There’s more to the supercharged Gulf than Dubai. A short drive down the coast is Abu Dhabi, place of the gazelle. Less frantic than its neighbour, the biggest of the emirates is now a destination on its own. This is a suggested list of six must do things in this friendly city just 38 years old, and in the 100 miles of day-tripping desert beyond that make up this emirate.
Arabian Nights Dreaming
Walking around the $3 billion Emirates Palace hotel, inspired by an `Arabian Nights’ Palace, I mistakenly read that guests are ferried around in gold buggies. Should have been `golf buggies’, but the first version made sense. If there was an inch of the vast foyer left unpaved in mosaic or shining marble, or a corner of its monumental dome not glimmering with real gold, I didn’t spot it. The government built a contender for the world’s most expensive hotel while not quite decending into architectural schmaltz, green-wrapping it with a ring of 8000 trees half a mile wide. Room prices are somewhere in outer space. But you wouldn’t want to waste a moment by sleeping.
User friendly city
Abu is one of the most user-friendly of cities. There is next to no public transport. That may be ecologically unsound, but the taxis are so cheap I kept looking at the meter in disbelief, expecting the real price to show up. So we were at the Abu Dhabi Mall, then wanted to compare the shops in the bigger and newer Marina Mall two miles away. It cost us 63p. We headed to the souk (Hamdan Center) to pick up some designer sunglass. That’s another 50p fare. Out at night to a posh restaurant? A fleet of smarter limousine taxis stands by, charging twice the price. Who’s arguing? Want a day out in Dubai, 80 miles away? £32 by taxi – don’t even think of hiring a car. A new taxi system has comes in, which probably means higher prices.
Desert Sands
An hour and a bit from this city of wealth and high-rise ambition, we peered over the razor-sharp crest of a 100 feet high sand dune, fresh-minted by the wind that morning. Our driver Ibrahim coaxed the 4 by 4 up there to prove that such a view still existed, a pristine golden world stretching to all horizons, empty apart from the odd oil well and power pylon. Calculating complicated safety theorems in his head, Ibrahim then let the vehicle, my whole family aboard, drift in neutral down the near sheer incline. Thrills over, we crept up on a lonely camel train. In the distance a trio of gazelle sprinted away. Back on the road, we ended up at the Liwa Oasis, on the edge of the Empty Quarter where Wilfred Thesiger made his epic crossing in the 1930s.
Dine out for £2.50
There is fine food in hotels throughout the city. It’s normal to eat in hotel restaurants as a non-resident, because they have the alcohol licences. But for a meal as authentic as the red and white-squared dish dash (at perhaps a tenth the price)call a cab to Maroosh. This is local fast-food slowed right down at your table. The starters of olives, chillies, garlic paste, mint and hummus with still oven-hot flat bread, was a meal in itself. But they would insist on serving more. Plates of chicken and lamb shawarma (wraps), falafel and tabouleh (parsley and cracked wheat salad) arrived. Along with mango, guava and pineapple juice (who needs alcohol?) Real food at its finest. The bill for four was £10. I think that extra bottled water at 4p did the damage. 009712 6441419
Cars of the world
The car was Sheikh Hamdan’s world, and indirectly, as gas guzzler, the source of his family’s riches. So why shouldn’t he make a vehicle the shape of the planet the opening feature of his car museum in a pyramid shaped building in the desert just south of Abu? If that monster doesn’t silence Clarkson, the creation inside surely will. It’s a whole house, complete with bedroom, corridor and dining room on elephant-high wheels. They actually drove it, but just the once. The rest of the display are pristine polished marques of the world – New York taxi, original Beetles and a gorgeous black Buick from an earlier age of restrained, contoured elegance. And some of the Rainbow sheikh’s customized fleet of Mercs, each a different colour of the rainbow.
Fancy a flight?
With gridlock beginning to grip in Abu, the tourist people devised the perfect city sightseeing solution, a ten minute buzz through the clear (most days) night sky from Port Zayed. You see a lot at a lazy 75 mph. Star lit-up features include the huge flag, as big as a bus, on a 360 feet pole on the Corniche walkway alongside the Emirates Palace. Abu’s skyscrapers may not match Dubai’s for might and height, but with each one lit in its personal colours, they are a vibrant night spectacle against the black desert beyond. If the moon is up, look for the string of islands out in the Gulf. And, out east, the world’s second biggest mosque, with room for 40,000.
The writer travelled courtesy of British Airways Holidays, (7 day package around £1300).