Page 210 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 210

The Traditional Economics

          The diver sped his descent by attaching a heavy stone to his foot,
        which was pulled up on a rope by the attendant soib as soon as the
        diver reached the bottom. With his nose plugged by a peg made of
        bone (fatam) his ears protected with wax and his fingers capped with
        leather tips he would quickly gather shells into a basket (diyyln)
        which he carried attached to his waist. When he could no longer hold
        his breath he gave a tug on the rope tied to his belt and the saib
        hauled him up as fast as possible. The contents of the diyyln were
        taken aboard, while the diver rested in the water holding on to a rope,
        and after a few minutes he descended again. The accumulated heap
        of oysters was opened in the very early morning under the
        supervision of the nukhacla, who immediately registered in a book
        any particularly good pearl which might be sold individually, and
        he weighed and registered at intervals the collection of smaller
        pearls.
          All the boats belonging to the same port under the authority of one
        shaikh departed to the pearl banks as one fleet. One of the
        nawakhidah was formally appointed leader of the fleet; he co­
        ordinated mutual assistance if a boat was in trouble, and he decided
        upon a date for the return of the entire fleet; no boat was allowed to
        return before all the others were ready to set sail for home. If someone
        was taken ill he was sent to Dalma Island or to the nearest port on
        one of the small craft used by the visiting pearl dealers.
          The diving season lasted for about 120 days, from early June to the
        end of September. During that time most boats returned only for one
        or two brief visits to their home ports but would put in a number of
        times at Dalma, where drinking water was available free of charge to
        all pearling boats and where supplies of rice, dates, coffee and
         tobacco could be bought in a seasonal suq. Apart from this ghaus al
         kablr, many boats used to put to sea earlier for a forty-day period
         called ghaus al barid, the cold dive, because the waters of the Gulf
         were still cold. The exact date of the beginning and the end of each
         season was not the same each year, especially if the fasting month of
         Ramadan, when diving is not permitted, occurred during the summer
         months.39 Each shaikhdom set different dates for the departure to
         and the return from the pearl banks.
           In certain places, for instance, in the far west of Abu Dhabi, pearls
         were obtained by wading (mujannah), and during the winter all
         along the coast people would search for oysters in the shallow
         waters.

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