Alila Jebel Akhdar
Jebel Akhdar is a well touristed area in Oman’s Al Hajar mountain range. The main reason for overseas tourists to visit is usually to stay at one of the two well known high-end mountain resorts: either Anantara or Alila and soak in the mountain views and cooler temperatures at roughly 1800m elevation. There are a few hikes in the area, but outdoorsy people tend to head to the Jebel Shams area instead (more on that to follow!!)
We elected to stay a night at Alila because the location, design and vibe looked more appealing online compared to Anantara. It’s the newer of the two resorts and it was ever so slightly south of AUD1,000 a night whereas Anantara was around $1,200 at the time of booking.
Much is made of the drive up to Jebel Akhdar. Famously, one needs to have a 4WD to pass the police checkpoint at the bottom of the mountain. This is despite the fact that the road is sealed all the way and better quality than just about any mountain road I’ve ever driven on in Australia. It’s definitely steep and has a few hairpin bends and blind corners (which some local drivers seemed to think were good places to overtake…). Overtaking lanes were plentiful both going up and back down again. In fact the road is probably 3 lanes for more of its climb than 2 lanes.
Our wheezy Mahindra/Suzuki Grand Vitara really struggled with the hills to the point that on some slopes I had to shift it into manual mode and lock it in first gear to maintain about 25km/h! I would have felt much more at ease driving a Corolla or a Camry up the hill than the ‘mandatory’ 4WD. The only reason I can think of why they insist on a 4WD vehicle is for drivers of said vehicles to have enough common sense to use a lower gear to go down hill and not cook their brakes.
Anyway, after crawling up the mountain we pulled into the very refined atmosphere of Alilia. The White Lotus observations began immediately. While it was a treat, a splurge and a slight stretch for us as a comfortable, Australian, DINK couple to have a night at such an expensive place, it looked like the majority of other guests were settled in for the week…immaculately dressed, bilingual children in tow!
We were shown to our entry level room and given a brief tour of the property’s facilities along the way and offered an abseiling experience for OMR75 a head (a mere AUD600 for the two of us).
Thus began the extortion.
I’m no stranger to 5 star hotel prices and and paying a bit of a premium for a remote location. But Alila was eye watering. Lunch by the pool of a burger, a club sandwich and two soft drinks: AUD180++ thank you very much.
Or have a look at this page from the wine list, specifically at the Koonunga Hill Chardy.
That price is of course in Omani Rials and subject to a further 20% tax and ‘service’ charge. So your $14 quaffer from BWS on the way home from work to have with a bowl of pasta for dinner would set you back a cool $350! Suffice to say, we didn’t order a bottle.
Thankfully the rooms and architecture at Alila were beautiful and the views (no charge…) even better!!
For dinner we ordered a main each, shared a dessert, had a G&T each and coffee to finish which came to a smidge under $300. Like I said, I’m not usually one to balk at 5 star hotel prices because I know it’s a treat once in a while, but this experience at Alila left a really sour taste. By contrast we had dinner at a local place in Nizwa a couple of nights later, total price, 3 OMR for two people (AUD12.50) so it’s not that Oman is necessarily that expensive.
After a decent sleep we had big breakfast from the all inclusive a la carte menu followed by a relaxing morning using the hotel facilities and made sure to squeeze out every minute up to our 12 noon check out time.
It’s really hard to say whether I would recommend others to stay at Alila Jebel Akhdar. The hotel is in an undeniably magnificent location. It's beautifully designed, the food all tasted great and we received OK enough service. So the room price it probably isn’t tooo far off the mark compared to comparable properties around the world. I know that AFF member tastes range from “backpacker hostels are just fine" to "nothing less than caviar in First and 7 star hotels all the way." You can make up your own mind though whether paying for the privilege to eat or take up optional activities makes economic sense. Oh and of course the people watching is free...imagining the White Lotus back stories of the folk staying there for a week or more.