Liwa Date Festival 2017: After five years of second best at the Liwa Date Festival, Rashed Abdulla could now say he is the number one. All photos by Christopher Pike / The National
Rashed won with a 106kg branch of dates that hangs in pride of place at the festival.
Taking place at the fringe of the Empty Quarter, an estimated 2,500 farmers descend each year on the remote oasis town to compete for over Dh6 million in prizes
Al Dhabbas dates at the festival.
No less than 60,000 dates in six varieties are expected to be presented for the judges each year to inspect.
Rashed Abdullah, winner of the largest date branch for the Liwa Date Festival in 2017, at his farm. The winning branch weighed in at 106.5kg.
The festival will this year run until July 27, and is open to the public daily from 4pm until 10pm.
Ali Al Mehri at his nephew's farm in 2017.
A single palm is worth its weight in gold.
One kilogram of dates sells for an average of Dh30.
Since the age of twenty, Abdullah has been studying from his uncle Ali, 70. Ali was raised in a time when the palm was the difference between life and death: its branches were used for shelter, its fruit provided food.
Abdullah at his farm in the Al Dhafra region.
Liwa Date Festival 2017: After five years of second best at the Liwa Date Festival, Rashed Abdulla could now say he is the number one. All photos by Christopher Pike / The National
Rashed won with a 106kg branch of dates that hangs in pride of place at the festival.
Taking place at the fringe of the Empty Quarter, an estimated 2,500 farmers descend each year on the remote oasis town to compete for over Dh6 million in prizes
Al Dhabbas dates at the festival.
No less than 60,000 dates in six varieties are expected to be presented for the judges each year to inspect.
Rashed Abdullah, winner of the largest date branch for the Liwa Date Festival in 2017, at his farm. The winning branch weighed in at 106.5kg.
The festival will this year run until July 27, and is open to the public daily from 4pm until 10pm.
Ali Al Mehri at his nephew's farm in 2017.
A single palm is worth its weight in gold.
One kilogram of dates sells for an average of Dh30.
Since the age of twenty, Abdullah has been studying from his uncle Ali, 70. Ali was raised in a time when the palm was the difference between life and death: its branches were used for shelter, its fruit provided food.