Note to readers: This
is part one of a three part series about our adventure to the Al Dhafra Camel Festival. Coming soon are Camel Bling-Bling and How to Judge a Camel Beauty Contest.
Stay tuned.
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Al Dhafra Camel festival Million Street parade. See Tip#10 |
There is an art to enjoying a camel festival . . .
If you are looking for an authentic Arab experience, the Dahfra Camel Festival is a must see.
This celebrated festival occurs the last two weeks of
December in a desert camp city that sprouts up just outside of Madinat Zayed about a 2 hour ride into
the desert from Abu Dhabi. This is a
serious festival. At the 2013 Festival, the winners of the various festival competitions
took home 50 million dirhams ($13,623,978+) in prize money including 198 top-of-the-line SUVs.
In 2012, Roger and I ranked this camel festival #2 in our 2012 Top Adventures In and Around Dubai; for 2013 it will retain its #2 slot. We just
love getting down with the natives!
So here are my Top 10 Tips for enjoying the one-and-only
Dhafra Camel Festival:
#1 Book a Room . . .
or pitch your tent
A camel festival compound proudly flying the UAE flag - wish we'd been invited to tea! |
Since it is a very long ride into the desert and activities
run late into the evening, I strongly suggest that you plan on spending the
night. The Tilal Liwa Hotel is right
in the middle of the festival. The LiwaHotel is a 30 minute ride down the road. Roger and I have stayed at both
and are comfortable recommending either depending on how much pain your wallet
can endure.
Or . . . be adventurous and join the crowds who pitch their
own tents. Just pick a prime piece of desert property and claim it as your own.
Many festival participants travel from the Gulf region, some even come by camel
caravan. They set up elaborate tent compounds that patriotically fly their
country’s flag. I decline Roger’s
gracious invitation to attach an American flag to our antenna and “camp out” in
our Ford Explorer.
#2 Don’t rush it
Arabs love racing their Saluki hunting dogs, one of the oldest domesticated dogs know to man. |
To get the real feel of the festival, you need at least 2
days to experience the many events. . . Al
Dhafra Mazayna (camel beauty contests) are center stage but also offered
are races – camel races, Saliuki (Arabian hunting dogs) races and Arabian horse races. There are competitions
with falcons, dates, Halab (camel
milking), photography, Nabati (Arab
poetry) and handicrafts.
Go shopping at the camel auction, the livestock market, a
camel “bling-bling” souq or a traditional heritage souk where you can purchase
Emirati goods hand-made by local women. “Camp follower” vendors set up tents
along the main road selling everything from ear-splitting audio speakers to food
stuffs, firewood, clothes, pots and pans and more. Roger makes a beeline for the Classic Car Contest
but its meager offerings do not set him on fire.
#3 Adjust quickly
to Arab time
Camel Beauty contestant poses for the camera. |
This is a pure Arab experience. Don‘t expect to see a schedule
and if you happen upon one understand it's only a suggestion. Events sometimes happen
spontaneously, run late or not at all. However, there are some basic times for
certain events. Camel beauty contests generally occur in the morning starting
around 7am and again in the late afternoon; races are mostly in the afternoon;
the souqs open around 2 pm and run well into the night. But not everything
happens each day. See tip #4.
#4 Reach out and
touch someone
Roger with kind gentleman who helped us find the horse races. |
You can’t be a shrinking violet if you want to get in on
the good action. My tactic, which makes Roger cringe (I think it is a guy
thing), is to talk to anyone I can find who speaks any amount of English. I inquire
as to what is happening today, where and what time. I find most are eager to
help an inquisitive American blonde.
It is important you not rely on one person’s answer. Think
about the rule of journalism – you must have three independent sources before
you can print it – most likely you will get conflicting information but just
keep asking. When you find a good
suspect you can even go so far as to ask him to take you there. He probably will
politely oblige. Remember Bedu hospitality is in play here and Bedouins are
bound by a cultural tradition to help anyone they find lost in the desert.
If you see a cluster of expats being led by someone who
looks official, just join the group. It's your best bet. A bonus would be to get an invitation for
lunch or dinner at one of the tented compounds set up by festival participants.
#5 Become a
participant whenever you can
Roger relaxing in the Camel Beauty Contests' reviewing stands. |
The races afford the opportunity to join the fun if you
are brave enough. While the camels, horses and Salukis are running as fast as
they can to win their races, owners and spectators are recklessly speeding alongside
the track in their SUVs cheering them on. You too can join this merry ride if
you are a good driver. I prefer to hitch a ride with someone else (all you have to do is ask) since it is a
bit too “wild west” for my driving skills. Roger just won’t even talk about it.
When there are reviewing stands, always take a prominent seat so you can see all the action. For a really good time, try to find the “Magic Carpet Ride.” I will let you discover what that
is. Hint: locate the Abu Dhabi Tourism and Cultural Authority compound.
#6 Location,
location, location
SUVs full of enthusiastic Arabs roar down the side of the track cheering on their prized Arabian horses. |
It is all about being in the right place at the right
time. Rather than wait at the race finish lines we find it far more exciting to
drive to the starting line and mix with the contestants and their owners. All
the tracks we saw have dirt roads on both sides so you can drive down them to
find the starting line. Caution . . . once
the races start there will be a herd of crazies driving SUVs heading for the finish-line at breakneck speed alongside the sprinting animals – make certain you are well out of
their way.
Didn't wake up in time for the camel beauty contest? Just
stroll among the judging pens that are beyond the grandstands and pick out the ones you think are the most
beautiful. Primer on judging a camel beauty contest to be posted soon. Be sure
to read tip #9.
#7 Finding petrol
in the desert
With our gas gauge hovering close to empty, Roger says, "Shukran" to the festival organizers for providing a mobile fueling station. |
Everyone knows the first rule of traveling to the desert
is to go with a full tank of gas. But what do you do when you are there and the
petrol stations are few and far between. The organizers of the camel festival
have solved that problem for you with a portable fueling station. With our gas
gauge hovering very close to empty, Roger gladly takes advantage of this
service. Oh yes, you only want to visit the festival in a four-wheel drive
vehicle since you don’t want to miss something interesting because you can’t
drive off-road.
#8 Eating at the
festival
Bar-B-Q Goat anyone? |
Street food vendors are plentiful serving traditional
Bedu and Arab cuisine cooked on the spot. There are even a few “pop-up”
restaurants. Feeding a crowd? Go to the livestock souq and purchase your meat
for the evening’s feast - goat and lamb seem to be most plentiful. I bet you
can even find someone who would cook it for you. If you are not wild about
street food – or picking out your dinner from a corral, there is more
traditional hotel fare at the adjacent Tilal
Liwa Hotel. This year we had lunch at the Tilal bar. Can’t say we were
overwhelmed with the food but it served the purpose. The bartender very cordially
allowed me to teach him how to make a dry martini – he didn't know what it was - go figure! The second option is the Liwa Hotel
about 30 minutes up the road in Liwa. We stayed overnight there and had a very
nice buffet breakfast.
#9 Be careful what
you admire . . . Mashallah
Mashallah! Aren't these just the cutest camels? |
Be careful how you compliment a beautiful camel. You may end
up taking it home. If you tell an owner, “What a beautiful camel you have,” it triggers Arabs’
generous nature and the owner could feel obliged to gift you with the admired dromedary.
In the Arab culture, always add “Mashallah” to a compliment. This means “As
God has willed it” and it glorifies Allah for anything which is pleasing or
beautiful and gets you off the hook. It should be used whenever you praise or admire someone or something.
Adding Mashallah to a personal compliment also guards that person from the
"evil eye."
My friend Linda tells the tale of being in Tunisia and
admiring a friend’s stunning gold charm on her necklace, which the owner took off and
presented to her as a gift.
“Of course, this
cultural blunder resulted in my needing to return the favor with a present of a
gold charm to her,” said Linda. “It was an expensive way to learn to add
‘Mashallah’ to my compliments.”
When Roger heard this he made me practice
"Mashallah” 20 times just to protect us from any unexpected camels
appearing on our doorstep.
Million Street . . . . this is hard to imagine. One of
our first UAE road trips was to the Tilal Liwa Desert Resort where we saw the
sign “Million Street.” Not until we
visited the festival did we learn what that meant. At around 4:30pm every day during the
festival there is the parade - this is a pageantry of camel
beauty contestant winners who are for sale - road is so named because millions and millions of dirhams change hands in the buying and selling of camels on this street during the festival. It
is a tad out of control.
Zooming around the parading camels are cars full of
excited participants robustly cheering, FRANTICALLY honking their horns, joyfully
backfiring their engines, and blasting loud Arab music in celebration of their
camel’s win. In the middle of the chaos, camel handlers proudly strut their award-winning
dromedaries down the broad dirt boulevard with as much aplomb as a bevy of
fashion models on the runway. And then
you have the “escapee” camels who have managed to elude their handlers and are
running wildly amongst everything else. Oh, and don’t forget the fearless
photographer who gets right out into the middle of the fray and her darling
husband sitting in the car just holding his head in his hands. This bedlam continues long into the
night.
Postscripts . . .
The Al Dhafra Festival, formally in its
seventh year, actually started 21 years ago to settle an argument between a father and his son-in-law as to who had the most beautiful camel. Today, it has grown into
an iconic camel festival where hundreds of buyers and sellers come from the
across the UAE and surrounding Arab countries. The festival strives to preserve
and promote Emirati heritage and the pure bred Asayel (tan) and Mahajim (black)
camels.
Directions: On E11 past Abu Dhabi take exit #236 towards
Madinat Zayed. After passing through Madinat Zayed you can follow signs to the
festival or to the Tilal Liwa hotel. This is how the festival was set up in 2013
. . . Once you turn off the highway,
continue straight on that road. On our left was the livestock souq and tents
selling different goods; on our right on top of a dune was the traditional
souq; next to this souq was an encampment of tents where they were selling camel
bling-bling. Continuing on this same road, on our left is a smallish white
building - site of the camel and saluki races. Following signs to Tilal Liwa
Hotel we turned left at a roundabout; as we approached another roundabout we
saw a long structure in front of us. This is where the camel beauty contest was
held with the holding pens for the camel contestants behind it. On our right was
the sign for Million Road. The Tilal Liwa Hotel is just beyond all of this.
Looking for another authentic Arab experience . . . . try the Bull-Butting in Fujairah
Photo album . . .
Racing camels exercising on Million Street. |
Harsh, the prized falcon, with (l. to r.) owner Gareeb Al Kabi, my trusted translator Mohammed Al Hanidi and his friend Gharbia Madfrez. |
Arabian horses break out of the gate headed towards the finish line. |
Taking time in the desert to pray to Allah. |
Camel "bling-bling" for sale. |
Camel Beauty Contest winners parade on Million Street. |
Camel pride! |
Million Street camel traders. |
Race officials position the "lure" ghazel that the Saluki dogs chase in their races. |
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