Recently one
of my sisters came to visit me and the two of us, along with a good friend,
Stacia, from the ship, travelled up to northern Madagascar to explore the
country.
The
adventure began with a 5:30 wake up alarm, dressed, luggage up to reception, a
quick breakfast, disembarked, a few hugs on the dock and into the bus and
waving goodbye by 6:30am. The road out of Tamatave to Antananarivo (shortened
to Tana) winds around the mountains. I mean, curving around mountains for
practically 8 hours solid! Unfortunately the first 4 hours of Stacia’s journey
was spent vomiting into a bag, or sitting staring out the front of the bus
trying not to throw up. I stayed in my seat a few rows back, trying not to
watch and sympathetic vomit into my non-existent vomit bag. It was quite the
relief to eventually make it to Tana where we sat still in traffic before
making it to the guesthouse and giving my sister, Sarah a great big hug!
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Sarah, Deb and Stacia |
Day one of
adventures took us into the city centre of Tana where we wandered through the
markets, soaking up the smells of dried fish, fresh fruits and vegetables,
checked out the locally made clothes and pretty much anything else you could imagine.
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The old royal palace |
The
following day we headed to the airport to make our Air Madagascar flight up to
Diego Suarez, in the north of Mada. We’d heard a lot about Air Mada making a
lot of changes to flights and while I’d been on the bus from Tamatave to Tana,
I had received a call from them telling me both flights had moved times. So I
didn’t breathe a sigh of relief that we were actually going until we were
sitting on the plane and in the air.
Even though we made it to Diego, when we
waited for the luggage to come out, a lady came out and said that they had left
everyone’s luggage behind in Tana. They had some reason like it was too hot or
too heavy, but just decided to leave it all behind, but they would fly it in
tomorrow. Haha. The whole flight full of people tried to cram into a small
office to leave details of the hotels and places for Air Mada to drop off the
luggage after it arrived the following morning. The only problem we had was
that we already had plans that we couldn’t change the next day and now that we
didn’t have our things it would make it difficult. We ended up staying around
until we were the last people there and after a few phone calls, one of the
guys in the office printed out a form which we signed and they handed over some
compensation money to each of us! The idea was that we could go and purchase
whatever we needed for the next day- easy to say when you’re in a country with
shopping centres! Anyway, we headed to the nearest supermarket for some
toothbrushes, toothpaste, deodorant and water- all the essentials in life!
The funniest
part was Stace going to sleep in her clothes and waking up in the morning with
the alarm, flicking back her blankets, standing up and saying, “Ok, I’m ready.
Let’s go!”
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The essentials |
We hiked up
French Mountain, a 485m mountain, in our flip flops and joked the whole way up
and down saying as we tripped or slipped on the rocks, “Flip flops, no
problem.” We managed to get all the way up and down with all skin and flip
flops intact, despite my prediction. (I did have to take them off at one point because my feet were too sweaty to stay in them!)
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Diego Suarez, Diego Bay and Sugar Loaf Mountain |
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"Flip flops, no problem!" |
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A well-deserved lunch |
We visited
the Three Bays.
Our luggage
was returned to us, much to our relief, even though they tried to give Sarah
someone else’s bag! After several phone calls, a trip in the car here and there
and knocking on the Air Mada office door, we eventually got her bag back.
We took a
trip out to Emerald Sea, marvelling at the gorgeous colour of the water and
AMAZING snorkelling!
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A reminder from the coral of our time at Emerald Sea. |
From Diego
Suarez we drove down to Ankarana via the Tsingy Rouge.
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We found this male chameleon on the side of the road. |
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Petit Tsingy |
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Tsingy Rouge |
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Tsingy Rouge |
We walked
through the rainforest to the tsingy limestone, spotting some lemurs and other
wildlife along the way. Tsingy means tip-toe in Malagasy.
Driving over
the roads between villages and national parks, our guide turned around and said
to us, "The holes in the roads, we say in French as chicken nests, but
here they are so big we call them zebu nests." So for the rest of the trip
whenever we had to drive around or through a big pot hole, we'd call out,
"Zebu nest!" or "Elephant nest!" for the really big ones.
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Zebu walking home |
We spent a
night in Ankify at a beautiful place called Baobab Lodge where the view from
where I lay in my bed was gorgeous.
A tour at a
plantation that grows vanilla, ylang-ylang, pepper corns and cocoa beans taught
us a lot about many different Malagasy exports famous around the world.
Did you
know: Coca-Cola uses Malagasy vanilla in its products? McCormick & Co also
sells and uses Malagasy vanilla.
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Cocoa tree |
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A small cocoa pod |
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Inside the cocoa pod |
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Cocoa seeds are fermented for 6 days. |
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After fermentation the seeds are dried in the sun. |
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Remove the skin and you have 100% cocoa. |
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Ylang-ylang trees are cut so that the branches can always be reached. |
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Ylang-ylang flowers |
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Ylang-ylang flower |
We were
greeted in Nosey Be by our local tour guide who pulled out refrigerated face clothes
scented with ylang-ylang to refresh us. We dropped our stuff off and walked
along the beach soaking up the colours of the setting sun and our surroundings.
We watched
the sun set over the ocean at Mont Passot and fill the sky with colours.
We set out
for a day trip to Nosey Tanikely, exclaiming on arrival of how beautiful the
colour of the ocean was and once we were swimming and snorkelling around, I was
just in awe.
We
snorkelled around for hours, swimming with sea turtles and pointing out to each
other the different fish, so colourful and so creatively different from each
other. It was like being in a whole different world. I liked to duck down and
swim among the fish, watching their little bodies flit about and change
direction, showing off the colour reflections from their glittering fins. There
were so many colours, so many fish, so many shapes, such beauty to watch and be
a part of.
After
snorkelling we had an amazing Malagasy picnic lunch, where we were joined by a
local lemur. We were told not to feed him, because he’s wild, but it was
difficult to keep him away from the bananas!
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"Look out Stace!" |
We also saw
the most beautiful chameleon I have ever seen!! Amazing colours!
Lokobe
National Park in Nosey Be was our next adventure. We were driven to the nearest
village close to the national park and then hopped into a pirogue (French for
canoe) and rowed ourselves 45mins to the village where the national park
is. We were taken by three amazing guides who found us the most extraordinary creatures,
which were very difficult to spot for the untrained eye!
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Can you see the mossy leaf-tail gecko? |
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Pygmy Chameleon |
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Boa Constrictor |
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The very rare Mouse Lemur |
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Wild vanilla |
After
another amazing picnic lunch we digested our food over interesting conversation
about Malagasy culture and rowed ourselves back over the gorgeous green sea,
through a cloud of rain, back to our waiting vehicle.
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Female chameleon |
Our last day
we waited to hear if our Air Mada flight had changed times again- it had, but
they had moved it back which gave us enough time to get back out for a half day of
snorkelling. We lathered up with sunscreen and the spent the hours face down in
the sea, chasing the fish, swimming with turtles and soaking up all the life
under the sea that we are never able to see from above.
We spent one
more day in Tana, shopping in the markets and wandering around the streets.
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Adventuring means asking locals for directions. |
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Tana city |
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We loved our calendar fabric from 1985 & 1990 pillowcases at the guesthouse. |
Goodbyes
soon came as Sarah flew back to Australia and Stacia and I headed back to the
ship, with plenty of washing to do and a million photos of the amazing things
we had seen.
Have I convinced you to come and see it all for yourself?