AlUla Dates Festival ends on a sweet note

1 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
2 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
3 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
4 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
5 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
6 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
7 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
8 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
9 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
10 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
11 / 11
The final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. (Photo/Huda Bashatah)
Short Url
Updated 24 October 2022
Follow

AlUla Dates Festival ends on a sweet note

  • Event witnesses record-breaking date auction
  • Bestselling varieties were mabroom, sagai, medjool and ambar

ALULA: The end of the AlUla Dates Festival this weekend saw an array of cultural activities, a record-breaking auction and a showcase of the special Al-Shannah date preservation method unique to AlUla.

At 7 a.m. sharp, the final morning auction of the festival involved farmers and attendees bartering over date prices. As the sun started to rise in the sky, the prized dates, stored in cartons, proved to be the most valuable commodity of the show.

Organized by the Royal Commission for AlUla, the event returned with a record-breaking auction on the final weekend of the festival, with dates selling for SR51 ($13.50) per kilo.

Farmers and attendees clapped enthusiastically at the end of the bidding.

In its first week this year, the event sold 96 tons of dates, in the second, 142, and in the third, 149, for a total price of more than SR3 million — without factoring in the final day’s sale.

In comparison, 2021’s event saw date sales of about SR1 million.

On four weekends between Sept. 30 and Oct. 22, the auction is one of the main attractions in the area.

In a strategically located open space near the intersection of the main travel routes to nearby Tabuk and conveniently situated near stretches of local farms, the local auctioneer rapidly shouts out prices to start the bidding.

He continues the auction based on the head gestures of interested buyers. The event’s auctioneer is originally from Madinah, but arrives to inspect the date collection each night before an auction in order to decide starting bid prices.

Farmer Turki Al-Uneizi told Arab News that the gift of witnessing the date auction is a “treat for all.”

He added: “The difference between AlUla dates and other areas is, first, the water. It is good water — there is no salt. And the soil and the climate and things like that. It has low humidity.”

The bestselling dates are the mabroom, sagai, medjool and ambar varieties.

In the evening, local vendors offer handicrafts, products and entertainment with live music and snacks.

The Saudi Post offered a station that allows attendees to conveniently ship date purchases to friends or family in other cities, or to their own homes elsewhere in the Kingdom.

The Al-Shannah special event is unique to AlUla. It showcases a date preservation process inherited from generations of locals in the region. The harvested dates are wrapped in a hardened and cleaned shell made from dried goat or sheep skin. The technique is used to preserve the flavor and color of the dates for up to one year.

Vendors such as Abeer Soap, which is headed by women entrepreneurs from a local group of artists, sold natural and organic soaps derived from local dates at the festival.

Lamia Hamdan, owner of Be Alive brand, sold kombucha produced from dates. Her love of combining local ingredients makes for a unique blend of flavors and benefits.

“What makes my product unique is it’s a mix between Japanese culture and Saudi Arabian culture. It is all Saudi handmade,” Hamdan told Arab News.

Her fermented date vinegar aids in gut health while maintaining the integrity of traditional methods and local ingredients.

Hamdan uses dried rose petals to add a pop of color and adds sesame seeds and zataar to another mix — which is her bestseller — to add a little pizazz to a yogurt breakfast or sprinkled atop a salad.


KSrelief providing ongoing medical care in Yemen

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

KSrelief providing ongoing medical care in Yemen

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s aid agency KSrelief is providing ongoing cardiac surgery and catheterization for children and adults at Prince Mohammed bin Salman Hospital in Yemen’s Aden governorate.

The project runs until May 15, with 23 medical specialists participating in cooperation with the Saudi Development and Reconstruction Program for Yemen, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Thursday.

The medical team has already performed 35 cardiac catheterizations and eight open-heart surgeries, all of which were successful.

Meanwhile, KSrelief has completed another medical project which included 226 procedures for people with burns, deformities, and sports injuries.

This initiative took place from April 27 to May 5, 2024, in Yemen’s Aden governorate.

In addition, there were 1,026 individuals treated at the dermatology clinic, 2,317 at the family medicine clinic, and 587 at the dentistry clinic.

Training was also provided for 78 staffers in sports rehabilitation.


KSrelief to restore homes damaged in Aleppo earthquake

Updated 48 min 49 sec ago
Follow

KSrelief to restore homes damaged in Aleppo earthquake

RIYADH: The Kingdom’s aid agency KSrelief signed a pact on Wednesday to restore the homes of families affected by the earthquake in Aleppo, Syria.

In collaboration with a civil society institution in Syria, this project aims to restore 743 homes to benefit over 4,500 people, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Renovations will include the provision of new water tanks and ventilation systems.

KSrelief’s Assistant Supervisor-General for Operations and Programs Ahmed bin Ali Al-Baiz signed the pact at the center’s headquarters in Riyadh.


Saudi Armed Forces participate in military exercise in Turkiye

Updated 09 May 2024
Follow

Saudi Armed Forces participate in military exercise in Turkiye

  • The field exercise phase of EFES 2024, which begins on Friday and continues until May 30, follows a command center phase that began on April 25 and ended on Wednesday

RIYADH: The Saudi Arabian Armed Forces are taking part in a multinational military exercise in the Turkish city of Izmir, the Kingdom’s Defense Ministry said on Wednesday.

Upon arrival in Turkiye ahead of the field-exercise phase of EFES 2024, the Saudi units were greeted by the military attache at the Saudi embassy in Ankara, Commodore Adel Al-Kalthami, the director of the exercise from the Kingdom, Brig. Gen. Nasser Al-Suhaimi, and officers from branches of the Armed Forces.

The exercise involves two main phases, the first of which was a command-center exercise at the Multinational War Center in Istanbul and the Joint Command Training Center in Izmir, which began on April 25 and concluded on Wednesday. The second phase, involving live-firing field exercises at Izmir’s Doganbey Firing and Exercise Area, begins on Friday and continues until May 30.

The head of the Saudi Armed Forces Education and Training Authority, Maj. Gen. Adel Al-Balawi, said participation of the nation’s forces in the exercise reflects the care and support of the Saudi leadership for the development of their capabilities and the enhancement their organizational, training and armaments skills.

The exercise provides an opportunity for forces from participating nations to exchange skills, train together in the planning and coordination of joint operations in various environments, raise their combat efficiency, and enhance military cooperation, he added.

During the exercise the Saudi units and their counterparts from other countries will carry out many field maneuvers on land and sea, including sea-landing operations, search and rescue missions, and responses to threats posed by drones, using light arms loaded with live ammunition and other weaponry, Al-Balawi said.


Saudi king, crown prince offer condolences to Brazilian president over flood victims

Updated 09 May 2024
Follow

Saudi king, crown prince offer condolences to Brazilian president over flood victims

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s King Salman sent a message of condolences and sympathy to Brazilain President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, following the floods that swept the state of Rio Grande do Sul that killed and injured several people and left a number missing, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Wednesday.
“We learned of the news of the floods that swept through the state of Rio Grande do Sul, south of the Federal Republic of Brazil, and the resulting deaths, injuries, and missing persons,” the king said.
He added: “We share Your Excellency’s pain of this tragedy, and we send to you, to the families of the deceased, and to your friendly people, our warmest condolences and sincere sympathy, wishing that the missing will return safely and the injured a speedy recovery.”
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman also sent a similar cable to the Brazilian president.
Heavy rains and flooding in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul since last week also have left 128 people missing, authorities said. More than 230,000 have been displaced, and much of the region has been isolated by the floodwaters.
(With AP)


Saudi crown prince, Ukrainian president discuss Russia-Ukraine conflict during call

Updated 09 May 2024
Follow

Saudi crown prince, Ukrainian president discuss Russia-Ukraine conflict during call

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Tuesday received a phone call from Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelensky, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
During the call, they reviewed bilateral relations between the two countries and discussed several issues of common interest. 
They also discussed developments in the Ukrainian-Russian war and efforts to resolve the conflict.