Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Hopes and Dreams 2015 - Peace and Harmony - Gulf News Dt 31 December 2014
Peace and harmony
The year 2014 was one with mixed feelings filled with
disappointments and achievements. From a global perspective, I am saddened by
the manmade calamities happening around for known and unknown reasons or
ideologies. As educated people, we can stay focused on goodwill and harmonious
living. There is no other alternate way to win over the current situation. Do
not fall prey to the call for extreme actions at any cost.
Looking ahead into 2015 gives lots of hope and optimism for
those who wish to bring good to their communities. Personally, I am keen on
seeing a peaceful and prosperous world around. To fit in my humble role towards
this goal, I will try my best to create positive vibes through my writings.
From Mr Ramesh Menon
Abu Dhabi
Saturday, December 27, 2014
Avoidable anger - Gulf Today - Short Take Dt 27-12-2014
Avoidable anger
The year that is passing by swiftly and
silently has been one with mixed emotions and experiences. There were plus and
minus aspects as always. Travelling around gave several opportunities for
thoughts and photography opportunities, which led to many useful insights that
I shared with interest through the Short Take column.
Last week, I was at the airport check-in.
The line was long and the airline system was working slow due to some
connection problem. A pregnant lady was at the counter handling the passengers.
The delay made everyone restless. But, one passenger was more expressive. He
reached the counter and as the process took extremely long, he started raising
his voice and showering strong words at the girl. The lady was helpless and
kept her silence and emotions well.
Standing behind him and watching all the
actions, I asked him whether there was any need to raise his voice in such a
tense situation unnecessarily as it raised emotions of others as well.
He said to me that it is his way of doing
things and he felt comfortable by shouting at her. I smiled at him as well as
the lady who was listening to the conversation, as she felt relieved to get
some support.
We moved on to the security check point and
a person ahead had some items inside his bag which was creating an alarm with
the security system.
The screening process had to be repeated
several times and it took time.
The man who created ruckus a few minutes
before was behind and was standing without any option to show his emotions at
the security staff.
We all who watched him shouting looked at
him to see how he expressed his anger this time. He knew what we intended and
gave us a helpless smile. It was sure he was sorry about what happened before.
A smile has several positive values at all
situations. Let the year ahead be a positive one and let us all spread happiness
and positive spirit with a sweet smile to those we meet.
Ramesh Menon
Gulf Today – Short Take Dt 27-12-2014
To read it in original, please visit Gulf Today online
Saturday, December 20, 2014
Life without a phone - Gulf Today - Short Take Dt 20-12-2014
Life without a phone
Weekends are always special. But the last
weekend was extra special. I got myself ready with my cameras early morning and
set out to capture the sight of the race boats participating in the Volvo Ocean
Race reaching Abu Dhabi. It was interesting as the non-favourable wind and
weather delayed the arrival. What was supposed to be a two-hour boat trip got
extended to more than five hours.
The experience was really good enough to
understand the difficulties of the sailors out in the sea. It was all the more
tough with limited facilities for those in the race boats participating in this
extreme sport.
Closely covering and photographing the
journey of the first three boats, I became friendly with the crew and wanted to
have some personal shots and thought of taking it using my mobile phone instead
of the professional camera. I was happy to pose with them and have some
personal memorabilia shots taken.
Someone else had other ideas. As I moved
along the crowd and got out to my car, I could not find my phone. I thought it
would have fallen down. Reaching home, I searched all over and rang my number.
It was ringing. In a few minutes it was giving a switched off mode and gone!
It took a few days for me to get a
replacement SIM and phone and reorganise myself. At the beginning, I was
feeling sad for the lost phone and the precious photos with the super heroes of
Volvo Ocean Race. After a while, I did surrender to the reality and changed it
to a blissful situation of absolute silence.
Life without a phone and calls. Unbelievable
and absolute peace. Should I thank whoever took my phone and made it possible!
Ramesh Menon
To read it in original, please visit Gulf Today Short Take - Dt -20-12-2014
Saturday, December 13, 2014
To bee, or not to bee - Gulf Today - Short Take Dt 13 December 2014
To bee, or not to bee
Our life is full of predictable and unpredictable actions
and activities. That is one thing that makes it interesting. For me, for you
and everyone for that matter.
I have been fascinated by a beehive in my balcony that
has developed into a beautiful one in
size and population.
As the number of bees started growing, we took more caution
to leave them alone. What will happen if by chance, the hive was disturbed!
My interest in nature held me from taking any action to
remove the hive. I kept on observing them, their lifestyle and routine. With
still and video photography, I kept on recording their activities from morning
till night.
At one point, it was sure that the hive had to be removed. I
was feeling sad till the last minute, as we had to remove it completely from
our area.
The action known to us was unknown to the creatures. It gave
me an opportunity to think about various natural calamities that happen
suddenly without any notice to mankind.
At times, however equipped we are, we are helpless in front
of nature and its fury or even any other destructive force that is on us. There
is a lot to think about this and am leaving it to your imagination.
Ramesh Menon
To read it in original, please visit GULF TODAY online
Friday, December 12, 2014
TCA Abu Dhabi weighs anchor on VOLVO Ocean Race Destination Village
BIGGER
THAN EVER 23-DAY STOPOVER HUB OPEN TO PUBLIC FRIDAY
Heralding the start of the VIP tour. Volvo
Ocean Race CEO Knut Frostad shows Sultan Al Dhaheri, Acting Executive Director
Tourism, TCA Abu Dhabi and Omar Kaddoura, President & CEO, Rotana Group ,
into the Destination Village.
Abu Dhabi: Thursday, December 11, 2014 - Abu Dhabi Tourism & Culture Authority (TCA Abu
Dhabi) today hosted a VIP preview tour of its purpose-built Volvo Ocean Race Destination Village on its
stunning Corniche Breakwater, which will open to the public tomorrow (Friday,
December 12).
The 35,000 square
metre, waterfront, village will be the hub of three weeks of sports,
entertainment and leisure as part of the UAE capital’s stopover hosting of the
hardy Volvo Ocean Race fleet, which is expected to arrive from the 6,125
nautical mile Leg 2 from Cape Town on Saturday December 13. The village is 30%
bigger than in 2011/2012 when Abu Dhabi last hosted the Volvo Ocean Race.
Ahead of the
tour, HH Sheikh Sultan Bin Tahnoon, Chairman, TCA Abu Dhabi and Department of
Transport, Government of Abu Dhabi said he expected the UAE capital to be the
“stand-out” stopover of the race, which will visit nine stopover destinations
on its epic, round-the-world challenge which began in Alicante, Spain and ends
in Gothenburg, Sweden next June.
“This is a
destination in its own right for our residents and the many visitors we expect
in Abu Dhabi over the coming weeks and New Year,” said Sheikh Sultan. “It is
active, engaging, entertaining and provides something for all nationalities and
age groups.
“Naturally it is
compelling destination for sailing and watersports fans yet has many aspects
that will appeal to those who have never ventured out into the ocean. The
village has been created with the support of many key stakeholders who should
be congratulated on their efforts. Yet again, Abu Dhabi has shown how coming
together as one delivers excellence of product and I believe visitor feedback
will bear out this sentiment.
“The village is
also a headline promotion of our centuries-old maritime heritage with many
activities celebrating our sea-going past and showing how Abu Dhabi was, and
remains, at one with the sea.”
Today’s VIP tour
was led by Volvo Ocean Race CEO Knut Frostad and attended by: Sultan Al
Dhaheri, Acting Executive Director Tourism, TCA Abu Dhabi; Majid Al Muhairi,
CEO Abu Dhabi Sailing & Yacht Club; Salem Al Romaithi, CEO, Abu Dhabi
International Marina Sports Club; Omar Kaddoura, President & CEO, Rotana
Group, the stopover hospitality sponsor, Abdulkareem M. Al Masabi, Vice
President – Port Operations, Abu Dhabi Ports Company; Major Ali Al Suwaidi,
President, Emirates Marine Environmental Group and Faisal Al Sheikh, Director,
Events Bureau, TCA Abu Dhabi.
Sailing fans from
around the world, race sponsors and families of the seven teams contesting the
gruelling, 38,739 nautical mile challenge are expected to descend on Abu Dhabi
over the coming weeks delivering a year-end boost to the UAE capital’s tourism
industry.
Boat operator
Xventures said Stopover demand for craft has been such that it has drafted
additional vessels into its fleet.
"We operate
a fleet of five boats in Abu Dhabi and would usually operate at about 75
percent capacity over the Festive period with certain days sold out but we have
had to bring in a number of additional boats to cover demand from the Stopover,
especially around race days,” said Tony
Hajj, CEO, Xventures, Abu Dhabi. “We’ve also seen an increase in uptake across
our other activities as the city attracts teams and their families as well as
additional international visitors, many of whom are staying for extended
periods this year.”
The Rotana Group
is also reporting strong response with an influx of race-related bookings.
“Such initiatives
are extremely important and give this great destination tremendous worldwide
exposure. We truly believe Abu Dhabi is the ideal destination to host such
events and are ready to welcome thousands of race guests to our properties,”
said Rotana President & CEO, Omer Kaddouri.
“Rotana has
extended its full marketing support via of customers and ‘Rotana Rewards’
members through branding, advertising, and digital signage in over 50 Rotana
properties across the region. The event has boosted occupancy and served us
well during the festive season. Rotana will host thousands of executives,
teams, crews, spectators and tourists travelling from around the globe, over
six weeks in December and January and will receive over 3,000 room nights in
its properties in Abu Dhabi during the Stopover.”
Music, the sea and tradition meet at the Destination Village |
The free-to-enter
Destination Village has six distinctive and interactive zones covering: culture
& heritage; adventure; family; exhibitions; team and haul out and the
environment.
“We’ve increased
the village opening hours by 25% after visitor feedback from our 2011/2012
hosting,” explained Sultan Al Dhaheri. “In all the village will be open to the public
for 225 hours, which is equivalent to almost nine and a half days and it will
bring a heightened dimension to festive and New Year seasonal celebrations
here.”
Abu Dhabi’s VOR
Destination Village features 22 exhibition pavilions for visitors to tour,
including five international pavilions from China, Sweden, Spain, the
Netherlands and Great Britain.
“Each of our
international pavilion partners will be promoting their own destination and
cultural attractions,” said Al Dhaheri. “Their presence underlines the
importance of this market to these respective countries.”
The village also
features, for the first time, a 440 metre ‘floating’ Skyline Stage which will
host live concert and solo performance by a range of international musicians
and personalities as well as regular ‘Cinema Al Mamsha’ (Boardwalk Cinema)
screenings of popular movies and regional premieres.
The Skyline Stage
has been built into the sea bed off the Corniche by a team of 13 commercial
divers with over six tons of underwater ballast.
The opening
Skyline Stage performance will be on Friday night when the celebrated BBC
Worldwide production ‘Blue Planet In Concert’ will be screened to music
conducted by five-times Oscar-nominated composer George Fenton and performed by
the 75-piece National Symphony Orchestra Abu Dhabi. The performance will run
for a second night on Saturday and tickets are available from
timeouttickets.com.
Over the coming
three weeks the Destination Village will host stage performances and
appearances by over 200 artists from 23 countries including Lebanese singing
sensation Myriam Fares, Argentinian guitar maestro Dominic Miller, French
marine adventurer Fabian Cousteau, the City of Birmingham Philharmonic
Orchestra, Grammy nominee Kamal Massalam and Madrid’s renowned ‘El Corral de la
Moreria’ flamenco troupe.
“In addition, contributions from over 80
traditional artisans, musicians and chefs feature in the Destination Village
programme thanks to partnerships with cultural stakeholders, such as the
Khalifa Fund, Abu Dhabi Falconers Club and Soqur Al Mqbeel,” explained Al
Dhaheri.
“The community has responded enthusiastically
to the village with over 7,500 man hours being contributed by 220 volunteers
working during the 23 day stopover.”
The village will
also host, for the first time in public, the model of the UAE capital’s planned
Mina Zayed permanent cruise terminal in a pavilion, mounted by Abu Dhabi Ports
Company, where visitors can enter a contest for a chance to win a US $1,000
voucher towards a Royal Caribbean International cruise.
The village opens
daily from 12 noon to 9pm Sunday-Thursday and 11am to midnight Fridays and
Saturdays until January 3rd when the fleet leaves on the third leg
of the race to Sanya in China.
Aside from the ongoing activities and entertainment, village-goers will be able to buy refreshments from 12 cafes and restaurants spread throughout the venue including themed stalls serving shawarmas, Arabic sweets, European, Asian and Mexican cuisine. A special ‘show kitchen’ is at the heart of the ‘Galley’ area and features live cooking demonstrations from professional Spanish, French, South African, Swedish and Emirati chefs.
TCA Abu Dhabi, which is behind the emirate’s VOR campaign is using the event to highlight Abu Dhabi’s swelling sailing and watersport credentials.
“We have it all,” said Al Dhaheri. “Fabulous active marinas, superb winter weather, first-class watersports suppliers, clean seas and generally ambient prevailing winds.
“At this particular event the outdoor life will be in prime focus with over 150 hours of watersport and beach sport events involving upwards of 1,500 people from UAE schools, rugby and soccer clubs, sailing, paddling and fitness clubs. If you live here, there’s no reason to stay indoors at this time of year – and if you live elsewhere and want to escape grey skies – this is the place to be.”
The packed
destination village programme is available on www.abudhabievents.ae and www.volvooceanraceabudhabi.ae. Highlights
include the December 14/15 fleet arrivals, the January 2nd in-port
race and the January 3rd race restart.
“All will be
marked by distinctive, culturally-slanted parades and celebrations which we
want everyone to see and enjoy,” said Al Dhaheri.
Meanwhile, from
December 15, Destination Village goers will be able to visit ‘The Boatyard’ and
get bird’s eye views of the competing Volvo Ocean 65 yachts including ‘Azzam’
(Determination) of Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing (ADOR) – the emirate’s own entry. A
public viewing platform, built eight metres above ground, will allow visitors
to watch shore teams as they work to prepare their vessels for Leg 3.
A series of ‘Meet
The Crews’ sessions are also being planned so the public can get
up-close-and-personal with the VOR ‘Heroes Of The Seas.’
More photos of the event:
Monday, December 8, 2014
Communal Harmony - Reader Pictures - Gulf News Dt 08 Dec 2014
Gulf News reader Ramesh Menon took this
photograph in Bengaluru, India. The Abu Dhabi-based reader said: “Wherever
flowers blossom, you are sure to see honey bees. Our apartment complex was no
exception. Pictured is a bee hive getting bigger, better and more beautiful
each day, in my balcony. It would be a disaster if they are disturbed or hurt.
They exhibit true communal harmony, which is very important for peaceful
living.”
To read and see it in original, please visit Gulf News online
Saturday, December 6, 2014
Life is BEE see
Getting bigger, better and beautiful each day. A bee hive close to my balcony. Interesting to see the activities happening. However, a bit worried if by any chance they are disturbed!. How to safely remove them? Search for solutions still on...
Not an edited video. You may share it with your children to see them up, close and personal. Following them for a few days, I have an interesting story to tell in the coming days.
Not an edited video. You may share it with your children to see them up, close and personal. Following them for a few days, I have an interesting story to tell in the coming days.
Busy bee - Gulf Today - Short Take Dt 06-12-2014
Busy bee
I like to travel and of course without fail
my camera is always there with me. Visiting different places and meeting people
known and unknown give me opportunities to explore new horizons.
Thanks to a long holiday in the UAE, I am
currently exploring various cities.
This time my subject is not human beings
but a colony of honey bees at a particular spot. Last time, when I visited, the
hive was in a substantial size and shape. This time, they have become bigger
and better. Without disturbing their habitat, I am exploring their life through
different zoom lenses.
It is interesting and keeps me busy. Every
story has to have an end and this one too. Very soon, the hive will be removed
and harvested for honey and wax.
That makes me wonder if man is the greediest
of living beings!
Ramesh Menon
To read it in original, please visit GULF TODAY online
Sunday, November 30, 2014
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