Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Fujeirah


The UAE has seven emirates: Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Dubai, Ras al Khaimah, Ajman, Um Al Quwain, and Fujeirah. We've been in the first four long enough to go for runs, spot flamingos, camp, and scope beaches. We've hardly touched the last three. Especially Fujeirah, the pink region on the map below.


This is a serious omission. On the east coast of the Arabian peninsula, just below lovely Musandam, Fujeirah has an entirely different look and feel: coastal mountains gathered next to sandy beaches, tremendous snorkeling (or, in our case, diving with goggles), and a whole new gulf to swim in. 

The drive there from Abu Dhabi sent us up past Dubai, through the rather scrubby interior....


....until dunes begin in earnest.  


And then, as if the terrain couldn't get any stranger, the mountains set in. 


Then it was over the mountains and a quick swoop down to the coast, where we stopped at a tiny Indian restaurant.



"No menu, just biryani," the proprietor explained enthusiastically. Two deep-fried fish later, we wandered out to meet the Gulf of Oman. 




We made it up the coast nearly to Dibba, where we stopped at Snoopy Island, named for its uncanny resemblance to Snoopy asleep on top of his dog house.

 
And that's where we spent the night. On the beach, with an Emirati family camping nextdoor.  


But first, we played some frisbee, swam in our front yard....


....and watched the sun set.

 

 The next day, we swam out to the coral reef near Snoopy Island, where we saw fish that could only be described as tie-died, sea slugs, urchins, anenomes, and all kinds of coral. We lay on the beach afterwards, listening to the German, Russian, and dubious English of the various vacationers. And then started back by a different route. 


Friday, October 31, 2014

A Passage to India, volume I: Chennai

We spent our first three days in India in Chennai, the bustling and sprawling capital of Tamil Nadu.



We were nowhere near EM Forster's sound-warping caves, but there were some Forster-worthy miscommunications. Our gracious hosts were so anxious for us to have a good time that we grew anxious that they were over-exerting themselves. Chief among mounting anxieties was the worry (no one will possibly believe this) that we weren't eating enough. They were especially worried (again, we don't expect you to believe this) about Nick.



Believe us, he was eating. For starters, he ate that, in one sitting! And it was amazing. In Chennai, we had the best chana masala, poori, and daal we'd ever tasted. Every day was full of delicious dishes, familiar and unfamiliar. Each and every one of them was rich and incredibly filling.

We had a brief respite from our marathon-like meals over coconut water...



...and while learning to cool hot coffee, Indian style.


On our first full day in Chennai, we wandered through "nearby" Pondicherry, the largest French colony in India. Pondicherry, we discovered is actually pretty distant from Chennai (which was a British trading post for cotton, widely known as Madras).

Pondi, as it's affectionately known, impressed us from the start. Upon getting out of the car, we turned to see an elephant amble down the middle of a street full of parked cars. Unfortunately, we only got pictures of Nick walking down the street. We'll pretend not to be disappointed.



The French quarter is pretty and quaint, with big trees arching over the road, brick-paved streets, and a pretty town square. Street names are all in French, as are the stations of the cross in this lovely Catholic church.



On the way to Pondi, we saw strange things. First example: Oreville, a Utopian town conceived in the 70s, built around meditation inside a golden bean, which apparently holds a large crystal. The town has been slow to spring up (as has the moat promised around the bean), but non-participants can view the bean from afar.


We imagine that more time was spent perfecting the bean than crafting the town's guidelines, which require town citizens to abandon religion, and also to "live freely" under a "single authority." Conduct a few interviews, and we could write the condescending New Yorker piece ourselves.

We also saw wondrous things. (No, the bean didn't really count.) Also on the way to Pondi was Mamallapuram, sprawling stone temples dating from 7th - 9th century.



The temples testified to the booming trade in the region -- we saw Roman columns and Chinese-style pagodas and lions.


This temple, which is one of the largest bas reliefs in the world, was our favorite -- covered in Hindu stories all carved from a single stone.



That little columned temple on the left shelters some rather darling animals. A bull stands strong, his leg jutting out from the rest of the carving.



A mama cleans her baby.



Krishna's Butterball is nearby. The huge stone worried the British so much that they had seven elephants try to dislodge it before it fell on its own.  The elephants couldn't budge it, and it remains perched not-so-precariously on the hill.



We were delighted, after such serious sightseeing so far afield, to spend time in Chennai. The streets are packed -- with cars, with people, with oxen, with food sellers. The bustle was dusty, vibrant, and exhausting. Temples make for a tiny bit of respite at nearly every street corner.


We visited Kapaleeshwarar on a Story Trails tour of Chennai. We were glad to get guidance. We had no idea, for example, that there is a set path through Hindu temples (we wondered in Nepal why we were the only people wandering back and forth), and we didn't realize that the chatting, back-slapping, and eating going on inside is part of usual temple life.


Mothers hoping to conceive, and girls hoping to get married, hang things from this tree. 


Catholicism made it to India early, with St. Thomas, who landed in Kerala and walked across the peninsula to Chennai, spreading the Gospel as he went. He lived in Chennai for some time, and was martyred on a nearby hillside. Today, St. Thomas's Basilica is built around his remains. 

The building is a neo-Gothic birthday cake of a church, ruffled and white. Inside and outside, local symbols and traditions blend with Catholicism. 

Mary graces the courtyard outside, wearing a sari. She gets a change of outfit (and, we hear, color) every day. 


Peacocks, symbols of purity, stand at the foot of the cross; Christ's feet rest on a lotus flower. Outside, flags celebrating the time of year and the religious day are draped on poles like those at Hindu temples.


The Portuguese built the church (they were there ahead of the British), but the British helped rebuild it in the nineteenth century. They already had their own church, inside the fort.

Fort St. George, built to administer the cotton trade and protect the workers of the Dutch East India Company, is now the center of state government. At the heart of the fort is a small Episcopalian chapel. Soldiers, none too experienced at church-building, made it more fortress than church. The ceilings could withstand shelling: they are three meters thick.





Nearby the fort is an even odder remnant of colonial presence: an ice house, built to store ice shipments from the American east coast in the 1830s.


After three days in Chennai, we hopped on SpiceJet to our next stop...Kerala!



Our trip to Chennai was memorable, but in a peculiar way. We were welcomed so graciously and attentively, and we were fascinated by everything we saw. The bustle, the attention, the various pieces of wildly different history, and the driving (oh, the driving) made Chennai memorable, but also disorienting. We could not imagine navigating the city on our own. As we look at our pictures, we see the disorientation we often felt. And we realize that part of the experience that was meaningful for us was the confusion itself. We will have to keep reading and learning to understand even a tiny piece of what we saw.

Friday, September 12, 2014

California adventures in pictures

While we were back in California, we got to visit a few of our favorite places. We went tide pooling in Point Lobos...


Tide pooling in Muir Beach...


To the top of Mount Tam...


And castle-building and seal-spotting on the beach with cousins...


It was wonderful to be back in the land of family, fog, and temperate weather. California, we miss you!


Saturday, May 31, 2014

A fearless expedition to Lulu Island


After nine months of yammering about buying a kayak, we took the plunge, with a used inflatable kayak on Dubizzle (the Craigslist of the middle east, minus the racier sections).  We can't wait to explore all of the mangroves, inlets, and islands suggested by terrific sites like this one.  But we wanted something less ambitious to start with. 

And so we set out for Lulu. Lulu island is a long man-made piece of land directly across from Abu Dhabi's downtown, and is only accessible by boat.  For a few years, there were restaurants and talk of serious development (not a unique story).  But now it lies empty, with big red dunes and rows of palm trees.  

The set-up took a bit longer than expected...


...but eventually we figured things out.


Margaret is ready to launch, and hoping that the thousands of little fish don't nibble her toes before safely in the boat.


After a half hour of rowing (and looking neurotically every time we heard a motor boat) we made it to our destination.


We discovered some creatures hiding under rocks.


And made it back in time for a dip in the gulf!


Thursday, November 28, 2013

Heritage Village

Heritage Village is a free museum aiming to preserve traditional Bedouin crafts, and it's a lovely walk from our apartment along the waterfront. Why haven't we been yet? We aren't sure either. 

Perhaps it was the uncompelling signage that kept us away.

But we're glad we went in. We saw a camel....always a welcome sign to us...


...and a whole collection of swords. (In our endeavors towards furnishing our house, we've seen a lot of arms of various sorts prominently displayed on walls in people's houses. We have yet to buy any.)


There are boats being built...


...and pitchers for coffee (called Dallah, we think) being hammered. There are fewer and fewer people able to make the traditional Arabian pitchers, which require extensive handiwork for traditional shapes and patterns.


There was a room full of beautiful glass...


We especially liked the glass-animal bedecked perfume dispensers.


And there was a beautiful view of the Abu Dhabi skyline on a beautiful fall night. .