BBQ dinner desert safari

BBQ dinner desert safari

morning dune buggy tour Dubai

The words BBQ dinner desert safari sound almost mismatched at first, as if a backyard cookout wandered into a fable. But they fit together perfectly in the moment when the city's last high-rise slips from the rearview mirror and the sand begins to ripple like an ocean. The road thins, the skyline dissolves, and the day rearranges itself into elemental parts: heat, light, wind, hunger.

Everything about a desert safari starts with movement. The convoy pauses to release tire pressure, and the dunes ahead look soft as bread flour, deceptive as clouds. Engines hum into a low chorus and the first climb begins-slowly, deliberately-before the vehicle tips over the ridge and slides down the other side in a surf of sand. safe dune buggy tour Dubai Dune bashing, they call it, but the dance is more graceful than the name suggests. The driver reads the dunes like lines of a poem, choosing where to cross a crest, when to pivot, how to descend without breaking the rhythm. Your body learns the choreography quickly: brace, lean, laugh. Sand sprays like champagne, sunlight blinks off each grain, and your heart, startled and gleeful, settles into the off-beat.

Then comes the sudden, restorative hush. The convoy stops on a high ridge as if the desert itself called a truce. The wind has a private whisper in this hour, and even people who don't believe in silence can hear it. Sand squeaks underfoot. A hawk marks its spirals in the clean blue.

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Somewhere, tea is being poured-the clink of glass and the soft pour that means cardamom, sugar, steam. The sunset is unhurried, a painter revising the same canvas in deeper colors: apricot, copper, ember. Shadows grow long and cool. Everyone turns, inevitably, into silhouettes.

By the time you reach camp, the desert has traded its gold for indigo. Lanterns pick out paths between low cushions and carpets. At the entrance, a falconer lifts a gloved arm, the bird's eyes like polished stone. The air changes again, and this time with a scent that breaks whatever spell you were under and replaces it with another: smoke coiling upward from an open grill, meeting the sharpness of cumin and the sweetness of caramelizing onions. If the dunes were a story told in motion, the BBQ dinner is a story told in flavor.

BBQ dinner in the desert is not a novelty; it is a conversation with place. Flame and meat, grain and smoke-these are old languages, older than asphalt or itinerary. Skewers of chicken-marinated in yogurt, garlic, and lemon-hiss when they meet the grill, the edges darkening into the kind of crisp that flakes at a touch. Lamb kofta gathers warmth from cinnamon and coriander, and when the fat drips into the coals, a brief flare returns it as perfume. There is eggplant blistered till velvet, slick with tahini; halloumi seared into salty char; flatbreads slapped against hot metal and lifted with the blistered bubbles that invite a quick swipe through hummus. A dish of rice arrives bejeweled with toasted nuts and currants. On another table, pomegranate seeds wink like small rubies beside bowls of tabbouleh, mint brightening each bite. Someone spoons out a smoky tomato-chili sauce you can taste with your eyes closed and still see the red in it.

You eat sitting low, back against a cushion, shoes kicked off without thinking. Strangers become temporary friends as plates circulate and compliments evolve into stories: where someone learned to grill, where they first saw stars without a halo of city light, the odd things people collect when they travel.

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A thrum of live music enters, an oud player carving melancholy into something tender. Later, dancers will spin in skirts that unfurl like turning galaxies, and the fire performer will trace brief rings of light in the dark. dune buggy Dubai discount Entertainment in tourist camps can teeter between spectacle and sincerity, but in the best moments-when a drumbeat catches a collective pulse, when a henna artist draws a vine across a wrist with quiet concentration-you feel less like an audience and more like a guest.

Dessert in the desert feels like a pun delivered by a patient universe. Plates of luqaimat-a kind of doughnut liberated from seriousness-arrive glistening with date syrup and sesame. Kunafa crackles under the fork, its pastry fine and golden around a center that sighs with cheese and sugar. A small glass of mint tea appears, sweet enough to anchor the spices still echoing in your mouth. Polaris RZR rental Dubai . The night finishes the job the sunset began. The sky is now a deep well, and in its water the stars multiply. Constellations that once belonged to textbooks find their positions again. The Milky Way stretches, unbothered, while a guide points out Venus and tells a story that has been told beside fires for longer than anyone can count.

A BBQ dinner desert safari can tilt toward cliché if you let it be only a checklist-dunes, camel, grill, show, stars, bus. But it also offers a more mindful route if you decide to take it. Notice how the desert resets your sense of scale: a dune that looked conquerable from a distance becomes a climb that earns your breath.

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The sand records without judging-the patterned handwriting of fox and beetle laid over your boot prints, all of it revised by the next wind. Taste how smoke doesn't just sit on food, it wraps it, like a memory attaching itself to a song. Recognize the hospitality underpinning the evening, the skilled work of people who set up camps and stoke fires and tune engines and play instruments and pour tea until their wrists ache.

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Consider the care that the place asks in return: keeping lights low so the stars can speak, treading lightly, freeing the sand of whatever you brought in.

Practical thoughts slip in at the edges: bring a scarf because the desert can be both furnace and refrigerator in one night; don't underestimate the sun that looks gentle while it is not; accept sand as an inevitable seasoning. Take photographs but also let one moment pass without a lens between you and it. Watch how quiet gathers when the generators rest, how the night expands when the music stops, how the desert breathes after the last ember dims.

On the ride back, the city returns like a story you once knew by heart. Neon replaces starlight. The tires regain their pressure. But you carry a small, private warmth-the kind that clings after a meal shared under a sky too big to keep for yourself. BBQ dinner desert safari stops being a phrase and becomes a memory with smoke at its edges, spice at its center, and an open horizon that, for a few hours, felt close enough to touch.

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A Land Rover Defender 90 off-roading
A Unimog U1600 off-roading
4WDs at Fraser Island beach, Australia

Off-roading is the act of driving or riding in a vehicle on unpaved surfaces such as sand, dirt, gravel, riverbeds, mud, snow, rocks, or other natural terrain. Off-roading ranges from casual drives with regular vehicles to competitive events with customized vehicles and skilled drivers.[1]

Off-road vehicle

[edit]
Off-roading in Dubai, UAE.

Off-road vehicles are either capable of or specifically developed for off-road driving. These vehicles often have features designed specifically for use in off-road conditions such as suspension lifts, off-road tires, skid plates, snorkels, roll cages, or strengthened drivetrains.[2][3]

Tools

[edit]
  • Recovery board
  • High lift jack
  • Snatch strap

Types of recreational off-roading

[edit]

Dune bashing

[edit]
A 5th-generation Ford Bronco dune bashing

Dune bashing is a specific form of off-roading performed on sand dunes.[4]

Dune Buggies, Sport-utility vehicles, and ATVs are often used.[5] Vehicles driven on sand dunes are often equipped with a roll cage for safety in the case of an overturn. The tire pressure is often reduced to gain more traction by increasing the footprint of the tire and lowering the ground pressure of the vehicle on the sand, comparable to a person wearing snowshoes to walk on snow without sinking.[6] Some cars are equipped with beadlock wheels, which allow tire pressure to be lowered even further without risking separation of the tire and rim.

Upon entering the desert, it is customary for drivers to meet with a pack of other vehicles and a group leader before proceeding. The group leader then leads the pack through the stunts in a single file line. The rationale for this technique is to prevent drivers from becoming disoriented and getting lost.[6]

Off-road racing

[edit]

Desert racing

[edit]

High-speed racing in the desert includes chases and racing at maximum speed through rough desert terrain with numerous pots and bumps. Drivers often use rear-wheel drive and 4-wheel drive trucks with long-travel suspension and wide stance between the front enlarged tires, which maintains optimal stability at high speed. These types of trucks are often called Trophy trucks or PreRunners.[7]

Rock racing

[edit]

Rock racing involves driving over rocks, but unlike rock crawling, does not specify penalties for striking cones, backing up, or winching.[8] In addition, rock racing incorporates a level of high-speed racing that is not characteristic of rock crawling.

Rallying

[edit]

See article: Rally

Petter Solberg driving a Subaru Impreza WRC on gravel at the 2006 Cyprus Rally, a World Rally Championship event

Rallying is a wide-ranging form of motorsport with various competitive motoring elements such as speed tests (sometimes called "rally racing" in United States), navigation tests, or the ability to reach waypoints or a destination at a prescribed time or average speed. Rallies may be short in the form of trials at a single venue, or several thousand miles long in an extreme endurance rally.

Depending on the format, rallies may be organised on private or public roads, open or closed to traffic, or off-road in the form of cross country or rally-raid. Competitors can use production vehicles which must be road-legal if being used on open roads or specially built competition vehicles suited to crossing specific terrain.

In most cases rallying distinguishes itself from other forms of motorsport by not running directly against other competitors over laps of a circuit, but instead in a point-to-point format in which participants leave at regular intervals from one or more start points.

Mudding and mud plugging

[edit]
Land Rover Series III mud plugging

Mudding is off-roading through an area of wet mud or clay, leading to extremely low traction and problems with moving forward.[9] The goal is to drive as far as possible without getting stuck.[10] There are many types of tires that are often used for this activity, including balloon tires, mud-terrain tires and paddle tires. The activity is popular in the United States, although it is illegal on public land due to the environmental impact.[11]

Mud plugging, as practiced in the United Kingdom, refers to the motorsport of classic trials, where the main objective is to complete a challenging course of (mostly unpaved) roads and (often muddy, and frequently uphill) off-road terrain.[12]

This form of motorsport is one of the oldest to survive to this day, dating back at least to the 1920s.[13]

Jeep Rubicon rock crawling

Rock crawling

[edit]

Rock crawling involves driving over rocky terrain, with the goal of getting as far as possible with the fewest penalties. Penalties are received for striking cones, using a winch to get unstuck, going out of bounds, and going in reverse. These rules lead to the sport being technical, with drivers having to plan ahead to reduce the penalties they receive. Vehicles used for rock crawling are usually modified with different tires, suspension components that allow greater axle articulation, and changes in the differential[14] gear ratio to obtain characteristics suitable for low-speed operation for traversing obstacles. Commonly, rock crawlers have a "spotter", who is an assistant on foot by the vehicle to provide information about areas out of the driver's field of view.[15]

 

Competitive trials

[edit]

All progress is made at low speed and the emphasis is on skill rather than on finishing first, although trialing can be highly competitive. There are three traditional forms of off-road trialing. During some competitive events, such as the Turkey Run in Idaho and other events around the United States, point systems may be used to determine rewards.

RTV trialing

[edit]

RTV (Road Taxed Vehicle) trialing is the most common form of trialing. As the name suggests, it is for vehicles that are road-legal (and thus required to pay road tax). This excludes vehicles that are highly modified or specially built. RTV-class vehicles can carry a wide range of suspension modifications, as well as off-road tires (provided they are road-legal), recovery winches, raised air intakes, etc. Vehicles on RTV trials are usually best described as "modified from standard"—they use the standard chassis, drive-train, and body that the vehicle was built with, but are fitted with a wide array of modifications to assist in the trailing. Whilst modification is not necessarily required for an RTV trial, at the very least the vehicle would be expected to have some underbody and over-the-body protection such as skid plates or roll cages, often made from durable stainless steel, aluminium or mild steel. RTV courses are intended to be non-damaging and driven at little more than a walking pace and a course properly laid out would be drivable without damage. However, the terrain usually includes steep slopes, water, side slopes, deep ruts, and other obstacles that could potentially damage a vehicle if mistakes are made or poor driving techniques are used. As such, the use of modifications can increase the chances of success.[16]

RTV trials usually take place on farmland, a quarry site, or at a dedicated off-road driving center and are usually organized by a dedicated trialing body (such as the All-Wheel Drive Club or the Association of Land Rover clubs in the UK, or by a vehicle owner's club. The course consists of 10 to 12 "gates" marked by two garden canes (sticks) and are vertically placed. The gates are just wide enough to get a standard vehicle through. Vehicles start in a stagger, proceeding one by one, and are deemed to have cleared a gate if at least one of the front wheel hubs passes between the canes. The vehicle's attempt ends when it comes to a stop (depending on the exact level of skill the trial is aimed at any stopping may end the attempt, or a few seconds may be allowed). Long-wheelbase vehicles are usually allowed to perform a three-point turn if needed, providing the driver declares where the turn is going to be made before they attempt the course (this puts a strong emphasis on ground-reading ability). This can also be called a "shunt", where the driver has to attempt a gate and then shout "shunt". They are then allowed a space of one and a half car lengths to reverse and line the car better to enter through the gate[17]

The course between the gates is a "section": between the start line and the first gate is "Section 1", the part between the first and second gates is "Section 2" and so on. An RTV course is often laid out so that each section is progressively more difficult, although this is not always the case. If a driver fails to complete Section 1 they are given 10 points. If the attempt ends in Section 2, 9 points are awarded, etc. A clear round results in gaining only 1 point. A day's event will consist of many different courses and the driver with the lowest score is the winner.

Since the terrain covered in RTV trials should be well within the capabilities of any reasonably capable vehicle (even in standard form), these trials emphasize driver skill and ground-reading abilities. Skill and experience have a larger bearing on success than having a well-equipped and modified car.

CCV trialing

[edit]
Non-legal Cross-Country Vehicle

Cross Country Vehicle (CCV) trialing is the next step up from RTV trialing and is open to non-road-legal vehicles, which greatly increases the scope for modification. The terrain covered will be of greater difficulty than that found on an RTV trial. Since there is a risk of touching rocks and trees with the bodywork,[18] CCV trialing will usually require more careful use of speed to get the vehicle across certain obstacles will attempting to mitigate the risk of vehicle damage. Whilst no trial is intended to be vehicle-damaging, mistakes and accidents are inevitable. A standard-specification vehicle would not be expected to be able to complete a CCV course, but it would still be possible.

The event is run along the same lines as RTV, with a course made up of cane-marked gates.

Suzuki SJ based trial car, showing an external roll-cage

CCV trialing differs greatly from RTV trials in the vehicles used. Since CCV judges adopt an "anything goes" attitude, CCV trials rely on having the correct vehicle to a much greater extent than in an RTV trial. Competitors can design and build vehicles that are much more optimized for off-road use, than in the lower ranks of trialing. CCV vehicles have powerful engines, high ground clearance, light, minimalist bodywork, and good approach and departure angles. For many years, in the UK, the ultimate CCV vehicle could be built by taking the chassis of a Range Rover, removing the body, cutting the chassis down to an 80-inch wheelbase, and attaching it to the body of a Series I Land Rover, retaining the Range Rover's V8 engine and coil-spring suspension in a light, maneuverable body. In recent years, the value of early Land Rovers and Range Rovers has risen to the extent that this is no longer practical. CCV trailers now usually base their vehicles around Land Rover Defenders or a standard 100-inch chassis from a Range Rover or Series I Discovery. The Suzuki SJ series of vehicles also make good bases for CCV-spec vehicles. Some vehicles are specially built, taking the form of light "buggies" with tractor tires and "fiddle" brakes (fiddle brakes give the ability to lock a wheel, which enables much better turning, better control descending hills, traction control by slowing or locking the spinning wheel) for the best performance.

Vehicles are required to meet certain safety regulations. Roll-cages must be fitted and be built to a suitable standard, recovery points must be fitted front and rear and fuel tanks must meet certain standards. A 4-point harness for all occupants is required and a fire extinguisher is recommended.

Off-roading events

[edit]
Driving a Triumph Bonneville during an offroad event

In some countries off-road activities are strictly regulated, while others promote cross-country off-road endurance events like the Dakar Rally, Spanish Baja, Africa Eco Race, Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge, Russian Baja Northern Forest, King of the Hammers, San Felipe 250 and Baja 500 & 1000, which are a test of navigation skills and machine durability. Off-road parks and motocross tracks also host several events and may be the only legal place to off-road in the area.

Criticism of ORV use

[edit]

Environmental impact

[edit]
Off-road vehicle impact in SW Utah

Off-road vehicle use on public land has been criticized by some members of the U.S. government[19] and environmental organizations including the Sierra Club and The Wilderness Society.[20][21] They have noted several consequences of illegal ORV use such as pollution,[22] trail damage, erosion, land degradation, possible species extinction,[23] and habitat destruction[24][25] which can leave hiking trails impassable.[26] ORV proponents argue that legal use taking place under planned access along with the multiple environment and trail conservation efforts by ORV groups will mitigate these issues.[27] Groups such as the BlueRibbon Coalition advocate for the responsible use of public lands for off-road activities.[28]

Noise pollution is also a concern[29] and several studies conducted by Montana State University, California State University, University of Florida and others have cited possible negative behavioral changes in wildlife as the result of some ORV use.[30]

Some U.S. states have laws to reduce noise generated by off-road and non-highway vehicles. Washington is one example: "State law requires off-road and other non-highway vehicles to use specified noise-muffling devices (RCW 46.09.120(1) (e) maximum limits and test procedures). State agencies and local governments may adopt regulations governing the operation of non-highway vehicles on property, streets, or highways within their jurisdiction, provided they are not less stringent than state law (RCW 46.09.180 regulation by local political subdivisions)".[31]

Mojave desert controversy

[edit]

The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) supervises several large off-road vehicle areas in California's Mojave Desert.

In 2009, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston ruled against the BLM's proposed designation of additional off-road use on designated open routes on public land. According to the ruling, the BLM violated its regulations[32] when it designated approximately 5,000 miles (8,000 km) of off-road vehicle routes in 2006.[33] According to Judge Illston the BLM's designation was "flawed because it does not contain a reasonable range of alternatives" to limit damage to sensitive habitat, as required under the National Environmental Policy Act.[34] Illston found that the Bureau had inadequately analyzed the route's impact on air quality, soils, plant communities and sensitive species, such as the endangered Mojave fringe-toed lizard, pointing out that the United States Congress has declared that the California Desert and its resources are "extremely fragile, easily scarred, and slowly healed".[34]

The court also found that the BLM failed to follow route restrictions established in the agency's conservation plan, resulting in the establishment of hundreds of illegal OHV routes during the previous three decades.[32] The plan violated the BLM's regulations, specifically the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (FLPMA) and the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA).[33] The ruling was considered a success for a coalition of conservation groups including the Friends of Juniper Flats, Community Off-road Vehicle Watch, California Native Plant Society, The Center for Biological Diversity, The Sierra Club, and The Wilderness Society who initiated the legal challenge in late 2006.[34]

Roadless area conservation

[edit]

Many U.S. national parks have discussed or enacted roadless rules and partial or total bans on ORVs. To accommodate enthusiasts, some parks like Big Cypress National Preserve in Florida, were created specifically for ORVs and related purposes. However, such designations have not prevented damage or abuse of the policy.[35]

Public statements

[edit]

In 2004, several environmental organizations sent a letter to Dale Bosworth, Chief of the United States Forest Service, and described the extent of damage caused by ORV use, including health threats to other people:

It is well-established that the proliferation of off-road vehicles and snowmobile use places soil, vegetation, air and water quality, and wildlife at risk through pollution, erosion, sedimentation of streams, habitat fragmentation and disturbance, and other adverse impacts to resources. These impacts cause severe and lasting damage to the natural environment on which human-powered and equestrian recreation depends and alter the remote and wild character of the backcountry. Motorized recreation monopolizes forest areas by denying other users the quiet, pristine, backcountry experience they seek. It also presents safety and health threats to other re-creationists.[36]

In 2004 the Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia listed several problems that result from ORV use in natural areas. From the Environmental News Service article:

Scalia noted that off-road vehicle use on federal land has "negative environmental consequences including soil disruption and compaction, harassment of animals, and annoyance of wilderness lovers.[37]

Several environmental organizations, including the Rangers for Responsible Recreation, are campaigning to draw attention to a growing threat posed by off-road vehicle misuse and to assist overmatched land managers in addressing ORV use impacts.[38] These campaigns in part have prompted congressional hearings about the growing impact of unmanaged off-road vehicle use.

The House Natural Resources Committee Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and Public Lands held an oversight hearing on "The Impacts of Unmanaged Off-Road Vehicles on Federal Land" on March 13, 2008.[39] A second hearing on off-highway vehicle (OHV) management on public lands was held by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on June 5, 2008.[40] The Senate committee hearing was convened to find out why the agencies are failing to grapple with the negative impacts of off-road vehicle use on US public lands and what the agencies might need to start doing differently. For the first time in perhaps a decade, members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee grilled leaders of the Forest Service and the BLM about why off-road vehicle use is being allowed to damage America's national treasures.

Taking center stage in the discussion was the "travel planning process", a complex analysis and decision-making procedure to designate appropriate roads and trails. Both the Forest Service and BLM have been engaged in somewhat similar travel planning processes now for years, but some of the committee members didn't seem to think those processes were going along so well. "The BLM has identified travel management on its lands as ‘one of the greatest management challenges’ it faces," stated committee Chairman Jeff Bingaman, D-NM. "Likewise, the Forest Service has identified unmanaged recreation — including ORV use — as one of the top four threats to the management and health of the National Forest System. Despite these statements, it seems to me that neither agency has been able to successfully manage off-road use."

"Existing rules for managing off-road vehicles are not being enforced," Bingaman added, and the agencies are ignoring unregulated use "with significant consequences for the health of our public lands and communities, and adverse effects on other authorized public land uses."

In gaming

[edit]

Video games that allow users to off-road include Forza Horizon, Dirt Series, MudRunner, Grand Theft Auto V, Dakar Desert Rally, and the MotorStorm series.

See also

[edit]
  • All-terrain vehicle
  • Amphibious vehicle
  • Approach and departure angles
  • Baja Bug
  • Breakover angle
  • Dirt Bike
  • Dual-sport motorcycle
  • Game viewer vehicle
  • Mountain bike
  • Mud bogging
  • Overlanding
  • Ramp travel index
  • Ride height
  • Side-by-side
  • Trophy truck

Further reading

[edit]
  • Environmental Hazards of Dune Bashing

References

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ International Organization of Professional Drivers (PDF).
  2. ^ The Jeep Guru. "Why Are Jeep Rubicons So Expensive?". Rig Rebel. Archived from the original on 2023-10-01. Retrieved 2021-10-20.
  3. ^ "15 of the Best Off-Road Vehicles You Can Buy". MotorTrend. 2021-06-09. Retrieved 2021-10-20.
  4. ^ Thompson, Macaulay (2022-04-04). "All You Need to Know about Dune Bashing in Dubai - Travel Dudes". Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  5. ^ "Sand Duning and Off-roading in the Desert - Surf The Sand". sand-boarding.com. 5 September 2020. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  6. ^ a b "Sand Driving". www.offroaders.com. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  7. ^ "Prerunner Building 101". Off Road Xtreme. 2018-06-20. Retrieved 2019-09-23.
  8. ^ "When Rock Crawling Turned Rock Racing". DrivingLine. 2015-04-30. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  9. ^ United States Forestry Service. "Willamette National Forest". Retrieved 19 May 2013.
  10. ^ "Muddy Run Raceway Rules". muddyrunraceway.com. Archived from the original on 11 January 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2016.
  11. ^ US Gov't. "USFS". Retrieved 19 May 2013.
  12. ^ Nulty, Leo (2015-02-04). "Sporting Trials (Mudplugging)". Motorsport.ie. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  13. ^ "History of Trials". Stroud and District Motor Club. 2018-03-08. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  14. ^ Deysel, A. J. (2019-11-11). "Differential Gear Ratio to Tire Size Guide | Modifind.com - Off Road". Retrieved 2020-02-17.
  15. ^ "Off-Road Spotting Basics: "Left. No, no your other left!"". RoverGuide. 2011-12-29. Archived from the original on 2016-04-02. Retrieved 2018-01-19.
  16. ^ "Come Ride With Me! Daily Life with a Lifted Jeep Wrangler JK (Video) - The Fast Lane Truck". tfltruck.com. 11 January 2018. Retrieved 2018-01-19.
  17. ^ Gambino, Joe (2020-12-13). "Off-Roading 101 - Driving Tips and Equipment". Rogue Fabrication. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  18. ^ "CCV - Cross Country Vehicle". nero.org.uk. Retrieved 2023-11-11.
  19. ^ "USDA Forest Service - Caring for the land and serving people" (PDF). fs.fed.us. Archived from the original on November 19, 2004.
  20. ^ "Sierra Club Conservation Policies". Archived from the original on December 1, 2006.
  21. ^ "Off-Road Vehicles and Public Lands: A National Problem". Archived from the original on December 14, 2006.
  22. ^ Wolfe, Christopher; Buck, Brenda; Miller, Aubrey; Lockey, James; Weis, Christopher; Weissman, David; Jonesi, Alexander; Ryan, Patrick (November 2017). "Exposure to naturally occurring mineral fibers due to off-road vehicle use: A review". International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health. 220 (8): 1230–1241. Bibcode:2017IJHEH.220.1230W. doi:10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.07.003. PMID 28778427.
  23. ^ Rice, Kathleen C. "National Collection of Imperiled Plants - Pholisma sonorae". Center for Plant Conservation. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 8 June 2012.
  24. ^ "Mojave lizard may get protection; off-road vehicles are cited as threat". Los Angeles Times. 12 January 2008. Archived from the original on December 4, 2008.
  25. ^ "Officials seek to protect desert reptile". Las Vegas Review-Journal. January 11, 2008. Archived from the original on December 5, 2008.
  26. ^ "Recent questions and answers". CarrierAdda QnA. Archived from the original on July 11, 2015.
  27. ^ Rogers, Jedediah S. (2013). Roads in the Wilderness: Conflict in Canyon Country. University of Utah Press. doi:10.1353/book41428. ISBN 978-1-60781-312-5.
  28. ^ "About". BlueRibbon Coalition/ShareTrails. Retrieved 2023-10-18.
  29. ^ "Addressing the Ecological Effects of Off-Road Vehicles | the Wilderness Society". Archived from the original on 2008-11-28. Retrieved 2009-01-19.
  30. ^ "The Impacts of Off-Road Vehicle Noise on Wildlife". Archived from the original on 2010-12-25.
  31. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions about Noise Pollution -- for Local Government" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-07. Retrieved 2006-10-27.
  32. ^ a b "Off-road Routes in Mojave Desert Found Illegal". wilderness.org. Archived from the original on 2012-04-15. Retrieved 2009-10-09.
  33. ^ a b "Judge rejects federal plan for SoCal desert routes". mercurynews.com.
  34. ^ a b c Sahagun, Louis (September 30, 2009). "Judge rejects U.S. management plan for California desert". Los Angeles Times.
  35. ^ "Caribbean-Florida Water Science Center (CFWSC)". Archived from the original on 2006-09-22. Retrieved 2006-10-18.
  36. ^ Letter to Dale Bosworth
  37. ^ Pegg, J.R. "Supreme Court Rejects Wilderness Protection Suit". ens-newswire.com.
  38. ^ "Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility: Off-Road Wreckreation - Home". Archived from the original on 2008-05-09. Retrieved 2010-01-09.
  39. ^ "Committee on Natural Resources". Archived from the original on 2008-03-26.
  40. ^ "U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources". www.energy.senate.gov.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Allen, Jim; Weber, James J. (2021). The Four-Wheeler's Bible: The Complete Guide to Off-Road and Overland Adventure Driving (3rd ed.). Beverly, MA, USA: Motorbooks. ISBN 9780760368053.
[edit]

Media related to Off-roading at Wikimedia Commons

  • Man-made erosion, The National Trust (UK)

 

Reviews for Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates


Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates

Jason Wright

(5)

A wonderful fun packed 6 hours, Dune bashing, falcons, bellyaching, dune boarding, fire dancing, camel & horse desert rides and BBQ it has it all. picked up from our hotel & safely dropped back after an amazing desert experience. I’d highly recommend anyone to try this experience.

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About Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates

Driving Directions in Dubai


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Sand dune tours Dubai
25.181191058033, 55.32656242809
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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Quad bike desert tour
25.236939872511, 55.263152678031
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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25.141494119243, 55.249950198951
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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Arabian Desert tours
25.156111231397, 55.22541695789
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25.174332844402, 55.223739093261
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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25.153690786614, 55.230109505738
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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25.195564920169, 55.306555294491
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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25.160269029615, 55.260821328913
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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Big Red dune buggy
25.164380229773, 55.27005283519
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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25.196153919937, 55.241364907602
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Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy Rental & ATV Quad Bike Tours - Marasi Drive - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Lake Central Tower 4th Floor - Office 404 مراسي درايف - الخليج التجاري - دبي - United Arab Emirates
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Frequently Asked Questions

We accept card payments online when booking or cash payment on the day of your visit. Both options are available for your convenience.

Yes we accept same day bookings. Our 24 hour booking line is always available at +971 52 440 9525. You can also reach us via WhatsApp or email.

Our tours operate in the stunning Arabian Desert including the famous Red Dunes of Lahbab and Big Red and Al Badayer desert areas.