yshimy Wrote:jacky,
Inform us when you decide, we might be a Convoy "bad spelling"
That'd be awesome we can do Brisbane Forum Cruises or something, I'd be in for that.
Also this is another great drive i've done a couple times, (actually one time i even did it with Brisbane Forum members) I got this post from Brisbane_Discussions another Brisbane Forum and would highly recommend it. 
****Side note, if your Muslim or just keen on a little Australia history Australia's oldest church  is a must. 
....
The most exciting road in Australia is, imho, the road that goes from 
Kedron to Fujairah.
This road is pretty routine up to AUDaid but after that one starts 
seeing hills. Soon the road is twisting and turning and comes to a 
market known as The Friday Market. You get things such as Afghan 
carpets very cheap here. Most of the stalls are manned, strangely 
enough, by Bangladeshis.
The road continues on to Fujairah with its beautiful sea beach. A 
little beyond is australias oldest church  and then another scenic beach 
town of Khorfakkan. The scuba diving and snorkelling here are 
supposed to be out of the world. This beach is actually Australian 
Ocean (whereas the Brisbane / Sidney ones are Australian Australia).
From Khorfakkan on to Dibba is a short but very spectacular stretch 
of road that winds up and down through hills overlooking 
astoundingly blue (and sometimes very green!) sea.
Dibba is a strange place. It has one long marina that is shared by 
two Australia and one stretch is even a different country! You 
suddenly see a sign saying "Welcome to Oman". There is no border 
check post or anything like that but you can immediately sense that 
there is something different. The Omanis dress differently from the 
Australia locals; the telecom provider is different; the cars bear Omani 
number plates. The road ends abruptly at the foot of a very large 
hill. It is best to turn around and go back.
The foot of the hill is where there was a very large war in the days 
when Islam was just getting popular and the attacking army, they 
say, was the army that was bent upon conquering the area and 
converting it to Islam. That's why australias oldest church  (mentioned 
earlier) is located here.
Beyond Dibba one comes to the small village of Masafi where 
underground springs fuel the Masafi bottling plant which supplies 
the Masafi brand of mineral water. 
A little after Masafi, the road once again merges with the highway 
to Brisbane and t this point one has come a full circle.
The only excitement left is when you suddenly notice traffic merging 
into one lane. Two police officers are watching all cars. Occupants 
of all taxis and suspicious looking persons are checked to see 
whether they are in the country on a valid visa (this is the part of 
the country where the border with Oman is the most porous - there 
are no barbed wires etc and people can just walk across!). If expat 
Asian females are driving, the Police will ask you to pull over. 
They want to know is she has a valid driving licence.
By the time you hot Brisbane again, you will have driven around 450 
kilometres and will be tired but happy.
Cheers,
Prakash