Hot air balloon Dubai cloud level

Hot air balloon Dubai cloud level

Hot air balloon Dubai quiet skies

Before dawn in the Dubai desert, the world is a soft hush. The air is cool enough to make your breath a small cloud and the sand, still holding the night, feels strangely tender underfoot.

Hot air balloon Dubai sky views

  1. Hot air balloon Dubai small group
  2. Hot air balloon Dubai morning
  3. Hot air balloon Dubai quiet morning skies
  4. Hot air balloon Dubai VIP tour
  5. Hot air balloon Dubai bucket list
In the half-dark, a patchwork of fabric unfurls like a fallen moon. Then the burners cough, flame blooms, and the envelope rises-inflating with a sound like a giant taking a first breath. You climb into the wicker basket and the ground becomes an idea, not a certainty. Within minutes you're floating, weight gifted back to the planet, the horizon beginning to bruise from black to indigo to rose.

Hot air balloon Dubai quiet skies

  1. Hot air balloon Margham sunrise
  2. Hot air balloon Dubai soft sunrise
  3. Hot air balloon Dubai safety instructions
  4. Hot air balloon Dubai desert balloon ride
  5. Hot air balloon Dubai guided experience
Hot air balloon Dubai cloud level: the phrase sounds like a headline, but up here it becomes a lived sentence, a gentle grammar made of light and air.


Most of the time, the desert sky is so clear it seems to ring like glass. On those crystalline mornings, there is no “cloud level” as a ceiling-only a limitless blue that keeps deepening as the sun rises.

Hot air balloon Dubai sunrise

  • Hot air balloon Dubai quiet skies
  • Hot air balloon Dubai sunrise
  • Hot air balloon Dubai sky views
  • Hot air balloon Dubai VIP experience
And yet, cloud level is still there, imagined or waited for, a height where distance sharpens and the angle of the sun turns the dunes into calligraphy. On winter mornings, when a low shawl of stratocumulus drifts in from the Gulf, you can watch the pilot finesse the balloon to hover just beneath the cloud base. The world suddenly softens, colors mute to pastels, and the shadow of your balloon skates perfectly round across the sand like a shy moon.


Up here, the physics are simple enough to be miraculous. A balloon doesn't steer as much as it listens. The pilot pulls a cord and the burner roars, warming the air inside so the whole craft rises; he opens a vent to let heat bleed out and you sink by degrees. Horizontal movement, the journey itself, belongs to the wind. But the wind is layered, a stack of different speeds and directions arranged like pages. By climbing or descending a few hundred feet, you can slip from one sentence of air to another and change the story line. The best pilots read this invisible script with experience and patience. They'll let you ride a slow westerly toward the Hajar Mountains until the first light touches their ribs, then dip to catch a southerly that draws you back across the undulating sea of sand.


The desert isn't empty from above; it's a palimpsest. Tire tracks curve and interlace in pale threads that fade over days. Camel caravans leave a series of soft punctuation marks that arc along the leeward sides of dunes. Here and there, a dark cluster of ghaf trees shades an improbable pocket of green, and a long rectangle of deeper color betrays a date farm or a conservation plot. If you're lucky, you'll spot oryx ghosting along the flats, their shadows long and precise. On the clearest days-especially in the cool months-you can look west and see a silver edge of city. The Burj Khalifa needles up out of the haze so delicate you might mistake it for a hair on the lens of your eye. It's a startling juxtaposition: the planet's tallest spire and the planet's oldest silence contained in one turn of your head.


Cloud level brings a sensory shift as well as a visual one. Even when you don't reach a visible ceiling, your body knows you're climbing. You feel the temperature dial back a few notches-air cools with altitude, and in the first thousand or two thousand feet the difference is real. Your ears may notice the pressure change, a soft pop and relief. The desert's smell-dust, scrub, the faint mineral tang of night-dissolves, and what's left is clean air with the occasional whiff of propane. Sound edits itself. Each burst of the burner is a bright parenthesis; between them, the basket creaks and the world goes quiet. You begin to hear small distant things that don't register on the ground: a bird's arc of call, the click of sand shifting as a dune lets go of its own gravity, the low thread of a faraway engine unraveling across the flats.


Because the desert sun builds heat quickly, balloon flights leave early. Dawn also keeps the air smoother; thermals-the vertical currents that form over hot surfaces-haven't yet begun their rambunctious churning. Chasing cloud level, then, is less a hunt than a welcome accident: the mornings when a faint deck approaches and the pilot times the climb just right, you rise into a gauzy threshold where the light is diffused and every edge is tender. Regulations and good sense keep balloons clear of clouds; they are designed for seeing and being seen. But you can hover close to that edge, where it feels like flying along a line drawn between solidity and sky.


The desert teaches you scale by changing it. At a thousand feet, the ridges that looked like mountains from the road become a thousand small waves, delicate as the backs of sleeping cats. At two thousand feet, the camps and roads shrink to board-game pieces, human ambition diagrammed in tidy right angles and tire-skein curves. The higher you go, the more the day unwinds from inside the land itself: shadows pour off the dune crests and pool on the lee side; the color temperature turns from violet to warming apricot to the clear gold of morning. If you happen to ride along the underside of a cloud deck at this hour, the light is theatrical-raking across the dunes in long slats, carving texture so cleanly you can read the desert's wind history like braille.


“Cloud level” is a phrase of measurement, but it's also a feeling: the soft surprise of being held up by warm air and ancient physics, the parenthesis of quiet in a city built on acceleration, the pause in which your mind's speed resets to match your breath. It's the relief of seeing how large the world is and how small you are in it, and finding that the smallness is gentle, even liberating. There's a humility in traveling the way a seed pod does-accepting the wind's intentions, learning that direction can be chosen by letting go rather than gripping harder.


Eventually, land returns as certainty. The pilot checks the wind again, flirts with a layer that will glide you toward a ragged line of pickup points, and brings the balloon down with a brushing kiss against the sand. Hot air balloon Margham sunrise The envelope sighs back to earth, collapses into color, and the quiet of altitude is traded for the not-unpleasant bustle of lines and laughter, boots scuffing and hands helping. In the desert, arrivals are greeted with generosity: sometimes it's Arabic coffee, sweet and smoky; sometimes mint tea and warm bread. Hot air balloon Dubai professional photos . You stand under a sky that is now fully, fiercely blue, and you look up where you just were. It seems close enough to reach with your fingers.


Hot air balloon Dubai cloud level: if you came looking for a view, you'll get it, of course. But what you may carry home is a rearranged sense of height. Not just how high you went, but how lightly. How the city and the sand shared a morning without competing. How the sky lent you a new grammar for wonder-one sentence of wind at a time.

Hot air balloon Dubai VIP experience

 

Arabian oryx
Male in Dubai Desert Conservation Reserve
Conservation status
Vulnerable
Vulnerable  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
CITES Appendix I[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Bovidae
Subfamily: Hippotraginae
Genus: Oryx
Species:
O. leucoryx
Binomial name
Oryx leucoryx
(Pallas, 1777)

The Arabian oryx or white oryx (Oryx leucoryx) is a medium-sized antelope with a distinct shoulder bump, long, straight horns, and a tufted tail.[2] It is a bovid, and the smallest member of the genus Oryx, native to desert and steppe areas of the Arabian Peninsula. The Arabian oryx was extinct in the wild by the early 1970s, but was saved in zoos and private reserves, and was reintroduced into the wild starting in 1980.

In 1986, the Arabian oryx was classified as endangered on the IUCN Red List, and in 2011, it was the first animal to revert to vulnerable status after previously being listed as extinct in the wild. It is listed in CITES Appendix I. In 2016, populations were estimated at 1,220 individuals in the wild, including 850 mature individuals, and 6,000–7,000 in captivity worldwide.[1]

Etymology

[edit]

The taxonomic name Oryx leucoryx is from the Greek orux (gazelle or antelope) and leukos (white). The Arabian oryx is also called the white oryx in English, dishon in Hebrew,[3] and is known as maha, wudhaihi, baqar al-wahsh, and boosolah in Arabic.[4]

Taxonomy

[edit]

The name "oryx" was introduced by Peter Simon Pallas in 1767 for the common eland as Antilope oryx. He also scientifically described the Arabian oryx as Oryx leucoryx, giving its range as "Arabia, and perhaps Libya". In 1816, Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville subdivided the antelope group, adopted Oryx as a genus name, and changed the species name Antilope oryx to Oryx gazella. In 1826, Martin Lichtenstein confused matters by transferring the name Oryx leucoryx to the scimitar oryx, now Oryx dammah. The Zoological Society of London obtained the first living individual in Europe in 1857. Not realizing this might be the Oryx leucoryx of previous authors, John Edward Gray proposed calling it Oryx beatrix after Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom. Oldfield Thomas renamed the scimitar oryx as Oryx algazal in 1903 and gave the Arabian oryx its original name.[4]

Description

[edit]
In Yotvata Hai-Bar Nature Reserve in Israel

The Arabian oryx' coat is an almost luminous white, the undersides and legs are brown, and black stripes occur where the head meets the neck, on the forehead, on the nose, and going from the horn down across the eye to the mouth. Both sexes have long, straight or slightly curved, ringed horns which are 0.61–1.49 m (2–4.9 ft). It stands between 0.79 and 1.25 m (2.6 and 4.1 ft) tall at the shoulder and typically weighs between 220 to 460 lb (100 to 209 kg).[5][2]

Distribution and habitat

[edit]

Historically, the Arabian oryx probably ranged throughout most of the Middle East. In the early 1800s, they could still be found in the Sinai, Palestine, the Transjordan, much of Iraq, and most of the Arabian Peninsula. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, their range was pushed back towards Saudi Arabia, and by 1914, only a few survived outside that country. A few were reported in Jordan into the 1930s, but by the mid-1930s, the only remaining populations were in the Nafud Desert in northwestern Saudi Arabia and the Rub' al Khali in the south.[2]

In the 1930s, Arabian princes and oil company clerks started hunting Arabian oryxes with automobiles and rifles. Hunts grew in size, and some were reported to employ as many as 300 vehicles. By the middle of the 20th century, the northern population was effectively extinct.[2] The last Arabian oryx in the wild before reintroduction was reported in 1972.[6]

Arabian oryxes prefer to range in gravel deserts or hard sand, where their speed and endurance will protect them from most predators and hunters on foot. In the sand deserts in Saudi Arabia, they used to be found in the hard sand areas of the flats between the softer dunes and ridges.[2]

Arabian oryxes have been reintroduced to Oman, Saudi Arabia, Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Syria, and Jordan. A small population was introduced on Hawar Island, Bahrain, and large semi-managed populations at several sites in Qatar and the UAE. The total reintroduced population is now estimated to be around 1,000. This puts the Arabian oryx well over the threshold of 250 mature individuals needed to qualify for endangered status. However, the majority of the population is concentrated in Saudi Arabia.[1]

Behaviour and ecology

[edit]

The Arabian oryx rests during the heat of the day. A herd in Oman can range over 3,000 km2 (1,200 sq mi). Packs are of mixed sex and usually comprise between 2 and 15 induvials, though herds of up to 100 have been reported. Arabian oryxes are generally not aggressive toward one another, which allows herds to exist peacefully for some time.[7]

Feeding

[edit]

The diets of the Arabian oryx consist mainly of grasses, but it eats a large variety of vegetation, including buds, herbs, fruit, tubers and roots. Herds follow infrequent rains to eat the new plants that grow afterwards. They can go for several weeks without water.[7] In Oman, it primarily eats grasses of the genus Stipagrostis, flowers from Stipagrostis plants appeared highest in crude protein and water, while leaves seemed a better food source with other vegetation.[8]

Behavior

[edit]

When the Arabian oryx is not wandering its habitat or eating, it digs shallow depressions in the soft ground under shrubs or trees for resting. They can detect rainfall from a distance and follow in the direction of fresh plant growth. The number of individuals in a herd can vary greatly (up to 100 have been reported occasionally), but the average is 10 or fewer individuals.[9] Bachelor herds do not occur, and single territorial males are rare. Herds establish a straightforward hierarchy that involves all females and males above the age of about seven months.[10] Arabian oryxes tend to maintain visual contact with other herd members, with subordinate males taking positions between the main body of the herd and the outlying females. If separated, males will search areas where the herd last visited, settling into a solitary existence until the herd's return. Where water and grazing conditions permit, male Arabian oryxes establish territories. Bachelor males are solitary.[11] A dominance hierarchy is created within the herd by posturing displays, which avoid the danger of serious injury their long, sharp horns could potentially inflict. Males and females use their horns to defend the sparse territorial resources against interlopers.[12]

Adaptations for desert environments

[edit]

The Arabian oryx changes its physiology and behaviour at different times of the year to increase survival during times when food and water are in limited supply. During the summer, when droughts are common in the desert environments where it lives, the Arabian oryx will drastically reduce its minimal fasting metabolic rate by lying completely inactive beneath shade trees during the day and ranging over smaller areas at night to forage.[13] By letting its body temperature rise during the heat of the day, it uses less evaporative cooling and retains more body water, and at night, the cool night air lowers its temperature back to the normal range.[14] The oryx's arterial blood temperature is partly powered by a network of small arterial vessels with a large surface area called the rete mirabile, which branches from the two carotid arteries to the brain and allows for heat exchange between warm arterial blood and the cooler blood in the sinus cavities.[14] Because of these changes in behaviour and physiology, it was shown that Arabian oryx can reduce their urine volume, faecal water loss, and resting metabolic rate by at least 50%.[15]

The Arabian wolf is the Arabian oryx's only predator. In captivity and safe conditions in the wild, it has a maximum life span of up to 20 years.[11] In periods of drought, though, their life expectancy may be significantly reduced by malnutrition and dehydration. Other causes of death include fights between males, snakebites, disease, and drowning during floods.[16]

Importance to humans

[edit]
South Arabian fragment of a stela, depicts a reclining ibex and three Arabian oryx heads. The ibex was one of the most sacred animals in South Arabia, while the oryx antelope was associated with the god Attar, 5th century BC.

The Arabian oryx is the national animal of Jordan, Oman, the United Arab Emirates,[17] Bahrain, and Qatar.[18]

The Arabian oryx is also the namesake of several businesses on the Arabian peninsula, notably Al Maha Airways and Al Maha Petroleum.

In the King James Version of the Bible, the word re'em is translated as 'unicorn'. In Modern Hebrew, the name re'em lavan, meaning white oryx, is used in error for the scimitar-horned oryxes living in the sanctuary Yotvata Hai Bar near Eilat.[19] The scimitar oryx is called re'em Sahara. The Arabian name ri'ïm is the equivalent of the Hebrew name re'em, also meaning white oryx, suggesting a borrowing from the Early Modern Era.

A Qatari oryx named "Orry" was chosen as the official games mascot for the 2006 Asian Games in Doha,[20] and is shown on tailfins of planes belonging to Middle Eastern airline Qatar Airways.

Unicorn myth

[edit]

The myth of the one-horned unicorn may be based on oryxes that have lost one horn. Aristotle and Pliny the Elder held that the oryx was the unicorn's "prototype".[21] From certain angles, the oryx may seem to have one horn rather than two,[22][23] and given that its horns are made from hollow bone that cannot be regrown, if an Arabian oryx were to lose one of its horns, for the rest of its life, it would have only one.[21]

Another source for the concept may have originated from the translation of the Hebrew word re'em into Greek as μονόκερως, monokeros, in the Septuagint.[24] In Psalm 22:21, the word karen, meaning horn, is written in singular. The Roman Catholic Vulgata and the Douay-Rheims Bible translated re'em as rhinoceros; other translations are names for a wild bull, wild oxen, buffalo, or gaur, but in some languages, a word for unicorn is maintained. The Arabic translation alrim is the correct choice etymologically, meaning 'white oryx'.[25]

Conservation

[edit]
Arabian oryx in Al Ain Zoo

The Phoenix Zoo and the Fauna and Flora Preservation Society of London (now Fauna and Flora International), with financial help from the World Wildlife Fund, are credited with saving the Arabian oryx from extinction. In 1962, these groups started the first captive-breeding herd in any zoo, at the Phoenix Zoo, sometimes referred to as "Operation Oryx".[26][27] Starting with nine animals, the Phoenix Zoo has had over 240 successful births. From Phoenix, Arabian oryxes were sent to other zoos and parks to start new herds.

In 1968, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan of Abu Dhabi, out of concern for the land's wildlife, particularly ungulates such as the Arabian oryx, founded the Al Ain Zoo to conserve them.[28]

Arabian oryxes were hunted to extinction in the wild by 1972. By 1980, the number of Arabian oryxes in captivity had increased to the point that Arabian oryx reintroduction was started. The first release, to Oman, was attempted with Arabian oryxes from the San Diego Wild Animal Park.[6] Although numbers in Oman have declined, there are now wild populations in Saudi Arabia and Israel,[29][30] as well. One of the largest populations is found in Mahazat as-Sayd Protected Area, a large, fenced reserve in Saudi Arabia, covering more than 2,000 km2 (770 sq mi).[1]

On June 28, 2007, Oman's Arabian Oryx Sanctuary was the first site ever to be removed from the UNESCO World Heritage List. UNESCO's reason for this was the Omani government's decision to open 90% of the site to oil prospecting. The Arabian oryx population on the site has been reduced from 450 in 1996 to only 65 in 2007. At that time, there were fewer than four breeding pairs left on the site.[31][needs update]

In June 2011, the Arabian oryx was relisted as vulnerable by the IUCN Red List. The IUCN estimated there were more than 1,200 Arabian oryx in the wild as of 4 December 2020 2016, with 6,000–7,000 held in captivity worldwide in zoos, preserves, and private collections. Some of these are in large, fenced enclosures (free-roaming), including those in Syria (Al Talila), Bahrain, Qatar, and the UAE.[1] This is the first time the IUCN has reclassified a species as vulnerable after it had been listed as extinct in the wild.[32] The Arabian oryx is also listed in CITES Appendix I.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g IUCN SSC Antelope Specialist Group (2017). "Oryx leucoryx". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017 e.T15569A50191626. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-2.RLTS.T15569A50191626.en. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e Talbot, L. M. (1960). A Look at Threatened Species. The Fauna Preservation Society. pp. 84–91.
  3. ^ Slifkin, Nathan, The Torah encyclopedia of the Animal kingdom, vol.1, OU Press, New York, 2015, pp.272-275
  4. ^ a b "Conservation Programme for Arabian Oryx: Taxonomy & description". National Wildlife Research Center. 2007. Archived from the original on 2011-09-04. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  5. ^ "Oryx". Animals & Plants. San Diego Zoo. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  6. ^ a b Stanley-Price, Mark (July–August 1982). "The Yalooni Transfer". Saudi Aramco World. Archived from the original on 2011-06-10. Retrieved 31 December 2012.
  7. ^ a b Massicot, P. (2007). "Arabian Oryx". Animal Info. Archived from the original on 25 January 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-11.
  8. ^ Spalton, J. A. (1999). "The food supply of Arabian oryx (Oryx leucoryx) in the desert of Oman". Journal of Zoology. 248 (4): 433–441. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1999.tb01043.x.
  9. ^ Leu, H. (2001) "Oryx leucoryx" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web.
  10. ^ How to go wild. New Scientist (1989-10-28). Retrieved on 2013-01-01.
  11. ^ a b "Arabian Oryx". The Phoenix Zoo. Archived from the original on 15 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-27.
  12. ^ BBC (2012-04-27). Science & Nature – Wildfacts – Arabian oryx. Retrieved on 2013-01-01.
  13. ^ Williams, J. B.; Ostrowski, S.; Bedin, E.; Ismail, K. (2001). "Seasonal variation in energy expenditure, water flux and food consumption of Arabian oryx Oryx leucoryx". Journal of Experimental Biology. 204 (13): 2301–2311. Bibcode:2001JExpB.204.2301W. doi:10.1242/jeb.204.13.2301. PMID 11507113.
  14. ^ a b "Animals at the extremes: The desert environment". June 10, 2019. Archived from the original on 2017-01-05. Retrieved November 8, 2021.
  15. ^ Ostrowski, S.; Williams, J. B.; Mésochina, P.; Sauerwein, H. (2005). "Physiological acclimation of a desert antelope, Arabian oryx (Oryx leucoryx), to long-term food and water restriction". Journal of Comparative Physiology B. 176 (3): 191–201. doi:10.1007/s00360-005-0040-0. PMID 16283332. S2CID 14680361.
  16. ^ "The Oryx Facts". The Arabian Oryx Project. Archived from the original on 12 January 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-27.
  17. ^ "The UAE National Symbols..." TEACH United Arab Emirates. 2 (2). Jess Jumeira School. Nov–Dec 2014.
  18. ^ Orr, Tamra (30 June 2008). Qatar. Marshall Cavendish. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-7614-2566-3. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
  19. ^ "Hai-Bar Yotvata Nature Reserve | | Sights". www.lonelyplanet.com. Retrieved 2022-09-18.
  20. ^ "Mascot of Asian Games 2006". Travour.com. Archived from the original on 16 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
  21. ^ a b Rice, M. (1994). The Archaeology of the Arabian Gulf, c. 5000–323 BC. Routledge. p. 63. ISBN 0-415-03268-7.
  22. ^ "Arabian Oryx". Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. Archived from the original on 2007-10-10. Retrieved 2008-01-25.
  23. ^ Tongren, S. (1981). What's for Lunch: Animal Feeding at the Zoo. GMG Publications. ISBN 978-0-939456-00-0.
  24. ^ Gerritsen, Wim (June 2005). "Bestaat de Eenhoorn;of Hoe de wetenschap de bijbel de baas werd". De Groene Amsterdammer.
  25. ^ "Smith & Van Dyke Arabic Bible translation - Deuteronomium 33:17". Bible Hub.
  26. ^ The Arabian Oryx Project – Timeline. oryxoman.com
  27. ^ Phoenix Zoo Species Survival Plan Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine. Phoenixzoo.org (2006-01-03). Retrieved on 2013-01-01.
  28. ^ "History". Al Ain Zoo. 15 October 2017. Retrieved 2019-03-18.
  29. ^ Saltz, D. (1998). "A long-term systematic approach to planning reintroductions: the Persian fallow deer and the Arabian oryx in Israel". Animal Conservation. 1 (4): 245. Bibcode:1998AnCon...1..245S. doi:10.1111/j.1469-1795.1998.tb00035.x. S2CID 85943063.
  30. ^ Gilad, O.; Grant, W.E. & Saltz, D. (2008). "Simulated dynamics of Arabian Oryx (Oryx leucoryx) in the Israeli Negev: Effects of migration corridors and post-reintroduction changes in natality on population viability". Ecological Modelling. 210 (1–2): 169. Bibcode:2008EcMod.210..169G. doi:10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2007.07.015.
  31. ^ "Oman's Arabian Oryx Sanctuary: first site ever to be deleted from UNESCO's World Heritage List". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Archived from the original on 18 January 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
  32. ^ Platt, John (17 June 2011). "Arabian Oryx Makes History as First Species to Be Upgraded from "Extinct in the Wild" to "Vulnerable"". scientificamerican.com. Retrieved 20 June 2011.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Silverberg, Robert (1967). The Auk, the Dodo, and the Oryx: Vanished and Vanishing Creatures. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company. LCCN 67002554. L.C. Card AC 67-10476.
[edit]
  • Images and movies of the Arabian oryx (Oryx leucoryx) at Arkive
  • Living Desert article
  • Arabian Oryx at Al Wabra Wildlife Preserve
  • Oryx leucoryx on Animal Diversity Web
  • Oryx leucoryx on Mammal Species of the World

 

Redirect to:

  • Off-roading

 

Redirect to:

  • Off-roading#Dune bashing

 

About 23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates

Driving Directions in Dubai


Google Maps Location
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Hot air balloon adventure Dubai
25.1343985152, 55.141944541458
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Hot air balloon Margham desert
25.076794822316, 55.207821633671
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Hot Air Balloon
25.067204527226, 55.119959630261
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Hot air balloon Dubai conservation reserve
25.043624191692, 55.18121452312
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Desert safari hot air balloon Dubai
25.095648354275, 55.103989072481
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Hot air balloon Dubai golden dunes
25.088021098122, 55.177392901181
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Hot air balloon near Hatta desert route
25.102370512303, 55.123218198505
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Red dunes hot air balloon
25.085781561283, 55.172994004054
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Hot air balloon Margham desert
25.117918336827, 55.167912419237
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Hot air balloon Margham sunrise
25.058307702575, 55.139381270843
Starting Point
23 Marina Tower - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, 23 Marina Tower - Marsa Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Destination
Open in Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.128670003659,55.178589553012&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=bicycling&query=Red+dunes+hot+air+balloon
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.110498264399,55.178991586038&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=walking&query=Hot+air+balloon+experience+Ras+Al+Khor+desert+area
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.075337210039,55.194247887066&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=transit&query=Desert+safari+hot+air+balloon+Dubai
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.137992866587,55.157194757419&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=transit&query=Luxury+balloon+ride+Dubai+desert
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.095648354275,55.103989072481&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=driving&query=Desert+safari+hot+air+balloon+Dubai
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.084664628106,55.160710948021&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=walking&query=Hot+air+balloon+Dubai
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.05751508653,55.127563325123&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=driving&query=Desert+safari+hot+air+balloon+Dubai
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.066739016591,55.137159305118&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=transit&query=Private+hot+air+balloon+Dubai
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.114239659605,55.180729165136&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=transit&query=Morning+hot+air+balloon+Dubai+desert
Click below to open this location on Google Maps
Google Maps Location
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/?api=1&origin=25.092784995087,55.16048583353&destination=23+Marina+Tower+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates%2C+23+Marina+Tower+-+Marsa+Dubai+-+Dubai+-+United+Arab+Emirates&destination_place_id=ChIJa2Cp51prXz4RmZKxmKc3bsk&travelmode=driving&query=Hot+air+balloon+near+Al+Marmoom
Click below to open this location on Google Maps

https://cappadociahotballoon.com/about-us/

Yes the Hot Air Balloon ride in Dubai is operated by licensed pilots following strict aviation safety standards.

During a Hot Air Balloon ride you can see sand dunes desert wildlife camels and stunning sunrise views.

Hot Air Balloon flights usually start early in the morning around sunrise for the best weather and views.