Pool". It is a long narrow lake between the C&O canal and the Potomac River. We were out for 4 hours.

We explored a side creek and found a flock of geese way back in the woods. No pictures .... Sorry. We've decided that these were the mythical "Forest Geese", so perhaps we wouldn't have been able to get their picture anyway. We chased them all the way up the creek until they ran out of water, at which point they scrambled up the bank and disappeared into the underbrush.

On the side of the lake I found these blue dragonflies hanging out near to the surface of the water. I wasn't able to see their wings with my eyes, but the camera was able to stop the action just fine.

There were LOTS of turtles. Unfortunately, we did not get very good pictures. We had the waterproof camera with us and it is not the best at zooming in, especially on small subjects from a moving base. They were quite skittish and slipped into the water whenever we got close. However, Pam did manage to catch a little one - she just floated up next to him and grabbed him with her bare hands. Perhaps he was too young to know any better. Pam really wanted to bring him home with us, but we had no way of getting him there. He was VERY cute.

 

Friday, June 1, 2012

Vandals

Don't worry. Nothing bad happened. I just stumbled across this little tidbit on the Internet today and thought it worthy of sharing in the blog.

Have you ever wondered where the term vandalism comes from?

Around 439 AD, there was an East Germanic tribe called the Vandals, who under king Genseric formed a kingdom in North Africa, around the area that is now Tunisia. Part of this kingdom included an area that was claimed by Rome - the Roman Africa province. In 455, the Vandals sacked the city of Rome, leaving a great deal of destruction in their wake. The north Africa Vandal kingdom was only held for about 100 years at which point, in the Vandalic War (533-4), Justinian I re-siezed control for the Eastern Roman Empire.

Early Pro-Roman historians classified the Vandals, as, I suppose, any culture that was not Roman, barbarians for their sacking and looting of Rome. While the Vandals destruction of Roman antiquities was likely no more destructive than other invaders of the time, the Vandals were often blamed for Rome's downfall.

So, the Vandals got a bad rep and a bad rap. But it wasn't until much later (1794) that the term "vandalisme" was coined by Henri Grégoire to describe the destruction of artwork following the French Revolution. The term quickly swept into public use across Europe and - as we well know - is still used to this day to describe wanton or useless destruction of property.

Information gathered from Wikipedia (the fount of all knowledge)

 

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Magic

From a Chipotle bag:

"Recycling turns things into other things. Which is like Magic."

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Tuckernuck Island

Under the sub-heading of "What Did Van Learn Today?", I have discovered information about an interesting little island - Tuckernuck Island, off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts. What got me looking up information was this quip on the inside of a Nantucket Nectars bottlecap:

"During a storm, the last remaining year-round resident of Tuckernuck Island buried himself to survive, and did."

Well ... How did he accomplish that? Coffin perhaps? He would have needed to breathe. How did he then dig himself up again?

Having never been to Nantucket, I asked myself what more I could learn about Tuckernuck Island.

According to The Fount of All Knowledge (Wikipedia), Tuckernuck Island is about 900 acres and has around 35 vacation homes on it. No more year-round residents, I guess. Supposedly, the island is privately owned by the vacation home owners. It is not open to the public. Any visitors must be invited. There are no public utilities, though they do have home-made electricity (via solar cells and gas-powered generators) and running water. They also use gas for cooking. Very few cars are used on the island, however residents do use golf carts for getting around.

Several areas have either protected or endangered flora and/or fauna, including the largest concentration of Oldsquaws (Long Tailed Duck) in the Western Atlantic. Counts of over 150,000 have been recorded. The landmass is left over from the terminal moraine of the last glacial period (Wisconsin Glaciation) and still retains characteristics of moraine geology.

Tuckernuck Island
Image courtesy of NOAA and iNavX