Saturday, June 27, 2015

How does a sandstorm feel like?


Pix credit: nricafe.com/

A lot of sand

Most people in the world has never experienced a sandstorm. Well, maybe in movies.

But all the high pixel resolution, surround sound and 3D effect will never ever replace the experience of a real sandstorm. So, how often do we get sandstorms in Qatar?

Well, maybe a few small ones a year and a biggie once a year. And then, there is the mother of all sandstorm in 1 April 2015, this year. All old-timers in Qatar will tell you this is the worst sandstorm in living memory.

You get local sandstorm all the time because Qatar is low lying, is windy and there is plenty of sand. The wind is blowing all the time and you see tumbleweeds and small swirling sand storm right outside your door or in the next empty lot. These are local 'storms', harmless and usually die down after a few minutes.

The bigger ones typically originate from a desert in a neighbouring country and travel across borders to reach you. Of course you are on low land and do not see it but satellite or airborne photos will show a sandstorm moving across the land; just as any decent Hollywood movie will depict a sandstorm.

Start of a sandstorm

You feel the sandstorm presence by increased wind velocity, the howling of wind and decreasing visibility. If you are home, you are likely to stay home. If you are already outside, you'll notice a decrease a traffic, more cars turning on their hazard lights, decrease in visibility and basically, sand flying everywhere.

Most of us sit out a sandstorm at home or in the office. Most sandstorms die within a few hours and you step out to find sand everywhere, debris from your neighbours dumped on your doorstep, everything looks sandy or brown and your car coated in dust and fine sand.

The once a year biggie or the mother of all sandstorm we had in 1 April can be quite frightening even if you are at home. 

Mother of all sandstorm

This mother of all sandstorm originated in Saudi Arabia and reached Qatar near midnight. You can hear the howling wind through double-glazed windows and feel the rattle throughout the night. You wake up to find a fine layer of sand within your home, look out of the window to see visibility down to almost five meters and almost unable to open the door past the howling wind and 6 inches of sand dumped against the door.

Many of us received messages that schools and a number of offices are closed. Visibility is almost zero on the road, schools are closed and many flights were diverted. The entire Qatar was almost in a shutdown mode.

Social media went into a frenzy and you read news and watch pictures of a massive sandstorm rolling across the land captured off aerial cameras, of houses and basement carparks dumped with a layer of sand, of zero visibility on the roads, of fire alarms going off mistaking sand for smoke, of aircrafts grounded or diverted at the airport, of massive cleaning up of roads, shops and offices.

This sandstorm was so massive that it travelled all the way to India's West coast and dumped sand there. Qatar was lucky that the storm gathered in the late night and there were no reports of major accidents nor casualties caused by the storm. Had the storm started during the day, it is likely to cause major accidents on the road.

Like earthquake, there are apparently after-sandstorm as well. We continue to have sandstorms for a couple of weeks after that massive sandstorm although they were all of a much smaller scale.

Why am I writing this blog a couple of months after 1 April? Well, we had a small sandstorm these couple of days and the sand outside my door reminded me of that massive storm again.

Welcome to the world of sandstorm.

Top 8 activities to do in Qatar

Relax at the hotel

Relax at the beach


What does one do for entertainment in Qatar? 

Ask a different person and each will have a different story to tell you.

I guess what one sees as entertainment is largely dependent on whether you're a swinging single, an aspiring artiste, a family person, a sporting person, a sociable person or a dead bore.

Here's a list of popular social/entertainment activities; not necessary in any particular order.

#1 Visiting a shopping mall

As much as I say this list is not in any particular order, I think shopping safely takes the No 1 spot by any mean of measure.

Going to the mall seems to be Qatar's residents' favorite activity. At last count, there are 4 large malls that seems to take in half of Qatars' residents every weekend. They are Villagio, CityCentre, Landmark and Hyatt Plaza. In the last 1 year, Ikea and Ezdan Mall join the list of malls.

Shopping malls are where everyone goes to do grocery and household shopping, to watch a movie, to eat at a restaurant, to people-watch, to window shop or simply to kill time. Most malls typically has an anchor supermarket and some has cinemas, bowling alleys and ice skating rinks to bring in the crowd.

Try not to go to a mall after 1 pm on a weekend; it's impossible to find a parking lot. One goes to a mall to relax; not to fight with the next person over parking lots.

#2 Visiting a Hotel

I find it strange but hotels are packed on weekends; both with local residents on staycation and day visitors. There are hardly any tourist and business visitors would likely to have left Qatar on weekends.

Many hotels; especially the 5-star ones offer sport clubs, private beach access, restaurants, spas, boutique shops, hairdressers, swimming pools and many other amenities. Hence, they tend to pack in the Qataris and well-to-do expatriates.

Dress codes are a little loose, so you get to see Bikinis at the pools. Alcohol is served and the weekend brunch and buffets pack the crowds in at US$100 or more per person. Jazz bars, pubs and spas attract alike their niche clients who cannot enjoy them anywhere else in Qatar.

#3 Going to the desert

Going to the desert appeals to certain segment of Qataris and expatriates and you do not fail to see them heading to the desert every weekend especially during the cooler months. They bash the dunes with large 4 wheel drive SUVs, noisy off-road bikes and carts and set up large tents; complete with electrical generators, air-conditioners, water tanks, electric BBQ grills and water mister out in the desert.

#4 Going to the beach

Qatar has some very nice beach complete with clear, unpolluted turquoise sea. You need to drive an hour or so from Doha and some beaches can only be accessed using a 4x4 SUV.

The beaches are packed once the cooler months start with colourful tents lining the popular beaches.

#5 Brunch and dinner buffets

Every restaurant, from the economical to the high-end, is offering some kind of buffet ranging from US$15 to US$150 over the weekends and it never fails to bring in the crowds. Food offering tend not to change nor vary very much but still is adequate for some residents to make it a point to restaurant-hop to add some variety to their weekends.

#6 Parks and playgrounds

Qatar encourages family outings and there are surprisingly a good choice of parks and playgrounds. Some like the Corniche has been around for some time and is popular with families, cyclists, joggers, single men and tourists and is packed even till the late hours.

Newer and larger grounds like the Aspire park, Katara Cultural Centre and the Islamic Museum park come with water features, performance area and even restaurants and never fail to attract families and visitors.

There are also many smaller parks all over Doha city and are always popular especially with families as these parks always tend to have children playgrounds and refreshment kiosks.

#7 Hanging out at a coffee cafe, fruit bar and shisha lounge

There are coffee cafes everywhere and popular in Qatar are Starbucks, Costa Coffee, Coffee Bean, Coffee Culture and a whole host of other similar cafes. Whenever you meet someone for a chat, the appointment is likely to be in a coffee cafe. They open late and are likely to have wifi, sports channels and basic food offering.

I heard about fruit bar when I first came to Qatar. Fruit juice cafes are popular in Qatar and they serve nothing but mixes of fruits; often with exotic cocktail names. I guess the combination of fancy cocktail names and where youngsters can hang out gave rise to the term fruit bar.

Shiha lounge is the other popular outlet for people to hang out especially the expats of Arabic origin. Some Shisha lounge simply serve tea and Shisha, while others are restaurants cum Shisha lounge. The outdoor lounges are particularly popular during the cooler months while the popular indoor lounge seems to pack in the crowd regardless the hour of the day.

#8 Staying at home

You may be surprised but staying at home is popular with a large segment of the population especially during the hot Summer months when temperature goes up to 50C.

You can get everything at home.

Air-conditioning. Satellite TV. 4G internet. Grocery home delivery. Laundry home delivery. Food home delivery. Car wash; home delivered. Why even bother to go out and fight the traffic and crowd?