Sunday, December 13, 2009

Dubai Rugby 7s




The Dubai Rugby 7s is a 1 weekend Rugby Tourneyment for the 7-person rugby teams from around the world. 7's Rugby is fast and fun to watch. The games last 15 minutes and are unpredictable as an individual performance can turn a game. The event itself is a bit of infamous expat fun, where the beverages flow liberally and costumes of all types abound. It is a fantastic time when you can see people dressed as divers, flintstones, cheatahs, cheerleaders and the like along with flag-waving, singing, chanting supporters from teams that cover 6 continents! Dubai si a fantactic place for this because you really do get contingents of supporters ranging from 1000's of English, Austrailian, and South African supporters that live in Dubai, to Fiji and Samoan islanders to Kenyan drummers to a group of 50 Kiwi kids that can shout a mean Haka (Maori chant/dance) the team usally does before a match, but at 7s they did for theur victory lap.

Monday, November 9, 2009

F1 in Abu Dhabi, UAE

Dubai's neighbor to the south sure knows how to put on a show. The event was well organized, traffic no problem. A few hiccups fixed by day 3 or 4. Great course, great races and great concerts! I love Kings of Leon music, but Aerosmith showed them why they are still famous in their 60's!!!

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Al Ain Zoo


During the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, certain venues have special hours as sleep cycles of fasting Muslims change. It is also still quite hot. So, the Al Ain Zoo was open from 9pm until 2am! I had never been to Al Ain which is very far inland in the United Arab Emirates. After a 90 minute drive from Dubai we came up to the zoo, which in contrast to the tiny cages of the Dubai Zoo is a refreshing, huge place. It has mostly large, open enclosures with mixed animals and tree cover. It is definitely modelled after the San Diego Zoo and Wild Animal Parks. Not ass great as the San Diego parks, but very nice and cheap! It hard to take photos at night but here is a shot of the african animals below Jebel Hafeet, the largest mountain in the UAE in the background.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

The Nile


It has been too long since I posted, and I have ideas ready to go, but I need to revisit at least my favorite part of Egypt, the Nile. After Cairo, we flew to Luxor and saw the first of Many Temples, Karnak! It was awesome, and has a great name. All of the temples and tombs were amazing. I still can hardly believe they are 'real' even with my own eyes. I guess what makes them real in time to me is the defacement and graffiti for Christians 100's of years ago that wild sad, reminds me that Disney or whomever didn't just go cast the hieroglyphics in concrete for the tourists. The heart of Egypt though is wonderful to see by boat, cruising the nile. I loved passing calmly by villages, wetlands, felucca (sailboats) ruins and my favorite part, farmers on tiny sandbar islands living in reed huts and waving with no expectation of a tip. I imagine this kid sees 50 cruise boats a week and still takes care to wave, I hope they don't care about global recession or conflict and just deal with the river as it has been farmed for 1000s of years.
Another crazy part was when the cruise boats came upon the locks (ship elevators to get up adn down steep portions of rivers) and had to que up to get through. Apparently it was Egyptian night on all the boats and they encourage you to dress up in costume, where to get a costume... Well as you come upon the locks a floatilla of tiny row boats approach, I thought they were pilots of the locks, but when they swarmed they coulb be pirates, but no, they grab on to lines from the boat and get dragged along and as we gawk from the deck objects get tossed and fall from the sky, costumes in plastic bags that they are selling, its hillarious and trusting, I don't know how you pay, a few pounds go back in a back and you get your damp tacky outfit, I just enjoyed the entertainment.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

The Egyptian Musuem

We started out in Egypt arriving in Cairo. After getting over the small miricle of getting picked up at the airport we were off to the Egyptian Musuem straight-away. We'll a bit of traffic in what appeared to be a parking lot, then a u-turn some security then the museum. I think Cairo traffic is so infamous the tour operators may do this on purpose to satisfy tourists. In any case the Egyptian museum was an interesting place to start, the densest collection of the best Egyptian artifacts ever found. You are at the mercy of your guide for interpretation, but the statues, sarcoughphagi? and the vast contents of King Tut's tomb are all on display. Mummies too, but for extra money, money you need for toilet paper, in the same grand museum. It really is a museum like no other with so much stuff it cannot really all be showcased properly, so they are building a new one (the Egyptian Musuem is more than 100 years old!)

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Migration from hotmail/msn spaces to blog spot

I've gotten frustrated with the poor interface microsoft maintains, and that there new and improved roll out, was no improvement on performance or ease of use, so I'm giving blogger a try, even though someone snatched my being Dave moniker, at least that gave me a chance to use moniker in a sentence.