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No matter where one
lives or visits, the recreation and leisure activities are no
less important than work and business. Kuwait has all the
amenities and infrastructure for business and modern living
and has plenty to offer for extra curricular activities,
pleasure, relaxation and pastime.
With modernization the pastime activities of the past,
Falconry, hunting in the desert and sea fishing have lost much
of their appeal, though evening 'Diwaniyah' is still a
favourite pastime for Kuwaiti men. Expatriates and visitors
have every conceivable modern pastime and recreational
activity for relaxation available in Kuwait.
THE
MEDIA In Kuwait, television and radio are
state run and the rest of the media is supervised by the
Ministry of Information.

The Press Five
daily newspapers are published in Arabic, Al-Qabas (the
Torch), Al-Watan (the Native Land), Al-Anbaa' (the News),
Al-Rai Al Aam (Public Opinion), and Al-Seyassah (Politics).
These cost 100fils each, but home delivery is available for a
subscription of KD35 per year, except for Al-Anbaa' which
costs 150fils a copy or KD45pa. There are also
two daily English language newspapers, the Arab Times and the
Kuwait Times. These cost 150fils each but are also available
on early morning home delivery for KD45 a year. Most foreign
English language quality papers are available from hotel
kiosks and the larger bookshops, though they tend to arrive a
day late. Plenty of weekly, bi-weekly and
monthly magazines are published in Arabic. Many English and
Arabic Newspapers and magazines from various countries are
available at the better bookshops.

Videos & Music Kuwait has plenty of video and music shops
where music audio and latest films video cassettes and CDs in
Arabic, English, Hindi, Tagalog, and other languages, are
available.

Television The ubiquitous
satellite dish means that TV programmes from all over the
world can be received, including CNN, TNT, Star TV, the BBC,
LTV, even MTC and Israeli TV --- programmes and timings are
shown in the daily newspapers. Many apartment blocks have
communal dishes. Kuwait has four state-run
channels. KTV1 broadcasts a comprehensive selection of
programmes in Arabic, including variety and music shows,
movies, news and current affairs, from morning until late in
the evening. KTV4 takes over from KTV1 when the latter closes
down and broadcasts a rather entertaining mixed bag in Arabic
and English throughout the night. KTV2
broadcasts a variety of family and popular programmes in
English. Some programmes, such as the evening movie, are
subtitled in Arabic. Opening at about 2pm, KTV2 closes past
midnight after the late night movie. KTV3 is Kuwait's Sports
channel. It broadcasts a wide selection of live and
prerecorded sporting events from all around the world, some
with voice-overs in Arabic.

Radio Kuwait Radio
bro-adcasts a wide variety of progra-mmes in Arabic and
English, and in a few other languages such as Persian, Urdu
and Philopino on several FM, MW and SW
transmitters. The main Arabic station
broadcasts programmes on current and social affairs as well as
music and regular news bulletins. Kuwait also
has a commercial Arabic FM station pumping out modern Arabic
music on FM103.7 and classical Arabic music on FM87.9 24 hours
per day. Kuwait has its own English-language FM station,
Super Station 99.7 and Easy FM 92.5.Kuwait's SUPER STATION is
probably the best music station in the region.
Kuwait's AM service in English broadcasts a mixture of
cultural, religious and musical programmes that reflect a
Kuwaiti view of the world, twice a day, from 8 am to 11am and
from 9pm to midnight, on 963KHz on the medium wave for
listeners in Kuwait and the Gulf. There is a main news at
9:00am and an extended news at 9:30pm. Listeners in South and
South East Asia may tune into the morning programmes on 15110
KHz on the 19 meter band on the short-wave, while listeners in
Europe and North American may pick up the evening programmes
on 11990KHz on the 25 meter band on the short
wave. Details of programmes, advertising rates
and other information on Kuwait TV and Radio are available on
the Ministry of Information
website:www.moinfo.gov.kw The American
Armed Forces FM Radio broadcasts a variety of programmes for
American servicemen from Camp Doha on the north side of Kuwait
Bay, which can be received in most parts of Kuwait.
 Overseas Radio Reception Most international radio stations can
be received in Kuwait. The major international
broadcasting stations publish lists of frequencies, programmes
and times, and these are usually available from embassies in
Kuwait. The BBC World Service reports world events around the
clock in English and several times a day in other languages.
The VOA (Voice of America) has a relay station in
Kuwait.

RECREATIONAL GARDENS
& RESORTS The Government's
success in greening the harsh desert can be seen in Kuwait's
parks and road verges. Most public gardens have children's
play areas and there are several amusement parks dedicated to
the art of keeping children actively enthralled for hours at a
time.

Municipal
Gardens The Municipality maintains several well
designed public gardens, all with naturally shaded areas,
around Kuwait City.

Zoological Park Kuwait Zoo (tel: 473 3389) is open every
day except Saturdays from 8am to 8pm in winter, and from 8am
to 12 noon and 4pm to 8pm during summer. Located in Omariya on
the Airport Road, entrance is 250fils, infants
free.
Touristic Enterprises Company
(TEC) The Touristic Enterprises Company (TEC)
organises many of the major entertainment and recreational
facilities in Kuwait. It works in cooperation with local
companies in developing and maintaining leisure related
projects, such as beaches and sea clubs, recreational parks,
guest houses and resorts, and entertainment centres for
children. (tel: 5650111/5653771).

Recreational Parks Touristic Enterprises Company (TEC) has
two recreational parks, the South Sabahiya Garden (tel: 361
0472) in Ahmadi Governorate, and the Touristic Garden (tel:
434 5961 / 434 9283) in Jleeb Al-Shyoukh. Each has
amuse-ments, rides and other games for children and adults, as
well as snack bars, gift stalls and piped music. Both parks
have 'Roman' theatres for the presentation of entertainment on
weekends. Entry is 250 fils a person on ordinary days and 500
fils on evenings when shows are presented. There are also
several smaller parks, run by private enterprise, offering
amusements and games for children, located in different
areas. The privately owned Al-Shaab Leisure
Park (tel: 561 3777) is located next to TEC's offices on Gulf
Arabian Street. The Park has a variety of games and amusements
for young and old, including carousels, dodgems, bowling hall,
billiards, snooker and tennis, as well as a theatre and
cinema. All the amusements are linked by paths that meander
through gard-ens and around water fountains. There is a
restaurant block conta-ining branches of most fast food
outlets in Kuwait. Open daily from 4pm to midnight (from 10am
on weekends), entry is 500fils a head and games cost 250 to
750fils a go, though a full ticket may be purchased for
KD2/500.

The Green Island Managed by TEC, this artificial island is
near the Kuwait Water Towers. Linked to the main land by a
short walkway, the Green Island has an amphitheatre, two
restaurants, a viewing tower, a children's castle and
landscape of flowers and greenery. The entry charge of 250fils
a person provides a pleasant walk with some nice views of
Kuwait City.

ENTERTAINMENT
CITY Al-Madina Al-Tarfihiya
(the City of Entertainment) is located in Al-Doha, about 20
kilometers from the City. Run by TEC, the complex provides a
complete range of amusements based on themes from the 'Arab
World', the 'International World', and the 'Future World'. One
of the best amusement parks in the world, the entrance fee is
only KD3/500 per person, an all-in price which allows the
ticket holder to enjoy various rides and amusements without
paying anything extra. Timings: Summer Winter Sun
- Wed 4- 12pm 2:30-10:30pm Thur - Fri 4- 12pm 10am -
9pm Sat - Closed tel: 487 9545 / 487 9455

SHOWBIZ Showbiz (tel:
571 4094/5/7) is a permanently sited carnival with carousels,
dodgems, donkey and cart, pony and camel rides, etc, located
in Ras Salmiya. Open daily from 4pm to midnight (from 1pm on
weekends), entry is free but each amusement costs 500fils a
go, except for the large roller coaster (KD1) and a few other
main attractions.

TOURISTIC BUS The
Touristic Bus is an open top double-decker bus that runs from
Showbiz in Ras Salmiya along the coast to Shaab and back via
Salmiya and the Sultan centre. The half hour sight-seeing
round trip costs 250fils per person.

THE MUSICAL FOUNTAINS
Considered to be the fourth largest fountain in the world, the
Musical Fountains (tel 242 8394), next to the Ice Skating Rink
on the First Ring Road, provide a sight and sound show of
music and colourful 'dancing waters', every night during the
summer from 4pm to 11pm. Entry is 250 fils per person, but
subscriptions for week-end shows are 500fils per adult and
250fils per child.

RESORTS &
CHALETS Accommodation for the
week-end or longer can be rented in many places along the
southern part of the coast. Al-Khiran Resort
(tel: 395 1122) is a TEC facility about 120 kilometres south
of Kuwait City. The resort has nearly 200 chalets and studio
flats. Facilities include a yacht club and fully serviced
marina, swimming pools, playgrounds, sports and health
facilities, shops, a supermarket, coffee shops, and a 24-hour
business centre. Small chalets cost KD100 for a weekend and
KD202/500 a week. Regular chalets cost KD110 per weekend and
KD285 for a week.

The Scientific
Center A new addition to Kuwait's attractions,
The Scientific Center, was inaugurated on 17th April 2000.
Situated on Gulf Road in Salmiya, this new monument is a
symbol of cultural heritage projecting the advancement in
sciences. Conceived and financed by Kuwait Foundation for the
Advancement of Sciences (KFAS), it has the largest aquarium in
the Middle East, a class IMAX theatre, Dhow Harbour, Discovery
Place for children, a restaurant and a gift shop. (For further
details Tel: 848888, or visit their website at: http://www.tsck.org.kw)/
Other Palces of
Interest Other places of interest to see in
Kuwait encompass the moderately old and the almost brand
new.

Dhow Harbours & Building
Yards There are several dhow harbours along the
coast where traditional wooden boats, such as sanbooks
(medium-sized coastal traders), can be seen. There is a fairly
large dhow harbour between the Seif Palace and the fish
market, and another one just opposite the National Assembly.
These are working harbours and most of the boats are used for
fishing. Doha Village was once the centre of
boat building in Kuwait but the building yards were looted and
fortified by the Iraqis, and nowadays very few dhows are being
built except for some exquisite miniatures.

Al-Hashemi II The
world's largest wooden dhow, owned and built by Hussein
Marafie, Al-Hashemi II is a 'Baghalah'of monumental
proportions. 'Baghalah' was a large wooden cargo vessel which
sailed the seas in the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. Constructed next to the Radisson SAS Hotel, the
double-decked Al-Hashemi II is dry-docked next to a pre-oil
era Kuwaiti village and marine museum containing models of
extinct and modern dhows. The lower deck has the Grand
Ballroom, one of the finest in Kuwait.
Al-Hashemi II has earned the distinction of being listed in
the Guinness Book of World Records.

OLD
BUILDINGS There are several old
houses from the pre-oil era along the seif (waterfront) which
have been renovated and prese-rved, including the old British
Political Agency building opposite the Dhow harbour. In the
area just inland in Sharq there are some interesting broken
down old houses awaiting preservation. Bayt
Al-Badr, an old house located next to As-Sadu house, was built
between 1838 and 1848. It is a good example of the famous
front doors of old Kuwait and exhibitions of local handicrafts
are sometimes displayed there. There is a
replica of an old Kuwaiti town next to the Dhow harbour
opposite the National Assembly, which includes a play area for
children and is occasionally used for traditional cultural
events. Though it is a bit contrived, the replica does provide
a good idea of what a coastal Gulf village was like in the old
days. There are several ancient mosques in
Kuwait City which are still in use. The oldest is the
well-preserved Al-Khalifa Mosque, opposite the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs on Arabian Gulf Street, which was built in
1714CE (1126AH). Other 18th century mosques include Ibn
Khammes, Al-Nesif and Soud Mosques, and Al-Hamdan Mosque in
the Central Area. Al-Matabba (now Shamlan bin Ali bin Seif
Al-Roumi) Mosque and Ibn Bahar Mosque (opposite he Council of
Ministers) are from the 19th century.
OLD CITY WALL
GATES The wall around the old City
was demolished in 1957 but its five gates were left standing
as monuments to the past. These are Maqsab Gate (by the sea,
down from the Sheraton Hotel), Jahra Gate (inside the
roundabout at the bottom of Fahd Al-Salem Street), Shamiya
Gate (at the start of Riyadh Street), Beraisi Gate (at the end
of Mubarak Al-Kabeer Street), and Bneid Al-Qar Gate (in Bneid
Al-Qar), in the green belt between Soor (wall) Street and the
First Ring Road. The gates were destroyed by the Iraqi
invaders but have since been rebuilt.

BAYT LOTHAN A
wonderful cultural centre on the seif at Salmiya, Bayt Lothan
(tel: 575 5866 / 5877) was set up to preserve the culture of,
and develop skills in the creative arts and crafts of Kuwait
and the Gulf, and to promote fine arts and handicrafts both
locally and internationally. The Bayt's facilities include a
court yard for lectures and concerts, an exhibition hall, a
children's play centre, two tea rooms, a shop selling art
materials, books and gifts. The Bayt, a private non-profit
organization, offers basic training programmes in creating
jewellery, pottery, drawing, painting, mixed media,
photography, Arabic calligraphy, and music, and provides much
of the materials and equipment needed. All courses are
conducted by professionals and are open to both the indigenous
and expatriate communities. Bayt Lothan also organises and
sponsors art exhibitions, educational programmes and public
service campaigns.

SADU
HOUSE The 'House of Weaving',
located near the National Museum, is a fine example of a
pre-oil era house. It exhibits bedouin camel bags,
decorations, tent dividers, carpets and cushions and is open
in the mornings and from 5 to 7 pm, Saturdays to Thursdays.
Founded to preserve the art of Sadu, Bedouin women can be seen
weaving inside. Sadu House (tel: 243 2395) organizes weaving
lessons. The Kuwait Textile Association (President: Fadela
Bird tel: 5624517) holds seminars, lectures and demonstrations
under the auspices of Sadu House. (Website: http://www.sadu-house.com)/

MUSEUMS The
National Museum (tel 245 1195 / 245 6534 fax 240 4862),
near the National Assembly, comprised four buildings and a
planetarium. It once housed the Dar Al-Athar al-Islamiyah, the
As-Sabah collection of Islamic Art, one of the most
comprehensive in the world. Other buildings housed pearl
diving relics, ethnographical artefacts and archaeological
material from excavations on Faylaka Island. Looted and burned
by the Iraqi invaders the museum is now restored and some
exhibits are again open to the public including parts of the
Dar Al-Athar al-Islamiyah collection, ninety percent of which
has been returned from Iraq. In 1997, Muhallab II, the
replacement for (and replica of) the magnificent trading dhow
from the 1930s that graced the front yard of the museum before
it was burned by the Iraqis, was constructed on site and is
now open to visitors. The Educational
Science Museum (tel 242 1268 / 244 8320-1 / 244 1791-2) is
on Abdullah Mubarak Street. It contains displays of the
petroleum industry, natural history, aviation, machinery,
electronics, space and zoology subjects, as well as a health
hall and a planetarium. The museum is open from 9:00am to noon
and from 4:30 to 7:30pm everyday except Thursdays and Fridays.
Entrance fees are 150fils per adult and 100fils per
child. The Taraq Rajab Museum (tel 531 7358 / 531 8060) is
a private museum, located in a villa in Jabriya (area 12),
that specialises in Islamic arts and crafts. A large
collection of ethnic and Islamic gold and silver jewellery,
manuscripts, metalworks, textiles, embroideries and costumes,
ceramics and musical instruments, can be viewed every weekday
from 9am to noon and 4 to 8pm every day except Friday
afternoons. The new KOC Display Centre is an
ultra-modern audio-visual museum of Kuwait's oil industry,
past and present. It is open to the public by appointment
(tel: 398 2393).

LIBERATION
MONUMENTS There are several monuments to the
Iraqi occupation and Allied liberation of Kuwait here and
there, all conceived in a discrete understated
style. Al-Qurain House (tel 543 0343) was the
site of a bloody battle between the Messilah Resistance Group
and the Iraqi occupiers. Situated in the new Qurain housing
area on road 208 between the Fahaheel and Magreb Expressways,
the house is now a museum and monument to the martyrs of
Kuwait.

MODERN ARCHITECTURE A stroll
around Kuwait City or its suburbs is well worth the while for
persons interested in modern buildings. The
Kuwait Water Towers (tel 244 4021) are situated on Arabian
Gulf Street on a promontory to the east of the centre of the
city in Dasman. The Towers are the country's most famous
landmark. The uppermost sphere of the largest tower (187
metres high) has a revolving observation area (one full turn
every half hour) and a restaurant, with access by high speed
lift. Entrance is 500fils per person but is free if lunch or
dinner has been reserved. Cameras with zoom lens are
forbidden. The other two spheres in the towers are water
tanks, containing about 4.5 million gallons of water
each. The Liberation Tower, with a
height of 372 meters, is the fifth tallest communication tower
in the world. Construction started in April 1987 but had to
stop due to Iraqi Invasion in August 1990 and resumed in 1993.
Covering an area of 21,000 square meters, it includes a hall
to serve the public 24 hours a day and the new main building
has administrative and technical offices and the Liberation
Tower. The eighteen meter under ground foundation holds three
basements. The tower has a revolving restaurant and the
vertical cavities in the tower body contain two elevators
which provide panoramic view of the city as they climb to the
revolving restaurant and the viewing balcony.
There are many fine examples of modern mosque architecture in
Kuwait. These include the pyramid shaped mosque in Ras Salmiya
and the Fatima Mosque in Abdullah Al-Salem. The Grand Mosque
(tel 241 8448/7 to arrange guided tours), opposite the Seif
Palace, combines several traditional Islamic styles using
modern technology while retaining the local characteristics of
Kuwait as well as preserving the Islamic tradition of
calligraphy. The three-storeyed Islamic Medicine Mosque,
attached to the Centre for Islamic Medicine in the Al-Sabah
Hospital Area, is a masterpiece of Islamic style and
calligraphy.

AROUND &
ABOUT There are several areas in the country
of interest to nature lovers. Near Sulaibi-khat, for example,
there are mudflats where various species of marine and
terrestrial animals can be seen, as well as (occasionally)
flamingoes. Jahra Town was once a small
flourishing garden settlement, with a strategic importance
because it was on the intersection of three major caravan (and
invasion) routes. The ancient Qasr Al-Ahmar (Red Fort), famous
for several historic battles, is open during the morning and
is well worth a visit. Driving in Jahra is a unique
experience. Ahmadi, Kuwait's oil town, lies
about 40km south of the City. It is attractively laid out in
tree-lined avenues fringed by small houses with well-tended
gardens, which gives the place a park-like
appearance. Wafra, in the deep south, is the
main centre for farming in Kuwait. The area has about 1,000
farms and the town has a vast vegetable market for local
produce which is patronised by buyers from Kuwait City, who
descend on the place in droves during the weekend.

THE MOVIES There
are 15 cinemas run by the Kuwait National Cinema Company (tel:
5396091). Seating areas for families and single men are
segregated, and women do not usually go to the cinema alone.
Arabic, Indian, Chinese and international films are shown.
Prices range from KD1/500 to 3/- a head. Tel 5387300/400 for
locations and timings. Automated 24-hour telephone service for
movies schedule 803456.

New Cinema
Entertainment Center KNCC has plans to construct a
unique multiplex cinema entertainment center at the current
location of Drive-in cinema on the 6th ring road with 10
screens. The center will also have restaurants, bowling alley,
games arcade, prayer rooms, internet cafe and extensive
shopping centre.

SCIENCE
& CULTURAL ARTS The cerebrally
orientated will find that Kuwait is a hive of intellectual
activity.

The Sciences The sciences are
actively encouraged. The Kuwait Fund for the Advancement of
Science receives a compulsory donation from the annual profits
of public companies which it uses to fund scientific
research. Membership of The Science Club on
the 6th Ring Road is open to all nationalities. Managed by a
group of enthusiastic amateurs, the Club's amazing range of
facilities and the latest in scientific hardware includes
Al-Aujairy Observatory. Its aims are to create an informal
environment in which people of all ages, from pre-teens to
grandparents, can develop their scientific hobbies.
Contact: tel 5396561/2 fax 5392549 e-mail: kscintr@hotmail.com.

ART & ARTISTS The
government actively encourages the development of artistic
talents in Kuwait and provides funding for developing artists
to study abroad. The Free Atelier, founded in
1960, to provide technical help and professional instruction
for students, and its full-time artists have their studios on
the premises near the British Embassy in Arabian Gulf Street.
Visitors are welcome between 8:00am and 2:00pm every day
except Thursdays and Fridays. There are
several commercial art galleries, notably in Salhiya Complex
and in Salmiya.

VISITING
DIWANIYAHS Male expatriates,
are often invited to the diwaniyahs of their Kuwaiti friends.
These are excellent opportunities for making good business
contacts. Indeed, a pleasant evening may be spent going from
one diwaniyah to another. These diwaniyahs range from large
formal gatherings used as public meeting places and platforms
by well known Kuwaitis down to small private diwaniyahs where
a club atmosphere reigns. In the formal
diwaniyahs seating is usually provided. If not, sitting
cross-legged on the floor becomes comfortable in time. Tea and
other beverages, and small snacks are served.

OTHER CLUBS &
SOCIETIES Kuwait has many clubs and
societies catering to a wide range of social interests. The
Kuwait Transplant Society carries out public awareness
campaigns to encourage the public to donate their organs. The
society also encourages re-search and, in cooperation with
Arab and international organisations, organises seminars and
conferences. (tel: 2520230/0147, fax:
2560751). The Social Reform Society was
established in 1963 with the aim of providing moral guidelines
for the country's youth. It does so by contributing to the
debate on educa-tional policies and by encouraging charitable
works through the organisation of social activities for all
sectors of society. (tel: 2514180, fax:
2560523). Bayader Al-Salem Society - Women
aims to achieve social, educational, cultural and religious
objectives in practical ways, such as by organising lectures
and seminars to improve the cultural awareness of women, by
establishing model nurseries, by organising educational
courses in household management and other topics, and by
founding kindergartens and schools. (tel: 2514501/8, fax:
2514528).

SPORTS
ACTIVITIES Kuwait has an
abundance of sports and leisure facilities and there are
facilities for playing all major field, track and indoor
sports, such as tennis, handball, basketball, volleyball,
athletics, gymnastics, squash, table tennis, etc. Despite its
small size the country has four world-class stadiums. Each has
a capacity for about 25,000 spectators and can host
international field and track events by day or night.
Football, with more than 120 football pitches in sporting
clubs and schools, is by far the most popular sport in Kuwait,
followed by basketball.

SPORTS FEDERATIONS & THE KUWAIT OLYMPIC
COMMITTEE The Ministry of Social
Affairs & Labour provides generous funding for organised
sports activities through the Public Authority for Youth and
Sports. Sports activities are organised into federations which
are supervised by the Kuwait Olympics Committee. The sports
federations and the Kuwait Olypmic Committee are located in
Hawalli (tel: 263 7904). The Kuwait Olympic
Committee, which is recognised by the International Olympic
Committee and is a member of the Asian Games Federation,
organises Kuwait's participation in international events.
Kuwait first took part in the Olympics in Mexico City in 1968
and Kuwait won the Olympic gold medal, in Moscow in 1980.
Indeed in the last twentyfive years Kuwait has had outstanding
success in international soccer, equestrianism, swimming and
athletics, much of which can be attributed to the
encouragement of HH the Amir, generous state support, the
enthusiasm of fans and the media and, above all, to the
guidance and organisational genius of Sk. Fahd Al-Ahmad
Al-Sabah who was first elected chairman of the Kuwait Olympic
Committee in 1974. Sadly, Sk. Fahd died valiantly in defence
of his home on the 2nd August, 1990. The current chairman of
the Olympic Committee is Sk. Ahmed Fahd Al-Ahmed, a worthy
successor to his father.

ICE-SKATING TEC's Ice
Skating Rink (tel: 241 1151-3 ) is just off the 1st Ring Road
at Shamiya Gate. It has an Olympic size skating floor as well
as a smaller rink. The small rink is often reserved for women
and children, and it may be rented for private and corporate
parties. Training is available and there are equipment rental
shops (which also sell skating clothes and equipment) and a
small cafe. Hours are 8:30am to 10:00pm every day except
Saturday. Entry 500 fils and scating costs KD1/500 per head
(including rental of shoes). Kuwait Skating
School offers a variety of reasonably-priced courses from
beginners to advanced for children and adults. Contact:
Gilda Karam mbl: 9058996

SWIMMING The
beaches are safe, though sea urchins and stone fish may be
encountered. Sea snakes are sometimes seen but they are not
aggressive. Jelly fish may annoy at times. Shark attacks are
virtually unknown. However there are strong currents along
parts of the coast, so bathing at the popular beaches and
clubs is safest.

Swimming Pools &
Sea-Clubs Women and families may prefer to go to
the facilities operated by TEC, all of which have supervised
bathing, swimming pools, cafeterias, shaded areas with tables,
showers and changing rooms, gardens and play areas for
children, though moderate entry fees are
charged. The Swimming Complex (tel: 562 2600)
in Shaab on Arabian Gulf Street contains an Olympic-size pool
and a diving pool for youth and adult use only. There is a
family section with a beginners' pool and two pools for the
under-fives. The complex also has a swimming school and
cafeteria as well as a billiards and snooker
hall. The Aqua-Park (tel: 243 1960-3) is
beside Kuwait Towers. Its main attractions are the water slide
and artificial wave pools. There are also kids pools, as well
as restaurants. TEC runs three sea clubs, Shaab Sea Club
(tel: 564 1953), Ras al-Ardh (tel: 574 0977) in Ras Salmiyah,
and Fahaheel Marine Club (tel: 372 4073). The clubs have
swimming pools, and basketball, volleyball and tennis courts,
and amusement halls. Shaab and Ras al-Ardh have bowling
alleys, fitness centres, a sauna, a swimming school, and
amusement halls. Shaab also has a karate gym, while Ras
al-Ardh has table tennis. All three clubs have gardens, each
with a theatre and cafeteria. Ras al-Ardh has a billiards hall
and a ball room, while Shaab caters to nautical members with a
200-berth anchorage for boats (maximum 15-foot) and related
services. TEC operates three beaches, Messilah
Beach (tel: 5650642) just off the Fahaheel Expressway and
Oqeilah near Fintas(tel: 3900583), and Fahaheel (tel:
3719496), where bathers are supervised by trained life-guards.
These beaches have cafeterias and open theatres. Messilah also
has a swimming pool for adults and two for children, as well
as children's entertainment such as a spider's web climbing
pole and a train.

WATER SPORTS Sports
such as boating, wind-surfing and jet skiing may be enjoyed
off most beaches. Police regulations prevent speed-boats and
jet-skis from entering areas used for swimming.

Fishing There are
fish of every conceivable shape and size in the waters off
Kuwait, just there for the taking, including six different
sorts of shark, two types of barracuda, stinging and
non-stinging ray fish, four sorts of mackerel and tuna, and an
array of soles, breams, snappers, rock and cat fish,
flounders, cobias, puffers and needlefish.
Fishing can be done from the beaches using sophisticated long
casting rods, from prominent rocks and the ends of piers using
simple poles, lines and hooks or wire baskets to catch fry,
from the water off the beaches using nets held by several
persons, from boats using trawls and multi-hooked lines.
Tackle, from the simple to the ultra-sophisticated, is
available (see Boats & Yachts in the KPG Business
Directory), though many of the most successful fishers seem to
use rather crude looking home-made equipment. The fishing
boats can be hired either from dhow harbours or private
companies operating in TEC's sea clubs.

Yachting Kuwait is a
sailor's paradise. Off-shore there is nearly always a moderate
breeze and it is not often that sailors are becalmed or driven
to land by rough seas. Boats range from small sailing dinghies
to large yachts. The Yachting Club, on Arabian
Gulf Street next to Shaab Sea Club, has a marina with 390
fully-serviced berths for craft with a minimum length of 25
feet. The club has a marine survey centre and also runs the
nearby Shaab Anchorage where it costs KD1 a day to moor a
small boat. The Yatching Club organises an annual regatta and
speed boat championships. The Kuwait Offshore Sailing
Association (KOSA) is a registered Royal Yachting Association
shore-training centre and offers internationally recognised
shore-based theory courses. KOSA, which has about 50 members
and ten boats (24 to 40 foot), runs three racing series in
Kuwait each season (September to June) under international
offshore racing regulations and also takes part in
international races. Meetings are held on the first Monday of
the month at 7:30pm in the Messila Beach Hotel. Sailing and
racing takes place on weekends from TEC's marina at
Shaab. There is a Catamaran Club centred on
the Messilah Beach Hotel for Hobie (16-footers) and Dart
(18-footers) which meets once a month at the home of one of
its members. All the boats are privately owned. Members
welcome visitors on Thursday afternoons and Fridays and,
though there are no formal training courses, newcomers will
find that members are happy to demonstrate their
craft.

Scuba
Diving Despite increasing pollution from the
Shatt al-Arab, the seas off Kuwait are comparatively clear,
and scuba diving is popular. The best locations are off-shore
around Qit'at (Donkey's Reef), Umm al-Maradim and Qaruh
islands in the south and so most trips leave from Fahaheel or
the Khiran Resort area. There are several
diving schools offering training courses, from complete
beginners to assistant instructors, conducted by instructors
with internationally recognised certification. Equipment can
be hired from diving centres and commercial establishments,
which also organise diving trips on weekends and public
holidays. Diving trips are about KD15 a person per day and
full cylinders can be hired for KD2 each.

Pearl Diving To
preserve Kuwait's pre-oil heritage, pearl diving using
traditional boats and equipment is being revived under the
auspices of HH the Crown Prince. The boats are prepared in
April, training in diving techniques takes place in June and
July, and there are diving competitions in late
August.

HIRING &
BUYING BOATS & EQUIPMENT
Taking a boat trip to one of the islands, such as Failaka, can
make for a pleasant day out, with swimming and picnicing on
fish caught by trawl or line along the way. A dhow can be
hired for a few hundred dinar a day, including crew and all
running costs, which is ideal for a small office outing or for
several families clubbing together. Enquire at any dhow
harbour. KPTC (tel: 5742664) runs ferry trips from Ras
Salmiya to Failaka Island every day. The return journey costs
KD2/500 per person, cars with driver KD 20 and box cars KD 25.
The time schedules are different for every day and monthly
schedules are available from KPTC. A trip by dhow to Umm
al-Maradim Island for 30 people from Khiran Resort (tel:
3951122) costs KD100 for 12 hours. Boats may
also be hired at the sea clubs. One holding 14 persons rents
for KD25 an hour. A 45-minute sea trip in a large boat usually
costs KD2 a head or KD1 in a small boat. But at the Yacht Club
a 74-footer holding up to 35 persons can be rented for KD250
for the day. Parasailing is available from
some of the sea clubs. Jet skis may be hired from private
traders on the beaches for KD10 an hour; the owner usually
insists on holding the customer's civil ID to ensure the safe
return of the equipment. For long-term
enjoyment it is more economical to buy. Most international
brands of marine equipment are on sale (see KPG Brands &
Agents Directory), though locally made boats are also
available (KD1,150 upwards for a fibreglass pleasure-fishing
boat). Gear for speed boating, windsurfing, jet skiing, water
skiing, yachting and scuba diving can be bought from the
dealers shown under Boats & Yachts in the KPG Business
Directory.

THE CUISINES
OF KUWAIT The polyethnic
diversity of the population is the reason that a vast range of
foodstuffs is available in Kuwait. The staples of the Arabian,
Western, Indian and Far Eastern diets are sold in the
supermarkets. Up-market speciality shops offer haute nouriture
from Lebanon and Europe. Small groceries supply the soul foods
of Arabia and the Eastern Mediterranean, Pakistan,
Baluchistan, India, Sri Lanka, Korea, the Philippines, and
Thailand --- everything from fragrant rice to fermented fish.
This phenomenal choice is reflected on private dinner tables
and in Kuwait's innumerable restaurants. Kuwait is a food
lover's paradise. Home cooking and partying
play an important part in the social life of expatriates. This
may be due to the emphasis on family life and the conservative
nature of evening entertainment in Kuwait. But the culinary
emphasis also arises from the abundance of freshly caught
seafood and fresh vegetables and fruit available every day in
the local markets.

EATING OUT Kuwait is
rumoured to have more restaurants per resident than any other
country in the world. Without a doubt there is choice enough
to suit every taste and pocket.

Hotels Restaurants
The restaurants found in Kuwait's major hotels range from
coffee-shops to exclusive dining rooms where international
haute cuisine is served. Compared to Europe, America and
Japan, prices are reasonable. Every hotel has
a buffet where for a fixed price guests may gorge themselves
without limit. These serve a variety of hot and cold foods and
though the cooking is not exclusively Arabic, they do offer
excellent introductions to Kuwaiti cuisine. Prices range from
less than KD5 to 15 a head at most, which is cheap considering
the quantity, quality and variety of food. In
addition to Arabic and 'intern-ational' cuisine, many hotel
restaurants have 'theme nights', such as Italian, Japanese,
Western, etc, when they offer foods and ambience based on
national cuisines from the East or the West.

Other
Restaurants Outside the hotels there are
hundreds of restaurants where substantial meals can be enjoyed
at very reasonable prices. Those that specialise in particular
national cuisines, such as Arabic, Persian, Indian, Chinese,
Philippino and Italian, seem to enjoy better culinary success
than the few that serve a mix of styles in an attempt to
satisfy all tastes. Possibly because of its
relative blandness, Continental and American cuisine is mainly
found in the larger hotels. Yet there are several Italian and
other European restaurants in Kuwait City and down the
coast.

Small Restaurants, Take-aways &
Casual Dining Every street in Kuwait has several
small sandwich shops with a few seats and a mainly take-away
clientele. Most sell Arabic snack foods, such as sh'wermas,
samboosas, and falafel, and a filling collation may be enjoyed
for less than half a dinar. Most of the Arab, Indian, Persian,
and Chinese restaurants, even the larger ones, provide a
take-away service. The apex of local
restaurants are the kebab houses selling kebabs, shish kebabs,
hummus, juices, samadi (a mix of ice creams, fruits and
juices) and other triumphs of Arabic casual dining. These are
mainly found in residential areas. A full meal costs KD1/250 a
head at most, and foil and plastic wrapped deliveries to
nearby flats and residences at no extra charge are
usual. For those with unadventurous palates,
the homogenous burger of American casual dining experience is
available most everywhere, along with the usual range of pizza
parlours. Though they tend to be concentrated in the City and
the shopping areas such as Salmiyah and along the Seif (Gulf
Road), outlets for international chains such as McDonalds,
Burger King, Wendy's, Wimpy's, Hardees, Kentucky Fried
Chicken, Pizza Express, Pizza Hut, Pizza Italia, etc, are
found just about everywhere in Kuwait. Of more interest to the
discerning is the growth in recent years of local chains of
casual dining outlets, such as Bint Al-Deek, Naif Chicken,
which serve a creative mix of international and Arabic casual
dining foods using mostly home-reared animals and fresh
produce.

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