Wandering Footsteps: Wandering the World One Step at a Time » A travel journal following a family on their overland trip around the world.

A Tourist’s Atypical Experience of Dubai

We pull up to a red light in our 1988 Toyota camper van. In front of us is a white Ferrari. Beside us, a Corvette; behind, a Bentley. Just before our light turns green, a Lamborghini jets through the intersection, roaring his motor furiously.

And the funny thing is, everyone is looking at our car.

Self-explanatory, I think.

Self-explanatory, I think.

I already talked about how Dubai is the City of Superlatives. How glitz and glamor are the norm here. I guess it’s little wonder that an old, beat-up Land Cruiser with a Made-in-Africa cell on the back and two paintings of Le Petit Prince on the side stands out here.

Our ol’ camper van has, in fact, been a blessing several times in Dubai. Parked along various public beaches south of town, more people have stopped by to say hello and inquire about our lives in three weeks than in the almost-three years since I started this camper-van lifestyle.

Because of Totoyaya (our Toyota), we got to share a lovely meal with Frank, Karine, and their two bright children, one of many French expat families in Dubai. Another one – with another Karine and more lovely children! – welcomed us in their home for an apéro. One day, we were presented with a temporary bicycle from Fatima, a Moroccan expat. Other days we were offered hot showers, laundry machines, Moroccan couscous, beer, and gas canisters.   So many people asked for my blog address that I ended up writing it in permanent marker on the side of our camper van!

A few of the French kids we got to meet at the beach of Dubai.  Hi girls! :)

A few of the French kids we got to meet at the beach of Dubai. Hi girls! 🙂

Homegrown advertising!

Homegrown advertising!

The advertising worked – a day later I received a message on my blog from an American/South African couple who were planning their own overland journey from Dubai to Durban. Mere hours later, they ran into us, parked at a different beach, and invited us for drinks and dinner.

We would have loved to, but we’ve just been too darn busy doing yoga! My recent trip to Singapore got me back into yoga – and exercise in general – and I persuaded Bruno to get a one-week unlimited-yoga pass at Zen Yoga Studios. Between the two of us, we attended 19 yoga classes in a single week! Most mornings, we’d bike ride to the studio, take a class, head home for lunch and a bit of beach-bumming, and bike back to the studio for an evening class. Bruno was massively sore, but was happy to take a real hot shower every evening that week – turns out he was sick of the bum-gun showers too!

My new bicycle has been an absolute blessing, not only for yoga transportation. Rather than drive to the giant Carrefour supermarket to stock up on foodstuffs, we’ve been able to ride our bikes there. When we want to go to the cinema or the mall, we bike to the Metro station and ride the above-ground subway. And when we want to be tourists – like on the day we visited the ultra-modern urban promenade at Dubai Marina – we are mobile and independent.

My new bike! (SOOO happy about this, as Bruno has been promising one since we met.  "Dubai," he

My new bike! (SOOO happy about this, as Bruno has been promising one since we met. “Dubai,” he’s been saying for almost three years!)

Bruno and I being cycling tourists at the Dubai Marina.

Bruno and I being cycling tourists at the Dubai Marina.

I didn’t expect to like Dubai. Before I’d even arrived, my mom’s emails were already asking me if the place as bling bling as she’d heard. The truth is, it is – Dubai is all about the biggest, the best, the most expensive. It’s like being back in high school, where everyone wore Abercrombie and Fitch and showed off their Land Rovers and Jeeps in the giant parking lot.

But for some reason, this side of Dubai hasn’t stopped me from liking it. Is it the cleanliness, the civilization, the modernity that I’m drawn to? Is it the fact that I can do yoga, bike ride on a smooth road, and jog on a beach promenade without being stared at? Was I craving malls and bikini waxes or something?

When most tourists come to Dubai, they climb the Burj Khalifa for a view of the skyscrapers on the edge of the desert. They shop at the massive malls and the traditionally-styled Arab souqs. They allow their skin to turn flamingo-pink on public beaches, and dine on posh cocktails at the Burj al Arab seven-star hotel.

I do exercise next to the Burj al Arab instead of going for cocktails there...

I do exercise next to the Burj al Arab instead of going for cocktails there…

I shop at the supermarket, not the souqs or glimmering malls.

I shop at the supermarket, not the souqs or glimmering malls.

Ski Dubai, as my father requested.  There are real penguins on show, and Swiss chalets inside.

Ski Dubai, as my father requested. There are real penguins on show, and Swiss chalets inside.

Instead, I was playing with a two-year old Emirati girl at a villa on the artificial palm-shaped island, Palm Jumeirah. For the past couple of months, I’d put some effort toward finding a job as a private governess/French tutor in the Middle East. These types of jobs are plentiful here, and the money is amazing. Finding work would also allow Bruno to stay put in one place long enough to finally attack the work on Totoyaya that he’s been putting off since we met. It made sense.

The first morning of my job trial didn’t start out well. The Dubai Marathon – only one of several special events in Dubai during my time here (Shopping Festival! Tour of Dubai! Food Festival! Yoga Festival!) – was blocking my route from the beach to the Palm, and I couldn’t get there by car, as planned.

“No problem,” said the mother. “Just walk a bit, until you see cars on the road, and I’ll send my driver to meet you.”

That “a bit” turned into 13kms of walking alongside the marathoners – indeed, I can now say I’ve taken part in a marathon and cross that one off my bucket list – so that by the time I reached the family’s villa I was two hours late, soaked in sweat, and with a bloody blister on my flip-flopped feet.

Camped at the public beach near the Palm Jumeira, where I interviewed as a governess with an Emirati family.

Camped at the public beach near the Palm Jumeira, where I’d interviewed as a governess with an Emirati family.  Wish I’d been camped here the day of the interview, could have saved my feet…

The public beach near the Palm Jumeira.  For obvious reasons, I have no photos of my interview period.

The public beach near the Palm Jumeira. For obvious reasons, I have no photos of my interview period.

The day didn’t get any better after that. The house was full of Filipino women chasing the children, vacuuming floors, cooking food, and tidying the playroom. Little Girl clung on to her mom, refused to listen to anyone, and screamed bloody murder anytime anyone asked her to do something she didn’t want to do. I tried to interact with her, but with so many hands stirring the pot – women popping out of nowhere to tickle, sing, read, distract, hand a toy – it was impossible.

The next day was better, and Little Girl and I spent an undivided hour playing with shells, sand, and water at the family’s private beach in the back. Nonetheless, the job wasn’t the right fit, but the experience was an interesting door into wealthy Emirati society. It was the only interaction I had with Emirati people in our entire month in the U.A.E. The closest I’d come was photographing them buying expensive modern gadgets in the glitzy malls of Dubai (which, by the way, provide some of the best people-watching I’ve ever experienced).

Arabs in malls.

Arabs in malls.

Bruno is slightly obsessed with surreptitiously photographing traditionally-dressed Arabs in malls.

Bruno is slightly obsessed with surreptitiously photographing traditionally-dressed Arabs in malls.

I can’t really complain about lacking interaction with the locals, though. Between the mini camper-van community we accidentally fell upon at Jumeirah Beach (at one point, we were seven European camping cars camped at the beach) and all the expats we’ve met, I’m not exactly starved for socializing. I feel like we have developed a local connection, even if it hasn’t been an Emirati one.

We’ll be back in Dubai in a month or so. It’s where we plan to take the ferry to Iran, providing we can get our tourist visas (easier said than done for Canadians, I’m afraid). I’m already looking forward to it. We have friends to see, and yoga to do.

And maybe we’ll climb the Burj Khalifa after all. I mean, you can’t go to Dubai and not visit the tallest tower in the world, right?

  • Micheline - Coucou Britt,
    Alors cette fois je les ai vus… et bruno ne peut pas les avoir ratés… Il y a plein de bijouteries dans ces shoping centers…. Montre lui !!!!!Bisous à vous deux.
    ladepluzenplubellesoeurReplyCancel

    • Brittany - Justement je lui disais ce matin qu’il me doit DEUX bagues! Et alors, puisque je les veux pas, j’ai le droit d’acheter deux GROS cadeaux de mon choix, n’est-ce pas??? 🙂 Et les Ferrero Rochers que Bruno vient de m’acheter pour remplacer les branches ne comptent pas!ReplyCancel

  • phil and angie - Hi you two.
    Just been reading your dubai camping details.
    superb.
    a real pleasure to read. thankyou.
    envious of your yoga regime, we miss ours, too darn cold n wet here at moment.
    keep the details of that dubai > iran ferry, we’ll be needing that later this year i expect.
    see you soon.
    Phil.
    🙂ReplyCancel

    • Brittany - Thanks for the hello – we’re still looking forward to our Turkey meetup in a few months! You there yet? (cold? wet? really?). Hope you’ll still be in Turkey in May – The Arab Peninsula is holding our attention longer than we thought, and we don’t expect to take the boat until early April…
      Let’s do yoga together soon!
      BBReplyCancel

  • Armand Doucet - Brittany, you are doing a phenomenal job with your blog!!! Frommer’s should be hiring you soon!ReplyCancel

    • Brittany - Can’t believe you had a moment in your busy life to stop by for a read – thanks for that! 🙂 I guess I’m now the Moncton area’s Dubai expert, so if you want more tips/advice for your upcoming trip, you know who to ask! Wish I could be there, but Oman is too wonderful to cut the visit short. Wish you had time to pop over for a few days!
      My best to you and your lovely little family!ReplyCancel

  • Brittany - Here you go dad – I added a photo of Ski Dubai into the blog. Regarding the lack of people at the beach, WE thought there were lots of them, but that’s because we’re used to the wild beaches of Canada and Africa, I guess. But we were in one of the more remote beaches, further away from central Dubai. Closer to the city the beaches were indeed packed! Lots of good women-watching for ya! 😉ReplyCancel

  • rcs - I was looking forward to a pic of the ski hill. I was surprised to not see more people on the beach. Is there a reason for this?ReplyCancel

Your email is never published or shared. Required fields are marked *

*

*