Oman
Ḩill ash Sharqīyah

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    • Day 215

      Wadi Nakhar

      February 11, 2023 in Oman ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

      Today we drove into the Wadi Nakhar, (turquoise line) also known as the Grand canyon of Oman. The cliffs on the sides reach up to a mountain plateau at 2200 meters.
      Part of the track led along the river bed partially carrying water and I experienced my first driving through deeper water.
      In the night you could only hear the gentle trickling of the water, above us a crystal clear sky, like in the desert with millions of stars.
      The clear skies are due to an atmospheric moisture level close to zero percent which has our skin chafing and lips cracking.
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    • Day 219

      Musandam, a world on its own.

      February 15, 2023 in Oman

      Musandam is on the tip of the Arabian peninsula 90km from Iran, forming the strait of Hormuz. The peninsula basically consists of 1600m high rocks and not much more, no rivers, no green anywhere. One can only access it by sea or from the Emirates. One track goes through it which is blocked in the mountains by a large military area. The rocks drop steep into the sea creating large fjords, there are hardly beaches and only one small town, Kahsab accesible by land, all the others only by sea. What it does have is lots of warm seas with lots of fishes and dolphins.
      As we approached Kahsab in the morning, we noticed more than 50 speedboats, relatively close to each other, racing toward Kahsab and wondered what it was. Later we heard that each morning, Iranian speedboats cross the strait of Hormuz transporting sheep and goats to be sold for hard currency and transported to the Emirates. In the Souk they then use the money to buy American cigarrettes and electronics, all packed in waterproof bags. Then they race back to Iran. The principle is that the Iranian customs boats can only stop one or two of them. The others get through. The fines are split up through the group.
      What a crazy story!
      The sad side is that the crossing with currents and large waves is so brutal that people standing in the boats can break their legs, many of the animals just die.
      Walking through Khassab we came across a whole truck full of dead sheep and goats. Horrifying!
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Ḩill ash Sharqīyah, Hill ash Sharqiyah, حل الشّرقيّة

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