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Cruise across stunning landscapes in luxury with Maserati Grecale grand tour from Dubai to Muscat

- Simon Wilgress-Pipe

The concept of a grand tour in motoring terms brings to mind summer trips around the Mediterran­ean in dapper vehicles, staying in luxury hotels and enjoying the finest sights in whatever country you happen to stop off in.

Such a trip doesn’t have to be regionally confined to Europe, though. This is the kind of journey you could make wherever you can find the sights – not least the Middle East.

Should you decide to do such a thing in, say, the UAE and Oman, you could do worse than making the trip in

Maserati’s compact SUV, the Grecale.

With this in mind, The Ritz-Carlton organised its own take on the classic experience comprising all of those elements. The co-ordinators made what they had in mind, officially calling the event the Grand Tour.

It consisted of a trip from Dubai to Muscat, taking in the region’s most fun roads to drive on while discoverin­g the best of what the region had to offer en route.

The Grecale range, which comprises the GT, Modena and

Trofeo, make for pretty solid choices as grand tourers in the classic sense.

Each is fancy enough to attract a few glances, but not too over the top in a supercar style.

Crucially, the trio all have the same comfortabl­e and roomy interior, with enough power to eat up the kilometres as you head in search of your next destinatio­n.

All-wheel-drive is standard across the range – useful if you have to head over a few bumps, which is always possible on a trip of this sort – but while the GT and the Modena rattle along nicely with 4-cylinder 2-litre engines, Maserati has cranked up the Trofeo with a V6 3-litre unit that reduces the 0-100kph time down to 3.8 seconds and ups the top speed to 285kph.

Not that grand touring is about speed and power, of course. Suffice to say that rolling into the two Ritz-Carlton venues situated in Dubai, the brand’s most northerly outlet in Ras Al Khaimah and finally the biggest of the quartet in Muscat, does not make you want to hurry.

Hotel chains generally retain a uniform feel among their various outlets, but, aside from the extreme efforts made to give visitors a luxury experience, Ritz-Carlton’s four Grand Tour venues stand out for having a very different appeal for customers. The RitzCarlto­n, DIFC hotel sits within one of the city’s most bustling financial districts and is one for those who like to be at the centre of things.

The emirate’s other venue, The Ritz-Carlton Dubai, is in the Marina District and offers a more beach-orientated and less hectic experience.

The Ritz-Carlton Ras Al Khaimah, Al Wadi Desert is one designed for lovers of the outdoors, and is situated within a nature resort.

Meanwhile, Al Bustan Palace in Muscat stands as an unquestion­ably visually spectacula­r destinatio­n, being

This is the kind of journey you could make wherever you can find the sights – not least the Middle East

housed in a building that was, indeed, once a palace.

The route between these hotels takes in some of the region’s most visually dramatic terrain, giving a proper sense of what the region has to offer.

Taking a trip like this makes you realise that, while flying is faster, taking a little more time and pulling in anywhere you fancy in a fun set of wheels ticks a lot of boxes, as well.

As we said, a grand tour is not just for Europe, after all.

 ?? The Ritz-Carlton ?? The Maserati convoy winds its way up Jebel Jais
The Ritz-Carlton The Maserati convoy winds its way up Jebel Jais

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