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Showing posts with label Abu Dhabi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abu Dhabi. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates) - Hitting it off

 Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates)

13 September - 15 September 2019

As one of those travelling families that have utilised Abu Dhabi merely a point of transit of the years, getting to be familiar with the International Airport, for us, was akin to establishing familiarity with the city itself. Which is to say, we really haven’t discovered a lot about the poorer/richer cousin of the brash & dazzling Dubai. Somehow on this occasion the feeling we took away was a place that was more engaging and more interesting. I couldn’t tell you the reason for that, we didn’t take in tours of discovery or undertake any culturally insightful events, we had a simple stay at the Bab Al Qasr hotel, a decent view, some sheesha, cocktails and relaxed vibe. Maybe that’s all that was needed. A little time reflecting on another great holiday, and figuring out where the next might originate.

Ready to roll - Dubai - United Arab Emirates

Rock Star moves - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Rock Star moves - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

The next day we were at the airport, ready to make our way back to Melbourne. Typically going the rigmarole of checking-in is laborious and boring at the best of times. With a 6-month old it becomes a challenging event, which makes it all the more frustrating when Eithad lets you know that the confirmed seats you have for the flight does not actually guarantee that you’ll get onto the flight. Typical, it seems for Etihad, as this has happened to both my parents and myself in Abu Dhabi previously, Etihad overbooks its flights, by what seems to be a far larger percentage that is common to industry practices. These means therefore that even if you turn up to the airport on-time, your chances of getting offloaded with a fully paid ticket are relatively high. An absolute nuisance and frustration, and a lesson to be learned in terms of drilling in the process of compulsory online check-in. For us, the day delay wasn’t a major drama other than the fact that I was commencing a new job the very next day, and so, re-arranging flights out meant that our new schedule had us in Melbourne at about 6:30am on Monday morning. For any of us that may have arrived home on a long-haul flight and committed ourselves to the torment of heading into work the same day, you know the pain, your working day is nothing short of torture. Still, Etihad gave us $600USD credit each and complimentary accommodation and meals, so not an entire disappointment.

Bab Al Qasr hotel - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Bab Al Qasr hotel - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

The Royal Palace from the Bab Al Qasr hotel - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates


Bab Al Qasr hotel - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Bab Al Qasr hotel - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates


Having talked up the Formula Rossa ride at Ferrari World for the past four weeks, the additional day gave us the opportunity to introduce Inga to the fastest ride on the planet.

There are simply no words and nothing that can prepare for the adrenalin rush the first time you accelerate out of the terminal. Touchpoints you thought that you may have had to any other roller coaster disappear when your body is thrust into the back of your seat and you gasp for air. Reaching 240kph just before you climb vertically into the Arabian sky feels almost surreal as you reach the apex of your first drop and the rest of the park is spread out before you.

For those that want to know the stats, 1.7 G-force at launch, 4.8 G throughout the ride and 0 to 240kph in 4.9 seconds – they’re some serious numbers.

Inga in the second row, red top - Formula Rosso ride - Ferrari World - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Ferrari World - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Ferrari World - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

I was happy that Inga got to share the experience because I had been talking up the ride for a while and I know that she didn’t quite believe that it would live up to the expectation – in her words, as she walked towards me after the right ended, ‘Oh wow…wow…I couldn’t breath …I didn’t expect that’

Exactly

After our afternoon at Ferrari World we headed back to the airport hotel, had some dinner and crashed out for the night.

The good 'ole Krompir Salata - Airport Hotel - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Out over the Indian Ocean

The next day, thankfully, we boarded our flight without any drama and I made it into work for 9:00am start o Day1 at Australian Unity.

Sunday, August 25, 2019

Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates) - An immersive experience


ABU DHABI (United Arab Emirates)
25 August 2019

I’ve been living the ‘defacto’ bachelor life for the past six weeks of my existence. Interestingly this is notable in the fact that it’s the first, and probably last occasion in my life when this will ever happen. I’ve never had the opportunity to live alone, there’s simply not been a time in my life, outside of travel, where I’ve walked into my own place and had free reign. But the question is, is there any sort of importance to be placed on being a bachelor for a period of time? Is it a rite of passage that somehow allows one to successfully formulate and identify themselves by their own frames of reference without interference. Is there growth, introspection and a special place for Bikram Yoga in this space of isolation?

F***it, for me it never  really happened and I’ll never know what a 'Bachelor's Life' really means. All I knew for right now was that Inga & Aiden were in Latvia and that my evenings were occupied by uninterrupted Ashes viewings, so the timing of their departure, whilst not emotionally comforting was impeccable regarding my desire to watch 6hrs of cricket a night without family commercials.

Missing the both of them however was not all that entertaining.

As the weeks trawled by and my list of discoveries on the clandestine Melbourne bar list that I put together somehow dwindled to a stall,  I clawed myself onto Etihad Flight EY462 from Melbourne to Abu Dhabi via several champagnes in the Etihad Business Class lounge. I had to make the most of what little time I did have left.


Etihad Business Lounge - Melbourne Tullamarine Airport - Australia
 


Months earlier, when I’d purchased the my flights on Skyscanner I recognised that there was an ‘extended’ 22hr wait in Abu Dhabi between  continental flights. For some, this type of extended layover is always a nuisance, for me, its always an opportunity in waiting!

Arriving in Abu Dhabi at 06:05 on a hazy morning with the beams of an Arabian sun hitting the tarmac adding an orangey hue to everything it adorned, I noticed that the temperature was pushing 35 degrees already. This could mean just one thing for me, Yas Waterpark was going to be the prime destination during this stop.

0605 - Abu Dhabu Al Maktoum International Airport - United Arab Emirates

Booking myself a room at the Premier Inn at the airport for the paltry sum of 250 dirhams for the whole day, I had effectively acquired a room to act as just a storage and shower facility. I knew in myself that the bed would go undisturbed if my plans to remain outside came to full fruition.

Making it to Yas Waterpark by 10am, the sun was already high in the sky, punishing, reinforcing its dominance, showing that it was the true boss of the U.A.E.

That big ball of fury has a presence in this part of the world, like an omnipresent heat force that you find yourself wading through between  over efficiently air conditioned buildings. Somehow at Yas Waterpark, the potential escape within the cool pools, rides and slides was always punctuated by the rapid absorption of water from your body and the perils of judging how far you were capable of walking on burning concrete paths.

For 250 dirhams Yas Waterworld in my estimation 'OK to good', not brilliant, and perhaps not the dynamic excitement machine that was advertised.

After a few hours I’d taken my fill of urine filled pools, 13 yr old kids acting like dumb asses and the pirate and faery princess dressed welcoming committee at the entrance. How they were tied into to the whole Yas Waterworld melange I’ll never quite figure out and dedicating my mental time to solving that task I knew was going to be about as futile as understanding the rationale behind a Trump tweet.


Ferrari World - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Ferrari World - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates
 
 
















My next stop however, at what I had assumed would be the underwhelming and highly overpriced Ferrari World, actually turned out to be a little bit of a ‘not-so-hidden’ gem. After having already paid 250dh at Yas Waterpark only an additional payment of 130dh was required for Ferrari World.

Now on first inspection the premises felt like a vacant, vacuous dedication that the manufacturer Ferrari conjured up boast of its eternal relevance. In this sense there should be no misconception, this theme park is exactly that. What makes up for their indulgence and consumer strategy are the rides, of which there are only really four, three of which were functioning when I attended.

Formula Rosso -  Ferrari World - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

The sign says it all - Formula Rosso -  Ferrari World - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Let me say this;

The Formula Rossa is mindblowing.

I’m no roller-coaster aficionado but still, I've been on quite a few in my life. So when I sat in the front seat of what’s proclaimed to be the World’s Fastest Roller Coaster I wasn’t anticipating anymore than then pedestrian style of ride that most fun parks have.

But ...holy sh*t!!!

That coaster train accelerates to its top speed of 240kph in the first 4.9 seconds of the rid!. Your teeth feel as though they’ve hit the back of your throat and the only thing holding your brains in place is the seat head rest behind you. That initial acceleration, especially when sitting in the front seat, literally takes your breath away. As you explode out of the gates you quickly realise that the goggles they provide you are not just a 'fun fact object' that they thought would be a kitsch little accompaniment - you need those bad boys to protect your eyeballs from hitting any stray piece of whatever travelling at 240kph.

There’s only been a few times in my life when I’d almost involuntarily let out a scream of an expletive, with no conscious thought. The first that comes time mind was the scream that accompanied my plummet from the roof of the Moses Mabhida stadium in Durban. On this occasion the ‘Holy Sh*t’ that I let fly came from the g-force and acceleration experienced in those initial take off seconds, leaving you breathless, and it’s only momentarily that somewhere in that initial whirl of adrenalin that you realise the ride flings you 52mtrs straight up at the end of the acceleration ramp! It’s a wild ride, and one that I happily took on another 6-7 times during the course of the hours I stayed there.

I found that the hours at Ferrari World passed easily. Needless to say, the lack of any queues at all made the experience a pleasure. It seems, from the infrastructure in place, that once upon a time there were ambitions for consistently large crowds. I’d say however that form my two experiences there (I also went with Inga & Aiden on the return journey), waits for all rides was no more than 5 mins, at worst.

Getting back to the hotel at around 7pm, I took the opportunity to shower, change and head through customs early, well in advance of my 02:05am flight to Amsterdam. Not that I didn’t make the most of my time, all 3hrs were spent in the Al Raheem lounge with a credible buffet and GnT’s on call. Say what you will, but airport lounges do offer both comfort and requisite refreshments that make waiting for a flight more than tolerable, even enjoyable in many ways.

Some 6.5hrs out of Abu Dhabi and I was touching down at Amsterdam Schipol airport at 06:50 local time.

There was only a short stop here and a minor hassle getting into the Schengen terminal from the Non-Schengen area. Unexpectedly the line and wait time was in the 40 min vicinity and reminded me of the unnecessarily tedious process that would always accompany a transfer through Warsaw.

Still, I made the flight to Lisbon on time. Placing me one step closer to being reunited with my family in Madrid.

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates) - All is quiet on New Year's Day

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ABU DHABI (United Arab Emirates)
01 January - 03 January 2018

Still feeling a little deflated from the NYE debacle, we made drove back down to Abu Dhabi and checked into the palatial Anantara Eastern Mangroves resort. Without question, the Anantara group know how to put together a fantastic hotel in an as equally stunning location, this was no exception.

Anantara Eastern Mangroves Resort - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Anantara Eastern Mangroves Resort - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates


Equally wealthy is comparison to Dubai, striving to be as contemporary, if not as garish as its neighbour, it still has its eye on rapid transformation but in a style that is less high paced than Dubai. Whilst only 90kms apart, their styles and methodology is still different and distinct. Dubai has formed and continues to form its identity via the ‘go big or go home’ adage whilst Abu Dhabi, is still more rooted in tradition and is more culturally connected.

Anantara Eastern Mangroves Resort - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Anantara Eastern Mangroves Resort - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates


Our stay in Abu Dhabi was almost exclusively within the resort, which was perfectly fine. All we wanted to do was access the pool, get some soon, have some cocktails and smoke some shisha. The resort allowed us to do this whilst also providing an exceptional backdrop. Everyone was a winner.

Friday, August 18, 2017

Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates) - An enforced detox

ABU DHABI (United Arab Emirates)
12 August - 14 August 2017

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Not exactly an afterthought but not a priority, Abu Dhabi was a necessity for purposes of exiting the UAE with the flights we had purchased.


View from the Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Our welcome at the Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

View from the Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Sheik Zayed Grand Mosque - the Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shisha @ the Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates


The extent of the sightseeing we did in Abu Dhabi extended to the pool area, gym and shisha lounges of the marvellous Hotel Shangri La Qaryat el Beri, a grand hotel on the Khor Al Maqta waterway.


Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Breakfast @ Shangri La Qaryat el Beri, phenomenal!! - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Breakfast @ Shangri La Qaryat el Beri, phenomenal!! - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates


An opulent hotel with plenty of bars, restaurants, cigar lounge, fantastic gym, private beach, breezy poolside bar and views to the mighty Sheik Zayed Grand Mosque. This was the perfect way to ‘de-buzz’ from our honeymoon.


Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

Shangri La Qaryat el Beri - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates


Somehow 6 weeks had just slipped on by so effortlessly but that’s a holiday for you, gone before you know it but the impressions and images you take with you for a lifetime.

Sunday, August 6, 2017

Qasr al Sarab Desert Anantara Resort (United Arab Emirates) - 1001 Arabian nights

QASR AL SARAB DESERT RESORT  by ANANTARA (United Arab Emirates)
06 August - 09 August 2017


This stop I had already marked as my own personal highlight of the region even before we completed our stay in the area. 

My own discovery of the Qasr al Sarab had occurred online some 3 years earlier. I'm not sure if it was a link or an online article that lead me there but my, wasn't I impressed when I got to discovering what it was about. I was so impressed that before my Mum & Dad returned from Europe, on my Dad's final holiday, I had paid for them to spend a couple of nights there. For my dad, I can comfortably say that he went out on a good one.

A three hour drive from Dubai and some 220kms south of down town Abu Dhabi, the Qasr al Sarab Desert resort is located in Abu Dhabi's section of the Empty Quarter, in the Rub' Al Khali Desert, occupying a space on the edge of the mighty Arabian desert, The Rub' Al Khali is one of the largest continuous bodies of sand in the world. Meaning, that if you're going to build anything out there, it better be damn self sufficient, impressive and to be able to cope with the types of temperatures that will have you easily pushing 55+ degrees on a normal day.


Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates


For the hour out of Abu Dhabi the landscape is monotonous, the road is as straight as an arrow and you can imagine how something like this could break you if you were required to do it frequently. Occasional trees punctuate the landscape and the odd, errant camel is an ever present danger, but for the most part you feel as though you're on auto-pilot.

Arriving to Qasr al Sarab is nothing like I've experienced before, and I thank my parents for imparting to me the little hint I needed to actually find the road to the resort. They told me to look out for the petrol station that would come up just before the turn to the resort, which seemed an odd thing to tell me at the time but now I thank them for it as I'm certain I would have driven straight past.


Welcome dates and 24hr dates as you desire

View from our room
Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Our room at Qasr Al Sarab

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates


The entrance gates to Qasr al Sarab have a miniature Jurassic Park type of feel, there;s something a little bit Disneyland fantasy ride about it, but this of course is just the teaser. After passing through the initial gates, unbeknown to the first timer, you still have a 14km drive, or a (15-20 min) run before you get to the resort itself.

A few kms from the resort, after you've driven through flame orange coloured sand dunes, the resort starts to reveal itself slowly. It unfolds gently but epically, like an elaborate mirage set amongst the might of the imperious sand dunes in the vast expanse of emptiness. Then when you arrive at the formal entrance to the resort you're greeted with an Arabian style fortress that draws you to its inner sanctum via the grand entrance bridge, lined with oversized lantern style lights. It's a scene conjured up from pure fantasy.


Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates


This surreal resort built in the middle of the desert to the tune of $5 billion dollars is a gold coloured fortress whose magnetism and aura is more than enough to be able to mentally transform you to the stories of 1001 Arabian nights where you feel that you could easily encounter Sinbad, Aladdin, Scheheradze or Jafar. With moody lanterns lighting the buildings, gorgeous Persian rugs running through the interior, turrets, date palms, faux mud-brick, shaded courtyards and sparkling fountains, the immediate impression is purely magical. A sense of both grandeur and wonder catches you from the start.


For our stay I had booked us into a Deluxe Terrace Room, a large corner room that overlooked the massive mirage style pool, with expansive views out to the desert. It provided out with an outlook was simply beyond words. Altogether other worldly is the best way to describe the views over sand with the setting sun playing its role as an artist on the vast sand canvas presented in front of us.


The resort itself is formed on a crescent shaped dune and stretches around a distance of what must be 1km. To support its ongoing operational needs there's also a town of 5000 workers required to make things run, maintain and service guests, which makes for a mighty grand business a long way from any other place of real significance. Admittedly it's not like the place is built on the moon but hey, if you needed to test what challenges the moon would bring in terms of a base, then you could do a lot worse than starting in location such as this.



Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates


The real trap to being a guest out here is the concept of time and what you do to occupy yourself during its passing. Breakfast is always a great place to start and in the Emirates, from what I've discovered, do buffets in such an absurdly outlandish fashion that you just don't know where to commence. Omelette stations, waffle stations, pancake stations, Asian food, European food, Indian.The choice is overwhelming and makes me think of Pareto optimality in the concept of choice, the theory being that when there's too much choice and thus too many factors to consider in making a decision then the optimal choice is rarely the one taken. A situation such as this typifies the dilemma.



Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates


Most of our  days had us occupying a spot at the insanely large oasis style pool. A perfectly normal past time had we have had a normal situation, but let me tell you, a normal situation would more than likely not have you being outside, baking in the Arabian sun, when the temperature was over 50 degrees. But of course, I have a Northern European wife whose fear of missing the sunlight means that she'll take it at every single opportunity available, because you know, it may not come back for months! Considering her love of the sun and her tolerance of heat, I was still amazed that she was able to bare being out in the sun baking her body whilst being in a furnace. She did that as I took refuge in the pool, and at the bar mostly. How in the world she was able to endure those temperatures and feel normal was beyond my realm of understanding.



Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates

Qasr al Sarab Desert Resort - Rub' Al Khali Desert - Empty Quarter - United Arab Emirates


Shisha was also a go to move for us in the time when cocktails and sunshine were not occupying our time. We did also manage to get out on a desert camel ride one day which was impressive and not the diabolical, painful experience that my parents described to me from a few years earlier. Of course, being 30 years younger than them meant there wasn't the same sort of stress and awkwardness placed on ageing muscles. 


What stood out for me, outside of the wondrous decor of the resort was just the scale and vastness of the setting. An environment where the sound of silence is beautiful, where the vast emptiness is astonishingly attractive and the ever changing mood of the sun is played out on its own personal canvas, shifting, changing but ever enduring and ever eternal.