Al’s Saudi Adventure

augusti 2024 - juli 2025
  • Alistair Penny
Nuvarande
Just a little travel diary/blog to document my time in Saudi Läs mer
  • Alistair Penny
Reser för närvarande

Lista över länder

  • Jordanien Jordanien
  • Qatar Qatar
  • Nya Zeeland Nya Zeeland
  • Norra Irland Norra Irland
  • Saudiarabien Saudiarabien
Kategorier
Inga
  • 119kantal resta kilometer
Transportmedel
  • Flyg-kilometer
  • Gående-kilometer
  • Vandring-kilometer
  • Cykel-kilometer
  • Motorcykel-kilometer
  • Tuk Tuk-kilometer
  • Bil-kilometer
  • Tåg-kilometer
  • Buss-kilometer
  • Husbil-kilometer
  • Husvagn-kilometer
  • 4x4-kilometer
  • Simning-kilometer
  • Paddling/Roddning-kilometer
  • Motorbåt-kilometer
  • Segling-kilometer
  • Husbåt-kilometer
  • Färja-kilometer
  • Kryssningsfartyg-kilometer
  • Häst-kilometer
  • Skidåkning-kilometer
  • Lifta med-kilometer
  • Cable car-kilometer
  • Helikopter-kilometer
  • Barfota-kilometer
  • 23fotavtryck
  • 326dagar
  • 189foton
  • 9gilla-markeringar
  • Rest in Peace Ernie

    24 augusti 2024, Norra Irland ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    It never ceases to amaze me how life, as you know it, can change unexpectedly in an instant. Tuesday the 20th of August 2024 is one such moment.

    I received a phone call from Joan’s brother Gareth informing me that their father, my father in law, Ernie had passed away suddenly at the family home in Mullaghmeen that afternoon. After speaking with Joan, our attention turned to making sure our girls were taken care of and making plans for both of us to get back to Northern Ireland as quickly as possible.

    Ernie was a giant of a man in every sense of the word, known to some as The Bear he was a large, tough, ex policeman from Northern Ireland who also loved his family, his faithful companion Daz, his friends and most of all his grandchildren. He spent his time in recent years growing incredible organic veges, maintaining the lovely gardens at The Rowans and volunteering his time to help out his beloved Enniskillen Rugby Club.

    Ernie was always a great sounding board for me personally and we have had many important discussions sat around the dining table in the family home, usually early in the morning after a few pints or glasses of Oyster Bay Sav, which was his absolute favourite. In recent times Ernie was a big supporter of my move to Saudi and has told me on a number of occasions that its family first, and everything you do as a father should be to benefit your family.

    Ernie’s passing has left an enormous hole in the lives of everyone who knew him and I am so thankful that we got to spend the best part of a month with him in the run up to Shiner and Louise’s wedding back in July. Seeing Scarlett and especially Frankie strengthen their bonds with their Granny and Granda was the absolute highlight of the trip, outside of the wedding, and is something that will stick with me forever. We are truly lucky that our memories of Ernie are so strong and so recent. The memory banks are full of amazing memories of donkey derbies, Granda’s crunchy bacon, Linda’s 70th birthday celebrations and for me personally the weekend that Ernie and I spent at The Open at Troon.

    I always enjoyed any time that I got to spend with Ernie, but the weekend in Troon was special. We spent hours in the car together talking about anything and everything and getting into lots of family related chats that taught me a lot about life as a Dad who works away and has to spend time away from the people you love the most. I’m still not convinced to this day that Ernie actually enjoyed watching the golf, especially when we got rained out of Troon on the Saturday, but if he didn’t enjoy it he never let on and always seemed genuinely glad that I was nerding out and fan girling over all the pros we got to watch at my first live major tournament. We also had a couple of incredible meals, pints and laughs at the Thai Orchid in Dalton, one of Joan and I’s favourite places to eat anywhere in the world.

    Ernie’s funeral was beautiful and an extremely fitting send off for a man widely respected and loved across Northern Ireland, New Zealand and anywhere else he went in between. The procession from the house down to the rugby club will stick with me as long as I live, the road lined with mourning club members old and young, including 5 of the Enniskillen Women’s team who were playing for Ulster on TV a couple of hours later, black arm bands on as a show of respect. Club members switched in and out as pallbearers as Ernie made his final journey. An incredibly moving and emotional outpouring of love and respect from the club and wider community.

    The coming days, weeks and months will be extremely hard for the wider Beatty family, which I am very proud to be part of, but we will all get through it together in time. Joan has been a tower of strength for Linda in her darkest hour and her calmness and clear thinking has been an inspiration to see. This has also confirmed for me what I already suspected, but this is irrefutable proof – that one of us is highly emotional and was in pieces since receiving the news, unable to think straight … and the other one is Joan.

    I can’t help thinking about the age old adage that you truly don’t know what you have until it is gone. Everything that has happened has shown me that Ernie has been a huge, influential part of my life for the past 20 years. He is someone that I respect immeasurably and alongside my own Dad, has been a guiding light for me in my adult life. Ernie was loved and respected by people from all walks of life in Northern Ireland, something that not many can say truthfully in a country which has undoubtedly moved on positively from the dark days of the Troubles, but still carries the scars of what has happened in the past. After witnessing the outpouring of love and respect over the past week, I hope that when my time is finally up, if half as many people say half as many heartwarming things about me as has been said about Ernie, I will be immensely proud of what I have achieved in my life. I will miss him so much.

    I just wish I had one more chance to tell him that.
    Läs mer

  • Week 1 of work done

    19 augusti 2024, Saudiarabien ⋅ 🌬 36 °C

    My first official day of was 14th of August and it consisted of a fairly standard induction to Red Sea Global and how the site that I was now visiting each day for work operated.

    The site is approximately 1 hour by bus north of where I am staying in Umluj at a site called Turtle Bay. The site itself is enormous and on land consists of the main offices for the project, accommodation for construction workers, hotel operators and RSG staff spread across the Construction Villages (circa 20,000 beds) and various types of apartment and townhouse accommodation. There are also a number of communal facilities such as entertainment centres, places to eat, gyms, swimming pools, shops (including a supermarket), a mosque and much much more. I am yet to see much outside of the offices though because I am still located at the hotel and it looks like I will be for some time to come.

    Then when you go out to the islands there are circa 10-15 hotels and resorts under construction currently - google Shura Island development to get an idea of what is being built here. The scale is quite mind boggling

    I am leading a team of 8 people at the moment made up of a males and females from NZ, Pakistan, Ukraine, India and Saudi Arabia and my boss is Irish so we are a bit of a United Nations for sure. The work looks to be really interesting so far and it looks like I will be applying what I have learned after 20+ years in NZ and the UK to a completely different asset type i.e. Accommodation. The change has been really refreshing actually and its great to be able to share my insights and experience with the team.

    Life in the hotel is OK, the hotel itself is lovely, the food is good, the facilities are top notch but it is a fairly lonely existence some times once we get back here from site so I am enjoying the daily video calls to Joan and the girls a lot and they are helping me feel like I'm not as far away from home as I am. The weekends are particularly hard as there isn't much to do outside the hotel itself but we have the option to work every 2nd Saturday and receive pro rata pay for it as well as a additional 12 days annual leave per year so I will be looking to get onto that programme as soon as I can given that's what I'm here to do.

    Yet to find any rugby coverage whatsoever so resorted to listening to the Newstalk ZB radio coverage of the 2nd test v Argentina, which I was very happy with after the dismal performance the AB's put in the week before in Wellington. On the plus side the time zone works quite well for EPL coverage so that is keeping me occupied as well.
    Läs mer

  • A tough goodbye with the girls at Auckland Airport
    Yanbu AirportMade itLunch on Day 1I can see myself spending a lot of time here in the next 2 weeksToken poolside shotI'm that guy - drinking coffee and blogging - what a wanker, ha ha

    The Start of the Big Adventure

    14 augusti 2024, Saudiarabien ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    After almost 8 months of planning and preparation the big day had finally arrived, I had my visa sorted and my travel was booked ... I was actually doing this, moving to Saudi Arabia to take on a new role with Red Sea Global. It felt like an eternity since Joan's ex colleague Tony had contacted us and asked whether this move would be something we would consider doing. After a few Teams calls back and forth and a few other things happening for Joan, the girls and I that we decided to take a punt and do something crazy and I accepted this new role and resigned from Stride, where I had been working for the past 8 years.

    I will be working on the Red Sea Global hotel and resort development project, one of the government's many giga projects that are happening across the country here at the moment.

    I will fly back and forth to New Zealand for the first part of my time away and then the plan will be for Joan, Scarlett and Frankie to relocate to Fermanagh for a while to spend some quality time with their grandparents Ernie and Linda, and Uncle Shiner and Aunty Louise which also means I will be considerably closer to them for visits.

    After a 28 hour journey with flights via Doha, Riyadh and Yanbu I have arrived at my home for the next 2 weeks, Waves Hotel just outside Umluj and have settled in to my room, caught up on some much needed sleep, have swum in the pool and am doing my best to acclimatise to the 36 degree heat after coming from winter at home. The plan is that I will be here for a couple of weeks before relocating into apartment accommodation on the work site.

    My work induction starts tomorrow bright and early and I'm looking forward to getting stuck into some work after being "between jobs" the past 6 weeks or so.

    I don't see this being a daily update kind of blog but more of a tool to keep the people who care up to date with what's happening where I am and how the whole experience is going when there is something interesting to write about.
    Läs mer