The Frankincense Trail

Frankincense — dried sap of the Boswellia sacra tree — was the gold of antiquity. Dhofar was the only place it grew in trade quantity, and the four UNESCO-listed sites of the Land of Frankincense map the route from grove to coastal port.

Overview

The four sites

Wadi Dawkah is the protected wild grove. Sumhuram (Khor Rori) and Al Baleed are the coastal ports that shipped the resin to Rome, India and China. Shisr/Ubar is the inland caravan stop on the desert leg toward Mediterranean markets. Together they were inscribed as a single serial UNESCO property in 2000.

Two-day self-drive itinerary

Day 1: Salalah base — morning at Al Baleed (museum + ruins), afternoon at Sumhuram and Khor Rori. Day 2: Inland — drive 2 hours north to Wadi Dawkah grove, continue 1 hour to Shisr/Ubar with site museum, return via the Empty Quarter edge or back to Salalah.

Buying frankincense

All four sites are non-commercial — buy in the Mughsail or Salalah souqs. The grades from cheapest to most prized are: dakhar (browny), shaabi (white), najdi and the premium hojari. Hojari is grown only in the limestone uplands above Wadi Dawkah.

Practical tips

Locations

Embed this map

Free to use on any site. Attribution required (included in the snippet).

Frequently asked questions

How long does the Frankincense Trail take?

Two days self-drive from a Salalah base. One day is possible if you skip Ubar.

Is the trail signposted?

Yes for Al Baleed, Sumhuram and Wadi Dawkah. Ubar is signed off the Thumrait road; the last 30 km is graded gravel and 2WD-passable in dry weather.

When is Boswellia sacra in flower?

The trees are evergreen; resin tapping happens in summer. Visiting any time of year shows the same gnarled grove.

Is there a single ticket for the four sites?

No. Al Baleed and Sumhuram each charge 2 OMR. Wadi Dawkah and Shisr are free.