
A picture is worth 1000 words. Dubai March 07
Reflections on travels along the face of the wave
For an avid surfer life in Dubai can be a bit frustrating. While one can surf from time to time in Dubai, the conditions are generally less than ideal. The largest swells are usually created by strong onshore winds that create messy conditions and the doldrums can take hold for quite extended periods. However, just 600km to the south the Indian Ocean serves up beautiful long rollers along the Omani coast between Salalah and Ras Al Had. Equipped with a 4x4, GPS, extra tires, and ample supplies of water and food the more adventurous make regular treks to the barren Omani coast where the line-up is always empty save for the occasional tiger shark
On the last trip in July, I intended to link up with my son and several other younger surfers who had left Dubai several days before to explore some potential new breaks. After a number of hours searching the coast I finally located their camp high on a steep point that jutted out sharply into the ocean. The long clean powerful rights were peeling down the line from the point and as I pulled up I watched a lone surfer take off on a wave and then carve his way along the coast for a good distance before peeling off the lip.
I greeted the crew - Khalid (Lebanese-Australian), Santiago (Columbian), Mubarak (German - Emirati), James (Zimbabwean) and my son Clint. They had been out in the surf all morning and were resting under a tarp they had set up. After the usual greetings I took a stroll around the camp and noticed it was located in an unusual and excessively rocky area surrounded by soft white sand for hundreds of yards and there was something strange about the rocks. They seemed to be arranged, to a certain degree, symmetrically - with the odd flat stone sticking up almost vertically every 6-8 feet. Then I realized the boys "surf camp" had been pitched smack in the middle of an old Muslim cemetery!With no village visible for miles, I pondered the origin and the age of this necropolis and wondered at the lives spent, now marked only by simple stones. 