March 31, 2022
90-ish, sunny. Time to break out the cotton clothes while making sure I'm covered from neck to ankle, from shoulders to wrist to maintain my modesty and not tempt anyone to lust. Though frankly, at my age, I'd count any day I could enflame someone's lust a very good day indeed! The sky seemed bluer here.
“By means of water, we give life to everything.” —Koran
Since we'd already been ground on the administrivia grindstone in Jeddah, our arrival in Yanbu Al-Bahr was simplicity itself. We simply walked off the Star and onto our waiting bus for our included excursion. Our guide today was Muhammed, a very well-spoken young man with a friendly manner and clear command of his material. He represented his culture, his country and his town very well.
First, he explained that Yanbu Al-Bahr means "spring by the sea," which marks it as supremely important to a country that has no natural lakes or rivers and very limited rainfall. Even Yanbu only receives an average of 1.3 inches of rainfall in a year, so an underground water source is golden. Muhammed was justifiably proud to take us to their manmade lake!
The area reminded me a bit of Boston Commons with the water features and flowers. |
How many birds do you see? |
But it was nearly deserted save for our bus.
That's because in Yanbu, people start their days later than we do. And then take several hours off in the middle of the day to escape the heat, working later into the evening. Families with children will come around after sunset to enjoy picnics on actual grass.
The DH switched from his BBcap to his sunhat! |
I'm not surprised.
My sister Jenn and her family used to live in Lake Havasu City, AZ, and they actually flipped their days and nights around to cope with the blistering summer temps. She couldn't let her kids play outside in the heat of the day lest they burn themselves on a car door or a metal swing. It wasn't unusual for her to grocery shop at midnight.
After this stop, we drove around the city while Muhammed pointed out places of interest. One was a large new building that is a school for women. It used to be only men who could attend a trade school or university, but the Saudi government has realized that women can be highly productive members of society and the key to all advancement of a society is education. I was delighted to hear it. I wish we in the US would prize education as highly as a means of upward mobility and a better life.
Migratory birds have discovered this little oasis and it's sometimes overrun with parrots from Africa. |
Prayer tents set up by the side of the road for the upcoming observance of Ramadan. Not sure what the plastic cannon is about... |
Young families pushing strollers walked along the seaway. That wonderfully atonal Arabic music drifted from a dozen open air restaurants. The laughter of children cut through the music, and we could see a number of them zipping around the area in little electric play cars they call "Bentleys." It looked like fun! And it gave us a peek at the life of young Saudi families.
I'm going to guess that "that guy" found himself caught between wearing a pair of trousers that needed (or was gone to) the laundry, and not going on the tour so found a solution. I say good for him! My husband would have missed the sights rather than look foolish. As for the champagne guzzler, some people are just selfish -- or maybe it was Martinelli's? One can hope... Thanks for the tour -- you are generous to share your world tour time...
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing that more charitable view. My take on the shorts over slacks was him metaphorically shaking his fist at our Saudi hosts and saying "I'm wearing shorts and you can't stop me!"
DeleteThanks for sharing that interesting stop with us. I agree with you. It is basic politeness to abide by the norms and rules of the different cultures you are visiting.
ReplyDeleteWhile we're in their country, our guides are trying to model the best of their culture, so I should try to do the same with mine by being polite and not overtly trying to give offense.
DeleteYou'd hope that travel would broaden our horizons to teach us that there are different cultures out there and that we need to accept that ... regardless of whether feel those cultures are right or wrong. But, alas ... well, I won't get on my soapbox.
ReplyDeleteAs for the plastic cannon ... it is traditional to shoot a cannon to let people in a given area know that it is OK to break their fast at the appropriate time during Ramadan. In the absence of a nearby fortification, this might be the solution they came up with.