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Mutrah is especially beautiful at night with the lights reflecting off the water and the white facades of the old merchants' houses that front the promenade.

Mutrah is especially beautiful at night with the lights reflecting off the water and the white facades of the old merchants' houses. (click to enlarge)


A few kilometres inland from Muscat and Mutrah is Ruwi, the capital's modern commercial district. Ruwi is surrounded by rocky mountains and has beautiful scenery. Here is a daytime view of Ruwi from our Sheraton room window.

Ruwi is Muscat's modern commercial district, and is surrounded by rocky mountains. (click to enlarge)


The tiny gated city of Muscat is cradled in a natural harbour surrounded by a jagged spine of hills and now home of the sultan's main palace. The first foreign presence in Muscat was the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama, who landed in Oman on his way to India. The Portuguese returned in 1507 to sack and capture Muscat, but were defeated in 1649. Here’s a view of Muscat as we drove in, with the fort on the left, and the Sultan’s Palace in the centre.

The tiny gated city of Muscat is cradled in a natural harbour surrounded by a jagged spine of hills and now home of the sultan's main palace. (click to enlarge)


The Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque is the third largest in the world, built between 1995 and 2001 from 300,000 tons of Indian sandstone. The complex is 1000m long and 885m wide. The most visible part of a mosque is the minaret, the tower from which the call to prayer is broadcast five times a day. There are four 45.5m minarets on the corners and a big central one of 91.5m, the five minarets symbolizing the five pillars of Islam.

The Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque is the third largest in the world, built between 1995 and 2001 from 300,000 tons of Indian sandstone. (click to enlarge)


Opened in 1985, the Al Bustan Palace InterContinental Muscat hotel has built a reputation as one of the best hotels in the Middle East and one of the finest hotels in the world. Situated eight kilometres from the downtown business district, the hotel is nestled on the coast surrounded by a dramatic mountain backdrop, sea and beach, and set in 200 acres of lush, green gardens. It enjoys spectacular views over the Gulf of Oman.

The Al Bustan hotel is nestled on the coast surrounded by a dramatic mountain backdrop, sea and beach, and set in 200 acres of lush, green gardens. (click to enlarge)


Misfah is an incredible village of ancient houses and narrow streets perched in a valley amidst the mountains and date palms, 10km from Al Hamra.

Misfah is an incredible village of ancient houses and narrow streets perched in a valley amidst the mountains and date palms, 10km from Al Hamra. (click to enlarge)

Updated: February 2009. Click on an image to see the FULL size with a caption.


Muscat, Oman

Oman has mountains, beaches, sun and excellent hotels, plus souqs, mosques and splendid museums. You can even drink the water. Best of all, Oman is a peaceful, stable country in a region not known for its calm. Oman has ancient forts and castles and is the place Sinbad the Sailor called home. It has mysterious bazaars, gold, frankincense and myrrh, and a conservationist, benevolent sultan who is doing a wonderful job of easing Oman into the modern world without losing its magic. Oman has been ruled by the same family for 250 years and until 1970 was a backwater - insular, invisible and illiterate, one of the poorest countries in the world. Sultan Qaboos bin Said Al Said, the ruler of Oman since he eased his father out of power in 1970, has transformed Oman, yet kept its best traditions.

Wedged along a relatively narrow strip of land between mountains and sea, Oman’s capital city of Muscat is a beautiful city mixing the old and the new, natural beauty and buildings with a consistent homage to traditional architecture. On the one hand, it symbolizes Oman's glorious past while on the other the quality of its contemporary architecture, infrastructure and services to commerce and industry place it among the ranks of the world's most developed capital cities.

Greater Muscat is made up of three distinct cities, each with its own particular identity. Muscat proper is the old port area given over to palace administration, a small area with few shops and no hotels. Mutrah, to the northwest, is the main trading district with the country’s most important harbour. Ruwi, built on a grid-plan in a valley a few kilometres inland, has developed only in the late 20C into a modern commercial and administrative centre. Still newer parts are the largely residential suburb of Qurm, and Medinat Qaboos with many government buildings, west of Mutrah on the coast. Al-Bustan, south of Muscat, boasts a luxury hotel: the Al-Bustan Palace Hotel.


My Top 5 Memories Of Muscat

1. Mutrah Corniche - pleasant walk with the sea on one side, the souq and old building on the other side backed by rocky hills and forts

2. Grand Mosque - the outside of the sandstone buildings is set in beautiful gardens, while the inside is lavishly decorated, including the biggest Persian carpet in the world

3. Muscat - tiny gated city is cradled in a natural harbour surrounded by a jagged spine of hills with Portuguese forts from the 1580s

4. Al Bustan Hotel - nestled on the coast surrounded by a dramatic mountain backdrop, sea and beach, and set in 200 acres of lush, green gardens.

5. Misfah - an incredible village of ancient houses and narrow streets perched in a valley amidst the mountains and date palms, 210km from Muscat