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Al Ain Cement Factory, amid hills of the western ridge of Jebel Hafeet. Al Ain is an important services centre for a wide area extending into Oman. There are three major shopping centres, [29] Al Ain Mall, Al Jimi Mall, Al Hili Mall and Al Bawadi Mall (opened in 2009 in Al Khrair area) as well as traditional souqs for fruit and vegetables and ...
Ras al-Khaimah produces most of the country's vegetables. [1] In addition to dates, the major fruit crops are citrus and mangoes. [1] A vegetable canning facility in Al Ain has a processing capacity of 120 tons per day. [1] Poultry farms provided 70 percent of local requirements for eggs and 45 percent of poultry meat needed in 1989. [1]
Drive to Al Ain city through Dubai – Al Ain road. Pass through Al-Hayer area and continue on the high way until you reach Al Ain Dairy Farms which will be on the right. Turn left at the next exit and continue straight on and follow the signs to UAE University and Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium.
Al Dahra Agricultural Company (Arabic: شركة الظاهرة الزراعية) is an agribusiness firm specializing in the cultivation, production, and trading of animal feed and human food commodities such as rice, flour, fruits and vegetables. The group owns and operates a land bank of 200 thousand acres, 8 forage pressing and production ...
Umm Nahad is a collection of four communities (Numbers: 911, 912, 913 and 914) located 30 km south of Dubai, adjacent to Dubai-Al Ain Highway. [1] As of 2018, the combined population of all four communities of Umm Nahad was 2,343.
The township, located off the Dubai/Al Ain Highway , is home to the Al Marmoom Camel Racing Track and contains a large number of camel farms, breeding centres and municipal veterinary services, including the Dubai Camel Market, home to over 130 shops in a sprawl of over 32 buildings. [2]
Qattara Oasis (Arabic: وَاحَـة الْـقَـطَّـارَة, romanized: Wāḥat al-Qaṭṭārah) is an area of irrigated date farm in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates featuring a distinctive falaj (Arabic: فَـلَـج) irrigation system as well as a late Bronze Age archaeological site dated to 1800–1500 BCE. [1]
Al-'Ankah Fort in the village of Remah, between the cities of Al-Ain and Abu Dhabi. The city of Al-Ain, part of a historical region which also includes the adjacent Omani town of Al-Buraimi, [9] is noted for its forts, oases, aflāj (underground water channels), and archaeological sites such as those of Hili and Rumailah.