The 4x4 and Camping Issue
Complimentary Copy
THE FIRST OUTDOOR MAGAZINE FOR THE UAE AND THE MIDDLE EAST Adventure chick
DOES THE DOWNWARD DOG Tori gives us some Yoga tips
‘like’ us on Facebook!
ME4x4 newbie drive
AND CAMPOUT
A fun and educational off-road experience
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Hot Cog
MTB
We head to Shawka for some hardcore mountain biking
Sardinia: The pearl of the
Mediterranean Antonio takes us near Italy for some epic fishing
Discover more and visit us online: www.outdooruae.com
+ + NEVER A sneak preview of our latest off-road guide book
too old...
An introduction to an inspirational pair
Issue 16, April 2012
FREE
Mirdif2City Centre | The Dubai Mall | Also available at select Sun and Sand Sports stores across the GCC.
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EDITORIAL
In Print: Managing Editor Daniel Birkhofer Editors Kim Perks Marilena Cilta Angelo Cabrera Graphics & Design James Russell Administration Jane Mesina Sales & Marketing (advertisement enquiries) Tara Atkinson Tel: 04-447 2030 Mobile: 055 9398915 tara@outdooruae.com Published by: Outdoor UAE FZE P.O. Box 215062 Dubai, U.A.E. Tel. 04-447 2030 contact@outdooruae.com www.outdooruae.com Distributor: Tawzea, Abu Dhabi Media Company P.O. Box 40401, Abu Dhabi, U.A.E. Printed at: Galadari Printing & Publishing LLC P.O. Box 11243 Dubai, U.A.E. © 2012 Outdoor UAE FZE Issue 16, April 2012
The information contained is for general use only. While we have made every attempt to ensure that the information contained in this magazine has been obtained from reliable sources, however the publisher is not responsible for any errors. All information in this magazine is provided “as is”, with no guarantee of completeness, accuracy, timeliness or of the results obtained from the use of this information. In no event will the publisher, its related affiliates or anyone else be responsible for any decision made or action taken in reliance on the information in this magazine. All contents are under copyrights and may not be reproduced in any kind without written permission.
Whoever
read my article about the Wadi Nikhab hike will remember my experience of a normal hike which turned into a risky and life threatening situation. Fortunately for us, all went well and once again luck or any other higher force was on our side. Practicing outdoor activities always bears a risk of injury or even death. Some activities to an extent are more risky than others, but the risk always remains. These thrills and spills of adrenaline are one of the essential parts of each adventure small or big, but it’s not worth risking your life for, being a daredevil, or trying to prove something. It is much more the intense feeling of being alive and valuing every minute we are allowed to be here. For me personally, all experiences which have been life threatening haven’t been extreme adventures, in fact most of the times it has been very little things in normal situations; turning into a worse ones, but until now they’ve always had a happy ending. I never met Dante (see page 52) but when our friend Leigh told me about him being an outdoor lover, and how he was taking on his favourite activity; kite surfing, from bottom of his heart and with full dedication until the very last minute of his life. I was deeply touched. We never know when our time will come and I think we should not be afraid of it no matter when it will be. We should live every day as if it is our last and enjoy every breath but with respect to other people and the environment. I’m sure Dante was one of these people, in which his passing makes it hard for his family and friends as everyone seemed to know him. Why – there will be never an answer. More important than “why” is to remember the person we lost and the things he loved. Keep them in your heart with a smile on their face; remember how they lived and not how they died. Dante, I regret to never have met you. My condolences to Dante’s family and friends, and to all outdoor lovers to be safe but never stop what you love doing!
Daniel. www.outdooruae.com
BETWEEN THE LINES Daniel Birkhofer
Founder and Editor in Chief daniel@outdooruae.com
Graphics and Photography james@outdooruae.com
Get to us on Facebook!
Kim Perks
Tara Atkinson
Copywriter and Editor
Sales and Marketing tara@outdooruae.com
Marilena Cilta
Angelo Cabrera
Management Assistant marry@outdooruae.com
Writer angelo@outdooruae.com
Jane Mesina
Administration jane@outdooruae.com
EXPERTS + CONTRIBUTORS Kit Belen
Our fishing pro
© 2012 Outdoor UAE FZE
Reg. at Creative City Fujairah P.O. Box 4422, Fujairah, U.A.E.
James Russell
Mike Nott
The 4x4 expert
Pete Aldwinckle Climber and all-round adventure seeker
John Basson
Moto/ATV and all round adventure seeker
Tori Leckie
Writer, runner, blogger, adventurer and adidas athlete
Ian Ganderton
when you’re done reading, please recycle!
Toby Foord-Kelcey Climbing Expert
Patrice Wergifosse Traveller and adventurer
Kayaker, climber, mountainbiker and snowboarder. Enthusiastic jack of all trades, master of none.
our list of contributors is always growing so please get in touch if you want to be one of them!
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CONTENTS
APRIL
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EVERY ISSUE 05 BEST SHOTS 06 EVENTS CALENDAR 32 PRODUCTS 46 PEOPLE 55 DIRECTORY
24 ME4X4 NEWBIE DRIVE
TIPS & TRICKS 48 RECOVERY STRAPS WITH CRAIG
26 SARDINIA
EVENT REVIEWS 12 HOTCOG MTB 14 GULF FOR GOOD 17 MIDDLE EAST MOTOR TUNING SHOW 2012 20 ME4X4 GPS CHALLENGE 2012 24 ME4X4 NEWBIE DRIVE 30 THE BEACH FESTIVAL 36 DUBAI INTERNATIONAL BOAT SHOW 2012
52 WE REMEMBER DANTE
TRAVEL & ADVENTURE 08 NEVER TOO OLD 22 SLOW LANE TO NOWHERE 26 SARDINIA: THE PEARL OF THE MEDITERRANEAN
OUR EXPERTS 34 ADVENTURE CHICK 40 THE FISHING KIT 42 GHALILAH MONSTERS
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12 HOTCOG MTB
44 EXCLUSIVE PREVIEW OF OUR NEW BOOK!
46 MEET JESSE AND NATHAN
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BEST SHOTS Each winning photographer will receive a free buff UAE headgear, and 5 free copies of the magazine. Well done!
Nathan Root Shawka MTB
Shoaib Ahmed Jan
Colin Handy
Green Machine
To see the rest of the fantastic entries simply visit www.outdooruae.com of find us on Facebook! (Outdoor UAE publisher page)
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EVENTS CALENDAR
Stay up-to-date with the latest events If you do decide to come down to any of the events listed below, look out for OutdoorUAE and you might be lucky enough to meet the team! If you would like your event listed here, get in touch with us at: contact@outdooruae.com. Entries listed in green are media partnered events.
Red Bull X-Fighters FMX Tournament Round 1 April 13 - The Walk, Jumeirah Beach Residence, Dubai
events calendar
High-flying freestyle motocross action is set to electrify Dubai as daredevil dirt-bike riders shoot up and reach for the sky while performing the sickest, death-defying stunts ever imagined. The FMX tournament will be touring around six locations around the world, with Dubai being chosen to grace the opening of the adrenaline-packed spectacle of twisted metal mayhem. Ticket prices range from 75 AED to 265 AED and can be bought at www.timeouttickets.com or www.tickets.virginmegastore.me.
Al Gharbia Watersports Festival April 12 to 21 - Al Gharbia, Abu Dhabi
The nation’s capital emirate will be bringing together sea kayakers, kite surfers and wake boarders worldwide to a ten-day event and show off some watersport action under the summer sun in the blue waters of the Arabian coast. www.algharbiafestivals.com/watersports/
Dubai Vertical Marathon
April 13 - Jumeirah Emirates Tower – Office Tower, Sheikh Zayed Rd. Dubai Dash 265 meters up through 1,334 flights of stairs and challenge the pulling grip of gravity as you ascend towards the heavens in the Jumeirah Emirates Towers’ office building for a noble cause. The event is now running for its 10th year, and has raised over a million Dirhams that will be donated to humanitarian aid work done by Médecins Sans Frontières’ to more than 60 countries worldwide. For registration and the event details visit www.premieremarthons.com and www.dubaiverticalmarathon.org.
Zoggs Aquathlon Race 3 of 3 April 28 - Madinat Jumeirah, Dubai
Runners and swimmers of all ages are invited to join in the third part of the biathlon event, and promises to bring a day of competitive fun under the summer sun. Those who would like to join can enter categories that start from the 200 m swim/2.5 km run to the intense 1600 m swim/10 km run or even the team relay. For registration and ticket price inquiries visit www.supersportsdubai.com.
Dubai Desert Road Run
April 28 - The Sevens Stadium, Al Ain Road, Dubai
The 10 km stretch of road at The Sevens Stadium will be readied for social and competitive runners alike. The run is a two-lap course that is aimed to draw the attention of spectators, and facilities will be made available on site including parking spaces, changing rooms, and most especially, food and beverage. Entry costs 70 AED per head, and individuals who are 15 years old and above can enter the event. Visit their website www.dubairunning.com for more details.
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Pro Bike Dubai Time Trial 21 and 42 km Series April 20 - Dubai International Academic City
Take a sprint with your bike on the throughways of Dubai’s Academic City in the individual time trial cycling event and clock-in your best time performance on either the 21 km or the 42 km run. To register, visit www.premiermarathons.com and click on the Individual Time Trial 21 and 42 km.
Just checking what’s in store at the
DUBAI GARDEN CENTER Words: Angelo Cabrera
If you have been regularly
tuning to some of the FM stations lately, you would have probably heard that quirky radio commercial with shouting; a competition about a furniture sale. Candidly comic as it sounds, it got people mumbling and rushing to the Dubai Garden Center, to see what the store has to offer.
Prices of the garden furniture products were reduced to either 25 or 50 percent of their original price, a good deal indeed for bargain hunters of garden knick-knacks and handicrafts. Among the stuff you can choose from was a long, wooden dining table set priced at 5,824 AED that was previously going for 7,765 AED, a sixchaired dining set going for 3,750 AED from the original 7,500 AED, and a coffee table that was previously 1,595 AED then lowered to just 797 AED! Their garden furniture sale will be running until April 20th, giving people plenty of time to get their list of garden things to buy. So far, according to the store’s operations manager Lito Dimaculangan, the turn-out of the promo was successful, as customers and the DGC patrons get to purchase their desired items and the store’s staff facing the need to re-stock their products on sale from time to time within the day as it is being sold after just a couple of hours on display! There is the regular flea market happening every weekend, selling locally produced fruits and vegetables, along with a selection of other dandy handicraft products, and some patisseries and other foodstuff. Aside from that, the garden store
also has a mini bookstore that offers a selection good reads at a very good price and a section right beside it that has got several aquariums of ornamental fish, and even baby turtles! With the summer season here, the garden store offers a variety of waterbedding plants that are suitable to grow in the coming months. Water fountains are also made aplenty at this time, too. So then, if you happen to have a garden, need something to sit or eat on while enjoying the view of the lush plant life around, and you live somewhere around Dubai, pay a visit at the Dubai Garden Center situated along Sheikh Zayed Road and check out the fanciful items that are truly worth your while.
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NEVER TOO OLD The Barkers and competing in the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge
Cross-country
mean machines are about to bring the thunder and intense off-road action to the dunes of the nation’s beloved capital as contenders rev up and roar the mighty engines of their battlehardened vehicles in the 22nd Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge.
The six-day cross country race will be a tough plough through the sweltering heat of the desert sun as contestants from different categories will be traversing through the desolate desert lands of Abu Dhabi’s Western Al Gharbia Region with hopes to reach the finish line first among the multitude of contenders racing in the event. Among a multitude of bold entrants in the desert driving showdown is an exceptional team that truly stands out of the competition: Newtrix Racing’s Ian and Sheila Barker, the only husband-and-wife senior tandem who will be competing in the 4WD category, and true blue veteran contenders of the grand event. And it is just not they are the only couple who will be making a dash for it in the competition –Ian is still going strong behind the wheel despite being 60, and his wife Sheila riding out with him at 52.
Name: Ian Barker Age: 60 Nationality: British Occupation: Managing Director, Al
Thika Packaging LLC Name: Sheila Hutton-Barker Age: 52 Nationality: British Occupation: currently not working, previously an ELT teacher Hometown: Sunderland, UK
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Emirate: living in Dubai since 1991 Vehicle of choice: Nissan Patrol LWB,
2008 model, modified with 6 litre V8 Corvette engine. This vehicle competes in T1, which is for modified/prototype cars, which means we are competing in the same class as the top professional drivers.
How did you get yourself in with cross-country racing? And for how long have you been in to it?
[Sheila] I have always been interested in off-roading and camping, having been involved in the Desert Challenge since 2001 as either a marshal, support crew for another local race team and in 2006/2007 as Sweep Team. We have been competing since 2008 when we raced in some local rallies and then in the Desert Challenge. We have also competed in Qatar, and my husband has competed in Saudi Arabia, but I am not able to take part there due to their ban on women in motor sport.
What’s your preparation stratagem for the race? Conditions in the desert seems to be quite harsh most especially during April, how are you preparing for this?
[Ian] The main preparation is centered on the vehicle. Personally I don’t have a particular fitness regime, but because of the heat we’ll be racing in next week we are already working on our hydration levels. During the rally we will have 9 liters of drinking water in the cockpit, and we’ll probably finish that between us. We have a reserve of another 10 liters in the back. As far as race strategy is concerned, it’s all about avoiding time penalties. You obviously need to avoid getting off-track and missing waypoints and passage controls, all of which will cost you time penalties. But the main issue is to avoid getting stuck or having a mechanical problem, because if you finish outside the limit
time, it’s an immediate 2 hour penalty. So it’s a fine balance between maintaining enough speed to finish within the time limit, and being careful enough to avoid getting stuck. To give you an idea how tough this event is, last year 43 cars and trucks started, but only 20 finished. Of these, only 7 avoided getting penalties!
We heard that your husband is also competing in the race; will you be riding in tandem? Tell us more about how it’s going to happen [Sheila] My husband, Ian Barker, is the driver. I am his co-driver - I’m the navigator.
Is it true that you have been competing in the previous
years? Tell us more about your experience on the ADDC challenge
[Sheila] This will be the 5th time that we have taken part in the Desert Challenge. We managed 14th place in 2008, but in 2009 we blew the engine on day 3. In 2010 we finished 10th – although we were as high as 6th. Last year, we had some technical problems, but still managed to finish 18th. In November we competed in the Qatar Baja, and were very pleased to get 5th place there. Last month Ian took part in the Umm Al Quwain Solo Race, and won the 4x4 class – our first ever win!
Based on your experience, what is the ‘real challenge’ of the ADDC?
[Ian] The main challenge is the environment and its effect on vehicle reliability and crew performance. You’ve got the worst combination of factors – high ambient temperatures, problems caused by sand and dust, and problems caused by the terrain on the steering, suspension etc. As soon as you get into problems (like getting stuck) the crew will start to feel the effects of heat exhaustion and dehydration. So just keeping going is the key to success!
An anecdote of your most memorable experience in your past entries in the ADDC
[Ian] 2009 was our first DC in our current V8-engined Patrol. On day 3, the engine blew when we were at the extreme western edge of the rally route, as far from tarmac as possible. (We later found out that the oil pipework was too small to provide the required flow-rate.) The rescue helicopter brought us back to our crew on the Ghayathi Road, and then we had to recover our stranded race car. Rick Carless and I took my road car (another Patrol) back in along rally route, and hitched up the race car on a long tow-strap. Rick drove it (without power brakes or power steering), and I towed it 45km through the dunes and out to the road. It was a real struggle, we had to winch it up some of the slopes, and find detours to avoid the worst dunes, and I had to keep up as much speed as possible which made for some hairy moments! We finally got out of the desert just before dark. Rick tie-wrapped his phone camera to the roll cage, so we have a video of this adventure!
Describe the entirety of the ADDC race [Ian] Every day, for five days, you do battle with the weather, the terrain and the rest of the competitors - then at night in the bivouac you make new friends, you beg, borrow and steal whatever you need, but everyone helps each other just to stay in the game.
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+2012 Jeep® Wrangler: + event reviews & reports
e Soul A New Heart, The Sam Built
on 70 years of legendary heritage, Jeep® is the authentic SUV with class-leading capability, craftsmanship and versatility. The 2012 Jeep® Wrangler and Wrangler Unlimited - the most capable and recognised vehicles in the world - are now even more capable both on- and off-road, courtesy of Chrysler Group’s all-new 3.6-litre Pentastar V6 engine - winner of the prestigious Ward’s 10 Best Engines award. More fuel efficient and powerful, and linked to a new five-speed automatic transmission, it delivers 285 horsepower (209 kW) and 260 lb.-ft. of torque (353 Nm), an improvement of, compared to the previous 3.8-litre V6 engine, 40% horsepower and 10% torque. The new powertrain and transmission also dramatically enhance the Wrangler’s on-road driving performance - delivering up to 21 mpg - while taking its legendary off-road capability to new levels. It also features the first application of a six-speed manual transmission to the Pentastar V6, making it one of the few mid-size SUVs to offer a manual option. Wrangler continues to offer a bodyon-frame design, front and rear fivelink suspension system, live axles and electronic lockers. The new automatic transmission delivers more refined
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shifting and gear selection - increasing the number of speeds from four to five allows the engine to operate in a more efficient rpm range, which helps increase fuel economy. More speeds also enable the engine to remain in the torque curve, increasing acceleration. The 2012 Wrangler boasts a 25% improvement in 0-60 mph (0-97 kmph) time, which is now 8.4 seconds. A lower first-gear ratio in the new automatic transmission also gives it more off-road capability via a lower overall crawl ratio. Best-in-class approach angle of 44.6 degrees, breakover angle of 25.5 degrees and departure angle of 40.6 degrees, help the Wrangler scale the toughest terrain. The capable driveline of the Sport and Sahara models includes a Dana 30 front axle and Dana 44 rear axle. The Command-Trac® NV241, part-time twospeed transfer case features a 2.72:1 low-range gear ratio, while an optional Trac-Lok® limited-slip rear differential provides extra torque and grip in lowtraction environments such as sand. The 2 door Jeep® Wrangler and 4 door Wrangler Unlimited, available in Sport and Sahara versions in the Middle East, feature an interior that combines rich styling, versatility, comfort and improved feature use. Highlights include upgraded materials, automatic temperature controls, power mirrors and steering wheel controls for vehicle systems. With room for five adults, Jeep® Wrangler Unlimited remains the only four-door convertible on the market. Jeep® Wrangler’s signature features include classic round headlamps, seven-slot
grille, trapezoid wheel flares, removable doors, exposed hinges, a fold-down windshield and innovative removable and convertible tops and half-doors that allow the Wrangler to retain the brand’s iconic appearance and function. The Wrangler incorporates structural enhancements and advanced safety systems to assist in crash avoidance and protection, including a reinforced passenger compartment safety cage that helps provide protection in the event of side and frontal impacts. Additional crash protection is provided by a standard frontal dual-stage air bag system. The 2012 Jeep® Wrangler and Wrangler Unlimited are available with an array of safety and security technology features - standard electronic stability control, electronic roll mitigation, Trailer-sway Control, Hill-start Assist and brake traction control are among two dozen available safety and security features engineered to improve handling and accident avoidance while providing occupant protection. An array of infotainment technologies enable drivers to safely communicate, navigate and select entertainment options using advanced voice recognition controls, including USB connectivity for iPod, Bluetooth® streaming audio, Uconnect® Navigation and Uconnect® Phone.
SPEED IN LUXURY: THE YAMAHA FX JET SKI SERIES Words: Angelo Cabrera
It’s
that time of the year when the sun burns the earth and your skin with its powerful rays, while the beach is sprawling with tanned bodies and the shore teeming with activities and life. And for the thrill-seeking few, what better way to quench their thirst for a rush of adrenaline and enjoy the great watery outdoors with a jet ski that can blast you through the waves with maddening speed and style. And that particular type of need has subtly been provided for by Yamaha with its latest line of Jet Skis, the FX luxury series, configured to perform with optimum speed and comfort. The design of the latest line of Yamaha’s speedy watercraft was refined to bring the smooth and sleek out and suit the rider’s handling needs. The latest line of Yamaha’s Jet Ski model is led by the flagship FX Cruiser SHO, a three-seating Jet Ski model that features a command link that offers the rider easy access to the watercraft’s instrumentation switches. The FX Cruiser SHO’s seat design was also done to give the riders a good view of their surroundings while taking a ride down the waves. Other models featured in the luxury Jet Ski line include the FX SHO, FX Cruiser HO, and FX HO. Another line of Jet Ski models to consider is VX Series WaveRunners, which Yamaha claimed to be the most affordable, reliable and fuel-efficient watercraft currently available in the market, and a top pick for the value minded buyers and rental operators alike due to its low maintenance feature. Another key feature of the VX line is its fuel-economy factor, being the best among three-seating Jet Ski models. One more to consider in Yamaha’s speedy line of Jet Skis is the FZ Series, which the company boasts as its epitome of high performance in its racing heritage. The FZ Series features Yamaha’s 1.8 litre supercharged engine, the largest displacement in the industry, along with Yamaha’s NanoXcel hull and deck,
which are engineered using the latest nanotechnology to be light, strong and nimble. If you’re the super sport adventurer who likes to gun through the waves with roaring engines under the summer heat, better put on a wet suit, try a ride out on one of these creations and zoom like a powerful jet stream on one of Arabia’s coastlines.
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+EVENT REVIEW +
event reviews and reports
6 HOURS OF HEAT AND HARDCORE: Hot Cog MTB’s Hot Six Endurance Challenge
Words: Angelo Cabrera Photos: Nathan Root
On the 23rd of March last month,
we scanned through the dry, rocky, and jagged landscape of Shawka that greeted our eyes in the far reaches of Sharjah’s Kalba area, anxious to check out the Hot Six Endurance Challenge organized by the ‘heartsand-lungs of steel’ mountain bikers from the Hot Cog MTB group.
Six hours worth of mountain-biking through a 10 km course of rough and rocky turns, swerves, sudden drops, steep uphill and downhill paths under the sweltering heat of the sun was one hell of a challenge by itself, but the Hot Cogs had revealed what the real challenge was; to do as many laps as you could around the track of hardcore difficulty within the six, excruciating hours. As unfathomably difficult as it sounds, a bunch of bikers had done several laps through the insane course already! Our adventurous buddy Ian Ganderton, who was one of the organizers of the endurance challenge, told our team that there were riders who have legs of iron doing as much as eight laps, finishing each lap at an average of 40 minutes. On top of that, there was this rider named Sam who had to pedal his way through the rocky road towards the finish line and made 3/4 of a lap with a flat back tire! In the end, the event saw a couple of spectacular efforts from several riders who had successfully gnarled and puffed their way through the sweet sight of the finish line. Jaako Soivio rode like a hot-cog monster and eventually nailed the top spot after doing seven laps in 5:21:15, while rider Adam Davidson followed behind in second as he completed the same amount of laps 21:47 minutes later. Phillip Ramos came in third and tallied six laps in 5:49:00. Meanwhile, Martin Harris and his riding partner Mike Duckworth won the team event after completing 8 laps of hard pedaling through the unforgiving terrain. Our team was invited to give the course a go – but being unseasoned mountain
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bikers, we really felt the pinch of the rocky terrain. So be prepared when considering a visit to the Shawka biking course, as a good level of experience and fitness is required. Adventure HQ, Ride Bike Shop, Micahs Bike Shop and Wolfi’s Bike Shop brought some great products and services to the event. The mountain biking community was in for a treat with a variety of bikes and biking equipment made available at the camping grounds, whereas clothing brands Endura and Buff sold their trademark apparels and accessories. A hearty meal of roasted chicken, charbroiled sausages and slaw was served by one of the guys from Adventure HQ who was doing his own endurance stint on the BBQ, while the others had their own roasting fires going and prepared their feasts. Some of them bade goodbye and left the camp site at Shawka tired but happy, while others decided to stay behind and settle for the night in the comforts of a campfire and tents, along with stories and a stash of cold drinks, before leaving the next day.
Angelo. Nothing like a good BBQ
Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge Sebsports has now been opened for over a year, and for the second year running we will be racing at the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge.
This year we will be supporting a strong team of 8 riders, 4 local and 4 international riders, 3 of them being Ex World Champions and one being the DC defending champion of the 2011 edition of the DC. The Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge is a 2500 km rally over 5 grueling, hot and windy days in some of the toughest and tallest dunes in the world, Liwa is part of the empty quarter on the border of Saudi Arabia and has the world’s longest stretch of unbroken dunes. The event is part of the World Rally Championship and pushes the best riders and pilots in the world to their absolute limits. The training for the riders for the Challenge has been specially formulated as to get them ready to spend in some cases 8 to 9 hours and their bike, this in dusty conditions and with temperatures reaching over 40 degrees Celsius. The Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge is an event not to be missed and we strongly suggest that anyone who has the time, to come down for a day or two and watch the event. There is a multitude of spectator vantage points from which you will be able to catch all the action.
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+EVENT REVIEW +
GULF FOR GOOD: CYCLE THE 7 EMIRATES by Louise Adamson
It’s an interesting
thing, donating money to charity. Usually, people ask, you stick your hand in your pocket, and you hand over some cash. Job done. No idea who the money is really going to, whether it will get to the people that need it, or even whether it will make a difference.
Established in the UAE in 2001, Gulf for Good don’t ask you just for money, they ask you to put yourself through gruelling and sometimes extreme challenges that really help put life, yours and other people’s, into perspective. Challenges also include direct contact with the recipient of the raised funds. Whether it is physically helping to build new houses for villagers or visiting orphanages, you can be sure it will be an experience you will never forget, often leaving participants emotionally affected by what they have seen and the touching stories people have told. Obviously the recipients of the funds benefit enormously, but doing the challenge itself often turns out to be a lifechanging experience for many challengers. Challenges have included summiting Kilimanjaro and Everest Base Camp, cycling from Bangkok to Angkor Wat, walking the Great Wall of China and a multi-activity adventure in Borneo. The most recent challenge saw 28 participants take on an epic bike ride around the UAE taking in all seven emirates raising money for the Al Manar Charity School in Ajman currently educating 2400 students. It provides free schooling for both boys and girls up to the age of 16, but has no government funding, so is reliant entirely on public donations. The children are of 36 different nationalities. More than 400 of these children are either abandoned or orphaned and at least 2000 of them are living in very vulnerable conditions.
THE CHALLENGE
The challenge began before a single pedal had been turned when 28 strangers from all walks of life, background and nationality met for the first time as a group. The next 5 days would see us eat, sleep, ride and
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suffer extreme conditions together – all for a common goal. Excitement, nerves, anticipation, fear – just a few of the emotions clearly evident on that first morning as we embarked on the tarmac route that took us from Al Ain Hili Park to Buraimi passing through the Omani border. It was a long drag to the campsite some 75km away, the road led us over undulating terrain that never seemed to end. A ‘wonderful’ (and I say that through gritted teeth as I remember the pain), long steep climb in the pitch black night following the pin-prick blinking lights of other riders was the last obstacle to be tackled before we could enjoy the comfort of our campsite and a hot meal – sleep wasn’t far away. Challenger, Marc van-den-Broucque says, “I was so tired at the end of every day that I could have slept on a bed of nails to be honest! But meeting people around the campfire every night and having great BBQ’d food made it more enjoyable.” A hearty breakfast cooked up by our very talented Nepalese camp-chef and the beautiful sun-dappled mountains were just enough to distract from steep gravel tracks winding up and over some monster climbs, and, although the day’s 92km seemed to have consisted of nothing but tough hill climbs, tunnels and traffic, a long fast downhill was enough to wipe
the memories of the day’s ascents as we swept, head down into Kalba with a majestic view across the ocean and at last, a rest off the bike seat. Challenger, Michael Cooke says, “There’s nothing quite like the feeling of a long winding downhill payback after a punishing climb.” I couldn’t agree more Michael! Dibba is a different world, especially in the morning light. A tranquillity punctuated only by the odd clip-clip of a goat hurried along by its owner. By now our morning routine was established – eat, brush teeth, check bike, fill water bottles and prepare for the day ahead with a short warm-up. We had quickly become a unit; riding out of camp zig-zagging backroads and chatting away like old friends. Challenger, Marc van-den-Broucque says, “We all got along really well - by the end of the second day you wouldn’t have been able to tell that we hadn’t known each other for years. It was great to see everyone bond really well despite any differences in ability on the bikes.” A tarmac section led us to the most difficult part of the day. Wadi Yas al Akl, through and up the Wadis Sidr and Sana – an incredibly challenging route for many reasons. It was touching 37 degrees with no breeze when we entered the narrow wadi and the gradual, almost invisible climb up the dried river bed had us all
wondering how we could possibly have prepared for this gruelling mix of loose stones and gravel, boulders, tough climbs and technical descents. A final push across a long bone-rattling, teeth loosening stretch of wadi led us into the small village of Al Ghail where we were relieved to see the yellow tents of camp as well as a welcoming committee consisting of a few local kids dressed in National Day garb, curious to know what on earth we were doing on their sand race track. Thursday morning had us on a bus and heading for the Al Manar School in Ajman where we were welcomed by a small group of representatives to give us a tour and show us how the funds raised will benefit the school and its students. It’s difficult to believe that an affluent country like the UAE can have such a school (and this is not the only one) funded entirely by charitable donations. It was evident that sanitation and developmental equipment is an absolute necessity where just a few barely functioning toilets service the students and a couple of slides in disrepair are the sum total of stimulation at play. Challenger, Michael Cooke says, “It was great to see immediately where the money could potentially go to make some
genuine improvements in a short time.” Challenger, Ben GleisnerCooke says, “It was interesting to see where the money would be going, and certainly highlighted that the project is in need of donations to further enhance what can be offered to students. Seeing how funds will make a difference underlined the real value of the cycle challenge. I’d ride up 1000 more hills if it meant a child gained an education they otherwise wouldn’t have.” Back to camp after the visit and it was a short tarmac road ride giving us all a false sense of security as we turned and saw the sand tracks that lay ahead. The only things meant to get across these sand flats are camels, so our bikes were at a disadvantage from the start! Ride, dismount, walk, mount, ride, fall, mount, ride, walk, get back on, grind through and battle on. But no-one gave up. And the faces at the end, a sight to behold – smiling, exhausted, grinning, scowling, laughing, swearing. Magic. Another wonderful night in the desert had us wake up to a freezing cold start
to the last day and the final 77km battle across pan-flat tarmac roads and through side-winds. Smiles were everywhere – I imagine mostly thinking of the soft, clean-smelling sheets of that night’s bed. Rolling victorious back into Bab Al Shams I think I speak for everyone when I look back on an exciting, eventful, emotional, tough, challenging, thoroughly enjoyable, adventure-filled ride. To make things even more rewarding, the cycle group had managed to raise a whopping AED 350,000! Let’s do it again sometime! Visit www.gulf4good.org and check out the 2012 challenges. Sign up and change yours and maybe someone else’s life.
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DRAGON BOATING by Kim Owen
Dragon boat paddling
is a sport which should come with a warning: ‘Beware - Highly Addictive!’ In its purest form, it’s adrenaline pumping, fiercely competitive and provides an awesome display of control, grace and power.
CNCF Barracuda Paddlers - a newcomer to women’s dragon boating in Dubai, is on a recruitment drive looking for women who want to join their ambitious team. The club has just celebrated its 1st year anniversary, and has already made its mark on the dragon boat circuit. In January this year, the club had its first big competitive win and acquired its first piece of silverware, taking first place in the Premier Women’s 200 meter race at Abu Dhabi’s Knock Out Dragon Boat Challenge this year. The club has also raced in Hong Kong and plan to return to the Far East to compete later this year. Nicki Berry, mother of two and the Barracudas’ team coach, says: “What we’re looking for is any woman who is willing to give it a go and make new friends. It’s a great way to challenge yourself individually while also learning to work as part of a team.” Fittingly for a team with many mums as members, the CNCF Barracuda Paddlers are also aiming to help children in Vietnam and Mongolia. One of the main aims of the Barracuda Paddlers is to raise awareness and funding for CNCF - the Christina Nobel Children’s Foundation charity. The organization protects and supports under-privileged children in Mongolia and Vietnam, aiming to ensure that each child has access to basic care and education. Dragon boating has ancient origins in Southern Chinese folk rituals and religious ceremonies going back 2000 years. Competition was originally between contending villagers and reaches as far back to the same era as the original games of Olympia in Greece. Today, dragon boat paddling is one of the fastest growing amateur water sports,
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with competitive events in 62 countries. It also features in programs of the Asian Games, the South-East Asian Games and the Asian Beach Games. Dubai is a perfect place to get involved in the sport, with consistently good weather and easy access to water. The UAE has up to 15 dragon boat teams who regularly train and compete in local and international events. Teams are also formed for corporate events held throughout the year. Dragon boaters use every muscle in their bodies, hitting places most gym workouts can’t reach. Paddling sessions focus on strengthening legs, thighs, back, shoulders and arms, as well as building core strength. Nicki, a personal trainer and the teams coach, says: “The explosive power and speed required to be competitive in a race comes from having well-conditioned lungs and strong muscles. Most dragon boat training sessions focus on paddle technique and building paddle fitness. If done regularly and consistently, all the ‘body conditioning’ just seems to follow as a benefit from the process.” Training sessions are held at the Dubai Marina. They’re varied and fun and last 60-90mins. The club is once again planning to compete at Hong Kong’s Stanley Sun Life Dragon Boat Festival in June. Hong Kong is considered to be the birthplace of modern dragon boat racing and the Stanley event is full of tradition, ritual, colour and passion. It’s a spectacle well worth experiencing, especially as a competitor! Dragon boat paddling is a team sport with a dash of oriental spice and a splash of competitive edge that could just fire up the athlete in you! Join up, and the Year of the Dragon could be your lucky year!! For more details check out the web site: www.barracudapaddlers.com or email: Margie@barracudapaddlers.com
+EVENT REVIEW +
CANDYSWEET RIDES Middle East Motor Tuning Show 2012 Words: Angelo Cabrera
The Emirati nation has a
serious love for cars – and we mean serious. We instantly know how much of its population have fallen for 4x4s and sports cars by taking a quick demographic look at all the motors cruising on the Sheikh Zayed Road. Another obvious place to check out this motor-pride was the Middle East Motor Tuning Show in from the 15th to the 17th of March that gathered the finest automotive creations which left car-loving blokes gasping in sheer awesomeness - another statement of their fancy for the metal-and-machine masterpieces. The OutdoorUAE team was also among the exhibitors that featured at the MEMTS and handed out some of the latest issues of the magazine to the public for free, with an aim to raise awareness of the Off Roading activities featured in the magazine that the public could get involved with…
The three-day tuner car spectacle that took place in Sharjah Expo Centre was a fanfare of the region’s automotive culture. Customized Chevy Camaros, Impalas, Cadies, Ford Mustangs, GMC’s, off-road 4x4s, tuner cars, pimped-out pick-up trucks which would seem to transform into Autobots at will, sports cars with sexy curves that would have made supermodels jealous, vintage automobiles in mint condition and waxed to a shiny glow, and lots of other stuff that had something or anything to do with hotrods. The life-size toy cars completely had us sighing at the sight of them – oh boy, we fell in love with them almost instantly. There were cars trembling with the booming sound of bass speakers that made your heart beat to its own funky rhythm. One sweet ride that got its interior juiced-up with a sleek audio system was a customized royal-blue Honda Civic with its backseat replaced by twin bass speakers and what seemed to be two nitrous-oxide
tanks that will have you zooming on the road at light speed. The European Mobile Media Association – Arabia was there and hosted an audio showdown for the loudest booming bass audio system fitted in tuner cars. Bombastic entries went in and maxed up their volumes to know who’s got the ride with the most powerful music box among them, with eardrums still intact. Another was a tuned-up brownorange Mazda 6 ‘trophy car’ fitted with Lamborghini doors and a superb speaker set at the back trunk. The showstopping show car was also strutting its championship cups just to show onlookers just how stunning the car’s winning beauty was. Beastly customized pick-up trucks were also put up on display by the Cyclonez GMC Customs group. The rolling behemoths have got monstrous tires with rims specked with steel spike bolts at the center, and a brutish body kit that would have made Arnold Schwarzenegger proud. The ‘Pride of the Emirates’ commemorative car was also on display – it’s a 1999 Chevrolet Camaro decked with 33,000 coins composed of 1 Dirham, 50 fils, 25 fils, 10 fils, 5 fils and 1 fil coins which was done to celebrate the country’s 40th National Day. The total amount of the coins used was about 21,000 AED and the job took 3,000 painstaking hours to finish. Talk about being patriotic! For the hip-hop fans, there was a skyblue-and-white Cadillac low-rider that caught our undivided attention, as it is being fitted with the famous hydraulic suspension systems that can make a whole car literally ‘bounce’ up and down on the asphalt with the flick of a switch, just like those things you see on rap artists’ music videos. The first words we uttered upon seeing this audacious automotive were ‘hell yeah!’ followed by a rhythmic headbobbing to go with it. An assembly crew from the G-Force Garage carried out a live modification job on a GMC pick-up truck to demonstrate what it’s like to fit body kits and other upgrades on a vehicle. There was also an artist at work doing his airbrush painting masterpiece on a hood of a black Nissan sedan that added flare in the creative and crafty atmosphere around.
Audacious interior for the audiophile
Grandpa’s car days
We bouncin’
The highlight of the three-day motor madness was the car drifting action done by the country’s drifting heroes, UAE Drifters, and the local 4x4 drifting team. Red Bull Car Park Drift’s reining UAE drift king Ahmed Al Ameri was also there and performed his trailblazing drifting skills with a tuner car, passing through the obstacle around the arena with graceful execution that wowed both the crowd and his fellow drift drivers. It was three days of pure auto bliss for petrol-heads and tuner fans, and a grand way to show love for the flourishing local car culture in the nation. In the land where black gold flows like honey, expect hot-rod monster machines to set their trails ablaze in the far-reaching roadways of this spirited country.
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The Liquid Rain Parties are back… LiquidSM, one of the capital’s
most established parties, made its debut in June 2011 and we’re happy to report that the infamous Rain Pool Party is back at the aloft Abu Dhabi Hotel for the 2012 season. Not just a pool party, LiquidSM takes getting wet, wet, wet to whole new level as cool water showers over the entire dance floor – the perfect way to dance the long, hot summer nights away! With a host of local and International DJ’s lined up, this party is so cool it’s hot, and when the weather is hot you’re guaranteed to stay cool! If you didn’t make the one on April 6th, make sure you circle May 4th in your calendar now, because one of the top DJ’s from Ibiza will be on the decks… As always ladies
can enjoy free entrance, whether you live in Abu Dhabi or outside it’s still worth checking out the hotel’s special LiquidSM overnight package for just AED 399 net including accommodation and entrance for two! As always with the aloft Abu Dhabi hotel, their friends have benefits so checkout facebook.com/maipoolparty for your chance to win exclusive prizes… For more information and pricing reach out directly to the hotel at 02 654 5013 (and don’t forget to tell them Outdoor UAE sent you)! Simple to find, the aloft Abu Dhabi hotel is located at Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre (ADNEC), just a short spin away from downtown Abu Dhabi, so buckle up and you'll be there in a wink of an eye.
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LETTING THE GOOD TIMES ROLL Kawasaki’s Financial Scheme Words: Angelo Cabrera
For most of us, owning a
“vicious” sport-bike will only remain a big dream to their costly price tags. But fear not, the folks from Kawasaki have laid out a crafty finance scheme specially made for those who aspire to ride one of their speed machines and zing like a roadster, at a more suitable option.
The crafty Japanese motoring brand introduces its Good Times! Financial Scheme that ranges from 4.49 percent to 6.15 percent, depending on the paying capability of their prospect buyers, with down payment plans starting at 0 percent and a financing term of up to four years. So this means a typical buyer who may not have been able to before, can now afford for example, to buy one of their Ninja Series models valued at over 55,000AED at 1,222 AED per month. This financing offer is especially great for those who are looking forward to get their hands on Kawasaki’s prized creation, the all-powerful 2012 Ninja ZX – 14R. This super sports bike is being hailed by the Kawasaki group as ‘the king of all sport bikes’ with its massive 1,441cc engine. People can now have this masterpiece of a motorbike for just 1,666 AED per month, and it looks very bold and daring in lime green. And take note, the financing scheme is available for absolutely all of Kawasaki’s vehicle range. You can apply for the financial plan for their dirt bikes, quad bikes, Jet Ski series, and off-road vehicle creations.
The financing scheme is a continuous offer aimed at helping future aspiring Kawasaki owners to get one of their masterly vehicle creations for a good deal. Do note that the prerequisite of the offer is to have a salary of at least 7,000 AED and above for financial security reasons. They have been strong on marketing the offer with the sport-bikes this past winter season, but now that the summer sun is out, they are targeting to launch the scheme with their watercraft series this April. So again, Fear not, super-bike fan, owning a two-wheeled monster machine is not much of a tough grind now as it was before. So start choosing now, saddle up, and let the ‘Good Times!’ roll.
+EVENT REVIEW +
ME4x4 GPS CHALLENGE 2012 by Gordon T. Smith
The GPS Challenge is a drive
between designated waypoints and the target is to achieve as close to the actual straight-line distance over the total number of waypoints. This distance is measured primarily via GPS readings rather than vehicle odometers due to gearing error if the tyres fitted are not standard. The team with the lowest average reading wins!
This year’s ME4x4 GPS Challenge was primarily in the Sharjah Emirate around Pink Rock, Wadi Faya, Fossil Rock and ending at the 1998 Arab Culture Capital Monument next to the Sharjah-Dhaid road. A turnout of eight teams of three vehicles per team began a staggered start near Tawi Nizwa, heading towards the first of ten waypoints.
The local terrain in that area means trying to drive in a straight line between the waypoints, with large pieces of rock as well as fences, small buildings etc., cause some diversions (and increased mileage) making straight line driving a formidable task even for the most experienced drivers. Once the first waypoint is reached, there are details of the next waypoint and so on. Each team has a page of stickers and must leave a team sticker on the GPS marker sheet. These sheets are then collected by the sweep team, who check that all teams have visited the waypoint, and also help
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ensure nobody is straggling behind or lost. The windy conditions blowing up sand also created an additional challenge, in particular for those who had some issues recovering stuck vehicles - having a good shemagh and sand goggles helps. One team using iPhones for navigation managed to find themselves at Dubai Outlet Mall; somebody apparently did not check the format used for the waypoints! The standard used by our club is WGS84 degrees, minutes, decimal minutes (dd mm.mmm). The teams left at five minute intervals from 0800 hrs with the first team arriving at the finish around 1430 hrs and the last team three hours later at 1730 hrs, which gives an indication of how difficult navigation over desert terrain can be. Only one team did not finish the 64 Km route; we believe they went shopping instead. Each team received discount vouchers from “Robbies� and Bling My Truck supplied some excellent prizes for the top three teams.
Results:
1st Place The Coordinators
2nd Place The JLTs
3rd Place The Royal Falcons
1. The Coordinators with 73.7 Km 2. The JLTs with 74.2 Km 3. The Royal Falcons with 74.6 Km Thanks to the organizing ME4x4 Marshals Dev, Warren and Sujit for the hard work setting up this event.
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+TRAVEL + ADVENTURE + So far, arriving back in Dubai
was a remote idea in the back of my mind. But when I saw a road sign announcing Bandar Abbas 1350km down the road, it struck me that if I wanted, I could be home in 3 days. However, the only thing I wanted was to extend my visa to stretch the trip as much as possible before going back to normal life.
I am experiencing parts of Iran I haven’t seen on the first part of the trip. I went up roughly through the Zagros Mountains in the West of the country, and I am now coming down along the Caspian Sea (that I didn’t see) and through the deserts of the center. As usual, most of the beautiful sights I am blessed with can’t be found on any map or in any guide, and it looks more and more like home with sand dunes, mud forts, oasis, and wandering camels… Following my instinct and trying to avoid any main road has been the thread of this trip and I definitely will not regret it. I told you last month that I had been invited by some off-roaders from Tehran to join them for a trip crossing Lut Desert; one of the less explored deserts on the planet. I saw some pictures of dunes that make Liwa look as flat as a beach. Unfortunately they didn’t get authorization of the army to take a foreigner there. The
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by Patrice Wergifosse place is a corridor for drug smugglers after they cross Afghanistan or the Pakistani border and the guy in charge for the region was afraid for my security. That was a big disappointment for me as I was really looking forward to this 6-7 days trip in full autonomy. When wandering alone along the edges of the desert, I met a few army patrols that were not really happy to see me there for the same reasons, so for the next few days I will have to stick to the more touristy areas. Two highlights of the North were an area I cannot remember the name of, near MeshginShar and Alamut valley north of Quazvin. In the first place I discovered a network of red canyons and I had a fun day trying all the tracks possible. Still with mud in some places, but it was evident that winter was getting away. Alamut Valley hosts a series of villages and hundreds of kilometers of mountain passes away from the nearest significant town. You could spend days exploring the whole region. There are tracks going over the mountains to the Caspian Sea, but they were still closed by snow (some passes are 3000+m high), so I had to backtrack and take the motorway to Tehran, but I’ll come back for sure! For the last 10 days, the snow has not been a problem anymore even though I still see some on a regular basis. I must admit I’ve started to have enough of it, I can now pack away my ski trousers for good after using them one last time for their real job: a day of skiing in Shemchak near Tehran. Unfortunately, the scattered snowfalls have been replaced by a powerful 5-day sand storm that didn’t stop for one single minute.
I have never seen anything that long in Dubai and even locals couldn’t remember something like that. Visibility was down sometimes to 10m and I had to seek refuge in Yazd and Kerman. I was pretty unhappy to be stuck in town, but I made the most of it by applying for few jobs. After all, in a few weeks life will go on. I will have a few more days in Iran in April, and then it will be time to arrange the ferry trip back to Sharjah. Next month’s article will probably be my last contribution on the trip in OutdoorUAE but I have enjoyed it, and it is probably not the last thing you will read from me. I couldn’t update my blog whilst in Iran because of the censorship, but if you just joined the story, you can read more articles and see a lot of pictures on my blog: slowlanetonowhere.blogspot.com See you next month!
Patrice (&Marcel of course)
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Level 1, Bawabat Al Sharq Mall, Abu Dhabi. 23
+EVENT REVIEW + ME4X4, NEWBIE DRIVE, RECOVERY WORKSHOP AND CAMPOUT 24th/25th February 2012 Words: Mike Nott
ME4x4 is not the largest, fast-
est growing or most well known offroad club in the UAE; there are many more that can claim to be these. But what ME4x4 does have is a wealth of experience that few can probably match. Established in 1997, it has conducted week long trips through the Omani Empty Quarter and into Yemen, it has opened up a plethora of new routes in both the UAE and Oman and its main aim is to go to those places that few, if any, others go. However, despite these laudable aims, the Club does not lose sight of the need to induct newcomers to the pleasures of off road driving; after all, we must all start somewhere.
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So, a decision was taken in December last year to organise an event to introduce newcomers and those with perhaps only a little experience, to these pleasures. Adverts were placed in this magazine and news of the event was put out on various grapevines. The number of participants was limited to 30 to which the Club allocated 10 senior members, allowing us to form 5 groups of 6 with 2 instructors. Of course a suitable area was also required that was sufficiently far away from Dubai/ Sharjah in order to avoid the hordes of weekend dune-bashers and the resultant churned up dust bowls. The area also needed to be suitable for newcomers, with a mix of terrains and allowing practice over a large variety of dune formations. All this can be found in the dunes to the South of Shweib and there is the added bonus of being able to camp undisturbed and with glorious views across to Jebel Sumeyni in the Oman. Full instructions were sent out to all the participants and everyone duly arrived at the Dubai Outlet Mall car-park with their interpretations of the Club’s mandatory recovery equipment. Some interpretations were better than others and some had hoped to find inspiration in the carpark! Nonetheless, we headed for
Shweib and split into our 5 groups and entered the dunes from a selection of entry points. There then followed a full morning of progressive newbie driving coaching. Tyre deflation and convoy drills were explained and then we moved into the dunes taking the line of least resistance to get those wholly new to driving on sand used to the feeling. Where to find the firmer sand, what features to avoid, where and how to stop, and use of low and high range were covered. Having successfully covered about 10km we now moved onto trickier terrain. Descending long slip faces, which, for the first time can be something of a mental hurdle for those new to it. It does take some positive persuasion to convince someone to keep their feet off both the accelerator and brake pedals while they descend a 50m long, 60° slope of soft, powdery sand. Finally we moved onto crest crossing, that most potentially embarrassing of terrains to cross.
Inevitably, at some point, you end up stuck on the crest and have to be recovered but, with persistence and practice, you get your approach and speed just right to get you over. Now, linking these terrains together, we headed for lunch. The Recovery Workshop is a mustdo for any newcomer to dune driving. The Club’s ethos is to concentrate first on self-recovery before moving onto assisted recovery. We also emphasise the point that with the Club’s mandatory equipment you can extract yourselves from almost any situation. And, if you think this mandatory equipment is extensive, it isn’t. It consists of a shovel (not a spade!), a rated recovery/snatch strap, 2 rated shackles, a jacking board, a tyre pressure gauge/deflator, a jacking board, a pair of work gloves and a fire extinguisher. Self recovery consists of a considerable amount of shovel use. However, knowing where and how to dig is a skill in itself and, as was demonstrated, effective digging in conjunction with some judicious pushing and rocking can get you out of most places. Of course, assisted recovery is less of a physical effort but the aim here is to put any recovery equipment and any recovery points under as little strain
as possible, so don’t forget to ease this strain by digging. The Club covered most eventualities: side slope stucks, crested stucks, powder stucks and tyres popping off their rims. Finally, as an introduction, the Club members demonstrated the use of sand-shoes and waffles, winches and hilift jacks; something for those to consider who are keen to make off-road driving a regular activity. By now, with the time approaching sundowner, we hot-footed it to the campsite, rendezvoused with all the other groups and enjoyed a most convivial campout. Blingmytruck had, very generously, donated a selection of prizes and these were raffled off around the campfire by the team. The next morning saw three groups head out from the campsite. Two heading across the dunes to Shweib and the other on the shortest route out to the road head. There were a few dings and mishaps over the two days but apart from the inappropriate use of a Nissan Armada, necessitating a tow and a two hour night drive through the dunes, the weekend had been, by all accounts, a huge success. If you’re reading this and are looking for a club that hides it light under a bushel, come and join us.
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+TRAVEL +
Sardinia:
pearl of the Mediterranean by Antonio Varcasia
Antonio
is a native and current resident of Italy’s Sardinia Island. Besides being a saltwater angler, he is also a video producer and a well-known sport-fishing journalist, having written for several magazines in Europe.
“
This land does not look like any other place. Sardinia is something else: enchanting space all around and distances to be travelled, nothing is finite, nothing is defined. It is like freedom itself. (David Herbert Lawrence, from Sea and Sardinia, 1921).
The
name Sardinia derives from its past inhabitants: the Shardana (Sherden). Well known in ancient times by both the Phoenicians and the Greeks, it was called Hyknusa or Ichnussa (Ιχνουσσα) by the latter, while the Latins called it Sardinia. It is the second largest of the Italian islands and of the entire Mediterranean Sea (23,821 km²); it is situated between the 41st and the 39th parallel, at a distance of around 187 nautical miles from the Italian coast, and of only 11 miles from Bonifacio, Corse. The island is the depositary of a culture which is thousands of years old with unique ethnic and linguistic peculiarities. Its isolation, created by its geographical position is the prevailing feature which contributed to maintaining its old traditions. This is in spite of commercial and cultural relations which have existed with many Mediterranean and European populations since ancient times, given its strategic position in the centre of the Western Mediterranean. In recent times, many visitors and writers have exalted the beauty of the island in their works, immersed, as it is, in largely uncontaminated surroundings, which host botanic and faunal landscapes with unique species, where the remains of the mysterious Nuragic civilisation are to be found. Its position means it is a good point of transit on the migration route of forage fish and all the predators which follow them. The abundance of rocky and shallows coasts, which are good refugia for
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alevins of many species to take refuge in, contribute to maintaining a stable and abundant fish population. Furthermore, thanks to its particular orogenesis, the Sardinian coast has a low human population density (around 1 million) in relation to the length of its coast
and the low fishing pressure from professional fishermen maintains fish stocks at an acceptable level. The Sardinian sea bottom is famous for the richness of its species and the clarity of its waters, and thanks to this fortunate combination, the island has been considered an
ideal location for tourism and sportfishing, in particular for spinning and vertical jigging.
Catchable species
The cold months: looking for Seabass and Barracuda The species which is most sought by anglers in Sardinia in all seasons, but above all during the cold months, is the Seabass (D. labrax). The best conditions for this kind of fishing in Sardinia are when the sea surface is perturbed or when it is calm just after a storm, as this predator has the habit of hunting near the seashore exploiting the poor visibility of a murky undertow or even an outfall. The most used tackle for Seabass is a classic light spinning rod of around 2.102.40 metres in length which casts up to 30-40 grams, matched with a medium/ high 3000-4000 size reel with a 20-40lbs dyneema or spectra braided line and 20-50lbs nylon or fluorocarbon terminal tackle, depending on the type of seabed and the sea conditions. Minnow, from 8 to 17 cm, are the best choice as lures as they do not sink too much unlike the lipless minnow, or other ones that don’t have big lips such as Ima Sasuke, Komomo, Duo Terrif, Nabarone, Rapala Max Rap, Duo Tide Minnow, Daiwa Shore line shiner. Other artificial baits which give the best results for Seabass in rocky shores are topwater, such as small poppers or WTD (Walking the Dog) which should be used near to rocks or small outfalls. We can say that Seabass fishing in Sardinia is very close to what happens in the Mediterranean rocky shore of France and Corsica. Seabass fishing from the beach is also possible, while fishing in estuaries is less common, as the island is not so rich of rivers (and often these
places are too crowed by surfcasters and bottom fishing anglers). On deeper parts of the seabed, such as volcanic ones which have sudden drops, you can often catch another fascinating predator which has been populating the Sardinian coasts for around the last fifteen years: the Yellowmouth Barracuda (Sphyraena viridensis). In the last years this has become one of the most usual prey for anglers that use artificial baits. Their diffusion to areas under rocky coasts is now practically guaranteed almost all year round, except in particularly cold periods of the year (usually February/March), when large schools move for refuge in small tourist harbours where they can still, however, be caught. During the mating season in May, the cudas are largely present inshore but do not hunt or eat until they have attended to their reproductive affairs. Over the summer, when the influx of tourists makes most of the fish swim away, it is still possible to catch large specimens with topwater lures in many spots, particularly high rocky shores, during the night. For Barracuda, timing is essential for a shore spinner: at dawn and sunset they will come closer for casting and captures are usually concentrated in these periods, however, during the day it is very unusual to see cudas when the sea is calm.
Barracuda like minnows that float in the upper side of the water column (except for the coldest period, when they swim deeper): their size does not matter, generally bigger is better. Long jerk are appreciated by big and small cudas alike, with a classical slow jerking with the tip of the rod down. The most sought after colours are sardine and glowing colours such as vis yellow, white, orange. When the winter makes the water temperature colder, barracuda became lazy and swim deeper when the best choice should be lipless sinking (Rapala Glidin’ rap is probably the most appreciated by their teeth) but also soft plastics shad and classical jigs with bucktail dressing are very effective. No doubt a cudas’ mouth will make light work of your little arsenal and get away with some jigs. Wire leader is not a good choice because it dramatically reduces strikes and doesn’t allow any feeling from yourself and the lure: the best choice is a good monofilament leader (nylon or fluorocarbon) of 50/60 lbs. The same fishing rod and reel used for Seabass from shore can easily be used, even during spring when the large females are close to reproduction, a slightly more powerful tackle could be recommended, given that 5-6kg specimens and even monsters weighing up to 10-12kg can be caught. Sometimes, when fishing from a rocky coast, if the conditions are good and fortune is on your side, it is possible to see one of the most fascinating predators of the Mediterranean, the lord of the high
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seabed and the submerged shallows: the Dentex (Dentex dentex), a beautiful Sparidae which patrols the rocky seabed in search of its preferred prey: Squid, Garfish, Mullets and Chromis. Up to now, only a few fortunate anglers have had the pleasure of catching a Dentex and they have used 12-16 cm sinking minnow or bucktail jigs, to be worked on the sea bottom. The defences of this predator are lively and it is always on the lookout for a rocky sea bottom to hide in. The Dentex, on the other hand, is one of the most frequent prey for those who have access to a boat in these months and can try their hand at vertical jigging. This technique, which is ever more frequently practised, enables Amberjacks, Sea Perch, and School Tunas to be caught in addition to these beautiful Sparidae, producing intense emotion and breathtaking combat.
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The warm months: Tunids, Leerfish, Bluefish and Dolphinfish When the days lengthen it is the sign that pelagics following the shoals of Anchovies and Sardines are coming closer to the coast. One of the most exciting fish to catch is Bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) which have a range which is limited to a few coastal areas, above all near to ports or river and fish trade outfalls. The Bluefish is a ravenous predator which can reach up to 8 9 kg in weight and is one of the most engaging fighters for the seaspinner due to its habit of violently leaping out of the water to free itself and its extraordinary teeth which really put the fishing line and moreover your leader to the test. This predator is active all day but it is, above all, at sunset and overnight when it is easiest to hook with surface lures and classic minnow baits. The baits which have given the most important results, up to now, are classic skipping lures such as Robert Lure Rangers and Italian Utopia tackle Ketch; also pencil poppers are good and sometimes, lipless and WTD. Roughly in the same environment of bluefish, we can also find the queen of the Mediterranean artificial bait anglers: the Leerfish (Lichia amia). On the Sardinian coast, the Leerfish fishing season begins in April/May, when they comes closer to shore for breeding and where they can find large shoals of their favourite prey, Mullets, so the best spots to catch them are river outfalls and ports where they are to be found in abundance. Large Leerfish in these settings appear to be real invaders, it is easy to see them in groups of 6 to8 specimens, which during the warmest parts of the day push the Mullets to the surface and hem them in towards the shore. Spinning for large Leerfish is for the “diehard spinner”: an angler who wants to have this fish hanging from his rod must be very patient as often the hours spent without seeing a fin seem never-
ending. He must be able to keep a cool head: when the Leerfish finally ventures towards the artificial bait he must not balk, as a slow recovery or a hasty strike can thwart days of fishing. He needs to be in good condition: casting heavy artificial bait which can weigh 60 80 grams for hours with appropriate rods is not for everyone! Indeed, these situations should be faced with heavy spinning tackle, so 2.20-2.70 rods and fast or extra fast actions which are able to cast heavy bait such as large poppers, skipping lures and pencils weighing from 50-90 grams should be used. The rod must have a good power reserve in order to support the fleeing fish which can weigh 20 kg and over. The reel must be adequate for the rod and the prey and must contain at least 250 metres of 50lb braided GSPE line (5000/8000 sizes are the best choice), it must have very good friction, which is both fluid and which unreels the line without jerking, in general it should have a 50-60lb nylon or fluorocarbon terminal, which should be tied with a Bristol knot to the braided double with a Bimini Twist at the end section. In Autumn, Spinner’s most wanted fish is the Dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus), a beautiful fish with bright colours which moves in large shoals patrolling the coasts perennially on the look out for small fish to terrorise with violent feeds at the surface. This predator can also be caught near to floating objects such as wrecks or buoys due to its habit of staying in the shadows of these objects (FADs). The most profitable artificial baits are all the classic surface ones such as surface lipless, poppers or skipping lures, metallic-sardine jigs or classic bucktail or synthetic hair jigs, which should be used when the shoals of Dolphinfish are much deeper. The recommended rod for this strong and entertaining prey could be a 2.10 metre rod which casts up to 30-50 grams, matched with a classic 4000/5000 high ratio reel (fastest is better) and usually a 30-40lb braided line. It is even possible to catch Dolphins when they comes closer to the coasts; boat fishing is recommended for better results, perhaps looking for fads and fries inshore. Fishing from a boat enables other pelagics such as Sarda sarda or Mackerel Tuna (Euthynnus alletteratus) or Frigate Tuna (Auxis thazard) as well as Dolphinfish to be caught; these are all fish which despite their small size are able to develop exceptional strength and put our tackle to the test. Bluefin tuna is present in all these places, spinning for this fish requires specific tackle and good experience and is strictly regulated by severe legislation (minimun size: 30Kg, 135 cm minimum length). It is only allowed during the fishing period from 15 June to 15 October.
coast, the seabass, but it is also one of the best place to fish for Yellowmouth Barracuda. In summer the fishing becomes problematic as there is a large tourist flow concentrated in a relatively small area. This does not exclude fishing completely though, except during rare summer disturbances confined to sunrise and sunset and at night. Inshore fishing is very good for dolphinfish (there are few fads a couple of miles out of the harbour) and small tunids. The authors of this article are based in this small town and can provide various information for anglers who would fish from shore. There is also the possibility of going out with some local guides (send an email to the author to kahuna@videospin.it).
Where to fish
Sardinia is situated in the centre of the Western Mediterranean, just 12km from Corsica, 120km from Tuscany and 185km from the coast of North Africa. The climate is generally mild, influenced by air masses from the Atlantic, Africa and the Arctic. The weather is generally good: there are around 300 days of sun during the year and rain on the other days, with the highest concentration of rain in the winter and autumn seasons and a few sudden heavy downpours in the spring. The island is very windy, with the Maestral wind from the North West dominating, making it cold and biting in the winter, but milder in the summer when the air is drier and more breathable. Less frequently, there is the Scirocco wind, which the southern coast is exposed to, and the Levanter and north-easterly winds which blow along the west coast. For this and other reasons, Sardinia is an ideal place for sports fishing, both for fishing techniques from dry land (Fly-fishing and Spinning) and from boats such as Vertical Jigging and Trolling. Bear in mind that even though it is a splendid island, Sardinia is not a Caribbean flat or an ocean spot, so with Sardinian fishing it is not always possible to catch what you would like to catch. This is also because the island is exposed to winds which can have a positive or negative influence on the fishing outcome. Without doubt, the best way to take advantage of the island’s potential is to plan a fishing holiday with an expert guide, who can adequately advise you and help meet your fishing needs.
to combine his passion with pleasing the family, as they can enjoy the beauty of the uncontaminated sea and in the evening can find a little nightlife to complete the holiday. As an expert guide for our fishing in Alghero, we found Daniele Foddai who dedicates himself mainly to live bait Trolling and vertical Jigging, but also for inshore spinning and fly fishing. He is one of the most long established sport fishing guides in Alghero and is avaliable for individual and group tours. He can be contacted via email: murkellino@yahoo.it or by mobile: +39 328 4766494. Comune di Alghero http://www.alghero-turismo.it
Stintino and the Asinara Gulf (North coast)
Stintino is a small fishing town in the northern part of Sardinia, in front of the beautiful National Park of Asinara Island. Its location makes it a natural paradise for anglers in search of the queen of the
Comune di Stintino http://www.comune.stintino.ss.it
Getting there
Sardinia is easily accessible by air with several flights a day from Rome or Milan on Alghero (west/north coast) Olbia (east coast) and Cagliari (south). The Island has a typical Mediterranean climate. Car hire is strongly recommended, expecially if you have to reach a fishing spot as train and bus services are not very efficent,). There are no special visa requirements. Sardinia’s food, history and nature makes this trip very interesting for non-fishermen too, and from May to October is amazing with its beautiful beaches reminiscent of other tropical locations. Hotels of all price ranges are available in the main city . B&B accommodation is ideal for anglers: a quick google search will give you several possibilities in Alghero, while in Stintino there are a few open during the low season, including the recommended B&B Il Porto Vecchio (www. bbstintino.com).
Guides: Alghero and the Riviera del Corallo (West Coast)
Alghero is a small Catalan outpost in Sardinia, a city with a fine historical centre which overlooks a well maintained port and a coastline which is famous the world over for its spectacular reefs and its numerous white beaches which attract thousands of tourists every year. A holiday in Alghero is the best way for an angler
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+EVENT REVIEW + Dubai's Only True Resort
BEACH FESTIVAL FRIDAY 30TH MARCH - a most excellent day of fun for all
©Xavier Ansart
On the
30th of March 2012, Outdoor UAE organized its first beach festival. With the tremendous support of its main sponsors; Adventure HQ and Jebel Ali Golf Resort and Spa, the first OutdoorUAE beach festival proved to be a great success. Further sponsors of the event included Julbo Eyewear, Al Ain Water Adventure Park and Al Yousuf Motors. A special thank you goes out to all sponsors and all the supporters of the event, not to mention those who ran activities throughout the day and contributed to the fantastic job of getting the people involved! Why a Beach Festival?
The concept of the Beach festival first came about with an aim to bring together some of the most enjoyable, accessible and relatively inexpensive activities to one venue. With some of the top outdoor operators and retailers in the UAE as supporters and sponsors - their outdoor activities and products would be available for the public to try out, getting them involved, trying something new and meeting the people behind the names! The main challenge the Outdoor UAE team faced in explaining the idea to people was to get them to understand it was a celebration of the Outdoors, a ‘Festival’ and not a trade show. One of Outdoor UAE’s main aims was to get people involved in all these activities and let them try as many as possible in one day. To be able to run the event, an entrance fee of 100 AED for Adults and 50 AED for kids below 10 years was charged. The entrance fee
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and limited tickets ensured that everyone had the chance to try the activities with no long queues. Despite the World Cup the following day at Meydan (just 30 minutes drive away), 600 visitors walked through the door and enjoyed not only a great day out at the beach but activity participated in an event that looks to have a promising future on Dubai’s yearly to do list! With not much more to say than, ‘hope to see you there next time’ –have a look to the photos to get a feel of what the day was about!
All photos of the event can be found on our website and on facebook, please tag yourself and friends and share the photos. If you are interested in the event and would like to join us for the next beach festival we are aiming to run the event from morning until evening rather than afternoon until midnight. Sign up to our newsletter to find out more about how to get involved. The next event will most probably be after the summer heat or on the last week before the end of May, we will be announcing it shortly so keep your ears peeled! Follow us to stay up to date.
©Xavier Ansart
A big thank you goes out to all the visitors and to all the sponsors and supporters and remember once you get involved – stay involved!
The OutdoorUAE Team.
©Xavier Ansart
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+PRODUCTS + A round-up of quality products available right here in the UAE
HUMMVEE JERSEY 225AED Available at: Adventure HQ in Times Square Center, Micah’s Bike Shop in Al Quoz area behind Oasis Centre Trail Protection, Rapid-wick textured fabric, Contrast mesh panels underarm/ side/back neck Long CF zipper with snapdown puller and reflective piping Triple rear pockets Zipped reflective pocket with iPod® port Microfibre glasses wipe integrated into side seam Silicone back pack gripper shoulder prints
YAMAHA VALUE 4-BUCKLE PFD 230AED Available at: all Al Yousuf Showrooms Tel: 04 3390621 Heavy duty coated nylon PFD by Yamaha is designed to assist a wearer, either conscious or unconscious, to keep afloat. Equipped with Front, Side & back foam & U.S. Coast Guard Approved/UL Listed.
COLUMBIA ENDURA 35 605AED Available at: all Columbia Stores +971 4 434 1280 Available sizes: 35L, 50L(755AED), 65L(785AED). Features: OmniShield advanced repellency, Techlite Endurance L.O.A.D. shoulder straps, Techlite L.O.A.D. hip-belt, 3L hydration compatible
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SINGLET RACK II SHORTS 335AED Available at: Adventure HQ in Times Square Center, Micah’s Bike Shop in Al Quoz area behind Oasis Centre Fully featured, durable baggy shorts, Cordura® nylon fabric with durable water repellent finish, Stretch thigh and back yoke panels, Front pockets with magnetic closure including zipped security pocket, Rear cargo pockets, Thigh vents with contrast zippers and mesh inserts, Wicking waistband with integral elastication and D-ring construction for adjustment, Heavy duty double and triple stitch on all seams, Clickfast™ compatible
Element fitness
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FREESTYLE WATCH 620AED Available at: Burton & Circle8 shop at Dubai Mall. Tel: 04-434-0675 A sport inspired evolution from the original Precision, upgraded with a fresh look and new ana-digi module to keep you on time before, during, and after your next adventure. 51mm Case, Analog and digital time/day/date, 1/100s Stopwatch, Dual Time, Daily Alarm, Dual Time Alarm, Preset Timer, Hourly Chime, Stainless Steel case, Durable polyurethane strap, Rotating bezel, Hydro pushers, 200 Meters H2O
REACTOR 35 MUMMY 495AED Available at: all Columbia Stores +971 4 434 1280 Compass Blue, 100% Nylon. Features: OmniHeat - thermal reflactive lining, Omni-Shield - advanced repellency, 2lb average weight, storage sack included.
PERSONAL
TRAINING
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EXCITEMENT
TO YOUR
TRAINING Let Element fitness remove the 4 walls and take you outside the gym . Challenge your thinking about what it means to be "fit" and how great it feels to really enjoy achieving your goals, Let us remind you how amazing and exhilarating it is to be out there in the natural world, which we often take for granted. Have a passion and stay fit and healthy. Open up your world to amazing adventure through your own health & fitness. Personal Training
Fitness Adventure Trips
TWIN AIR FILTERS 110AED Available at: SebSports +9714 3393399 www.sebsports.com Twin Air Filter’s design, high quality materials and superior construction deliver unbeatable performance and protection - and make Twin Air Filters the hands-down choice of more World & National Champions than all other filters combined. Extensive range available for bikes, quads and UTVs
boot camps
Free Lifestyle consultation and fitness body composition test. Packages developed for individual needs and goals. Sharon.james@element-fitness.net www.element-fitness.net Element-fitness
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050 2771317
+OUR EXPERTS +
e r u t n e Chick Adv dog d r a w n w o d e h t s e do
our experts
I have
Tori
writer, runner, blogger & adidas athlete PS. My email address is tori@fitchicksandfastwomen. com for thoughts, ideas, and suggestions… or just to say hello!
long been a fan of yoga. It has multiple benefits on its own from stress and pain relief to increasing strength, balance and flexibility, from cardio conditioning to finding some inner peace and quietening our monkey minds. Yoga is also a fantastic way to iron out the kinks we create from our adventure activities, be they cycling or climbing, trail running or paddling, mountaineering or diving. Add the al fresco element and Adventure Chick becomes very happy indeed. And so it was, on a cool Friday afternoon, that I made sure I found time for Yoga Fest’s Full Moon Friday event. Yoga Fest is a fantastic community yoga initiative held by one of the lakes in Dubai Internet City. Taking place every month, in conjunction with the full moon, the event is all about bringing together Dubai residents of all ages and abilities to practise yoga together and to experiment with different yoga styles. Various sessions are held, led by the city’s leading instructors, for an hour at a time. Just pitch up at any major yoga studio these days and you will be dazzled by the array of classes on offer … some focus more on breathing and meditation, others give you a pretty tough and physical work-out and others again, are fantastic for stretching and rejuvenating. All, to varying degrees, have a profound effect on our mental, emotional and physical health. The three sessions held on this occasion were Hatha, Pulse and Yin Yang.
Hatha Yoga is really the root of all yoga disciplines and is ideal for beginners as well as more experienced practitioners who want a more gentle, slow-paced, meditative yoga experience. Asanas (poses) are held for longer lengths of time thus enhancing muscle tone, flexibility and a peaceful mind. The end of a class is usually spent practicing some breathing and relaxation techniques. Pulse Yoga is all about micro move-
ments and free weights that are applied to basic yoga postures to strengthen, sculpt & tone your body and give you arms, shoulders and a bottom to die for. The sequencing of the postures allows you to flow smoothly through the routine
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and thereby reap the added benefit of enhancing your flexibility as well.
Yin Yang Yoga provides the benefits
of a balanced practice of Yin and Yang styles of yoga. The Yin style of long-held passive poses opens the body to more flexibility, increased flow of chi (energy) and a more contemplative mind-set. Yang yoga, on the other hand, is more active and dynamic, designed to strengthen and invigorate the body and mind. I left Full Moon Friday feeling relaxed, recharged and rejuvenated … and thanks to the lush lawns, splashing ducks and singing birds, I left forgetting I was in the midst of a commercial district in the middle of the desert. The entire concept is really pretty special. Here, amidst the offices of some of the world’s greatest companies, in probably one of the most dynamic, corporate and fast-moving cities in the world, come together a community from all four corners, of all levels of yoga experience and all walks of life, to practise yoga outdoors. Few countries alone, throughout the ‘winter’ months, even have the climate to accommodate this! I love that so many great community events are sprouting all over Dubai these days. They are a welcome antidote from the glitz and glamour that can sometimes seem overwhelming. This one, I certainly hope, will be here to stay and judging by the numbers that turn up each month, I suspect it will do!
Need to know: When: The next Full Moon Friday is planned on 6th April then the series will break for the summer. Their annual weekend-long YogaFest event will be held 29th Nov – 1st Dec. Where: Dubai Internet City Ampitheatre Wear: Comfortable clothing and take a yoga mat or a large towel What else: Call 04 391 0001 for enquiries, visit www.dic.ae/ yogafest & join YogaFest UAE on Facebook too. The event is free but registration is recommended ...
Love, Tori x
Photos: Wouter Kingma
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+EVENT REVIEW +
DUBAI INTERNATIONAL BOAT SHOW 2012 A Boater’s Paradise
Words: Angelo Cabrera
Dubai
has been building its name as one of the world’s luxurious destinations to date, and does not fall short of being such. But still, with all the gold-and-diamond trappings embroidered on the desert-city’s landscape, it always remembers its roots of being a coastal community, once thriving on the gifts of the azure waters of the Arabian Gulf that has been richly blessed with pearls and an assortment of marine life. And what better way to pay tribute to its blessed waters than by a celebration of boats and equipment that were meant for maritime travels, blending a stroke of class and the extravagance that Dubai has become inherently and rightfully synonymous with. That, indeed, must have been the motif of the Dubai International Boat Show that ran from March 13 to 17 at the Dubai International Marine Club – Mina Seyahi. Boats of all sizes and ones with odd shapes and styles, were docked at the Marina where the gargantuan and grandiose have come together so well in one place. Super yachts were floating mansions at sea, boasting their fine woodwork and hotel-like cabin interiors aboard. Deck boats and speed boats made with five-star quality, catamarans for those who love setting to the sea with sails and the latest marine technologies and equipment available in the maritime market. One particular watercraft that stood out from the rest was a huge ‘floating gallery’ that was indeed both stunning and audacious. The two-storey 15-plus ft. long gallery boat was brought by the Al Futtaim group as one of its frontline attractions
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in selling its latest offerings in the marine industry. The luxurious boat show event would not be complete without the presence of the nation’s crown jewel of the seas, the mega yacht ‘Dubai.’ The prestigious yacht once hailed the largest of its kind in the world was a grand statement of Dubai’s wealth and class. The 531ft behemoth of a yacht is owned by HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, UAE’s vicepresident, prime minister and the ruler of Dubai. The floating seven-star-luxuryhotel-like yacht has 44 cabins, a crew of 88 men strong and a rumored worth of over 300 million USD. The mega yacht’s interior design was also made fit for a sheikh highlighted by luxurious fabrics and handmade mosaics within its masterful halls, and by a grand, circular staircase made with glass steps that changes color. The boat show was not entirely about boats, though. A mélange of other trades were there ranging from diving clubs, adventure groups, and cars – which was quite an odd thing to expect in an exhibit that features things for the water, in spite of that, did not fall short of being one with the fabulous atmosphere, with high-class carmakers like Alfa Romeo, which caught the attention of passersby with its futuristic sports car, that strutted their top-of-the line automotives near the entrance halls. The OutdoorUAE team was also one of the exhibitors at the event, handing out complimentary copies to passers-by curious of what we had in store for them. A raffle of three goodies we were given away during the final day of the exhibition:
including a Modular Kayak from GO Sport Dubai mall, a fishing trip for 6 from Ocean Active and a night’s stay for two at the Banyan Tree in Ras Al Khaimah. Indeed, the emirate that was once a humble coastal province where the sails of its dhows billow to the breath of the Arabian breeze, has proved that it can and will always hail its beginnings, and celebrate the treasures of the Arabian blue with a spectacular show of maritime greatness.
>>MEET OUR RAFFLE WINNERS! We had 3 fantastic raffle prizes to give away at the boat show, and here are the winners!
MODULAR KAYAK FROM GOSPORT PENNY MCGARRY
DUBAI MALL
1 NIGHT FOR TWO AT THE BANYAN TREE LEANNE GALLARD-COETZEE
FISHING CRUISE FOR UP TO 6 PEOPLE GARY KELLY 37
SEA SPORTS & SAFETY Your Life is More Important than the Unsafe Adventures!
Summer is almost at the
doors, knocking the sea enthusiast to get into the exciting, fun filled sea adventures. Let’s do kayaking... what about surfing... No, no, we should do wakeboarding or may be rafting..! We are loaded with options! Hey wait for a while, have you prepared yourself for sea uncertainties or you are about to risk your life? Oh, what are the safety measures? Hmmm, let’s explore some: Kayaking:
Kayak is the perfect option to roam on sea, fishing, and exploring new exciting places. It’s a paddle supported boat with a capacity to hold 1 or 2 persons. Boat safety: Before getting into your kayak check your kayak & paddles thoroughly for any repair and maintenance requirements. Personal Safety: Life Jacket / PFDs, Helmet, wetsuit, gloves, shoes
Wake Boarding or Surfing:
Wakeboarding, surfing or even wake surfing is thrilling face-to-face fun with the sea while ruling on waves or wake. It’s fast, easy & can be done around any water location with suitable waves. Wakeboard Safety: Check your bindings and the tow row are safely secured, and that you have a life jacket if you are behind a boat. Board Safety: Wax your board properly & check the Leash with other parts. Personal Safety: Wetsuit, Gloves, Boot and Bindings
Towable / Inflatable
With towable you can share the fun together while keeping yourself close to water. Through this activity you come across to various faces of water with thrilling experiences. Towable Safety: check towable for possible leakages, breakage and other maintenance requirements Personal Safety: Life Jacket, Wetsuit, jacket, gloves, helmets, shoes If you are planning to spend more than few hours in water than it is recommended to
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keep the following items with you because weather conditions can change so quickly! • Visual Signals (e.g: flash lights, flares) • Navigation Equipment (e.g: campus, GPS) • Storage bags with shorts & extra cloths • Sunscreen, sunglasses, cap etc • Drinking water and snacks • Tool Kits and Spare Parts • First Aid It is always recommended that you should chose quality safety items through the authorized dealers such as Al Yousuf Motors where not only quality is good but also you can find their price very competitive, above all, you can find Al Yousuf Showrooms throughout UAE.
Subscribe to
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Option 1: Please fill in this form and mail it together with a cheque with an amount of 100 or 50AED, written to OutdoorUAE FZE or a 100 or 50AED note. Please make sure that if you mail, use recorded delivery (recipient signature required). As soon as we have received the payment and your subscription form, you will get a notification by email. If you don’t get a notification within 1 week please contact us directly. Option 2: Visit us at any of the events we are attending and fill in a form with us and pay. Check our newsletter or www.outdooruae.com to see which events we are attending. Option 3: Online, via PayPal. Conditions: 1. All requirements mentioned above and below (*) must be met for a subscription 2. Subscriptions are only possible with valid P.O. Boxes within the UAE 3. If the subscription is canceled the retail price plus the mailing cost will be charged but the remaining amount will be refunded. OutdoorUAE FZE P.O. Box 215062 Dubai, UAE Phone: 04 4472030 Contact@outdooruae.com
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+OUR EXPERTS +
THE
RED BIRD Each time I acquire a new
Kit
Our fishing pro
fishing gadget, I get excited. The Hobie Mirage Adventure Island, is no exception. Getting to know a boat is like getting to know a person. Knowing that you have to work within the limits of its capacities could either be frustrating…or in my case, fun! I love experimenting and rigging things to suit my fishing style. This was a huge undertaking and I believe as I go on and discover more about its “personality” I will be able to rig it the way I expect it to be rigged. The boat will behave the way I want it to…and so, it started… THE QUEST FOR THE UNCLUTTERED DECK!
I was facing quite a few challenges with the Adventure Island. The very first thing I noticed is the challenge of not having the kind of space you would expect when you see the boat for the first time. The Adventure Island is a big kayak! Until you get into the cockpit... There are: • Two ropes; one for furling the sail and your mainsheet. • The dagger board • The dagger board hole plug. • The mirage drive • The mirage drive cassette plug The ropes alone made me wonder how to stow them properly; they were all over the place! The first A clean deck and some much needed free space!
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An almost fully dressed Red Bird
solution I thought of was to install another pulley on the right side aka, then connect both the furling line and mainsheet. This would also provide a one- handed operation in both the furling, unfurling and trimming of the sail – this did not work, so off it went. Later I discovered that I could keep them out of the way by storing them neatly in front whilst fishing. I was happy with that, but there were other things cluttering the cockpit. The daggerboard is long and poses the question of storage. When launching, I usually keep it lashed on the front hatch. However, I discovered that if you put the right side seat strap through the safety
loop of the daggerboard, you can safely strap it with the paddle strap on the right hand side. Stowing it on the side of the boat leashed with the paddle straps keeps it out of the way when not in use but just inches away from you, should you need it. If I only use the mirage drive when paddling out to deeper water, I still keep it strapped on the front hatch. The foam plug for the daggerboard hole can be jammed in tight when in use which keeps it out of the way. However, the real challenge is what to do when the daggerboard is on and the plug comes out as there is nowhere to put it. I took the leash off the pad eye and put the strap of the seat through the rope loop. This gives you the freedom to slide it up and down the seat strap so you don’t lose it, and when the daggerboard is in use you can put the plug in the side mesh pocket. The length of the leash is just enough that you would think it was custom made! The Mirage drive on my Adventure Island is always mounted and I ensure it is leashed at all times to prevent accidents. This is primarily the reason why I don’t take the mirage drive out of the mount in
the first place; you stand a huge chance of losing it if you take it out of the well. The space is also where I put the Mirage Drive cassette plug when I use the Mirage Drive. I am happy to report that I now have a very clean deck! With all of that out of the way, my next challenge was where to put my rods. The Adventure Island is a great piece of kit and I firmly believe that with a few modifications and a few aftermarket parts, it really could be a lean mean fishing machine. So after taking it out a couple of times, I immediately saw how the molded in rod holders, even with the extensions, just wouldn’t cut it. The mainsheet runs to the back of the kayak and should not snag anything. With that in mind, you need your rod holder to stick to the sides in a very wide “V”. The place for this I believe is the aka mounting bar just behind the seat. It is easily one of the strongest parts of the kayak since this is one of the kayak’s lift points. These bars are the recommended places to hold when lifting the kayak with the akas and amas in place. I have installed two RAM ball mounts just behind the seat and use both rod holders for my trolling rods. The placement is perfect! I can adjust the tubes so they point slightly inward and can see both the right and left trolling rod tips at the same time. The Adventure Island is a wet ride, but then again, most kayaks are. The adventure island is the sports car of the kayak world and with the kind of speed it can go, the ride IS expected to be wet. To keep things dry, a cooler box solves the issue and it can double as a fighting chair that you can also sit on while fighting fish. There is no fear of flipping over since the amas make the boat very stable. Putting the icebox there for dry storage will eliminate the option of using this space to carry more rods via crate and rod holdertubes; you don’t want it there because of the mainsheet anyway…I tried, and failed. On any day, I have at least 4 rods using two to troll and two for casting and bottom fishing. If I was to spend the whole day in the water, I could carry 6 or more rods fully rigged. The icebox contains everything from the stuff I want to keep dry, food, extra water, my phone and extra lures and much more. The front hatch, when opened, is lined with an IKEA blue zipper bag, which I use as a fish bag. It can hold anything from as small as a snapper to a medium sized kingfish. On the mast base is a dry bag which holds the battery for my fish finder. I have temporarily glued the transducer (with a little bit of help from some waterproof duct tape) just behind the mast base and just in front of the mirage drive to keep it from moving around. It gives me very accurate readings and even water temperature!
ELECTRONICS AND OTHER BITS AND BOBS
I have a GPS loaded with a chart for the whole of the UAE and Oman which I keep in the bottle holder in my right hand side. The fishfinder is clamped on to the front AKA cross bar and I believe it is the best possible place for a fishfinder to be. Best of all, I didn’t have to drill holes for these modifications. Next week, I will be installing trampolines for the first time so I can fish off of them whilst fly fishing or bottom fishing. A drift chute and a sailing rudder are coming and the last to be installed would be a front splashguard.
A drybag bungeed to the mast base to hold the fish finder’s battery
THE FLIGHT OF THE RED BIRD
My friends and I started calling her “Red Bird”, as it’s red and boy can it fly! I keep on looking forward to the weekends so I can spend time on the water with this amazing watercraft. Red Bird will definitely catch something crazy pretty soon…so watch this space!
An IKEA bag lining the front hatch to keep the catch out of the sun and the inside of the hull clean
Till the next tidechange,
Kit. A nice catfish caught light jigging with PE 0.5 line.
Everything I don’t want to get wet inside a cooler box that fits perfectly in the well behind the seat - Also doubles as a fighting chair.
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+OUR EXPERTS +
GHALILAH MONSTERS by Toby Foord-Kelcey
Jebel Ras
Toby
Toby Foord-Kelcey is the author of “UAE Rock Climbing”, the first printed guidebook to UAE and Musandam climbing. A longer account of the first ascent of “Exile” can be found at the blog (click the “nostalgia” tag) at www. redarmadapublishing.com along with details about the guidebook and UAE climbing generally.
42
The road into Wadi
Ghalilah sidesteps a giant cement factory flanked by correspondingly vast and apocalyptic quarry workings. There’s nothing to indicate that the UAE’s most dramatic mountain scenery lies beyond. In some other countries you would find a national park entrance at a similar location but in the UAE the extractive industries rule unchallenged. Perhaps one day that will change. A few kilometers beyond the quarries the wadi opens up into a broad basin ringed with large cliffs up to 1000m high. From this point most visitors head towards one destination: the infamous “Stairway to Heaven” hike. For non-climbers the “stairway” part of the route gives a taste of big cliff exposure, but for experienced climbers it’s just a moderate scramble, if a long one. More substantial challenges abound.
In the late 1990s several of the biggest faces in Ghalilah were climbed by the swiss climber, Antoine Fabre, with various expat partners. Due to their length and seriousness his ascents were a step or two beyond most of the climbing being pioneered elsewhere at the time and did not receive any further attention for several years. When I worked on the guidebook in 2008/9 I wasn’t convinced their likely limited appeal justified full descriptions in print and in most cases instead uploaded details to the web for anyone keen enough to find. The size of Antoine’s routes accentuates their seriousness as removing loose rock on abseil prior to an ascent would be impractical. In contrast new route pioneers like John Gregory working on smaller cliffs elsewhere in the RAK area were always doing this. I biased the book toward “pre-cleaned” routes, believing this was the direction UAE climbing was developing and that Antoine-style ground-up “chossaneering” would prove an aberration of the past. How wrong I was! I was already aware that a couple of eccentric Dubai climbers, Aiden Laffey and Tim Richards, had been quietly plugging away with ground-up new routes in Ghalilah and elsewhere.
To my horror, the chossaneers’ ranks swelled, especially from the newly-established adventure training school, Al Shaheen, in RAK. Aiden even implausibly recruited Philippe Delauney, an expat from the spiritual home of safe, pre-prepared climbing: France! Over the last couple of years almost all Antoine’s routes have now been repeated. The biggest of them, Barun Wall, a 600m monster, was dispatched by Aiden and Andrew LaBonte, a very strong “RAK local”, in December 2010 in a single effort. Quite apart from the massive scale of the ascent, the descent involved several km of ledge walking and committing multiple abseils, which took Aiden and Andy three and half hours even with extensive prior knowledge of the area. In his write-up of their climb, Andy commented that a less familiar team could easily double that time; so potentially a day to get up and day to get down: a real alpine scale adventure! Around the same time, Andy’s colleague Peter Thompson, a British climber with extensive mountain experience around the world, got interested in the even larger face right of the “Stairway” cliff. Success required three attempts with different partners, exploring
Aiden.
different parts of the face in stages, before making a single-day continuous ascent in February 2011. The route, Black Dog, is probably the longest in the UAE at nearly 1000m, though as the climbing is divided by a long section of scrambling, from which escape is possible, it is not quite as substantial as Barun Wall. In the guidebook I noted that: “As yet no complete route has been pioneered to the summit of Jebel Ras Al Qays from this side; an interesting challenge with complex logistics.” Jebel Ras Al Qays is the mountain face behind which the usual Stairway to Heaven descends. It is a vast expanse of tiered cliffs, several km wide and certainly over 1000m tall. Aiden had been quietly exploring this face for several years, initially alone and in the summer months at night! He eventually linked the whole thing together in a single day in January 2011 with Shahan Contractor. This route is possibly even longer than Black Dog overall; much easier technically but much more committing as there’s no easy escape. One of Antoine’s routes that did make the printed guidebook is Exit Surprise, a 250m route on the Shady Circus cliff, which actually forms the lowest tier of the Ras Al Qays face. I’d emphasized this cliff in the book as the routes seemed more like more conventional “cragging” than elsewhere in Ghalilah; an easy approach walk, fairly easy descent and strong lines to follow. However, at the time of inclusion in the book, Exit Surprise had not been repeated. Once again, Aiden has been the main protagonist. From 2009 onwards he made four attempts on the route, with escalating drama. The key obstacle was the fourth pitch, about 150m up the wall, where
Antoine had traversed horizontally leaving several pitons in place. One attempt ended in Andy getting lost beyond the pitons. His resultant long fall was an unwelcome test of the now decade old pitons’ integrity. Aiden and Philippe finally succeeded on the route in November 2011. The “surprise” on the route is a chimney that disappears right into the cliff. Aiden takes up the story. “The chimney forms an hourglass shape that you have to squeeze through. You look straight down to the wadi from 200m here. It’s dark inside, hard to move and there’s no protection. I actually slid a metre or so at one point but stopped myself. At the top there’s an exit like a rabbit hole which is the exact width of my chest. You pop out on a big ledge. Above that it is easy.”
C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY
CMY
K
Toby.
Exit surprise
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NTS...MAGAZINE FOR THE UAE AND THE MIDDLE EAST PRESE THE FIRST OUTDOOR
A little teaser of our ultimate off-road guide! ADVANCED OFF-ROADING GUIDE BOOK
Route 17
18 ADVANCED ROUTES FOR THE UAE AND OMAN DETAILED MAPS AND DESCRIPTIONS INCLUDING WAYPOINT TABLES FREE CD WITH .GPS FILES FOR USE ON YOUR COMPUTER OR GPS DEVICE
Get your copy online at www.outdooruae.com
Rock & Sand Tour Grade 3 General Description This route will take you over three very technically demanding mountain passes in the Jebel Sumeyni Area. Jebel Sumeyni lies in a part of the Oman that can be accessed from the UAE without the need for an Omani visa. It lies to the South of the E44 (Dubai to Hatta road). After the mountain passes of the Jebel Sumeyni area you will move on to the high dunes to the West and work your way back towards the E44. This route is a circular day route. Please note that unless you are using, at least, AT tyres and have a limited slip differential and/or differential locks on your vehicle, you will be unlikely to make it over some of the mountain passes without difficulty. You have been warned! If you do this route, you will be rewarded with some
Accommodation Options As this is a day trip, no accommodation options are given. However there are ample and excellent camping opportunities along the route, should you so wish.
Escape Routes The ‘rock’ part of the tour follows tracks, though sometimes quite indistinct. If you need to escape during this part of the tour it would be best to either back-track (if you’re heading up to a pass summit) or keep going (if you’re descending a pass summit) to one of the major West-East tracks that you cross and then head East to the main road that leads North to the E44. You may however, find that
spectacular desert and mountain scenery
you’re descending from a pass summit and
and be traversing mountain passes that have
the track ahead becomes impassable. In this
rarely been driven over.
case you face the difficult prospect of turning around and heading back over the pass to
Note: You will need to carry your Emirates ID
escape.
and/or Passport to pass through the security check point on the Dubai – Hatta road. At the
To escape during the ‘sand’ part of the tour
time of writing, there were no formal immigra-
you’ll need to descend from the dunes on
tion procedures on the road, merely an ID
to the gravel plains and then find your way
check by the UAE authorities.
onto one of the West-East tracks and then
Enroute to RS8
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Rock and Sand
head East to the main road leading up to the E44. Once you’ve finished the last stretch of dune driving it would be quickest and easiest to follow the line of the Oman/UAE border fence to the E44.
Detailed Description Getting yourself to the start point is relatively simple. Get onto the E44 (Al Khail road) in Dubai and follow it to Hatta. You will pass through the UAE/Omani border just after the Al Madam roundabout (a passport and/ or an Emiratres ID card is required at the checkpoint). You will pass the Al Maha petrol station on your left and the start point is a further 5.7km on the right.
RS Start - RS8: At the start point you will turn right off the E44 onto a roughly tarmacced quarry road. Follow this road until you turn right at RS1 and keep following this quarry road until you arrive at RS2. At RS2 you turn left onto the wadi track (you may wish to deflate at this point) that will take you through the spectacular Wadi Mayhah in the shadow of Jebel Maqam. Follow the wadi track and find your way to RS3 and on until you reach the large track at RS4. Turn left onto the track at RS4 and follow it for the short
towards RS9. You’ll need to divert off this wadi track to get to RS9 but you’ll then pick up another faint track. Follow this faint track until it joins a larger one and follow this to RS10. Turn right at RS10, stay on the track and turn right onto the larger track at RS11 towards the village of Sumeyni. Pass the village on your right and turn left at RS12 and pick up the track on the right side of the wadi and head towards RS13. RS13 is a crossroads of survey tracks. From here you’ll see the line of the track up to the next summit pass. Beyond this point you will require some nerve, and faith in your vehicle’s ability to continue. Follow the line of this track towards the summit, you will have to divert a couple of times off and back on to the track, before making the final steep climb up to the second summit pass at RS14. Enjoy the spectacular views from here towards where the dunes and mountains merge.
westwards to descend to the track at RS28. Then pick your line across the gravel planes and over the dunes through RSs 29, 30 and onto RS31. RS31 is at the base of the final stretch of dunes, to the left of a plantation enclosure. Ascend into the dunes and find your own line to RS32. At RS32 you will see the UAE/Oman border fence to your left. You may wish to follow the track along the fence line towards the finish point. As you near the finish point, within 4km of it, you’ll need to divert from the fence line track and pick your way over the gravel plain to the finish point.
RS Finish Onwards:
From the finish point drive on towards the E44 and re-inflate. Turn right onto the E44 and follow it until you can make a U- turn and head back towards Dubai, refilling at the Al Maha petrol station if required.
RS14 – RS20: Descend with care from the summit pass and follow the track towards RS15. Turn left onto the wadi track, skirting the edge of the dunes on your right. Then turn right into a small gravel wadi at RS16 and follow it with care until you can climb out to the right towards the faint track at RS17 You may need to explore on foot from the wadi towards RS17 to check the way ahead. At RS17, follow the faint track towards the third summit pass. Turn right at RS18 and then left at RS19 and head towards the summit pass. Beyond this point you will require some nerve, and faith in your vehicle’s ability to continue. Ascend to the summit pass at RS20. distance to RS5, where you turn to the right and follow the fainter track along the base of a small hill. Follow this faint track on the right side of the wadi until you arrive at RS6. From here you will be able to see the line of the track up to the first pass summit. Follow the track and divert into the wadi bed at RS7 and then regain the track. Beyond this point you will require some nerve, and faith in your vehicle’s ability to continue. Follow the track until it turns down and to the left and then climbs steeply up to the pass summit, RS8.
RS20 – RS27: Descend with extra care from the summit pass. Turn left and then right at RS21 and follow the tracks over the gravel plain, skirting the sand and then onto the track at RS22 and through to RS23 and RS24. At RS24 turn sharp right on to the track, then left at RS25 and right onto a survey line at RS26 towards the dunes and RS27. You may wish to deflate down to sand driving pressures at this point. Gain the dunes and ascend to RS27.
RS27 – RS Finish: The dunes
RS8 - RS14: From the summit
are quite spectacular and you should pick
descend with care to the floor of Wadi
your own line through them. Follow the
Suhaymah and pick up the track taking you
line of the dunes westwards and then north
Ascent to RS14
This is just part of one route that you’ll find in the full book. This route will also come with a table of coordinates, along with a high resolution, detailed map! And don’t forget, a GPS file of this route come with the free CD! 45
+PEOPLE +
Jesse Lee Davidson
©Kyle Stanley
46
Where are you from? I am from Zimbabwe How old are you? I am 11 and my birthday is in April and I’ll be turning 12 How long have you lived in Dubai? I have lived in Dubai most of my life - 9 years now What is your favourite thing to do? My favourite thing to do besides all my sports is motocross What bike do you have? I used to have a 2011 KTM 65cc SX, now I have a 2009 Suzuk RM-Zi 85cc Where is your favourite place to ride? I really like the U.A.Q track because it’s really open and you can give it full throttle How long have you been riding / racing for? I have been riding for a year and this was my first season How is the season going so far? It’s been a great season! I haven’t lost a round but missed a few because I broke my arm What is your biggest achievement so far? My biggest achievement so far is being the only girl at DMX so far competing to win a championship Do you find it hard racing against all the boys? I don’t really think that I am racing against a different gender, I just try my best no matter if its boys or girls
What inspires you? Well my mom and dad used to race go karts and my friend’s brother did it, so as soon as I saw him I knew that was what I wanted to do Would you recommend this to other girls living in Dubai? I would highly recommend this to other girls; it gives us a chance to show our GIRL POWER!
Nathan Root
Name: Nathan Root Occupation: Camera Assistant / Editor Nationality: Australian Age: 26 What is your passion? Photography is a huge passion of mine along with travel, which is great because the two are inextricably linked for me. I always want to know what’s at the end of the road.. and then take a photo of it. Once you have the bug then you’ll do anything if you think you’ll get a good photo out of it! What inspires you? My deathbed. When all is said and done and your lying there surrounded by your family (hopefully) you will never look back and say, “wow, I’m so glad I stayed in that job an extra 10 years and didn’t ever follow my dream to travel the world because the job security was great!” You can’t take money, you can’t take a house and in the end all you have are some great stories to tell your grand kids. What has been your best experience that you can remember? At the age of 25 I had what I like to call a mid-mid-life crisis; I sold everything and bought a one way ticket to Bangkok. A few weeks later in Hanoi I bought an old Minsk and rode through South East Asia for 3 months alone. This was by far the most alive and free I have ever felt. It really was the adventure I’d always craved.
What is your next planned adventure? A friend of mine has offered to teach me how to ride a horse, so it will be either a horse trip to Mongolia if I can ride well enough or another motorcycle trip, maybe this time to Europe. What would you recommend our readers? At some point in your life you have to look at what your doing, take a step back and say “this is so ridiculously awesome I can’t believe I’m actually doing it”. It may be as easy as going on a roller coaster you’ve always been scared of, it may be paragliding through the Himalayas or zip lining high through the canopies in northern Laos, but what ever it is, all your reasons of why you can’t do them are laughable once you are there.
47
Picture 1: The wrong and right straps Lifting sling
Steel-hooked towing strap
Towing strap with sewn loops Large yellow recovery strap
+TIPS’n’TRICKS +
RECOVERY STRAPS
White with red loops recovery strap
What Your Mates Don’t Know by Craig Reynolds
The
Craig
Craig Reynolds was born and raised under the African sun and has been wondering around in the outdoors for as long as he can remember. Over the years he has climbed, hiked, 4x4ed, dived, surfed, kayaked and a lot of other things too, always with a camera at hand. He is an unrehabilitated Land Cruiser addict who is often sunburnt and generally in need of a shave and you can see his photos and read his infrequently updated blog at sunburntandinneedofashave. com
Porsche 911 was down to its’ chassis in a Jumeirah sand lot and was minutes away from being torn apart, as the owner had parked in the wrong place when fetching his daughter from pre-school. I arrived just in time to stop a well- meaning, but inexperienced rescuer from attempting to drag the car out. On closer inspection I saw that the strap had been looped around bits of the Porche’s rear suspension, one tug and the fancy sportster would be spare parts. Within a few minutes I’d reset everything using the correct equipment and, with very judicious use of the accelerator pedal, eased the 911 slowly from its sand trap. Recovery skills are not only for off-road; I’ve done many recoveries within Dubai city limits, and you start with buying the proper equipment, not just whatever you find at the hardware store. Recovery straps. Snatch Straps. Kinetic Ropes. Tug-ems. They go by a variety of different names, most look like webbing while some are braided ropes, I’ll use ‘strap’
48
for simplicity. A recovery strap and a tow rope are two very different things, even though they look similar. Firstly, recovery straps are dynamic, not static, which means that the strap is designed to stretch; not only does this cushion the impact of the pull but it stores kinetic energy in the strap - more on this later. Secondly, they have sewn loops at both ends or are spliced in the case of some braided ropes. Good recovery straps are not cheap. My main strap (I also carry a spare) cost me AED500 and has been worth every Fil. It always amazes me that off-roaders will spend a fortune buying a car but will buy the cheapest recovery gear they can find, risking serious damage to Picture 2: The right kind of shackles
the vehicle or injury, even death, to themselves or bystanders. Starting from left in the above picture (Picture 1) we have a lifting sling, steel-hooked towing strap and a towing strap with sewn loops. Avoid the steel-hooked strap at all costs; it’s a fatality waiting to happen. The D-shackle on the sling costs 12 dirhams, would you trust your expensive car to a cheap shackle? Only the two on the right are proper recovery straps, the large yellow one is my main workhorse and the white with red loops my spare. The white one is commonly available and quite adequate for most off-roaders. When buying straps don’t rely on the sales-person but look for
Picture 3: Chassis recovery points
Picture 4: Shackle pins should be finger tight only
gear marked with ‘recovery’ or ‘dynamic’ which indicates the strap is designed to stretch,. Some sets have both recovery and tow straps in the same bag. Know which is which, snatch straps should not be used for towing any more than tow straps should be used for recovery. Some stores sell slings that are designed for static loads. Although immensely strong these are not suitable as they don’t stretch and using a sling means it’s only a matter of time before you break something (or someone.) If you ever use steel cable you should be held down and severely beaten with it, imagine a steel cable snapping and flailing through a group of bystanders, especially kids. Along with your strap you will need some rated shackles with screw-in cross pins, not just any old ones. As can be seen in Picture 2, rated shackles come with a working load limit (WLL) stamped or raised on them, common ones are 3.25t and 4.75t shackles. I added the luminous paint to make it easier to find shackles dropped in the sand. A 3.25t shackle should be adequate for most off-road use. Avoid stainless steel shackles with a simple push-through pin, they are not rated and the angle at which you pull can severely distort,even brake, them. The impact of a highly tensioned cheap shackle breaking under the load generated by a 2.5 ton vehicle trying to free another 2.5 ton bogged vehicle is scary. Recovery points should be bolted to the chassis and are usually a metal loop. Make sure your shackles will fit through the recovery points, the older Jeep Wranglers have a very small recovery loop on the front bumper and I've come across more than one stuck in the desert with shackles that didn't fit the vehicle. Picture 3 shows standard recovery points bolted to a Land Cruiser's chassis, they're rock solid! Even the best drivers get stuck, if you don't get stuck you're not trying hard enough. Being able to do a snatch recovery is a basic, highly effective, but often misunderstood, technique and one that requires practice. I once ventured
out with a friend who had some off-road experience and I naively assumed that he knew how to do a snatch recovery. I managed to get my vehicle stuck in a tricky situation and set up the straps in text-book fashion as described below, expecting an easy recovery. Unfortunately my friend tried to tow me out, not snatch me out, and by the time I realised what he'd done both cars were dug-in and held in place by a highly tensioned strap. It took some careful work and steady nerves to sort it all out. As the name implies this is a snatch and not a tow, although 'tug' is closer to describing the correct method. The basic technique is that the strap is set up between the stuck and rescue vehicles with a fair amount of slack. The rescue vehicle drives off at a moderate pace pulling the strap taught, which stores kinetic energy as it stretches. The strap then contracts and it's the strap, rather than the towing vehicle, that pulls the stuck car free. A stretchy, dynamic strap ensures there is no sudden jerk to break bits off the vehicles and the subsequent contraction does the work. Going too fast risks breaking something.
generated could tear it loose. Don’t over tighten the screw pin, just finger tight (Picture 4). The tug will often tighten the pin anyway, making it difficult to remove. I put the round part of the shackle through the recovery eye and the strap around the pin, this allows the shackle to swivel in the direction of pull and ensures that the stress is on the full pin length, not one leg of the bow. I’m not a rigger and can’t say this is 100% correct, but it just feels right. 4. For the rescuer to build momentum there should be slack in the strap. As illustrated in the next picture laying the strap in a zig-zag pattern between the vehicles also allows you to see if the strap has passed through itself which would result in a disastrous knot when doing the snatch. Knots severely weaken the strap and in a hard tug can sever the strap immediately, I had this happen once while crossing the Wahaiba Sands in Oman and is why I do it this way and carry a spare strap. To prevent broken recovery points from whipping about and sending a lump of steel through a windscreen or person, cover with a tarp or blanket to act as a damper (use a bigger one than in Picture 5!) 5. Now explain to the person being rescued Picture 5: Lay the strap without twists and knot free
This is the routine I have used successfully for many years: 1. Firstly, take some time to assess the situation. Is the car is really stuck, could you drive out with lower tyre pressures or simply a good push? Determine the best direction for recovery taking into account slopes, churned up tracks, soft patches and the length of strap. Sometimes it’s easier to pull the vehicle back, other times forwards is better. 2. The stuck vehicle will have dug up a lot of sand, push away as much as possible in the direction of pull making a gentle ramp for the wheels. Also clear any sand blocking the chassis cross-beams, axles and differential housings. 3. Attach the shackles to the chassis recovery points on both vehicles. Do not simply use the tow hitch or bumper, the forces
49
what you plan to do, how far you intend pulling them, the direction, and ensure their steering wheels are aligned with the pull. Make it clear that they are expected to help by driving out, but without spinning their wheels. Explain any hand signals you will use, mine are simple: Thumbs up for ‘Ready?’ (and they must acknowledge) and a closed fist for ‘Stop’. If you cannot see each other, have a 3 rd person relay the signals. Tell your recoveree that if they drive over the strap after being freed that you’ll push them back in the hole and leave them there. No, seriously, tell them. 6. Chase bystanders far way, making they are at least two strap lengths away from the recovery and off to the side. DO NOT allow anyone to stand between the vehicles. The combined pulling force of a few tons can send a detached recovery point through a crowd without stopping. Even a strap on its own can be lethal to a child. On some heavy recoveries I raise the cars’ hood so that any flying projectiles will strike it first rather than obliterate a window and the driver. 7. Now it’s time to do the actual snatch: The stuck vehicle signals must signal it’s ready and is in the appropriate gear
Picture 6: A home-made recovery gear container
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depending on if it’s to go backwards or forwards. The rescuer drives off at a moderate pace, building momentum. You should feel a solid, but gentle, tug as the strap tightens, carry on driving for a few paces and then stop, keeping your foot on the brake. DO NOT spin your wheels and try to tow the other car out, all you’ll do is dig yourself in and then two vehicles will need recovery. After a few moments you’ll feel the strap contract and hopefully the other vehicle will be firmly pulled from its resting place. If the first tug doesn’t do it, go back again without driving over the strap, make sure there are no obstructions that you missed the first time and repeat with a bit more gusto, but never too fast. Sometimes it takes more than one pull, but avoid repeated, heavy jerks as this weakens the strap. Once the car is free keep driving to the pre-arranged firm spot. You might need pliers to loosen the shackle pin, even if it was only finger tight in the first place. Even the best quality straps have a limited lifetime, some manufacturers reckon 10 or so recoveries. In my experience having good technique
increases the number of pulls you can get out of strap while poor technique can destroy it in one go. Don’t walk, stand or drive over a strap, this forces grit into the fibers and weakens it. If people are getting stuck repeatedly it’s a good idea to alternate with your spare strap, the dynamic nature of straps mean they need a rest period to return to their original length and strength. Muddy straps, or those used in salt water, should be washed with fresh water and left to dry in the shade, avoid leaving them lying around in sunlight or packing them away wet. In the picture you can see my custom made recovery box, with both snatch and tow straps, shackles, gloves for summer and basic repair items. This sounds a lot more involved than it is, most of these steps are just common sense. If you’ve never done a snatch before I strongly recommend doing a few practice runs with a friend before venturing far off-road. And please, open that wallet and buy some quality kinetic straps and proper rated shackles. In the long run it’s cheaper … and far safer.
Craig Reynolds.
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Remembering Dante E. Torres Jr. 15th December 1981 – 12th March 2012
On March 12th 2012, Dante Torres was kitesurfing on Topanga Beach, Los Angeles, USA. Sadly, this was to be his last session as he got into trouble in the water and by the time help arrived he had passed away. The son of Dante and Lilian Torres, Dante was born in the Philippines on December 15th 1981. He lived in Dubai and continued his quest in excellence in his professional life in the field of media production with Orbit Showtime Network. He pursued his interests in various fields of education, sports and arts to the best of his abilities. A keen kitesurfer, mountainbiker, traveller and an avid reader and collector of Outdoor UAE magazine, he lived his life to the fullest and loved his family and friends dearly and passionately. We will be missing him but, Dante was doing what he loved and in his own words, "everything happens for a reason".
Stories about Dante During the hot season, every weekend, my brother would rush me and his best friend because we have to go to the beach while there's wind. His heart was racing with excitement and acting all giddy. We'd go to the beach and watch him kite while his best friend and I made fun of him. He would sometimes fly to Bahrain for the weekend or spend almost a month in the Philippines and just kitesurf all day. During the weekdays, he told me that- permitted that there's wind, he drops everything at work during the middle of the day/afternoon and goes to the beach and kites alone. My brother passionately loves this sport that's why I am still at ease that he passed doing what he's passionate about. To the kiters, stay safe always! Denise Torres (Sister)
Dante, You were a lovely young man, we had the pleasure of 22 days cycling around the Himalayas. You are an Angel Dante - sent down from heaven, to touch our hearts and show us how to enjoy life – and you did!!! With that big smile, full of joy, happy living, and you loved life! Sadly God wanted you back - God wanted to keep his special Angel. Now you can fly around the world with your wings... R.I.P. Dante Love Jane and Adrian (Momma and Pappa) x
I always thought that losing a mother will be hard, but a friend is heartbreaking too. Thank you, Dante that you included me to one of your friends. Thank you for teaching kitesurfing to me. Thank you for lending me your trainers kite and for the patience when I almost ruined your new kite. I will have a hard time to look for a friend someone like you. Please guide me up there while I'm in the water. Now I know that I don't need a new and beautiful kite because you wings will help me. RIP Dante. Jason
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Everybody has a Dante Torres story to tell. Keep those stories close to your heart, as these will make him live on forever. Thank you for the memories, Mr. Shenanigans (a.k.a "the Gos", as he dubbed himself when he looked so handsome wearing a suit)... You made such an impact on a lot of people. Yours is the life that we admire, yours is the life we want to live. Love you Deej, I'll see you again someday.. Kriska
I recall the last talk we had before u left.." Irma heart, once I'm back will catch up, promise!...I haven't since my parents for a long time so I need to spend some time with them..." I never thought this would be the last words that I will hear from you.. :( Fly high Dante...will surely miss you! Thanks for the good times! Hugs! Irma Death is inevitable but this is affecting me today and I can't seem to concentrate on anything. Not that I knew him well, unless you count spending three weeks in his company during our trip to Tibet knowing him. But then it was very intense and you get to know people and their character under trying circumstances. He was only 30 but he loved the adrenaline rush. He pushed himself on that trip and almost didn't make it until we physically stopped him, made him take rest and let his body recover. But within no time he was back on that cycle. He loved those mountain kids. He was always one of the first on the campsite and was surrounded by village kids. He ate and drank a lot and pee-d a lot too. We called him 'piddler on the roof '. He was outrageous and made us all laugh. He was so talented. The ads that ran on OSN were, to a large extent, designed by him, a very clever man. Such a waste but his time was up. There must be a reason why. If anyone knows, please tell me so I can lift the lead weight in my heart. Mita
I was on Topanga beach with my 8 year old daughter on Monday April 13. We spotted Dante on the beach getting ready to kite, Dante looked like he knew what he was doing, jumping both ways and not losing too much ground despite the light wind conditions. About 30 min went by before Dante came in to land. He asked me why I was not going out and I told him I only have a small kite. As he smoked a cigarette, I told him about the beach, the wind, water conditions around here. We spoke about other local spots and about Dubai. Smiling, he told me how he is from the desert with warm conditions and not used to the cold water here. He was very happy to be out on his first day in California. He asked me to launch his kite for him and before he went back in the water I tapped him on the shoulder saying I hoped to kite with him with him during his trip. I didn't realize then but I was to be his last human contact and I'm heartbroken by it. After 15-20 mins I noticed that Dante has dropped his kite. He seemed to be in control of re-launching & was about 150-200 feet from shore. 8-10 mins went by and I see that after a few attempts to relaunch have failed he is now not re-launching. I ran to the lifeguard station. The lifeguard headed down to the beach and enters the water. When he gets to the kite he follows the lines upwind to find Dante. Along with a surfer I can see them paddling and searching which means that Dante had gotten himself freed from his kite in an effort to save himself, I would think. The kite is drifting away slowly on the water. Approximately 20 mins elapsed between the time I got to the Life Guard station to them finding Dante. I'm very sorry to tell you all these details but I feel you ought to know and I'm deeply sorry for your loss. My deepest condolences to you and your family. I will never forget Dante's smile and where he fell for the rest of my life as I go to Topanga beach often. I have also fallen in the same spot before and was lucky. Dante is teaching the whole kiting community to better understand the conditions and risks Gerard I would not say I was a close friend of Dante's but I have known him for some time through kitesurfing here in Dubai. The first time I met him he was still pretty novice at kiting and always seeking tips. Every time I saw him on the beach we were happy to see each other. He was always full of energy and so polite to everyone around. We chatted about his work and also his love of mountain biking. When I heard the news last week I was so upset. It will feel strange when I go to the beach this weekend knowing that Dante will not be there to chat to and kite with. Forever more though, each time I kite on Ness Nass beach I will remember him and I am sure many others will too. Leigh
Our deepest and most heart-felt condolences go out to Dante and his family. The OutdoorUAE team could not be prouder to have had you as an avid reader of our magazine. Thank you Dante. The OutdoorUAE team, the contributors and the community.
53
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Hotels (Complimentary) Sofitel Hotel (in hotel rooms) Al Maha Resort (in hotel rooms) Abu Dhabi Aloft Hotel The Palace - Old town (Spa) Petrol Stations Enoc + Eppco Dubai and Abu Dhabi Airports
Directory General Sports Equipment Megastores
Adventure HQ, Dubai Times Square Center, Sheikh Zayed Rd, Toll free: 800-ADVENTURE, www.adventurehq.ae Decathlon, Dubai, Mirdiff City Centre, +97142839392 Go Sport The Dubai Mall, Dubai, +97143253595 Go Sport, IBN Battuta Mall: 04-368 5344, Mall of the Emirates: 04-341 3251, Mirdif City Centre: 04-2843034 InterSport, Dubai, Times Square Centre & Dubai Festival City, +97142066587, www.intersport.ae Sun and Sand, Most Shopping Centres
Adventure tours and desert safaris
MMI Travel, Mezzanine Floor, Dnata Travel Centre, Shk Zayed Road, Dubai, +97144045859, www.mmitravel.ae Alpha Tours, +97142949888, www.alphatoursdubai.com Cyclone Tours & Travels, Abu Dhabi, Khalifa Street, +97126276275, www.cyclonetours.com Desert Rangers, +97143572233, Dubai, www.desertrangers.com Dream Days, +97144329392, www.dreamdays.ae
Dream Explorer LLC, Dubai, +971433198801, www.dreamexplorerdubai.com, Element Fitness, Dubai, +971 050 2771 317 www.element-fitness.net Explorer Tours, Dubai, +9714286199, www.explorertours.ae, Net Group, Dubai & Abu Dhabi, +97126794656, www.netgroupauh.com Oasis Palm Dubai, Dubai, +97142628889, www.opdubai.com Rahhalah, Dubai, +97144472166, www.rahhalah.com Relax Tours Travels, Dubai, +97144221776, www.dubairelaxtours.com Wild Guanabana, Dubai, +971 056 7954 954, www.wildguanabana.com
Air
Ballooning Adventures Emirates, Dubai, +97142854949, www.ballooning.ae Jazirah Aviation Club, Ras Al Khaimah, +9716139859, www.jac-uae.net Seawings, Dubai, www.seawings.com Sky Dive Dubai, Dubai, +971501533222,
www.skydivedubai.ae
Boating & Sailing
Manufacturer Al Fajer Marine, Dubai, Al Quoz, +97143235181, www.alfajermarine.com Al Shaali Marine, Ajman, +97167436443, www.alshaalimarine.com Gulf Craft, Ajman, +97167406060, www.gulfcraftinc.com Distributors & Dealers Art Marine, Dubai, +97143388955, www.artmarine.net Azure Marine, Dubai, +97143404343, www.azuremarine.net Leisure Marine Beach Hut, Dubai, The Walk JBR, +97144243191 Luxury Sea Boats, Dubai, +971505589319, www.luxuryseaboats.com Macky Marine LLC, Dubai, +971505518317, www.mackymarine.com The Boat House, Dubai, Al Quoz, +97143405152, www.theboathouse.ae Equipment Al Masaood Marine, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Road, +97143468000, www.masaoodmarine.com Blue Waters Marine, +97142232189, Dubai, www.bluewatersmarine.com
Extreme Marine, Dubai, + 97143992995, www.extrememarine-me.com Rineh, Dubai, Al Quoz, +97143391512, www.rinehemiratesme.com Repair and maintenance Extreme Marine, Dubai, Dubai Marina, + 97143992995, www.extrememarine-me.com Rineh, Al Quoz, +97143391512, www. rinehemiratesme.com The Boat House, Dubai, Al Quoz, +97143405152, www.theboathouse.ae Cruise Operators Al Bateen Marina, Abu Dhabi, +97126665491, Www. marinaalbateenresort.com Al Marsa Travel & Tourism, Dibba, Musandam, +96826836550, +97165441232 Art Marine, Dubai, +97143388955, www.artmarine.net Bateaux Dubai, Dubai Creek – opposite the British Embassy, +97143994994 Bristol Middle East, Dubai Marina,+97144309941, www.bristol-middleeast.com El Mundo, Dubai, +971505517406, www.elmundodubai.com Happy Days Sea Cruising LLC, Dubai, +971558961276, +971503960202, www.happydaysdubai.com
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Club Area, +97126440300 Al Jeer Marina, RAK Border, Musandam +971 7 2682333 or +971 50 4873185 www.aljeerport.ae Dubai International Marine Sports Club, Dubai Marina, +97143995777, www.dimc.ae Dubai Marina Yacht Club, Dubai, +97143627900, www.dubaimarinayachtclub.com Dubai Maritime City Harbour Marina, Dubai, +97143455545 Dubai Offshore Sailing Club, Dubai, +97143941669, www.dosc.ae Emirates Palace Marina, Abu Dhabi, +97143388955 Festival Marina, Dubai, Festival City, +97144498400, www.igy-festivalmarina.com Pavilion Marina, Dubai, Jumeirah Beach Hotel, +97144068800 Umm Al Quwaim Marine Sports Club, Umm Al Quwaim, +9716 766 6644, www.uaqmarineclub.com
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directory
Camping & Hiking LY Catamaran, Dubai, +971505869746, +971566506683 www. lycatamaran.com Marine Concept, Dubai, +971559603030, www.marine-charter-concept.com Noukhada Adventure Company, Villa 332/7, Al Meena Street, Abu Dhabi, +97126503600 , www.noukhada.ae RAK Marine LLC, Ras Al Khaimah City Hilton Marina, +971504912696, +97172066410 Sea Hunters Passenger Yachts & Boats Rental, Dubai Marina, +97142951011 Sheesa Beach, Dibba, Musandam, +971503336046, www.sheesabeach.com Smoke Dragon Of London Yacht, Abu Dhabi International Marine & Sports Club, +9715070 11 958/+971504546617 Summertime Marine, Dubai, +97142573084, www.summertimemarine.com The Club Abu Dhabi, +97126731111 The Yellow Boats LLC, Dubai Marina Walk – opposite Spinneys, Intercontinental Hotel Marina, 8008044 Marinas Abu Dhabi International Marine Sports Club, Abu Dhabi, Breakwater, +97126815566, www.adimsc.com Abu Dhabi Marina, Abu Dhabi, Tourist
Equipment Blingmytruck.com, +971505548255, www.blingmytruck.com Picnico, Jumeirah Beach Road, Dubai,
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Tel: +971 (0)2 654 5000
www.aloftabudhabi.com
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Dubai, Street 13A 1, Al Safa 1, +97143466558, www.barracudadubai. com Services Absolute Adventure, Dubai, +97143459900, www.adventure.ae Adventure HQ, Dubai Times Square Center, Sheikh Zayed Rd, Toll free: 800-ADVENTURE www.adventurehq.ae Al Shaheen Adventure, Abu Dhabi, +97126429995, www.alshaheenme.com Arabia Outdoors, Dubai, +971559556209, www.arabiaoutdoors.com Dorell Sports Management, Dubai World Trade Centre, +97143065061, www.climbingdubai.com E-Sports Dubai, Dubai, www.e-sportsdubai.com The Club, Abu Dhabi, +97126731111, www.the-club.com
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Explore
MUSANDAM www.sheesabeach.com Call (+968) 2 683 6551 or (+971) 50 3336 046 info@sheesabeach.com www.sheesabeach.com
+97143941653 Tour Operators Arabia Outdoors, Dubai, +971559556209, www.arabiaoutdoors.com Absolute Adventure, Dubai, +97143459900, www.adventure.ae Libra, +971559228362, www.libra-uae.com Sheesa Beach, Musandam, Dibba, +97150336046, www.sheesabeach.com Desert Road Tourism, Al Khor Plaza – 503, Dubai, +971-42959428, www.arabiatours.com
Caving
ADNEC Exhibition Centre Abu Dhabi, P.O. Box 94943
AL YOUSUF MOTORS E-Bike out door ad.ai
Muscat Diving & Adventure Centre, Oman, +971503289642, www.holiday-in-oman.com
Climbing
Equipment Global Climbing, +97172353910, www.globalclimbing.com Adventure HQ, Dubai Times Square Center, Sheikh Zayed Rd, Toll free: 800-ADVENTURE www.adventurehq.ae Barracuda Fishing and Outdoor,
Equipment Cycle Sports, Dubai, Al Barsha1, +97143415415, www.cyclesportuae.com Probike, Dubai, Al Barsha1, +97143255705, www.probike.ae Rage Shop, Dubai Mall, +97144343806, www.rage-shop.com Ride Bike Shop, Dubai Mall, Festival City, Oasis Centre, Mirdiff City Centre, +97143750231,
www.element-fitness.net www.ridebikeshop.com Tamreen Sports, Abu Dhabi, +97126222525, www.tamreensports. com VELO & Oxygen, Mushrif Mall, Abu Dhabi+97125566113, www.funridesports.com Wolfi’s Bike Shop, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Road, +97143394453, www.wbs.ae Clubs Abu Dhabi Tri Club, www.abudhabitriclub.com Dubai Roadsters, www.dubairoadsters.com
Diving
Equipment Al Boom Marine, Abu Dhabi & Dubai+97142894858 , www. alboommarine.com Blue Waters Marine, +97142232189, Dubai, www.bluewatersmarine.com Gulf Marine Sports, Abu Dhabi, +97126710017, www.gulfmarinesports.com Premiers for Equipment, Abu Dhabi, Sh. Zayed 1st. Road, +97126665226, www.premiers-uae.com Diving Centers 7 Seas Diving Center, Khorfakkan, +97192387400, www.7seasdivers.com Al Boom Diving (equipment), Dubai, Al Wasl Rd, + 97143422993,
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PADI Career Development Centre Jumeirah Beach Hotel P.O. Box 11416, Dubai, UAE Email: divecentre@jumeirah.com Tel: +971 4 406 8828 Web: www.thepaviliondivecentre.com
Absolute Adventure, Dubai, +97143459900, www.adventure.ae Al Hamra Marina, Al Hamra, +97172434540 Al Mahara Dive Center, Abu Dhabi, Mussafah, +971501118125, +97150720283 www.divemahara.com Al Shaheen Adventure, Abu Dhabi, +97126429995, www.alshaheenme.com Arabian Divers and Sportfishing Charters, Al Bateen Marina Resort, +971506146931, www.fishabudhabi.com Arabia Outdoors, Dubai, +971559556209, www.arabiaoutdoors.com Barracuda Diving Centre, Fujairah International Marine Club, +9719222558 Belevari Marine, Abu Dhabi,+97126594144 Fun Beach Water Sports, Dubai, +97153244550, www.funbeachsports.com Happy Days Sea Cruising LLC, Dubai, +971558961276, +971503960202, www.happydaysdubai.com Noukhada Adventure Company, Villa 332/7, Al Meena Street, Abu Dhabi, +97126503600, www.noukhada.ae Ocean Active, Dubai, Garden Centre, +971502898713, www.oceanactive.com Sheesa Beach, Dibba, Musandam, +971503336046, www.sheesabeach.com Soolyman Sports Fishing, Dubai, Umm Suqeim, +971508866227, www.soolymansportsfishing.com Xclusive Yachts, Dubai, Dubai Marina, +97144327233, www.xclusiveyachts.com
General Sports Equipment Distributors
Email: GetMeOnAPlane@WildGuanabana.com Website: www.WildGuanabana.com Twitter: @WildGuanabana Facebook: www.facebook.com/wildguanabana Tel: 00971 567 954 954
www.desertsportsdivingclub.net
Fishing & Kayaking
Equipment Al Boom Marine, Abu Dhabi & Dubai+97142894858 , www.alboommarine.com Al Yousuf Motors, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Rd, +97143390621, www.aym.ae/yamaha/ Blue Waters Marine, +97142232189, Dubai, www.bluewatersmarine.com Al Masaood Marine, +97143468000, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Road, www.masaoodmarine.com Barracuda Fishing and Outdoor, Dubai, Street 13A 1, Al Safa 1, +97143466558, www.barracudadubai.com Global Climbing, Ras Al Khaimah, +97172353910, www.globalclimbing.com Leisure Marine Beach Hut, Dubai, The Walk JBR, +97144243191 Leisure Marine, Sheikh Zayed Road, next to ACE Hardware, +97143415530, www.leisuremarine-me.com Leading Edge-S, +97172447732, www.leadingedge-s.com Nautica1992, Dubai, +971504262415, www.nautica1992.ae Ocean Active, Dubai, Garden Centre, +971502898713, www.oceanactive.com Operators Al Boom Diving, Le Meridien Al Aqah Beach Resort, Fujeirah, +97143422993
800 Sport, Al Quoz, Dubai +971 4 346 7751 www.800sport.ae Adventure HQ, Dubai Times Square Center, Sheikh Zayed Rd, Toll free: 800-ADVENTURE, www.adventurehq.ae Flip Flop Arabia, flipme@flipfloparabia. com, www.flipfloparabia.com Global Climbing, +97172353910, www.globalclimbing.com Goal Zero, +971509128353, www.goalzero.ae Ocean Sports FZE, +971559352735, www.kitesurfsup.com Sakeen General Trading, +97147094224, www.sakeen.ae
Dubai - Tel: 04 3390621 | Dubai Auto sport 04 3388822 Abu Dhabi - Tel: 02 5588890 | Abu Dhabi - Buteen - 02 6660591 Sharjah - Tel: 06 5388066 | Ajman -Tel: 06 7410004 Al Ain - Tel: 03 7211444 | Fujairah - Tel: 09 2221188 Ras Al Khaimah - Tel: 07 2351592
Horse Riding
Equipment Emirta, Dubai, Sheik Zayed Rd, +9714 3437475, www.emirtahorse.com Tamreen Sports, Abu Dhabi, +97126222525, www.tamreensports.com Equestrian Centres Abu Dhabi Equestrian Club, Abu Dhabi, +97124455500, www.adec-web.com Al Forsan Resort, Abu Dhabi, +97125568555, www.alforsan.com Dubai Polo & Equestrian Club, Dubai, Arabian Ranches, +97143618111, www.poloclubdubai.com Desert Equestrian Club, Dubai, near Mirdif +971503099770, +971501978888 Desert Ranch (Al Sahra Desert Resort), Dubai, +971 4 8327171, www.desert-ranch.com Emirates Equestrian Centre, Dubai, +971505587656, www.emiratesequestriancentre.com Ghantood Polo & Racing Club, Abu Dhabi, +97125629050, www.grpc.ae Sharjah Polo & Equestrian Club, Sharjah, Al Dhaid Road, +97165311155, www.forsanuae.org.ae The Desert Ranch, Dubai, +97144274055 www.desert-ranch.com
Dubai Polo & Equestrian Club Opposite Arabian Ranches P.O.Box 7477, Dubai, UAE Tel: +971 4 361 8111 Fax: +971 4 361 7111 Email: info@poloclubdubai.com www.poloclubdubai.com
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directory
www.alboomdiving.com Al Jeer Marina, RAK Border, Musandam +971 7 2682333 or +971 50 4873185 www.aljeerport.ae Al Mahara Dive Center, Downtown Abu Dhabi, +971501118125, www.divemahara.com Arabian Diver, Hilton Marine, Ras Al Khaimah, +97172226628, +971502428128 www.arabiandiver.com Arabian Divers, Al Bateen Marina Resort, +971506146931 Atlantis Dive Centre (equipment), Dubai, The Palm Jumeirah,+97144263000, www.atlantisdivecentre.com Deep Blue Sea Diving, Dubai, International City, +97144308246, www.diveindubai.com Divers Down, Fujairah, Rotana Al Aqah Hotel Resort & Spa, +971092370299, www.diversdown-uae.com Emirates Divers Centre, Abu Dhabi, near Meena Fish Market, +97126432444, www.edc-ad.ae Extra Divers Ziggy Bay, Oman, Musandam, +96826735555, www.extradivers.info Freediving UAE,Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Fujeirah, www.freedivinguae.com Freestyle Divers, Dubai, Al Wasl & Dibba, Royal Beach Hotel, +97143944275, www.freestyledivers.com Khasab Divers, Oman,
www.khasabdiver.com Muscat Diving & Adventure Centre, Oman, +97150 3289642, www.holiday-in-oman.com Neptune Diving, +97150 4347902, www.neptunedivingcentre.com Nomad Ocean Adventures, www. discovernomad.com, +971508853238, Dibba, Oman Scuba Oman, Oman, +96899558488, www.scubaoman.com Sharjah Wanderers Dive Club, Sharjah, +97150 784 0830, www.bsac406.com Sheesa Beach, Dibba, Musandam, +971503336046, www.sheesabeach.com Sky &Sea Adventures, Dubai, Hilton, Jumeirah Beach Road, +97143999005, www.watersportsdubai.com The Pavilion Dive Centre (equipment), Dubai, +97144068828 Clubs Atlantis Underwater Photography Club, Dubai, +97144263000 Desert Sports Diving Club, Dubai,
GoSport The Dubai Mall Tel: 04-3253595 Fax: 04-3253590 gosport_dubaimall@almana.com kawasaki@liberty.ae
directory
Jet Ski
Dealer Al Masaood Marine, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Road, +97143468000, www.masaoodmarine.com Al Yousuf Motors, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Rd, +97143390621, www.aym. ae/yamaha/ Rentals Al Mahara Dive Center, Abu Dhabi, Mussafah, +97150720283 , www.divemahara.com Fun Beach Water Sports, Dubai, +971 5 3244 550, www.funbeachsports.com The Cove Rotana Resort, Ras Al Khaimah, +9717206000, www.rotana.com Xventures, Dubai, +971555404500, www.x-ventures.ae
Moto-cross & ATV’s
Dealer Al Yousuf Motors, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Rd, +97143390621, www.aym. ae/yamaha/ KTM, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Road, exit 42, +9714323151, www.ktm.com PolarisUAE (atv’s), Ras Al Khor, Nad al Hamar Road, Al Ghandi Complex, +97142896100, www.polarisuae.com Liberty Kawasaki, Dubai, Interchange4, Sheikh Zayed Road, 04-3419341, www.libertykawasaki.com Sandstorm, Al Quoz, Dubai
+9714 3470270 www.sandstorm.ae Seb Sports, Al Quoz Industrial Area 1 Dubai, +9714 3393399 www.sebsports.com Wild X, Dubai, Um Al Ramoul Industrial Area, +97142852200, www. wildx.ae Equipment Desert Road Tourism, Al Khor Plaza – 503, Dubai, +97142959428, www.arabiatours.com 2XWheeler, Motorcity Dubai, +97144548388, www.2xwheeler.com Sandstorm, Al Quoz, Dubai +9714 3470270 www.sandstorm.ae SebSports, Dubai, Al Quoz Industrial Area 3, +97143393399, www.sebsports.com Wild X, Dubai, Um Al Ramoul Industrial Area, +97142852200, www. wildx.ae
Motorcycling
Distributors & Dealers Al Yousuf Motors, Dubai, Sheikh Zayed Rd, www.aym.ae/yamaha/ Duseja Motorcycles, Dubai, Al Quoz, +97143476712, www.apriliauae.com Liberty Kawasaki, Dubai, Interchange4, Sheikh Zayed Road, +97142822144, www.libertykawasaki.com PolarisUAE, Al Ghandi Complex, Nad al Hamar Road, Ras Al Khor, +97142896100, www.polarisuae.com Tristar Motorcycles, +97143330659, www.tristaruae.com Workshop & Services 2xWheeler, +97144548388, www.2xwheeler.com Dune Bike, Dubai, Al Khail Road Alweer, +97143272088, www.dunebuggyuae.com Duseja Motorcycles, Dubai, Al Quoz, +97143476712, www.apriliauae.com Gecko Motors, Dubai, Al Quoz, +97143413550, www.gecko-motors.com
Motorsports
Al Forsan Resort, Abu Dhabi, +97125568555, www.alforsan.com Dubai Autodrome, Dubai, www.dubaiautodrome.com Emirates Motorplex, Umm Al Quwain, +97167681717 Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi, www.yasmarinacircuit.com
Off-Road
Manufacturer Blingmytruck.com, +971505548255, www.blingmytruck.com
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LRC Off Road Engineering, Dubai, +971553198526, www.lrcoffroad.com Repair and services Off Road Zone, Dubai, Al Quoz, +97143392449, www.offroad-zone.com Equipment AEV, Dubai & Abu Dhabi, +97143307152, www.aev.ae Car Max Off Roading Accessories Ras-Al Khor, Al Awir, Dubai, UAE +971 4 3204214 055 8485868 www.4x4dubai.com Icon Auto, Dubai, +97143382744, www.icon-auto.com Saluki Motorsport, Dubai Tel: +971 4 347 6939 www.salukimotorsport.com Wild X Adventure Shop, Dubai, Um AL Ramoul, +971509029800, www.wildx.ae Yellow Hat, Dubai, Times Square Centre & Festival City, +97143418592, www.yellowhat.ae Tour Operator Desert Road Tourism, Al Khor Plaza – 503, Dubai, +971-42959428, www.arabiatours.com Arabian Adventures, Dubai & Abu Dhabi, +97143034888, www.arabian-adventures.com Oasis Palm Dubai, Dubai, +97142628889, www.opdubai.com Clubs Abu Dhabi Off- Road Club, www.ad4x4.com Filipino Off- Road Club, www.forac.ae ME 4X4, www.me4x4.com
Running
Clubs ABRasAC, Dubai, www.abrasac.org Abu Dhabi Tri Club, Abu Dhabi, www. abudhabitriclub.org Mirdiff Milers, Dubai, www.mirdifmilers.com
Stand up Paddling, Kite & Surfing, Wakeboarding
Equipment Al Boom Marine, Abu Dhabi & Dubai+97142894858 , www. alboommarine.com Leisure Marine Beach Hut, Dubai, The Walk JBR, +97144243191 Leisure Marine, Sheikh Zayed Road, next to ACE Hardware, +97143415530, www.leisuremarine-me.com Pearl Water Crafts, Dubai Marina Yacht Club, +971553749398, www.pearl-watercrafts.com Surf Dubai, Dubai, Umm Suqeim, +971505043020, www.surfingdubai.com
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Surf Shop Dubai, Dubai, Al Raha Bldg, Al Barsha 1, +97143990989, www. surfshopdubai.com UAE Kite Surfing, +971505626383, www.ad-kitesurfing.net Distributor Ocean Sports FZE, +971559352735, www.kitesurfsup.com Operator Al Forsan Resort, Abu Dhabi, +97125568555, www.alforsan.com Dubai Kite Surf School, Dubai, Umm Suqeim Beach, +971 504965107, www.dubaikitesurfschool.com Kite Fly, Dubai, +971502547440, www. kitesurf.ae Kite4fun, Abu Dhabi, +971508133134, www.kite4fun.net Nautica1992, Dubai, +971504262415, www.nautica1992.ae Shamalkitesurfing, Umm Suqueim Beach – Dubai, +971507689226, www. shamalkitesurfing.com Sky &Sea Adventures, Dubai, Hilton, Jumeirah Beach Road, +97143999005, www.watersportsdubai.com Surf Adventures UAE, Dubai, Al Barsha1, +97143990989, www.surfadventuresuae.com Surf School Dubai, Umm Suqeim & Al Barsha, Dubai, +97143990989, www. surfschooluae.com Clubs Abu Dhabi Stand Up Paddle www.uaesup.com
Water Parks
Aquaventure Atlantis, Dubai, Palm Jumeirah, +97144260000, www.atlantisthepalm.ae Dreamland Aqua Park, Umm Al Quwaim, Emirates Road, +97167681888, www.dreamlanduae.com Wild Wadi, Dubai, +97143484444, www.wildwadi.com
Other leisure activities
Abu Dhabi Golf Club, Abu Dhabi, + 97125588990, www.adgolfclub.com Dolphin Bay Atlantis Dubai, +97144260000, www.atlantisthepalm.ae Dubai Dolphinarium Dubai, Creek Park Gate No. 1, +97143369773, www.dubaidolphinarium.ae Ifly Dubai, Dubai, Mirdiff City Centre, +97142316292, www.iflyme.com Sadiyaat Beach Club, Abu Dhabi, Saadiyat Island, +97125578000, www. sbgolfclub.ae Sharjah Golf and Shooting Club, Sharjah, +97143999005, www.golfandshootingshj.com SkiDubai, Dubai, Mall of The Emirates, +97144094000, www.skidxb.com Spacewalk Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi, +97124463653, www.spacewalk.ae
Health, Safety & Training
Safety Lessons Marine Concept Yacht Charter & Sea School, Rania Business Centre, Dubai, +971559603030, www.marine-charter-concept.com Safety & Leisure Training Middle East, Dusseldorf Business Point, Al Barsha 1, Dubai, +97144502418, www. sltme.com Sport & Health Centres The Physio Center, Suite 405, Building 49, Dubai Healthcare City, Dubai, +97144370570, www.physiocentre.ae
To advertise please e-mail: contact@outdooruae.com or call: 04 4502419
Available at Adventure HQ in Times Square Center Micah’s Bike Shop in Al Quoz area Distributor
Global Climbing info@globalclimbing.com
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