Bushra Alshakhly (an English Foundation Faculty Member - from Wisconsin but originally from Baghdad) and I are here together and spending some time exploring Riyadh and now Al Kharj. She and Amr and I are in pictures together.
We, all the international faculty and administration, are currently living in a furnished apartment hotel which is adequate but we can't get comfortable and make it home. We will move soon, insha'Allah, into a lovely apartment building which has been finished for us and simply needs the furniture and appliances. Ikea furniture (each resident will pick out her own couch and chairs and bed etc). This is Bushra standing outside our new building.
The front door is on the left. As we enter there will be security to manage building access and handle our transportation support. Following that, to the left on the first floor, there will be a large exercise room. On our street, within 2 or 3 blocks, we can walk to a small grocery store, a laundry, a bakery and a fish market. This is a conservative city and most women are fully covered. We maintain a standard of covering our heads in public with a scarf called a tarha. Inside the College, no abaya's or other covering are worn because we are only women together.
Next we went to the market area, the souk for Al Kharj. Car parts to gold to men's and women's cloths to food to housewares to carpets. This is the Eid and driving by at 10:30 in the morning, well, almost everyone is asleep, but you can see some of what is possible. Women can go there to shop and explore but in most places women cannot sit in the restaurants. There are family restaurants in the city where women can sit.
From there we were off to tour the general sites of the city starting with King Faisal's original Palace (immediately adjacent to the souk) which is where pilgrims and visitors are welcomed to the city.
And then we were off to the Birge al Kharj, the watertower which is the known far and wide to mark Al Kharj and is the meeting place for picnickers and for bbq at night.
And then off to see the landscape surrounding the Al Kharj because this area is considered the breadbasket of Saudi Arabia. Our good fortune was to stop at a smaller farm which is part of the larger Faisal Palace and Farm (which is gorgeous). The farm manager was willing to show us around and allow us to see the animals, see how the irrigation system works (which you can see by the lines and ridges of where the alfalfa grows under the date palms), and look at all the plantings. He sent us off with delicious handfuls of basil.
The following picture is of a one year old date palm field - they are watered every other day from under the ground until their root system is established.
We washed our feet in the irrigation stream - lovely cool water - and thanked the farm manager for his kindness and then went on to see the big fields outside the smaller farm. This is a big hay field for the cows, horses, camels, and sheep raised in the area and for the Kingdom and then a tomato field.
And the hothouses where plants are started or grown which fill the valley and use surface and well water.
And, finally, it is the Eid and during the Eid it is appropriate to celebrate with the giving of thanks and sharing with those less fortunate than we are. Amr and his uncle and Bushra and I went and chose a nice one year old sheep. Here is the gathering of sheep with Bushra and the sheep we choose in the van. We watched the preparation of the meat, which we won't share on-line.
Finally, the lovely sheep quickly became a box of bags of meat
which were shared far and wide and have eaten with gusto for bbq tonight with new friends. Wishing you Eid Mubarek.