Why...

Two mature aged people who love travelling and learning along the way... Our names are Rob (Robyn) & darian in the 60+ vintage of travellers keen to visit parts of the world which will stretch us mentally, physically and emotionally.

21 January 2026

Dubai 2026

Now after all that cold in the arctic, and heading southwards back towards Australia, it was a great opportunity to visit our final destination at the right time of the year due to it being cooler… Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.


We had seen those amazing architecture photos and videos of multiple structures in Dubai, but it always seemed a very hot destination, but our simple research told us January was an excellent time to visit with averages temperatures of 24/150C

Our travels throughout Dubai using trains, taxis & walking

Our plane touched down around 12:30am into Dubai and normally we wouldn’t talk about what follows, but as it turned out, it was quite typical of our 4 nights in this interesting city.


‘Things’ are BIG in Dubai and its not just the buildings!  We landed into section F of the airport and we started walking to where Customs were located, almost a straight line from the gate.


We walked and walked and walked… and after ~5,000 steps later, we reached the area where passports were checked and then started our ‘trek’ again to the baggage collection carousels and now having our luggage, it was time to find a taxi which wasn’t too hard as there were hundreds of them.  Next small challenge was to be allocated one before heading to our hotel.


By now it was nearly 1:30am and by the time we reached the hotel along very busy freeways, we were in bed ready for sleep after 2:00am.


Now Dubai to us is long and sort of ‘thin’ and maybe one way of understanding this is via the dimensions of a very efficient railway that runs much of its length being the ‘red line’ running north/south up to 67 kms and a ‘green line’ covering east/west-ish for 22.5 kms


From here on things were from a planning point of view very straight forward.  We had learnt how to make use of the trains having each bought a Silver Nol Card with a pre-paid amount on them, worked out the key things we wanted to see… we thought.

Walking to the railway station under the overhead railway

Will get started with a succinct description of visiting the Dubai Mall and beyond because it became more typical of doing sightseeing in Dubai.


We were staying a relatively short distance from a railway station to catch a fairly packed but frequent train, which was quite common, to the Burj Khalifa/ Dubai Mall Metro Station one station away.  


Then you start walking and the first time we walked using the meandering but covered walkways which were busy with many other tourists.  Eventually we reached the Dubai Mall which by the way is huge, including its famous and large aquarium, so this meant more walking.

The aquarium inside the Dubai Mall is like everything else... big!
Outside the Dubai Mall next to the Burj Khalifa Lake

Outside the mall is the Burj Khalifa Lake and of course, the tallest building in the world currently, the Burj Khalifa but more on that later, so more walking.  After whatever period we then found a shorter route around the lake and amongst some stunning parks, walkways and buildings back to the station, train back to our station and then a walk back to the hotel.

The Burj Khalifa or 'The Burj'... it certainly
stands out as the world's tallest building

So why go on about this?  If you are considering a visit to Dubai, be prepared to walk and walk.  Small fact, in the first 24hrs of our visit we walked over 20,000 steps!


Another few observations are that many of the primary attractions like the Palm Jumeirah, the Al Fahidi Historical Neighbourhood, the Dubai Creek area, the King Spice gold souk Dubai area and say The Museum of the Future as examples, are spread all over the length of Dubai so it takes time via the train and then walking.

Always something to see including
this old defence tower

Now you can take taxis after getting off the train if they are there when you need them and there are a lot of taxis but not always easily where they're needed.


Next little challenge due to the popularity of Dubai are the queues to get into various attractions.  As an example, we pre-bought tickets to visit The Palm Tower to then visit ‘The View at the Palm’ to view the Palm Jumeirah from the 52nd floor.  Our ticket was for 11am!

Very famous development in Dubai using
Google Earth... the Palm Jumeirah

We arrived before 11am but did not reach the 52nd floor until after 12:15pm due to the queues.


The Museum of the Future, a spectacular building had a queue time of around 1.5 hrs so we simply didn’t bother because if you add train, walking and then queue times in an environment where different locations are spread out, you actually may not get to see too much of what you hoped. The message simply is, work out your priorities before you get to Dubai.


So lets go through the key things we did visit and some impressions.


Dubai Mall

Our first destination was as described earlier, the Dubai Mall and is the world’s largest, has 4 floors and covers a total area of 1.2 million square metres.  It has over 1,200 retail stores, 200+ dining outlets, and major attractions like the Dubai Aquarium, an ice rink, fountain and immersive entertainment zones. In 2023 it had a record 105 million visitors.

The aquarium was a stand out

Dubai Creek & Old Dubai

We used both the red & green lines to reach Dubai Creek, a more traditional area where boats are used to ferry people along and across the creek.  There were numerous boats waiting to take people and was good to watch the overall process whilst enjoying a coffee.

The taxi boats wait and slowly moved
to the right to pick up passengers
Simply walk on, sit down, pay the money and its off

In the same area walking away from the creek looking for the old area of Dubai, we found it including the Grand Souk, housing spice, clothing and some jewellery shops, the smell of spices wafting throughout.

This was certainly a very earthy and traditional Grand Souk
Just loved the smell of all the spices

This area was very run down and quite dirty, but we knew of another location, The Heritage Village in the Al Shindagha Historical District, also labelled as ‘old town’. We reached it by train and more walking and it was very up market, very clean, also on the creek and full of shops.

Very different up market 'old town' vibe here
Well designed and presented
The views along Dubai Creek are quite pleasant

It was really like a self contained tourist village and created in the 1990s to showcase a little of historic lifestyle and buildings, including the cooling towers used to keep temperatures lower during summer.

Clever... these towers pull cooler air in
as warm air expelled out of the tower

Burj Khalifa

Time to get ‘Burj’d’ by visiting the tallest building currently in the world.  We had bought tickets during our mall excursion, joined the queue and eventually after a 70 second elevator, arrived over 125 storeys into the sky, Rob detecting slight rocking in the building due to her dislike of heights.

The Burj dominates the skyline

It really is quite a building and the views we experienced as the sun started setting certainly were both spectacular and ensured we better understood the extent and nature of Dubai more clearly.

Sunset was hampered by the smog but the view was still great
Then the lights came on

Burj Khalifa Lake & Dubai Fountain

After our lofty visit of the Burj, we found our way to the lake to witness the nightly ritual of the Dubai Fountain light show(s).  These show runs every 30 minutes from 6pm and to give you a sense of scale, its the world's largest choreographed dancing fountain system, located on the 12 hectare lake using 270+ metres high-powered water jets and lights.

View of Burj Khalifa Lake from the Burj
The lake before the show starts
The water forms created were very clever...
...and each show was different including the music playing


View at the Palm

Having already described some of this, especially the writing times, the purpose for being here was to get a good view of the famous Palm Jumeirah and by now you should have a sense things are big in Dubai.

View from 'The View at the Palm' of the Palm Jumeirah
and the Atlantis Palm at the end of the Palm

Again, a few size details - the Palm features a 2-km long trunk, a crown with 17 fronds, and a surrounding 11-km crescent breakwater.  On the fronds are exclusive villas and private beaches.

Combination of homes and The Atlantis Royal hotel on a section of 'The Palm'

In the same broad area as ‘The Palm’ is the sail type structure of the Burj Al Arab Jumeirah.

The Burj Al Arab Jumeirah in the distance where
Federer & Nadal played tennis on the heliport

Museum of the Future

Also reached easily by train, it's quite a structure which opened in 2022 but due to very long queues, we didn’t go through the museum, which is also actively involved in futuristic research.

The covered walkway from the train station
to the Museum of the Future
The Museum of the Future

It is an elliptical design with the solid structure representing what is known now and the void representing the unknown future.  It is covered with 1,024 stainless steel panels, the number symbolising 1 kilobyte and each panel engraved with Arabic calligraphy.

Reflection of the building in
the lake out front of it

Gold Souq

A souq is like an arcade and is known as the ‘City of Gold’ and houses 380 retailers selling gold, silver and precious stones.


It was packed with people and we have never before seen such a display of gold in our lives and how anyone would easily decide between one item and another with so much on display.

Walking through the Gold Souq

The items which certainly stunned us were the solid gold chest plates hanging in the windows of multiple stores.

There were the 'normal' forms of jewellery
Then there were the abnormal gold items for sale

General

During all our wanderings both day and night, there were a multiplicity of other constant things to look at, admire or in their own way stun us.  At night as were were walking to/from the Dubai Lake, there were light displays on buildings, in trees, man made displays everywhere.

Interesting location for a swim
The architecture is very creative
Most walkways are illuminated at night

Dubai for us was like the Gold Coast in Australia but on steroids.  It was exactly like what we were expecting, but as already described, the distance and the time it took to reach, wait and enjoy the experiences, in our humble opinion, need to be prioritised and planned to maximise available time.


Whilst we enjoyed the visit as a unique destination and were happy to have been there, we left with no real need to return for a holiday.


CLICK HERE for more photos of Dubai 2026


Well that’s it until next time we venture off somewhere, so until then… stay and go well!

1 comment:

  1. Geoff and I visited Dubai in May, 2013. It wasn’t that busy because it was very hot. We’re supposed to meet Geoff’s niece but she couldn’t make it. We did some sightseeing using the hop on hop off bus and the train. Very interesting place. Jane

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