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

Thursday, February 6, 2014

5 Ways to Travel like a Local


When they say 'travel like a local' - what do they exactly mean and why should one really travel like a local ...  

Here's how and why we (the husband, our daughter and I) try to get a 'local flavor' during all our travels.

The WHY is simple -

  • Traveling like a local gets you as close as you can to the local culture, mannerisms and way of life. 
  • Especially when you are traveling with kids, it helps you give your kids a flavor of how life is outside their home city and you wont believe how much fun they have in doing this. 
  • And of course the larger mass of tourists aren’t doing this, so at least here - you won't be one amongst a herd of tourists trying to get a selfie in front of a monument or in a queue to buy audio guides.

And now that I've mentioned the WHY, here's my take on the 'HOW':

5 ways to get a 'Local Experience' when you travel:

1.       Stay at a Home-stay

Home stays are the best way to see and perhaps even live a ‘day in the life’ of a local. Most often serve you food cooked in the home kitchen by the home owners or their domestic help – that’s food as authentic as it can get. 
You can strike a conversation with the home owner’s family (if they are open to – which they are in most cases) and their domestic help – and get insights into life in that place. 
If you are traveling with infants and have special food needs, home stays often give you the flexibility to get meals of your choice or warm up that glass of milk yourself in the kitchen.

The only caveat here is to look for home stays that are truly home stays (preferably with owners living in or around that house). Hotels camouflaged as home stays (and there are plenty) defeat the purpose. 


The cosy & tastefully done up living room of Kemal & Barbara's Pension (Guesthouse) - our home for a week in Goreme, Turkey
 
A traditional homestay we stayed at in Bekal, North Kerala, India

2.       Visit a Local Vegetable or Fish Market

Take time out to visit a local (non-touristy) vegetable market, fish market or maybe a weekend market. There is nothing touristy about it & you wont really get souvenirs here – but its fun to see locals buying (and haggling) fish or fresh produce of vegetable & fruits. We enjoy a weekend market the most – everything from vegetables to clothes to dairy products & toiletries sold in bulk – it’s a colorful feast for your eyes.  At a weekend market in Selcuk, Turkey, our daughter enjoyed seeing a variety of fish or fruits (that she hadn’t seen back home) while we struck up a conversation with local vendors.

 
A local market in Hanoi
 
A local fish market in Selcuk, Turkey

 
A lady selling spices & dry fish at a market near Darbar Square, Kathmandu, Nepal

3.       Eat at a Local Restaurant

The best way to try authentic local food in any place you travel to is to eat where there are no tourists and only locals eating. The food at these places is the most authentic and usually the tastiest (usually.. ;-)). The only caveat here is that - unlike touristy restaurants where the staff is often adept in some form English – staff in these local restaurants often don’t speak English (or the commonly used Hindi when traveling in India).
In this case, it helps to look up translations of the food menu on the internet (honestly this exercise is also fun). Once at small local restaurant in one of the by-lanes in Hong Kong, the staff spoke only Cantonese. Fortunately, as a home work, we had carried a handwritten list given by a friend containing 20 different local dishes written in Cantonese and their English equivalent – this way, we would just point out to what we wanted (and we knew what that meant in English).

A local restaurant serving Shawarmas & Snacks on a highway between Ajman & Umm Al Quwain, UAE

Fajau-Pav (Red beans cooked in coconut gravy & bread): popular as lunch with locals at this Goan eatery in Mulgaon - a village near Thivim in North Goa
Rice paper sheets being made for the vietnamese rolls at a street joint off Hanoi, Vietnam
A road side eatery serving meals to locals near Khajjiar in Himachal, India



4.       Travel by the most local transport

Enjoy a ride in a transport that locals use to travel. Mass transport (trains, trams, buses) are even better than individual transport like tuk-tuks/ auto-rickshaws  – as this way, not only do you experience traveling the local way, but often also get a chance to strike a conversation with locals on their daily commute. Kids also enjoy that ride in the tram or  tuk tuk… and of course this is also cheaper on the wallet. The only caveat when traveling with kids is if you re taking an overcrowded vehicle (bus/ rickshaw/ train) – this can be claustrophobic for children – in this case, ensure your child has enough breathing & movement space, else not worth the ride.

An auto rickshaw in Dhaka, Bangladesh - manouvered thru traffic to swiftly get me to my hotel (as an Indian from Mumbai, I am so used to these!)

 
The Himachal State Transport Bus we took from Pathankot to Dalhousie in North India - very good condition, very clean, great people!
 
The less fancy but loads of fun boat ride on an Abra - from Deira to Bur Dubai in Dubai

5.       Visit a Local Park

Head out to a completely non touristy (and usually residential) area of the town you are in and visit a park where local children play at a playpen and people take their evening stroll. Especially when traveling with kids.. Kids enjoy their time at the park (in any new place – a slide or swing is still as much fun!). And while your kids mix around with local kids in the play area, you can take a quiet break and watch on from a park bench while catching up with other parents. Of course there are some things that you do back home that you will still end up doing here – being a referee between your kids and others on who will use the swing first :-)

At the play-area of a local park in Sharjah

At Uskudar, Istanbul - my daughter on a see-saw playing with Turkish kids at the local park

Share your ideas & comments on how you get a local experience when you travel... 

Friday, January 10, 2014

Top 10 things to do in Dubai


As a kid growing up in India, Dubai largely meant only 1 thing - Shopping- the place where you can shop at half the price you'd get in India - electronics, cosmetics, exotic chocolates & gold... and the place where a huge part of the workforce were Indians...

While (unfortunately) it's still largely known for Shopping, I soon knew better that Dubai was a lot more than just that ... 

I was 28 when I first visited and 'experienced' Dubai! From Gravity defying skyscrapers to Wallet defying Gold Souks, from 'who's the largest of them all' Malls to as little 100 sq feet shops in the old souk and from diamond studded personal jets to century old wooden abras - the city's got them all... It's a pity Dubai's known only for shopping!

So here's my list of Top 10 things to do in Dubai:

Deira to Bur Dubai on an Abra

Hop onto an Abra - a small wooden boat that ferries passengers across the creek - at a Waterbus station at Deira (accessible from the Old Souk) and ride across till Bur Dubai - to get a magnificient view of the skyline as you sail across the Dubai creek...  At about 1 dirham one way, the Abra is a great way to experience local water transportation, catch the Dubai Skyline from a different perspective and catch up with locals ferrying across the creek.

Passengers ferrying across the Dubai Creek in an Abra

The Dubai Skyline from an Abra

Art Exhibits at the Bastakiya

Bastakiya in Bur Dubai, can pass off as an Arabian town setting from the 1800's (which I was told it was). Walk through the Bastakiya and check out art & museum exhibits or sit underneath a tree by a wind tower in the complex watching the open air art gallery. 


The Bastakiya

The Philataley House (with Wind Tower architecture)

Ancient Coin Displays at the Bastakiya

Hot Air Ballooning over Hatta Desert

Soar above the Hatta Desert in a Hot Air Balloon .. catch the breath taking sunrise over the desert. Catch glimpses of Bedouin villages, Camel Farms and Locals (and tourists) Dune Bashing. I even caught a Camel Race in action (with paparazzi in tow).


All set to soar!

Sunrise from the up in the air

A Bedouin Village in the desert viewed from the hot air balloon


A Camel Race (with paparazzi) in action

Dubai Museum

I am quite the history buff and ‘dig’ historic sites, ruins and museums… So the Dubai Musuem had to feature in my top 10 ... Located inside the erstwhile Al Fahidi Fort, the museum is a peek into the ‘traditional life’ in the emirates - including the ‘pre oil’ era.

The Dubai Museum located in the erstwhile Al Fahidi Fort

Entrance to the Dubai Museum

The 'Hourey' on display - a small boat carved from a single tree trunk


A replica of an 'Arish' - a summer house with wind towers to keep the house cool & breezy


The Old Souk

This not to be missed Souk (or ‘market’) is by the Dubai Creek and houses the textile, spice and gold souks. Walk through the Old Souk to soak up the heritage architecture and get a flavor of the traditional ‘shopping’ in Dubai beyond the flashy swanky malls. 


Walk through the Old Souk


Heritage Architecture of the Old Souk

Burj Khalifa

You cannot be in Dubai and not go to the tallest building on earth can you… The Burj Khalifa is a metaphorical representation of what Dubai stands for – grandeur & sky-high ambition to be the biggest & best.

The experience of Burj Khalifa begins right at the base – the entrance of the Dubai Mall in Downtown Dubai .. Right from the swanky ticketing office to the elevator that takes you to the observatory deck at Level 124 in flat 60 seconds.

The deck (called At the Top) gives you breathtaking views of downtown Dubai, Jumeirah beach and the Burj Dubai and beyond… Don’t miss the ‘Gold ATM’ at the observatory deck … It’s raining Gold! J


The magnificent Burj Khalifa

View from the Observatory Deck ... the otherwise Tall Skyscrapers Dwarfed by the Burj Khalifa!

Pop that Gold Code... The Gold ATM at the Burj Khalifa Ob deck

The Marina

Walk on the promenade of the Festival City mall get a view of the Festival Marina. Lined with a myriad of jett setter speed boats and even a helipad, the Marina is yet another reflection of the Dubai ‘luxury’ set in the backdrop of the Dubai Skyline.


View of the Marina from the Festival City Promenade

The line up!
Ski Dubai @ the Mall of Emirates

A visit to Ski Dubai is a must only to see how Dubai can make it snow even in the desert (and how!)! Once you are inside Ski Dubai (I was there one Xmas) and if you don’t look back at the rest of the ‘Mall of Emirates’ then you could be anywhere else in the snowy world!


A snowy Christmas in Dubai ;-)
Take a monorail to the Atlantis

Board a monorail that glides past the ‘branches’ of palm jumeirah with the Atlantis Hotel in the horizon… Start the ride at sunset - It’s a scenic ride and the Atlantis hotel post dusk looks splendid with the grandiose illumination… 


In a monorail - with the Atlantis in the horizon

Drive out on the Emirates Highway

Drive out of Dubai onto the Emirates Highway and head out to one of the emirates … As you drive along, catch locals camping out in the sands by the side of the highway in the evening – huddling around a bonfire with the 4 x 4s by their side. Stop by at one of the shacks en route selling fruits, corn cobs, ceramic-ware, furniture and the works. Or drive into one of the parks where locals have set out for a Friday morning picnic…



Drive out on the Emirates Highway

The Sun in the Mirror is closer than you think :-)

Some streets lined with shops selling fruits, toys, furniture even...

Local picnickers steaming up some coffee in a park

Corn on Cob - at a street stall en route the Emirates Highway