We are often struck dumb when friends or family ask us how
things went on our trips. The reality
for us, in part, is that each trip, even each day, is often indescribable. For this blog posting, we are going to try to
describe a typical day or two from our most recent Madagascar journey. In the end, they were… just another day like
so many others.
We began the day in darkness, not only because of the early
hour, but also because of the power outage that hit our hotel. Being seasoned to such, our headlamps are always
by our bedside. We slipped them on,
packing our bags for the last few hundred kilometers of a 1500 kilometer
journey across Madagascar to see a giant jumping rat. Madagascar has some strange wildlife and one
of the strangest is this creature found only in the west. Of course, the rat is not all we expected or
hoped to see, but we often smile at which sights drive us forward along the road. As the lights came back on, so did the
internet. We now had 30 minutes to do a
wire transfer, make a skype call, answer emails from a few of our students and
friends, pay a few bills, gulp down the daily Madagascar breakfast of dry bread,
butter and jam, and hit the road. We
headed out, behind trucks and taxi-buses bellowing poisonous black clouds of exhaust. Before long we were bumping along a highway,
dodging the many people, carts, zebu, dogs, chickens, and children filling the
streets as well as numerous potholes the size of small canyons. It is a holiday weekend, Easter and
Independence Day together, and the crowds are epic. At every river, the narrow, one lane highway bridges
are blocked by thousands massing for their traditional family picnics, food and
games. Our vehicle inches through, literally an inch at a time as the crowds
squeeze in around us, some revelers expressing their displeasure by thumping on
the car. Alcohol is flowing and there is
a palatable sense that the roads are no longer owned by those who drive.
We move through landscapes of deep red and verdant green
once populated by forest, but long denuded of trees by the French decades
ago. The erosion is stunning, and we are
not surprised an hour into our journey to find it at an abrupt end. The road has been swept downstream, and
people are on each side of the chasm, staring across a makeshift bridge more
than 100 feet long that the military is building. Some have been stuck here for more than 24
hours. We wander about, looking at the
women and families below in the newly cut stream channel as they pan for gold
in the freshly uncovered land flushed with turbid, murky water. Kids, as they always do here, begin to gather
and follow us. This time it is primarily
a group of boys, wanting us to take their picture as they play by the bridge,
its steel girders placed on wooden blocks not yet secured. We eye the structure wondering how and when they
will secure it when the army soldier beckons us forward…to cross it. Our driver carefully aligns us along two
planks as we hold our breath, wondering if the the 30 foot drop into the new
river channel would be better experienced with or without seatbelts. Then we are over and on the other side, the
driver and guide clearly as relieved as we are.
We are hungry as the hours pass by our windows, but there
are no hotels or restaurants along this route.
We stop to buy an avocado, finding a simple place for our driver and
guide to get rice as we ask for a spoon to share our green treat.
We buy water as it becomes more expensive and hard to come by where we
are going. We are headed for the fabled
Tsingy, a geological wonder found only in two places on the planet. It is now boiling hot, and we hide under hats
and wrap-a-rounds to avoid the direct sun in the un-air conditioned car. Most of the traffic on the road is Zebu cart
and foot traffic; few vehicles pass here.
Finally, late in the afternoon, we arrive in a small town and must now
transfer to the 4-wheel drive that we will need for the next three days’
journey. There is one small
problem. Our new vehicle and driver are
nowhere to be found. Day slides into
dusk and it gets dark as our guide calls and eventually locates our transport
and new driver. Driving in Madagascar at
night is risky and we are not thrilled.
There are bandits and the roads are so broken and challenging that
accidents at night are common. Most
vehicles have suffered the effects of the poor infrastructure and are quick to
breakdown as well. We start down the
dirt road for the supposedly 40 minute journey, the vehicle slipping in and out
of gear, and two hours later find ourselves at a small preserve. We are happy to get out. So far, we have eaten only half an avocado
each and shared some dry bread, but we are not to eat dinner yet…instead, we
start our much delayed night hike in one of the most intriguing forests in the
country. We see much in the next two
hours, with one of the many highlights watching a newly discovered lemur
species, Madame Berthe’s, the tiniest
primate in the world, as it stares back at us with impossibly large eyes. We get back, famished, and just as we begin
to eat our pasta, our guide rushes to us and beckons us into the night… the
giant jumping rat is close. We stalk it,
looking for all the world like Elmer Fudd from a Bugs Bunny cartoon, as our
guide turns to us, puts his finger across his lips for silence, and tip toes
forward. We surprise one and the chase
is on as we follow it to its mate. Giant
jumping rats crossed off the list, we can now rapidly consume our bowls of
pasta then head to our cabin for the night.
We turn on the shower water, hopefully, and nothing comes out. The windows are unscreened holes in the wall,
the boards thin, and the entire shack is falling apart, chunks of wood hanging
from the roof and sides. We climb onto
thin pallets with thinner frayed foam mattresses under mosquito nets showing
real wear. Just as we begin to drift off,
it becomes clear we are only visitors, not the real property owners. Something in the roof above our heads has awakened
and it begins the night with a screeching fight. All night long, it and a likely mate drag
sticks across the bamboo thatching above our heads, raining debris onto the
beds. It is a long, relatively
entertaining, but almost completely sleepless, night.
We head out for another hike in the morning, the lost sleep
forgotten as chameleons, waking lemurs, and butterflies greet us. Too soon we are back in the 4x4, which navigates holes in the road large enough to swallow it, slowly making our way north.Several
hours later, we stop along with a few other vehicles at a flooded water crossing. We see village people taking advantage of the
new waterway resulting from rains up north by boating their goods downstream. However, we cannot see the other side. This will be the first of three crossings,
our guide tells us…the next two have vehicle ferries. The driver and our guide are nervous and talk
to local people, one of whom hops into our vehicle to guide us through the hundreds
of yards of water filled road and ravines. We tell our driver that we are OK
turning around, as we understand that the vehicle is his livelihood. But he goes forward. It becomes clear to us
halfway through that while our driver and guide think our Nissan Pathfinder is
a submarine, it is not. We are not surprised
when the engine floods as does the vehicle when the driver opens his door. We hike up our feet, crawling onto the seats,
trying to bag up our luggage and vulnerable electronics. Out our window, flat bottom canoes and kids
floating by on logs stare in at us. We
are in trouble. Worse yet, we are in schistosomiasis country and prolonged exposure to water allows the parasites access to
softened skin. Wiggling their way
through, they will cause blindness if left untreated.
Eventually, a group of boys gather. They range in ages from 8 to around 15, none
very large, all very curious. With our
guide, they begin to rock our vehicle.
It does not move. Then it does,
but they are trying to push it uphill, through clay and sand and a couple of
feet of water toward a dry island a few dozen feet away in what is now a vast lake of
muddy brown water with river currents swirling. For what seems like an eternity they
fail. Then a strap somehow magically
appears and some of them pull while others push, one with an old fashioned
radio hanging from a belt around his neck to provide tunes and a beat for their
efforts. Remarkably, inch by inch, they
succeed. We are stunned and appreciative
but our attempts to thank them with money results in friction in the group that
was so seamlessly together for the past hour.
Now on a small patch of dry land, with curious locals watching from the
far shore, our driver and the local guide begin to take our
engine apart. Unfortunately, the damage was
too great, the challenge too much. The
vehicle is not going anywhere, and….the water is rising. The boys find a ride for us, a giant ferry
without a motor that people pull through the water. We will have to cross quite a bit of the
water to get to the ferry. We head
backwards, the way we came rather than toward the Tsingy. The next crossings are worse and the news is
that the area we have been heading toward for the past four days of driving is now inaccessible. We will have to go
back. We look at each other, our
luggage, our gear, and the rising river, wondering how we are going to navigate
this watery world. The boys come to our
rescue again, carrying our bags, one on each side of us grabbing our arms,
telling us Mora Mora (slowly, slowly) as they help us get to and up the ramp onto
the ferry. They then get out, wading
waste deep, pushing the ferry to the distant shore. We rent a truck, clambering into the back
with our bags, and head to the nearest village.
It represents the abject poverty we have seen all along the road on our
journey----no electricity, shacks built out of discarded boards. A small porch with two stools and a “store,”
a 3x3 space to sell soda and a few sundries with a curtain hiding the bar in
the back----it is the only place of refuge. Men drink the local rum. As we had driven toward this place in the
past few days, we had seen "rum runners", men with barrels of the
distilled sugar cane running across the road, avoiding the frequent police
stops. It is illegal to transport the
rum and the police stop every vehicle, in hopes of small infractions or finding
bottles of moonshine so they can pocket small bribes.
We get cokes which allows us a stool on which to sit and a
thatched roof over our heads. It begins
to rain. Children gather, first a few, then more than
two dozen. They cannot help themselves
as they keep moving in closer until they can brush against us, touch our
strange clothes, giggle and whisper. They
have little clothing of their own and none have shoes or sandals. They have no toys, playing with nails and
round pieces of wood they carve by rubbing on the only concrete in the village,
a well installed by an NGO. Shyly, one
asks us for a coke bottle cap, and they pounce on it playing with their new toy. They take our empty bottles later, briefly arguing
among themselves for who might get the prize.
Most are ill, and their coughs rain down on us as they press in,
surrounding us for hours. The flu has
been ripping through the country and clearly this village has been struck. Hungry, we are too embarrassed to bring out
our emergency food for us to eat, but purchase some cookies for our guide to
give the kids. They line up, carrying
their smaller siblings, eyes round with anticipation. The company is sending out another vehicle to
rescue us and take us back, but the hours pass and once again dusk approaches
along with the new truck, our ride to a safer place. The villagers are friendly at first, but the
holiday and drinking causes some to confront us, and we have grown increasingly
uncomfortable. We are grateful to get
into the vehicle, even if it means driving at night. Our headlights expose men carrying weapons, hunting
other men, Zebu rustlers, who will be beaten and hung if caught. Three times carts full of precious and
illegally harvested hardwoods are moved aside for our truck to pass, the men driving
to oxen carts ducking down so their identities cannot be known. We are not safe but have no choice but to
move forward.
Finally, we reach a port town on the coast, arriving at the
hotel where we were to stay four days from now.
The first driver we left behind greets us and along with the ever present hotel guards, helps
us get our bags inside locked gates. We enter
our hotel room, and while insufferably hot, it is a safe haven and we don’t
even mind that the electricity is off and the air conditioner is long unused
and not working. There is bland food for
dinner, a couple of long overdue gin and tonics, and beds without previous
occupants. We are grateful. Our room comes with a flush toilet and two buckets
full of water to provide manual flushing during the power outages that prevent
water pumps from working. We look at
each other and grin, adding soap to one bucket.
We have a chance to do some laundry and strip off our river clothes,
soaking them in the bucket, rinsing them in the other. We hang clothes around the room like a family
preparing Christmas decorations, every surface covered with a bright color or
piece of underwear. In the 90 plus
degree heat, they will dry overnight. At
last, we settle into the stifling hot bed, cover it with the mosquito net and
wonder if we will be able to sleep. We
have no idea where we will head the next day, our trip forward is no longer
feasible, but we are fine with the unknown destinations before us. We have eaten good Malagasy food, our laundry
is drying, our bodies are cleaner, and the day is done. Just another day on the road. While these two days were typical, the next one
was kind of challenging. But that is a
different story.
Written in Antananarivo, Madagascar; posted in Johannesburg, South Africa. Images are of the road washed away and make shift bridge, families panning for gold below; a giant jumping rat, the young men pulling our vehicle to safety and our ferry to shore; kids gathering for a cookie at the village; and a daytime image of illegally harvested hardwood from the preserve.
Written in Antananarivo, Madagascar; posted in Johannesburg, South Africa. Images are of the road washed away and make shift bridge, families panning for gold below; a giant jumping rat, the young men pulling our vehicle to safety and our ferry to shore; kids gathering for a cookie at the village; and a daytime image of illegally harvested hardwood from the preserve.
You two are really living....just another of day of making decisions and just making it. I am almost finished with a biography of Gertrude Bell, an Arabist circa 1900, who ventured, like you two, to places that women just don't normally go. Good on yaH!And oh yea the biology "stuff' is too cool.
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