Page 205 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 205

Chapter Five

               their salaries was used for repairs on the falaj. In the Buraimi oasis,
               for instance, a masha of two Rupees for three hours in the  summer
               and one Rupee in the winter was paid by the owners of date gardens
               in MuTirid, al Qattarah, JImi and Hfli, until the municipality look
               over the maintenance of all o/7nj in the territory of the oasis controlled
               by Abu Dhabi.20 The work of 'cm/ required not only a conscientious
               person but also someone who could determine very accurately when
               to divert the flow from one channel to another, using a sundial by day
               and the movement of the stars by night.30
                 Some date gardens in the wadis and in the vicinity of the
               mountains are irrigated exclusively from wells, but in general a well
               in a date garden is used to supplement the supply of water during the
               periods between falaj irrigation. Oxen were usually used to draw
               water from these wells but in some cases even agricultural well-
               water was hoisted manually.
                 In /a/o/-irrigated gardens a few other fruit trees grew among the
              date palms. Citrus trees, (oranges, lemons and limes) were the most
              common; but mangoes, figs, mulberries, bananas, and pomegranates
              seemed to do well in among the date trees; grapes were sometimes
              grown over vertical trellises. Underneath the trees the soil produced
              some seasonal crops, the most important of which was lucerne,
              producing several crops per year and, if irrigated every three to five
              days, continuing to grow through the summer. Water-melons, sweet
              potatoes, beans, garlic and onions used to be the only other crops
              obtained from the date gardens until the introduction of other
              vegetables to the daily diet induced the oasis farmers to plant
              tomatoes, carrots, cucumbers and other vegetables during the winter
              months. Pulse, cotton, wheat and barley grown in the spring and
              juwari and millet sown in autumn were the principal crops obtained
              from fields outside the date gardens.31 This description is applicable
              throughout the oases of the Trucial States, regardless of whether
              they are situated on the coastal plains or in the interior.

              Desert gardens
              The date gardens in the LTwa and in other locations in the desert
              grew  without falaj irrigation and with little irrigation from wells.
              There only the newly-planted date palms were watered regularly,
              usually by the owner carrying bags full of water from the well to the
              plant. The roots of date trees raised without irrigation tend to grow
              vertically rather than spreading laterally. They soon reach the water
              table, which is not very far down in the Liwa hollows and various

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