Showing posts with label Dubai 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dubai 2015. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 February 2015

Goodbye Dubai, Hello Melbourne

Hello! It's been a while. And yes, I know. I have been back from Dubai for almost 2 weeks now - my bad! I came straight back and started working again so I've been busy busy busy.

The last week or so of my Dubai trip was crazy eventful (as the end of holidays always are)! It seems as though in the first few days/week you think you have all the time in the world so you take time to sleep and veg around the house. Then in the last few days you realise how little time you have left and cram everything into those few days, like a crazy person.

In my two weeks in Dubai I completed a total of 4 rooms and thoroughly enjoyed every second of it. I am officially addicted. I'm planning on visiting the two escape room venues that are open in Melbourne right now and keep up my addiction! After having done Challenge Chambers with family friends and then HintHunt with my old high school friends, I decided I liked both of them for different reasons. Oh, and then Challenge Chambers again with my dad...and again. HintHunt inundates you with clues and not all of them are important at that very moment, and the clues are incredibly cryptic, until you know what they mean then they make perfect sense. And you'll stand there saying to yourself "Of course, how could I have missed that?!". Whereas Challenge Chambers is perhaps slightly easier and more straightforward. You're only asked to solve one thing at once and then move on, personally I found it a lot easier at Challenge Chambers but also less stressful as I wasn't panicking as much. Having said that, at the end of HintHunt when my friends and I finished with 1:01 left on the clock.T hat's right 1:01. We let out the stereotypical cheer that I had always thought was contrived on TV game shows. Man, did that feel good to finish. We were running around the rooms to get things we'd left in the other room; doing maths like crazed uni students and yelling at each other to "find the damn magnifying glass!". It was great fun, once again, I fully recommend escape rooms.

As well as feeding my addiction, I also went quad-biking, go-karting and to see the Monte Carlo Ballet's Romeo et Juliette.

Aditi and I on our quad bikes
Quad-biking happened in a truly Dubai style. We rocked up, late. They didn't notice/care. They took us to the quad bikes; we sat down. Note: no helmet, protective gear, insistence that we be wearing jeans or long trousers, or goggles. We rode around for an hour, wooping and scaring ourselves a little. It was so much fun, not sure it was entirely worth the full price that they charge (we had vouchers), but a good day out all the same.

Go-karting was great! But as anyone that knows me will tell you, I'm a little bit of a car freak (Australians read: hoon) so of course go-karting would be something I'd enjoy.

If you'll excuse me, again, I'm going to have a little bit of a rant. Not about escape rooms, this time, but about the audiences in Dubai. *skip to tl;dr version

The space and stage that the Monte Carlo ballet performed.
I went to see the Monte Carlo Ballet perform Romeo et Juliette. This ballet piece was exquisite. It was beautiful, technically gorgeous and it had sex/penis jokes...everything you could ever want from a ballet. It was lost on the audience. Completely. And utterly. Lost. There were two points in the performance which I thought that the director didn't make the right creative choice. However thinking about it, it seems as though he didn't have much other choice.

  1. There was slow motion in some parts throughout the piece as too many things were happening at once and all were of equal import and thus needed to be noticed. The first couple of incidents of slow-mo were great! The dancers kept in sync and it was an inspired effect. There was one slow-mo scene which was not the best. It was simply too long. The dancers got out of sync (who can blame them!) and the whole thing started looking a bit Year-7-Drama-Class-esque.
  2. Just after the interval the lights all went off on the stage and some house lights came up. My first thought, as a techy, was: "Oh no! The lights have malfunctioned, poor lighting crew!". That was not the case. There was a piece of staging that had to be added which required more than just rolling onto stage, this was unfortunate. It took too long, and I even saw some people leave. It would have been better if they could have done that during the interval but costume changes would have been sacrificed.
Onto the Dubai Audience. They were simply the rudest, most ungrateful little @$%&@ I had ever had the unfortunate time of sitting amongst. Honestly, I was so embarrassed to have been a part of said audience. The whole production started almost an hour late as people were only arriving when the performance was meant to begin, even though the tickets said that doors opened from 2 hours previous. They continued talking during the first 5 minutes of the start of the show and during the first few minutes after the interval. And people were late to arrive back into the theatre after the interval. These things could potentially be excused if it were not for their behaviour at the end of the show. Anyone who has ever been to any sort of theatre performance, dance or otherwise, knows that there is a protocol when it comes to the bows at the end. For the ballet, it's simple.
  • Ballet corps
  • Major characters
  • Main/Title characters
  • Whole company x 2
  • Director on stage, whole company
  • Curtain close.
As soon as, AS SOON AS, the lights went down on the final heartbreaking scene of Romeo and Juliet lying dead in each other's arms, people were leaving. People from right near the stage; people from the middle of aisle; people from the upper tiers. Then once the ballet corps had had their bow, more people left. There was a stream of people leaving! By the time the director was on stage only about half, if not less, of the audience remained. I was outraged! It was a privilege to have watched the Monte Carlo Ballet perform Romeo et Juliette, and I sincerely apologise to them and suggest that no ballet company goes to Dubai as I have no doubt that they won't be treated any different.

*Phew! Rant over. tl;dr - Dubai audiences were rude to an amazing ballet company.

And then I hopped on a plane to Brunei, had the usual stressy lay-over because Brunei airport sucks and then arrived back in Melbourne and got me some real bacon.

Thanks everyone (anyone) who has actually been reading this!

Until my next travel! Au revoir! Arrivederci! Auf Wiedersehen!

Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Dubai so far...

I've been here for over a week now (time flies!) and feel as though I've done very little in the way of sight-seeing or big activities.

Car 551 before we set off
Last weekend - Friday/Saturday - I went into the desert with my dad and a colleague of his and her husband for the Gulf News Overnighter Fun Drive. It was a lot of fun, I was allowed to drive for a section of it and only got us stuck twice! For anyone who has been dune bashing, they'll know that this is quite an achievement for my first time driving. I highly recommend the Fun Drive to anyone who is in Dubai; it was well organised, for the most part well marshalled, and well catered (we all know this is important to me). There were some not-so good things about the event, although this could just be me being picky. There was a stage of the drive that more difficult than the rest due to the density and grain size of the sand (both are very important in dune bashing). I would have expected this section to be crawling with Marshals, however I believe they were caught up helping the novices in the earlier bits of the course. In this section we got stuck 2 times and they were both pretty serious - I wasn't driving, otherwise we'd have been stuck a lot more than twice! - but there were no Marshals to be seen. Also, a lot of people arrived after dark at the camp, which makes me think that they weren't guided properly or told to go straight to the camp when they arrived at the appropriate check-point. If I had been the driver of a car and it was my first time out, I can imagine potentially doing serious damage to the car if I had to drive in the dark. Aside from a few minor things like that I felt it was well worth 375AED (125AUD, 102USD) each.

"That was days ago! What else have you been doing?" you ask.
"Well..." I answer.
Coming back to Dubai was never meant to be a sight-seeing holiday, it's been like a second home to me over the years so in a way I'm coming home to Dubai instead of going on a holiday. I've been treating it as a holiday in some ways, eg. planning tourist-y activities; not minding about spending a bit more than anticipated; relaxing and taking the time to read a new book. However, I also am not too worried about losing a day to bumming around the house or catching up on new TV episodes.

Belongs to tripadvisor, here
I haven't been completely idle. Yesterday, Monday, I went to Challenge Chambers, again with my dad and some colleagues to complete their Escape Challenge,"The 13th Victim". Challenge Chambers is similar to HintHunt which is an international brand name for a live version of the old escape room games. They're great fun as they require (cheesy as it sounds) teamwork, patience, and some mental stamina. The basic premise is: you and your team have a time limit - normally an hour, although there is some variation - to escape from said room by solving a series of puzzles that are found via decoding and discovering clues hidden around the room. The clues can be anything! This is partly what makes these sorts of activities so interesting. Also, the clues can be hidden anywhere: behind pictures, under chairs, via invisible ink, in code, the possibilities are endless. Again, this is an activity that I highly recommend to anyone, anyone at all, that's one of the great things about it. HintHunt is a global phenomenon now, so there is likely to be one in a city near you.

Until my next post.
Laura :-)

Monday, 5 January 2015

Dubai 2015 (and some other stuff)

So, it's been a while since I've used this blog. I've done some travelling since India 2012 but all of it has been in Australia. Whilst worthy of a blog post I never really got round to it; doesn't always feel like travelling to me when you don't need to take your passport!

The short of my brief Aussie travels
I went to the Gold Coast with my boyfriend, Dave, that was in February of 2014. The Gold Coast, for those of you unaware, is basically what people think of when you say Australia: beaches; people in bikinis; drunk Australians. It's got it all! It also has theme parks, three of which are: Warner Bros. Movie World, Wet 'n' Wild, and Sea World. We basically spent our 10 days split between the three of those. All I can say is, trust your first instinct about the Superman Escapes ride in Movie World...



Picture owned by Trees Adventure.
Accessed here
Then, late November 2014 we (Dave and I) went to the Dandenong Ranges, which is a mountain range North-West of Melbourne City; it was a nice relaxing holiday, with a few mini-adventures thrown in. We went horse riding and found out that Dave's horse was having a crabby day and decided to refuse to do anything asked of her. We also went to Tress Adventure in Belgrave (again, NE Melbourne), which I believe is fairly similar to Go Ape in the UK. It's basically a giant adventure playground up in the trees of the rainforest. The courses ranged in difficulty based on how high up the trees you went, and after the first flying fox you tended to look up far more than you ever did down. There is no doubt that I will be back there again, relatively soon!

And now onto the titled topic
Dubai! I have been here a grand total of about 16 hours and already I've noticed how badly everyone drives here...no surprise there.
I'm here with my dad and we've got a bunch of stuff planned; I'm basically a tourist this time round. I'll update every couple of days as I go. Here is a short list of some of things that I'll (hopefully) be doing whilst I'm here:

  • Dune bashing in both our Pajero and on Quad Bikes
  • Visiting the Grand Mosque in Jumeirah
  • Hint Hunt (sort of an escape-room-esque real life puzzle) & Challenge Chambers
  • Gulf News Fun Drive (yay!)
  • Visiting my old high school
  • Having dinner at Ravi's (this list would not be complete without food)
  • Getting cheese bread from Al Reef Bakery
  • Go-Karting
It'll be a busy two weeks, but I know it'll also be a lot of fun!

Until my next post,
Laura :-)