Business Traveller (India)

RESTORED TO HEALTH

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Coaxing turtles back to health at Dubai’s Jumeirah Al Naseem

Turtles and hotel guests are being JVH_LK IHJR [V Ä[ULZZ PU [OL YLJLU[S` opened Jumeirah Al Naseem, discovers Dominic Ellis

Ashort walk from the busy breakfast in The Palmery at Jumeirah Al Naseem, I’m in an altogether more tranquil spot watching turtles glide up, down and around a 150-metre lagoon. They’re easy on the eye and large informativ­e signs provide details of different species. I’m alone in this retreat within a retreat, marvelling at the turtles’range of age and size; not even seasoned divers may have seen adults this large (the biggest is 110kg).

The lagoon bridges Al Naseem and the rest of Madinat Jumeirah, which stretches out along the adjacent buggy-strewn pathways. The prime position is appropriat­e since the rehabilita­tion project is a linchpin in Jumeirah’s CSR (Corporate Social Responsibi­lity) drive; it’s the first hotel globally to feature a sea-fed and custom-designed turtle lagoon for rehabilita­ting critically endangered sea turtles.

We’re only staying one night but after several visits to the Family Lounge, dinner on the Rockfish terrace facing Burj Al Arab (lit up tonight for Chinese New Year), deep sleep in an Ocean Superior room, half-an-hour kayaking, games of badminton and table tennis, and swim in two pools – rounded off with a warm Jacuzzi soak at sunset – I’m ready to go again, and I’ve not gone anywhere near the Talise Spa (the enormous bathroom, stocked with generous Amouage toiletries, felt like a mini-spa in any case). Through settings and services, resorts have this recharging power that few city hotels can rival, and when it comes to the breadth of service offering, few can hold a candle to Madinat.

For the turtles, it takes a little longer, anything from two to three months for the smaller ones to 18 months for the largest. The majority are juvenile hawksbills, which are

found washed up on the Gulf coastline during December, January and February, suffering from the adverse effects of cold sea temperatur­es, ingesting plastic rubbish and injuries sustained from boats and water craft. During the recovery process, they are subjected to ongoing veterinary examinatio­n and monitoring, with appropriat­e medication or surgery being administer­ed as necessary.

The hardback book, Madinat Jumeirah 10 years of

Heritage at the Arabian Resort of Dubai (published by Motivate), states:“Smaller turtles are generally the fastest to recover. However some are simply too badly wounded to return to the wild; they remain at Madinat Jumeirah where quality of life is ensured”.

Jumeirah’s commitment to turtle conservati­on goes back to 2004 when the Dubai Rehabilita­tion Turtle Project (together with Dubai’s Wildlife Protection Office) first made waves, but this facility takes it to another level. To date, more than 1,090 rescued turtles have been returned to Dubai’s waters.

The project has three main goals: to rescue, rehabilita­te and release back into the wild any sea turtles that are found sick or injured throughout the region; educate local children, citizens and internatio­nal hotel guests about sea turtle biology and the local and global plight of the sea turtle (since we’re responsibl­e for two of the three main causes); and to understand the success of rehabilita­tion, as well as to research turtle movements throughout the region and beyond via a satellite tracking

initiative (one travelled an astonishin­g 8,600km in nine months, almost reaching the coast of Thailand). Last year, a couple of turtles were tagged and released and the resort reports positive progress.

I take one last look as two adults pop up for air, one revealing a beautiful brown-and-white patterned head and the other showing vast bulbous eyes and small sharp teeth.

Turtle feeding happens each Wednesday at 11am.

CONTEMPORA­RY DESIGNS

Compared with Mina A’Salam, Dar Al Masyaf and Al Qasr, Al Naseem is a more contempora­ry Arabianthe­med hotel. Emirati artist Mattar Bin Lahej was commission­ed to create a number of statement art pieces such as the large stainless steel caravan of camels running on water, which is located outside the hotel’s entrance.

Another sculpture, behind the lobby, is a poem written in Arabic calligraph­y by Dubai’s ruler HH Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum.

Burj Al Arab is visible beyond backdrop glass on arrival (or at least the lower half), although it’s not quite as open or panoramic as I had imagined.You won’t find pots and pans suspended in thin air elsewhere in Madinat, but it seems to work at the entrance to The Palmery, similarly the Bedouin camp etchings on the room walls lend a lighter Arabesque quality. Two galloping horses, painted deep blue, make for an arresting sight to the right of the lobby as we walk to the rooms.

Al Mandhar Lounge makes for a pleasant afternoon tea spot but we are escorted onwards to the Family Lounge (going down to ground, the lobby level is 2), opposite a comprehens­ive kids’ club, which serve a

range of regional and internatio­nal light bites, and is complement­ed by a juice bar (wine in the evenings) in the corner.

There’s plenty to satisfy every palate here; the Jumeirah-logo-topped sweets on the Moroccan and Turkish tray make me smile and alongside the freshest moutabel are cucumber sandwiches and later, delicious mini-burgers, accompanie­d by a wide range of hot beverages. Black-and-white traditiona­l Arabian prints hang on the walls, and the terrace affords views of the Wadi pool. We spot a famous football manager with his young family; such is the way with Jumeirah lounges.

An elevated area above, accessible via steps, contains the adult-only pool and SugarMash but most will head to the huge one that dominates the back, complete with attractive wind chimes and sections for Jacuzzi jets. None of the pools is especially deep although safety isn’t compromise­d with lifeguards at every turn. The children’s pool has fountain jets but looks more suitable for younger ones.

Our fourth floor rooms (#410/#412), left from the lift, are ideal for extra discretion while the other rooms line up further along the corridor to the right. The balcony is just a rail, but it doesn’t seem to matter as the sliding doors have knock-out views of Burj Al Arab and Jumeirah Beach Hotel; the one caveat with the rooms this side is the constant traffic to and from the Burj, and surroundin­g music, in the afternoon (we are here on a Friday), but I sleep soundly in the evening.

For dinner, we eat outside on the Rockfish terrace where service is a curious mix of attentive and careless with food arriving promptly. However, there is no drinks menu; when we ask, we are given a white recommenda­tion, which doesn’t arrive, and halfway through the mains we are poured a glass of Rosé. Around the table, the prawns are wholesome, sliced scallops fresh and my turbot wrapped in vine leaves and couscous fine, if a little dry, even with the sauce accompanim­ent – the same for my partner’s seafood mixed grill.

Four external restaurant­s, operated by internatio­nal names, include artisan burgers from New York’s Black Tap; Tuscan Il Borro by Salvatore Ferragamo (see video on facebook.com/BusinessTr­avellerME); the Philippe Starck-designed Japanese Katsuya (work ongoing during our stay); and Dubai-based brand Flamingos by Tasha’s.

We round off the stay with lunch at the casual Kalsa Pool Bar, whose menu includes traditiona­l Italian street food, and I liked the pizza fritta Fiorentina (ricotta, spinach, pine seeds, AED 50/`877), accompanie­d by a Marrakech Apples mocktail (fresh lime, mint, apple juice and syrup), which comes in a cocktail glass.

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 ??  ?? Left: aerial view of Jumeriah Al Naseem Top: informativ­e signs around the lagoon
Right: Jumeirah’s turtle lagoon
Left: aerial view of Jumeriah Al Naseem Top: informativ­e signs around the lagoon Right: Jumeirah’s turtle lagoon
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