Dubai Escorts
Escorts in Dubai

- Christie
- Dubai

- Pearl
- Dubai
Escorts available to travel to Dubai
Varying notice is required to book the following escorts for Dubai.

- Roxanne
- Brussels

- Eve
- Brussels

- Kenza
- Brussels

- Sharon
- Milan

- Natalie
- Vienna

- Sharlotte
- Rome

- Grace
- Vienna

- Jane
- London

- Jessica
- London

- Johanna
- Vienna

- Jess
- Brussels

- Martina
- Barcelona

- Ane
- London

- Heidi
- London

- Lina
- London

- Isabelle
- London

- Angel
- Madrid

- Claire
- Vienna

- Amy
- Brussels

- Angelina
- Rome

- Valentina
- Amsterdam

- Jill
- Vienna

- Carmen
- London

- Alexandra
- Barcelona

- Katharine
- Toronto
Dubai Sports
- The number of sporting venues and activities in Dubai is simply astounding, and you will definitely be spoilt for choice as to which exhilarating pastime to try out next. The Dubai Creek Golf and Yacht Club, located on Al Garhoud Road, is a world renowned sporting venue with an 18-hole golf course, and a beautiful marina packed with luxury yachts. The club is renowned for its striking tent-like clubhouse which features a variety of restaurants and bars. The Emirates Golf Club situated on Sheikh Zayed Road, and the Montgomerie Golf Club located in Emirates Hills and designed by Colin Montgomerie are other top-class golfing venues. The Emirates Club is also the location of the yearly $2.4 million Dubai Desert Classic, a PGA European Tour event which takes place every February over four days in which the biggest names in golf, such as Woods, Els and Norman take part.
Ski Dubai, situated within the spectacular Mall of the Emirates on Sheikh Zayed Road, is the first indoor ski venue in the Middle East. It features five runs on real snow, the tallest of which is 400m, and the largest indoor snowpark in the world featuring a bobsled run and snowball-throwing gallery. It also features the world’s first indoor black run. The Wild Wadi Water Theme Park located on Jumeira Road, has 24 different rides, including the Jumeirah Sceirah, the highest free-fall slide outside the USA. The theme park also features a surf pool, the Wipeout Flow Rider, where surfers can ride a 3m continuously breaking wave. Other watersports can be tried out at Dubai International Marine Club (DIMC) in Mina Seyahi. Offshore sailing is offered by Bluesail Dubai and Dubai Offshore Sailing Club, whereas most resort hotels will provide guests with catamarans, wind-surfing boards and kayaks. There are a number of PADI scuba diving courses offered by Al Boom Diving, located on Al Wasl Road and Pavilion Dive Centre at the prestigious Jumeirah Beach Hotel in Umm Suqeim.
The Camel Racecourse, located in Nad Al Sheba on Muscat Street, is a great unique sport in Dubai, the ‘Sport of the Sheikhs’; in winter you can take in races every Thursday and Friday mornings, but throughout the year you can always see the camels in practise for races. Dubai is also a horse-racing Mecca, with the Dubai World Cup, the richest horse race in the world at $21.25 million, taking place at the Nad Al Sheba Racecourse, located on Muscat Street. This is also the location of the Nad Al Sheba Golf Course. Nearby is another equestrian sports venue, the Emirates Riding Centre, the location of the richest show-jumping event in the world, the three-day $1.25 million Al Maktoum Memorial Challenge Dubai International Horse Show every January. Further horse events can be seen at the Dubai Polo and Equestrian Club, located in Arabian Ranches on Emirates Road, which is also the location of Dubai’s sole desert golf course, the par-72, Desert Course.
Also on Emirates Road is the Dubai Autodrome, a 3.3 mile Formula One motor-racing circuit. This track is used for the FIA GT Championships every November, as well as the A1 Grand Prix every December. The desert interior is also used for the UAE Desert Challenge every November, which takes in 1183 miles of off-road rally action. There is also an annual Dubai Marathon and the President’s Cup Regatta. One of the most extreme sports you can undertake in Dubai is a 4x4 desert safari which takes in the Big Red, a huge sand dune, with companies such as Arabian Adventures, Desert Rangers, Net Tours and Orient Tours. Dune sports, such as sand-skiing and sand-boarding, are other very popular extreme pastimes, and these can be tried out on organised desert excursions. Quad biking over the dunes is also offered by a number of activity centres on Route 44. You can also take part in wildlife treks in the desert, or riding on Arabian steeds in to discover traditional Arabia. The Falcon and Heritage Sports Centre, located on Muscat Street in the Nad Al Sheba area, offers visitors the chance to experience the ancient, but still very popular, sport of falconry.
The Al Mumzar Beach Park, located on the Deira side of the creek is the largest public park in Dubai. The park is a huge length of land, one kilometre in all, abounding in four beaches, two swimming pools, masses of green corners, barbecue and picnic areas, children’s playgrounds and an amphitheatre. Other popular beaches are the Jumeria Open Beach and the Jumeirah Beach Park both located on Jumeria Road, where the latter also features fabulous green areas and food courts.
The Dubai Tennis Stadium located within the Aviation Club situated on Al Garhoud Road, can seat up to 5000 spectators, and is a key venue for the WTA and ATP professional $2 million Dubai Tennis Championships, which take place in Dubai every February and March. Over the years this stadium has seen the likes of superstars such as Boris Becker, Andre Agassi, Martini Navratilova and Monica Seles. Andre Agassi and Roger Federer also made history in 2006 for the highest tennis match ever played, when they took part in a game on the turfed over helipad of the Burj Al Arab hotel to launch the Dubai Duty Free Men’s Open in February 2006. There are also tennis courts at the Safa Park on Sheikh Zayed Road. Rugby is another popular sport, and the Dubai Rugby Sevens event, part of the IRB Sevens World Series held at the Dubai Exiles Ground at Nad Al Sheba is an incredibly popular event. The stadium can hold up to 22 000 supporters, and is often filled to bursting during the three-day tournament.