How To Keep a Camel From Running Away

Matt of Where the Hell is Matt? fame snapped this photo of two camels in a desert somewhere who have their front leg tied to their snout. According to the kids on digg, this is to keep them from running away. (I couldn’t find the original post on Matt’s site where this picture originated.) Slightly cruel? Perhaps. But effective? For sure. What else are you going to do when there are no trees to tie your camel to?

Ice Bar in Dubai


Is it just me, or has the city of Dubai gone completely crazy?

We’ve posted a number of times here on Gadling about the wild construction frenzy enveloping this city and the wacko projects which have been popping up around town, such as a ski resort in the frickin’ desert, for example.

Well, not to be outdone by their friends to the (way) north, Dubai is now host to the Middle East’s very first ice bar. Yep, an actual bar made out of ice.

We’ve posted about ice bars here on Gadling as well, but they’ve been located in places like Montreal and Stockholm. I never thought we’d be posting about an ice bar in the middle of the frickin’ desert, however.

And yet, all that oil money has brought ice to the desert.

According to recent an AP article, the $3 million bar was craved out of ice in Canada and then shipped to Dubai where patrons enjoy “walls, tables and chairs; cups, glasses and plates; … art, sculptures, beaded curtains, a chandelier and the bar” all made entirely of ice.

And you wonder why the price of gas is so high?

The Devil’s Highway – Journey Along the U.S. Mexico Border

Walking the Arizona desert in 100 degree heat is no joke. I’ve done it before. During my travels I wasn’t out there alone and I had plenty of water to get me to my final stop. I was beyond well-prepared for the occasion, but it didn’t take away from the brutal heat, sun exposure and vast silent nothingness the desert so often revealed. On the flip side there are secrets only the wind carries, the skull of animal or worse – a human and border patrol know. My 20-mile stretch nothing in comparison to the journey made by hundreds of thousands Mexican migrants each day.

National Geographic Adventure Magazine has a spectacular story and photo gallery on the plight of the illegal migrant. Photographer John Annerino and contributing editor Tim Cahill spent nine days in the Sonora Desert borderlands of southwestern Arizona’s Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge discovering what goes down in one of America’s most troubled wilderness areas. One word – chaos. Imagine migrant groups battling it out with border bandits, vigilantes, Mexican coyotes and dehydration. If that isn’t enough already throw drug smugglers and the U.S. border patrol and what we have is a very ugly reality of one of the hardest types of travel known to man. The hunt for opportunity and better living in the land of the free could very well be in the hands of many migrants so long as they can make it in, through and well-out of the Devil’s Highway.

The story is truly phenomenal and the gallery just the same. If you’ve got the time I suggest you head over for a read. Makes you think.

Make Fortune Cookies

One night when I called one of my close friends she rushed me off the phone because she was in the middle of cooking. When I asked what was on the menu and whether or not see needed any taste-testers she quickly told me she was ruining the fortune cookies and had to go. Fortune cookies? Huh? Who on the planet makes fortune cookies? I thought a machine did that… How do you make fortune cookies? You can make them at home? After talking with her I wanted to look up a fortune cookie recipe to see what step she could have been at to be ruining the folded cookie like treats. After checking it out I’m not sure which it was and I’m sure glad she didn’t needed a taste-tester.

I won’t try this one, but FoodNetwork.com has one from their Sweet Dreams episode if anyone is interested. In summary the prep time is what gets you in making the cookies. They take an hour of prep, 24 minutes to cook and yield about 20 cookies. This could be a fun way to travel to Asia by way of food with friends or family on an evening stuck in the house.

Arizona & Utah's Wave

Talk about breath-taking! It’s scenes like the one found at the Arizona-Utah border known as "The
Wave" that make me want to toss all international travel plans aside for greater exploration stateside. The pink,
red, buff sandstone or pastel-stripped ocean wave plopped in the center of the desert, as Leon
Oliver describes for Go World Travel
isn’t necessarily easy to get to and should you arrive make sure you remember
the limited access. Only 20 visitors are allowed each day, a rule enforced by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM),
where ten apply on the internet and the other ten can only pray that they win the lottery held a day before their
visit. You’ll need a trail permit as well. For all the trouble
the location sounds like an incredible spot and worth it in the very end.

If Arizona, Utah or the two combined are on
your list of potential summer vacation areas make sure you include the border/Southwest Strata on your list and plan
ahead. Oliver lists good information on getting into the area, airports, hotels and nearby cities worth looking into.