This entry was posted on 2/25/2009 11:10 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

Thursday February 26 2009
It
was just a quickie trip into Dubai while Jan Worthington, Grace Ramsey
and her daughter Wendy were here, the object being a visit to the
Emirta "Horse Requirements Centre", (tack shop),

where the ladies shopped for one of those fancy Arabian halters. They
were quite lovely, but I didn't think Stormy would wear it more than
once before he tossed it in the back of his closet. (He's not vain, and
I know he'd appreciate it, but he's more of a Bohemian kind of horse.)
I
got a taste of Dubai - construction, detours, concrete barriers
narrowing lanes, more construction, construction cranes on every third
skyscraper, a monorail, and more construction and detours. The Burj
Dubai - going to be the tallest building in the world - is one of those
still under construction. I don't think I'll be lining up to go up to
the top floor when it's completed.
We had lunch at a terrific Lebanese restaurant,

then made a quick visit to the Dubai Equine Hospital, one of the top,
state of the art horse hospitals in the world, I'm told. Madiya visited
two of her horses, one who just had ankle surgery,

and another pony who's mysteriously losing weight despite all blood tests coming back normal.
On
the way home, we detoured by the Nad Al Sheba racecourse - with a
bigger new grandstand under construction - where the Dubai World Cup is
held in March - it's the richest Thoroughbred flat race in the world
now. Curlin, 2008 Horse of the Year, won the Dubai World Cup last year;
Dubai Millenium, one of Shaikh Mohammed's greatest racehorses (who
tragically died suddenly from grass sickness a year after he retired to
stud) won it in 2000.
We stopped at a camel souk (no camels
around) near there for another tack shop. Jan's favorite tack shop was
closed, and at a couple of the others, the same Arabian halters were
more expensive the Emirta store, and they were uninterested in
bargaining.
Madiya took us by the new house her family is
building. The workers are saying they will be finished in four months.
We thought it would be more like 4 years. It will be a beautiful place
when it is finished.
One evening Madiya took Tim (her personal
trainer) and me to the Global Village - a carnival/fair with exhibits
from countries around the world. Want to buy native dress from Kenya?
Step inside the souk. Pakistan? Walk through the doors of the 16th
century fortress. Covet a drum from Nepal or a bag from Thailand, or
Indian food? Come on in. How about a slice of durian (that spikey,
stinky fruit)?

How about a carpet? Tim and Madiya bargained with a man, and Tim left with two lovely carpets.
Things have been too busy to visit anything else, but for now, that was a good sample of Dubai.