There is an old expat quip that Dubai has only “two seasons – hot and very hot” (though a stronger adjective is often used) but this is clearly nonsense. The GulfThere is an old expat quip that Dubai has only “two seasons – hot and very hot” (though a stronger adjective is often used) but this is clearly nonsense. The Gulf

Dubai in the time of scorpions

2026/02/27 17:51
5 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

There is an old expat quip that Dubai has only “two seasons – hot and very hot” (though a stronger adjective is often used) but this is clearly nonsense. The Gulf desert climate, it turns out, is far more subtle.

The past few weeks proved this: dramatic fog at dawn – skyscrapers dissolving into milk-white air – dispersing into gloriously warm days with cool breezes, followed by evenings that carry an unexpected, stinging chill.

Local media weather reports say we are on the cusp of Gulf winter and spring. They also tell us, more evocatively, that we are in the “time of scorpions”.

I love the way the local papers do this. Gulf News and Khaleej Times are especially florid in their weather reporting, but they are only passing on the rich vocabulary of Arabic meteorology. 

I’m a sucker for this kind of extravagant phrasing. There is a moment in David Lean’s movie Lawrence of Arabia that has stayed with me for decades. Omar Sharif’s Sherif Ali, robed and inscrutable, explains to Captain Lawrence that the camel party is about to cross a desert known to the Arabs as “the sun’s anvil”.

The name lands with a metallic finality. It conveys not just heat but ordeal – a landscape hammered flat by the sky itself. Long before I ever set foot in Arabia, that phrase fixed in my mind the idea that here, weather and terrain were not merely experiences but named and given character.

Living in the Gulf has confirmed that. It turns out that Arabic, and the Arab cultures shaped by desert and sea, possess a remarkably flexible lexicon for the phases and moods of climate.

Instead of the broad seasonal blocks familiar to Europeans – spring, summer, autumn, winter – there is a more granular calendar of experiential weather: cold that bites, winds that scour, rains that mark the land. 

We are in one of those named passages now. Gulf News reported recently that we are in “al aqarib” – the time of scorpions. Traditionally spanning late winter into early spring, it is so called because the cold it brings is said to sting like a scorpion: sudden and deceptive after the apparent easing of winter.

It is not the only evocative period in the old Arabian climatological year. Deep winter is “al shabat” – the harshest cold of the desert season, when wind and dryness combine to produce a penetrating chill unfamiliar to those who imagine Arabia as uniformly warm.

Late winter can bring “bard al ajuz” – literally “the old woman’s cold” – a final, sharp snap of wind and temperature that folklore says caught an elderly shepherdess unprepared.

Spring’s season of brief but violent thunderstorms are “al saraya” – fast-moving tempests that sweep the peninsula. High summer’s heat is “al qayz” – the sweltering oppression of high temperatures and humidity.

And the longed-for easing of that heat arrives with “suhail”, the rising of the star Canopus in late August, which for centuries signalled the turning of the season and the end of pearl diving.

Even rainfall carries symbolic naming. Autumn’s first showers are “al wasam”, the “marking rains” that leave visible traces of greening across the desert.

Sometimes, even the Arabs are lost for words. When the UAE experienced the extraordinary deluge of April 2024 – a meteorological event of unusual intensity rather than a named seasonal phase – local reporting fell back on “al amtar al ghazira”, meaning just “torrential rains”.

I remember it as “the time of Rolls-Royces floating down Sheikh Zayed Road”. How would you say that in Arabic? 

Further reading:

  • Incident on Marina Walk: how Dubai responds to crime
  • Olena Shyrokova: ‘I feel strong support for Ukraine in the UAE’
  • Dubai awards $680m stormwater drainage contracts

Weather reporting in the Gulf often reads less like meteorology and more like storytelling: a mix between satellite forecasting and Bedouin sky-watching.

That is not accidental. A bit of research (thanks, ChatGPT) informs me that much of the Arabian weather lexicon derives from the ancient system of “an-anwa”, a pre-modern calendar linking seasonal change to the rising of specific stars.

Nomadic and maritime survival required precise knowledge of cold phases, winds, grazing conditions and rain timing. Over centuries, observation, oral transmission and early Islamic scholarship combined into a vernacular climatology of striking sophistication.

Medieval Arab scholars wrote about atmospheric phenomena, but the naming of seasons belonged first to herders, farmers and sailors and was linked to their everyday economic activity.

The contrast with Western seasonal language is striking. Europe settled on four neat astronomical divisions: equinox to solstice, solstice to equinox – orderly and scientific.

Arabia, by contrast, named weather as lived experience. Where Europe had plain “winter”, the desert had scorpions and old women and marking rains.

Frank Kane is Editor-at-Large of AGBI and an award-winning business journalist. He acts as a consultant to the Ministry of Energy of Saudi Arabia

Read more from Frank Kane
  • DP World shows Dubai’s ruthless instinct for self-preservation
  • Ramadan in Dubai – the lunar calendar meets the global economy
  • What if Saudi Arabia had stuck to the original Vision 2030 plan?
Market Opportunity
FAR Labs Logo
FAR Labs Price(FAR)
$0.002313
$0.002313$0.002313
-0.43%
USD
FAR Labs (FAR) Live Price Chart

World Cup Combo: Aim for 200x

World Cup Combo: Aim for 200xWorld Cup Combo: Aim for 200x

Combine up to 20 World Cup matches in one order

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Metaplanet buys 5,075 Bitcoin in Q1 to become 3rd-largest treasury

Metaplanet buys 5,075 Bitcoin in Q1 to become 3rd-largest treasury

Metaplanet lifted its Bitcoin holdings to 40,177 in Q1 after buying over $400 million of BTC to become the third-largest BTC treasury.
Share
Coin Telegraph2026/04/02 18:04
Adoption Leads Traders to Snorter Token

Adoption Leads Traders to Snorter Token

The post Adoption Leads Traders to Snorter Token appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Largest Bank in Spain Launches Crypto Service: Adoption Leads Traders to Snorter Token Sign Up for Our Newsletter! For updates and exclusive offers enter your email. Leah is a British journalist with a BA in Journalism, Media, and Communications and nearly a decade of content writing experience. Over the last four years, her focus has primarily been on Web3 technologies, driven by her genuine enthusiasm for decentralization and the latest technological advancements. She has contributed to leading crypto and NFT publications – Cointelegraph, Coinbound, Crypto News, NFT Plazas, Bitcolumnist, Techreport, and NFT Lately – which has elevated her to a senior role in crypto journalism. Whether crafting breaking news or in-depth reviews, she strives to engage her readers with the latest insights and information. Her articles often span the hottest cryptos, exchanges, and evolving regulations. As part of her ploy to attract crypto newbies into Web3, she explains even the most complex topics in an easily understandable and engaging way. Further underscoring her dynamic journalism background, she has written for various sectors, including software testing (TEST Magazine), travel (Travel Off Path), and music (Mixmag). When she’s not deep into a crypto rabbit hole, she’s probably island-hopping (with the Galapagos and Hainan being her go-to’s). Or perhaps sketching chalk pencil drawings while listening to the Pixies, her all-time favorite band. This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy Center or Cookie Policy. I Agree Source: https://bitcoinist.com/banco-santander-and-snorter-token-crypto-services/
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/17 23:45
The changing face of elder care in Malaysia — Sayed Mohammad Reza Yamani Sayed Umar

The changing face of elder care in Malaysia — Sayed Mohammad Reza Yamani Sayed Umar

JULY 10 — An elderly society is becoming increasingly prevalent in Malaysia at present. It is projected that the p...
Share
Malaymail2026/07/10 15:24

Activate to Enjoy Special Perks

Activate to Enjoy Special PerksActivate to Enjoy Special Perks

Access 0 fees, premium support, and loss coverage.