@@viktorkm No that is not correct. The desert and oasis tiles stay there until all 5 dice have been rolled and the leg is over. You don't prematurely remove them once someone lands on them, they only get a coin.
I am not sure if I played it right but if I remember correctly when going back and on a camel because of a tile, the camel going back does not stack on top of that camel but it moves to the bottom of the stack... that's what makes the betting and the race risky at all times
The game's name..."Camel Up"...isn't from stacking the camels up on top of each other (maybe a tiny bit). The name is a play on words with a little latin twist. When you bet or wager...you have to "Pone up" (pronounced "Pony up") which means to "pay your money" for your wager. The word "Pone" is latin in origin. People often thought that it was a horse racing term...to "Pony up" your betting money on which horse will win. So with this game using a Middle Eastern with camels and a pyramid theme...the name "Camel up" is just a play on words.
They are playing it wrong. The leg ends after every camel has moved. You put the spent die on its corresponding tent. Then you payout and put the dice back in the pyramid. A new leg starts with the player to the left going first.