Liwa When our musings go to the Wilayat of Liwa, we think about the littlest and lightest of resilient boats, or the Baobab tree with its agony slaughtering powers, or the wilayat’s vacation destinations like the mountain town of Qazah.
With its 58 towns, Liwa is 270 Kilometers from the Governorate of Muscat, just past the Wilayat of Sohar and on the piece of coast that closes at the Wilayat of Shinas. It has various strongholds, posts and towers incorporating Liwa Fort with its three towers, the as of late reestablished Qazah Fort – a fine three-story fortress 15 meters high and 14 meters wide with four rooms on each floor – and Awlad Ya’rub Fort – a compositional diamond in the town of Harmul.


Liwa’s white coral limestone mosques are an unordinary highlight of this zone with their ventilation openings like little windows high up in their dividers. A portion of these mosques have alluring minarets; the prettiest is the minaret of al Bahlul mosque in Hillat al Husn
The mosque of al Rabi’ container Habib in the town of Ghadhfan is named after one of the Hadith storytellers of the early piece of the second century AH/eighth century AD, who lived in this town before leaving it for Basra looking for information.
He at that point settled in Basra, however in the harvest time of his life he came back to Ghadhfan, where he spent the remainder of his life. Harmul Park, which the Municipality has spread out along the shore, is well known with guests. Ain al Qurm, next to the tidal pond at Harmul town, is another wonderfully green and fruitful spot and a resting place for moving winged creatures.

In the mountain territories, there are various lovely towns with plenteous water and mild atmospheres like Qazah, al Zuhaimi, Rahab, Bat and Dha’bain, which numerous individuals visit in the mid-year months. In al Zuhaimi you will discover the Baobab tree – the just one in the north of Oman.
Individuals accept that this one-of-a-kind tree will slaughter torment on the off chance that you embed a grain of sand in its huge trunk. Along these lines, any nearby individual with a toothache surges promptly to this tree and embeds a grain of sand into it, after which the torment is either fundamentally decreased or vanishes by and large. Endeavors have been made to develop other Baobab trees from its cuttings, yet they have not been fruitful.