Page 353 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 353
314 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [CH.
The general state of the atmosphere will be
best exhibited by a reference to the abstract
of the Meteorological Register which is sub
joined. Rain falls from October to March,
but rarely more than three or four days in
each month, when the storms, though heavy,
are partial. The lofty summits of the Jebel
Akhdar arrest the clouds in their progress,
and copious showers give rise to numerous
streams, which flow down and cross the plains
on either side the chain. Snow and ice in
the winter months in those regions are not
unknown, and in that of March hail-storms
frequently pass over the plains below. The
dews at night are singularly copious, leaving
upon the trees and surface of the ground the
same effects as would be produced by smart
rain. On the Desert the atmosphere is usu
ally clear and cloudless, and in the day the
sky is of the deepest blue. At night the stars
shine forthwith a brilliancy unknown in other
climes. The cold at that season, as in all other
sandy tracts, is proportionate to the heat of
the day; but fevers appear to be unknown
there; and the Bedowin who sleeps in the
sand receives additional vigour and vivacity