Sometimes, you need to get away from the
same old routine
Glowering clouds, wet window panes, a
black sea, gulls floating on the storm, bandy-legged men hitching up their
robes to wade through ankle-deep rivers where streets should be, cardboard
boxes, old pieces of furniture and sheep heads floating through the market
place. That's right. It's early evening in southern Arabia .
I'm in Oman to
ride a camel across a desert.
Why? It is because we all need to act
the bedouin from time to time. Riding a camel over a distant horizon will, I am
assured, put me in touch with the nomad and the hunter-gatherer deep inside me.
It is about remembering that the sun shines in the day and the moon in the
night. It is about not having to answer the telephone a hundred times a day. It
is also, funnily enough, about discovering what made Genghis Khan tick and why
the Great wall of China
had to be built.
Except that at this rate my camel-trek
will probably be rained off. Which gets me wondering what attitude
self-respecting camels have to rain - I suspect it makes them feel terribly
insecure and useless. What is the good in having spent millions of years
investing in a giant water barrel on your back when there is plenty of water
lying around everywhere in any case? The poor animals might as well look for
jobs as wine critics in Saudi
Arabia .
It must be the same for the bedouin.
These are the people whose area of special expertise lies in surviving drought,
sunshine and sand storms, whose spiritual energies are devoted to coping with
the bitterness of impermanence, when they are not breaching other peoples'
Great Walls of China. But when they look out of their tent flaps in the morning
and realise that the desert has today turned into a nicely watered piece of
agricultural land and tomorrow will be blooming like an Amsterdam
flower festival - what on earth are they to supposed to make of it?
No doubt they will ask themselves all
the usual tough questions about the nomadic life. Is the ability to ride for 19
days without water, or to face off a 100mph sand storm, really a more useful
asset than being able to manage a medium-sized grocery-export business for
example?
And by the time - say a fortnight later
- that the desert is full of fat-tailed sheep and ripening tropical fruit even
the thought of owning things like fridges and electric ice-cream makers will
begin to seem rather less embarrassing than before. But a leaking piece of
woven camel hair draped over a frame of sticks might no longer look like such a
great place to spend the night.
The next stage is they'll be dropping
out from bedouin society altogether. Instead of rugs designed to be rolled up
and bunged on the back of a camel, they will acquire wall-to-wall carpeting;
instead of water-skins they will have bottles of French mineral water. All in
all, they look like finding the repressed urbanites deep inside themselves long
before I ever find a single nomad. By the way, has anyone seen my umbrella?
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