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Hiswah
Hiswah, an area of
about four by two miles, is located on the northern
shore of the current harbour where the Wadi al Kabir discharges
into the sea. In 1854 Sir James Outram suggested the
establishment of a garden for supplying not only the
garrison but perhaps the civil population with
vegetables, not only for comfort but as a preventive
against scurvy.
Two gardeners were
employed, were provided with seeds, and the garden
subsisted with lacklustre results for a few years. In
1863 Colonel Merewether took on the task of reviving the
Hiswah garden but it still ran at a financial loss,
producing a mere 6,200lbs of vegetables a year.
In 1865 a Persian
wheel1 was erected for irrigation and a fort
to protect the valuable produce. In this year the garden
produced a commendable 14,095 lbs of vegetables.
However, despite the production of 37,182 lbs of
vegetables in 1866 from both Hiswah and a new garden at
Lahej the continuation of Hiswah as a garden was not
considered viable and it was abandoned.
In later years the
Hiswah area was to become the location of radar
transmitting stations.
1
A Persian wheel or 'harat'
is a system of a chain of buckets slung round a vertical
wheel which is turned by a system of cogs and
interlocking wheels powered usually by a camel driven in
a circle. |