Viking is really into big and splashy so the event
as we cross from Madagascar to the mainland is a big brunch. Stations of food (and bloody marys) are set
up all around the pool deck and the adjacent ‘Wintergarden.’ Chris hates it because of the crowds; I hate
it because I never know what they are serving where and spend too much time
standing in lines only to find there’s nothing I want at that station. This
time I thought to go just as it was opening to see the setup without the crowds,
then bridge class, then to brunch prepared!
In the afternoon of the 10th the
duplicate bridge was the ‘club championship’—meaning double master points. Chris and I did well enough to earn .55
master points. Whoopee! It seems that, through our certified
instructor/director, the Viking Sun is a registered ACBL (American Contract
Bridge League) club so Americans can get master points. Of course, they need to be members of ACBL to
actually get them, and we’re not.
This is our last sequence of sea days for awhile
because the Southern African ports come pretty much one right after another
which will tax my ability to keep up with this journal.
Madagascar, with tales of its many exotic species of
plants and animals, has always fascinated me.
We can only see a very small piece of it in a day because it is larger
than Germany! And mostly there are very
poor roads. Fort Dauphin or Tolanaro,
near which we docked, is in the southeast of the island. The capital is approximately in the middle,
and our guide told us it is a 2 hour flight from Tolanaro to the capital or a
3-day (and 3-night) bus ride. That says
something both about distance and, I suspect, about the roads.
The rather new port is in a rural area with good
roads; it and the roads, we are told, were built (and owned) 20% by the
government and 80% by Rio Tinto, the company (which as nearly as I can tell is
headquartered in Australia) that mines the area for black sand, which is
exported to Canada and used for titanium (and maybe minerals).
The area reminded me of rural Ethiopia with a dash
of Dominica—Dominica because of the mountains and forms of houses (or shacks),
Ethiopia because of the bad roads, roadside trash, extreme poverty, using
eucalyptus poles for scaffolding in construction, and people everywhere along
the road. Many, we were told, walked 15
or more kilometers from their village to jobs in Tolanaro (if they had jobs). Some children (and adults) were happy to wave
to us passing; others had their hands out (and sometimes through the windows)
for money; a few turned and shook their fannies at us.
The ship had recruited all buses available for our
tours and they were a motley assortment of school buses and mini-vans in
various ages. All the seats seemed
designed to hold 1 ½ people. Sometimes
we could have one large seat apiece, other times 2 tried to squeeze in. Heather had warned us that this was a real
third world country (especially after, I gather, getting some negative feedback
after Mauritius) and to expect few bathrooms, old buses, and guides with
varying amounts of English; but, she
stressed, they need our business badly and anything you can do to help is
appreciated.
We were treated to a bus tour through the very long
and large market and to various viewpoints (including a house in the country,
built by ‘the richest man around’ as a sort of replica of the U.S. White
House). Our guide spoke excellent English
and was knowledgeable and funny besides; he said he spent some time in
Montana—and I think it was doing a course in bible study, but I may have
misheard that.
The Nahampoana Reserve was our destination in the
afternoon—primarily to see lemurs. On a
very bumpy dirt and potholed and mud road we drove slowly through forest and
villages and people in a minivan with a dozen of us jammed into seats not made
for 2 westerners to sit together—it was not a comfortable ride.
We saw white, bamboo, brown, and ring-tailed lemurs
as well as a few large tortoises. The
white lemurs were happy to cavort in trees near us; the bamboo lemurs mostly
hid in the bamboo, and the ring-tailed and brown lemurs let us see them but not
too close. One of them peed on the head
of a woman which surprised her considerably!
At the gathering place where they sold bottled drinks, I traded our ‘coupons’ for a drink each to children in exchange for taking their pictures. They had crafts booths, one selling some nice palm raffia placemats among other things and the other hand-embroidered pillow covers, glasses cases, and other bags. An organization was teaching local women embroidery and they were beautiful! We all agreed the trip was worth the ride.
Aye Aye chameleon
Panther chameleon
Giraffe beetle (weevil)
From Darwin’s undergraduate beetles collection
Caricature of Darwin as an undergraduate riding a beetle
Darwin and Madagascar: what if…? Lemurs apparently are found only in Madagascar, a large island off the coast of SE Africa, where a diverse group of 100 different species (in 15 genera and 8 families) occupy a variety of habitats. During our visit recently we saw several of the arboreal types, including white and ring-tailed lemurs. Madagascar is also home to about half the world’s species of chameleons, including the colorful Aye Aye and Panther chameleons. Beetles – the most numerous and diverse group of animals – are unusual on Madagascar as well, as exemplified by the giraffe weevil, which unfortunately we did not see. Nor, even more unfortunately, given his keen undergraduate interest in these insects, neither did Darwin! (So avid a collector was he, that a Cambridge classmate sketched a caricature of him riding a beetle!)
During his historical voyage on the Beagle Darwin explored many islands,
notably the Falkland, and Galapagos groups, New Zealand, Australia, and Mauritius. As the voyage progressed he collected
specimens at each location for the British Museum and Cambridge University, and
his observations progressively became crucially important in shaping his
thinking about evolution and the origin of species; especially the origin and
evolution of Galapagos finches and their adaptation to the various island
habitats. What might Darwin had made of
the variety of Madagascar lemurs, chameleons, and beetles; and how might he
have speculated concerning origin and evolution of lemurs?
Following Australia, the Beagle visited the Cocos (Keeling) Islands and then Mauritius, en route to Cape Town, and Darwin’s journal documents his preoccupation with how various kinds of reefs – barrier, fringe and atolls — are formed, with little or no mention of resident animals or plants. Darwin apparently saw few or none of these Although Mauritius lies only 700 miles east of Madagascar, the Beagle by-passed the larger island entirely on its way to Cape Town! –Chris
I mentioned meals in the World Café, so I thought
I’d include photos of some of the crocheted food pictures that decorate the
walls. I don’t care for them, but they
are certainly interesting and, presumably a lot of work by someone.
While I’m at it, I include photos of two pictures in
the Chef’s Table (where we eat occasionally but play bridge in every sea
day). These pictures are moving (Harry
Potter anyone?) which doesn’t show much in photos, but the berries in one
constantly fall and the things that look like dandelion seed puffs in the other
are always in the process of increasing or decreasing in size. I can’t imagine who thought these were a good
idea for wall decoration, and I find it extremely distracting to sit facing the
berry one.
The ship is collecting clothing and other useful
items for distribution in Madagascar.
The home office has also decided to donate $50,000 in food, linens,
shoes (from the shoes they provide for staff), and other materials to
Mozambique through the Red Cross. The
knitters on board have created 75 baby caps to go to a hospital in Madigascar
and another 75 for Mozamibique.
Mauritius is poor (with enclaves of beach
resorts—I’m told it’s becoming ‘the’ place to go), but Madagascar, which we
visit tomorrow, is poorer. It should be
very rudimentary. Next stop is
Mozambique which is trying to deal with the effects of the cyclone a little
while ago that has caused about a million and a half people to be
displaced. That is in the north of the
country and we visit the south, but the country as a whole is poor and not
equipped to deal with the costs.
I must say visiting three third world countries
whose names begin with ‘M’ consecutively gets me very confused sometimes!
Woman with Indian dress & helmet by motorcycle talking on mobile
Flower in botanical garden
Botanical garden
Tamil temple
Tamil Temple detail
Mauritius is a wild blend of cultures. Originally a French colony, it became a
British colony. Thus, they drive on the
left, kept French law (the Napoleonic code), speak English officially but also
French and a creole that is, I’m informed, 80% French but words are spelled
more like the English would spell them.
For example the French ‘moi’ is used with the same pronunciation and
meaning but spelled ‘mwa.’
Black slaves were brought in for labor, but when slavery
was abolished in 1835, indentured servants were brought in, mostly from India
but also China and other countries. They
all live together now, apparently in harmony, and have created a composite but
distinctive culture of their own. We
were in port on a national holiday—one of the Hindu sects’ New Year—so most
shops were closed.
Our bus tour took us to a view point—Mauritius is
volcanic and has several interestingly shaped peaks,—to the market (open on the
holiday until 1 pm), and to the Botanical Garden. The market was both produce and souvenirs or
crafts and we were collared and bought t-shirts… The Botanical Garden was large and
peaceful. Driving through the city
reminded us of Addis Ababa with a lot of trash and mostly torn-down
buildings.
A hot, cloudy day spit out some hardly noticeable rain during our tour which turned to actual rain as we re-boarded the ship about 1:30, and then it became socked in and rainy for the rest of the afternoon. I was glad we had not joined the passengers who went to nearby resorts for a beach day. On the other hand I somewhat envied those who visited the underwater world either scuba diving or in a ‘submarine.’ I recall that my only previous acquaintance with Mauritius was that some people with the U.S. State Department in Ethiopia when we were there headed to Mauritius for a diving vacation.
At dinner we met a couple who had decided they weren’t up to 8 days at sea so they left the ship at Perth, flew to Singapore for a few days, and rejoined us today in Mauritius!
After three days of very calm seas (being in port or
along the coast), we embark on a full 8 sea days crossing the Indian Ocean to
Mauritius, and begin with a rather tumultuous sea, but it calmed down after the
first day.
Sunday was church with a backdrop of St. George’s
Cathedral, Perth, Australia. Heather
mentioned that we will be in port on Easter Sunday (in Namibia) and she’s
leaning to us celebrating on Saturday.
She said we’re a day ahead of those of you in the Americas and Europe,
which I would think would be a reason to celebrate on Monday (which would be
Sunday at home), but whatever…
One night was Indonesian night in the World Café with
various Indonesian food and waiters in costume.
One of the chefs turned out also to be an artist and made wonderful
pictures to decorate the café using the styrofoam tops from the coolers in
which the ship purchased fish. They were
amazing. It was a lovely night out on
the deck so the evening was a success.
The last day at a 5:30 Atrium concert we were
entertained by an amazing young singer from New Zealand named Will Martin. He is also proud that he is one of those who
sings the national anthem at the All Blacks rugby games. There seems to be a YouTube video of him singing the New Zealand, Australian, and
U.S national anthems.
We continued to gain hours of sleep as we head west. Those are welcome and, oddly enough, I enjoyed the sea days and was not quite ready to go into port again.
We spent most of the first day en route, arriving in port in late afternoon. Freemantle is the port, located near the mouth of the Swan River, and Perth is farther upstream, but by now they are contiguous.
Our resident guitarist for much of the trip, called ‘Minky G’ (see photo from yesterday), is from Fremantle and disembarking; some of the passengers went hear her and her band in Fremantle the first evening. There was a performance of local Aboriginal dancers and musicians on board as well, but we went to bed early because–
Our excursion began at 5:45 am (! Not my favorite
time of day…) and journeyed a couple of hours north along the coast to the
Nambung National Park, home of interesting rock pinnacles. Though they don’t rival those in the Utah
national parks, they were interesting and it was fun to walk across a bit of
desert.
The land near the coast is all sand underneath the
vegetation with large, very white sand dunes along the sea—and sometimes,
surprisingly, huge dunes of white sand a few miles inland.
Lunch was, what is known locally as crayfish but exported live as Australian rock lobster, at the Lobster Shack, which is not only a restaurant but also a huge lobster fishery and processing plant. We were given a tour, complete with video and audio commentary to accompany our movement through the plant, and shown a large live ‘crayfish’ by our hostess.
Several fishing boats go out each morning at 3 am
(and I thought 5:45 was early…) operated by the third generation of the man who
founded the operation. The lobster are
sorted by size before being exported live by plane, mostly to Dubai, Japan, and
China. Interestingly, Dubai and Japan
prefer the smallest size and thus pay a premium for those, while China prefers
the largest size and pays a premium for them!
I’m always a little squeamish about new tastes and it doesn’t taste
exactly like Maine lobster so I didn’t eat much of mine—something that was
appreciated by one of our lecturers who accompanied the tour because apparently
he ‘didn’t rate a lobster’, something I thought quite inexcusable, and ate mine
gladly.
It was a good trip all in all, but when I heard from friends who had gone on a tour of the Perth Mint and Bell Tower, I thought maybe I should have stayed closer to port (and slept in…) At the Mint, they were, among other things, shown gold being smelted down and cast. At the Bell Tower they were allowed to ring the large bells (I’ve forgotten what they are called, but those you ring by rope from a floor below because your ears couldn’t take the loudness if you were next to them.)
Upstream from Perth, the Swan Valley is a major (and
wine producing) area—watch for Swan Valley wines.
I found it interesting when two of our guides during our time in Australia mentioned that voting is compulsory in Australia. If you don’t vote, you are assessed a fine. The amount of the fine increases each subsequent election in which you fail to vote.
In the Albany post I included a photo of an ANZAC day tribute. ANZAC was the name for the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps fighting in the world wars, and April 25 was designated as ANZAC day to commemorate the soldiers in the Gallipoli campaign in World War I. Now it is to remember all who served in all wars, conflicts, or peacekeeping missions. People in both countries take it very seriously. The photo I included shows a display in the Albany cruise terminal and is covered with handwritten messages of remembrance.