There are also cultural differences between Muscat and Salalah. Salalah is a small town and as such is much more relaxed and runs at a slower pace. Almost every night I go down to a coffee shop on the beach with a couple of friends I met on our first night here in Salalah, and we sit around and talk for a couple of hours while I drink juice and they smoke sheesha (sheesha is basically just a fruit flavored tobacco that is smoked from a water pipe). For me it is good practice of my Arabic, and it is nice to sit right on the beach with the waves crashing in.
Every night, the entire area is filled with people sitting at tables all along the beach, some drinking tea or smoking sheesha, and some just sitting around having a picnic on the beach. Weekends (Thursday and Friday here in Oman) are especially busy, and there can be maybe 100 people at the coffee shop that we always go to all just sitting around, talking and relaxing.
Another thing that people like to do here is go up into the mountains, which are about 10 minutes away, and have picnics or visit family. The mountains have started turning green and they are amazing. We just returned from a trip to the desert and as we were driving back to Salalah and entered the mountains, in about 10 minutes time we went from a dry, hot desert with almost no vegetation and very little sign of life, to green rolling hills with cows and other animals grazing and it was amazing. As we were approaching the mountains you could see a wall of clouds ahead of us and once we entered the clouds, the temperature dropped 30+ degrees from well over 100 to somewhere in the 70s with a pleasant mist and beautiful green hills. It is difficult to describe the abruptness of the change, but it was quite an experience.
Salalah has been really nice so far. Our first night here we went to watch a soccer match in the European Cup, which is where I met a couple of guys, Ahmed and Salem, who I sit with almost every day and practice Arabic. Classes are nothing to rave about, but the atmosphere of being here and studying Arabic all the time has really improved my language and hopefully will continue to do so for the next 5 weeks or so that we have left.
Well, I don't plan on this being my one and only post, so I will finish now, and add more later. I hope you enjoy, and let me know if there is anything you would like me to write about or include in future posts, and I will do my best.
10 comments:
Danny, The postings were great. I loved them. Only one request, Post a picture of you! We would love that! Reallly awesome pictures though. Take and post some more!
We love you so much! Keep up the good work!
Love, your loving wife and daughters.
Hi Danny... Great blog and it is neat to see the pictures. As Shar said-- a picture of you would be great also.
It was fun to see & talk to you on the 4th of July.
Love you- Grandma & Grandpa
Hi: The area you describe is like the area Nephi dexcribes a the land Bountiful where he constructed the ship to bring his family to the Americas.
What do you think.
G Tolley
Hi Dan Man-
Beautiful pictures and descriptions. Thanks for setting up a blog so we get a better idea of what you're experiencing.
Love you!
Nate, Amy and Lu
Papa Hatch! Good to know you are still alive. Great to see Shar and your two awesome girls as well. If you ever want to see the most amazing web page ever, go to math.boisestate.edu/~gsaunders, that is about as good as my internet use gets. Anyways, I'm loving life here in Boise for one more year. Then I'm off to the big blue--er, I guess I'm already at the 'big blue', but you get the idea...just five more years of school to go.
-Garrett
Hope you are doing well!!
Very interesting. What are the buildings in the first 2 pictures?
Besides bananas what is the rest of the things in the fruit stand picture? When the people are not sitting on the beach talking with you, what are they usually doing? How do they make a living? What is this area of the country noted for? Are they curious about you and what you are doing there?
Danny, good to see all is well in the wonderful world of Oman We can't wait to see future postings!
Much love from the Trejos,
Bjorn, Kristin, & Gabby
Danny, Thanks for answering the questions. How many people are in your classes? Where do they come from and what are their backgrounds? Have you been able to look up Aboss? My guess is that he is in the capital, it seems like he said his dad worked for the government.
Ya salam! Thanks Danny. Why is your Yemeni friend carrying a rug? Why do you think the mosques are so large and ornate? Why didn't Nephi just stay there and start a banana business with his brothers? thanks for sharing your experiences.
--johnny
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