Well. It’s been a while.
And time’s-a-ticking
on Paradise Island. Whilst last term was jam-packed full of incredible
adventures, new experiences and great achievements, I have to say that this
term has been much slower in pace and I’m regretting resting on my laurels.
That said, there is still time, and I have been up to a few things here and
there in the meantime.
‘Oté, lé zoli zoli mem a Mafat!’ – A mighty hike in the Wild Cirque
‘Oté, lé zoli zoli mem a Mafat!’ – A mighty hike in the Wild Cirque
Golly, this must have been over a month ago!
A three-and-a-half day hike on my second trip to the Cirque de Mafate started
by one group member being late, and thus the traversing of a (sometimes thigh
deep) river slightly aided by the light of flimsy little torches for around two
hours. Needless to say we had wet boots for the whole weekend. The morning
after saw a steep trudge in the searing heat up to a bright and colourful îlet
where we camped overnight, waking to see a stunning sunrise over the
jagged-edged mountains. Nice. Many trudges later, we’d gone to La Nouvelle, the
‘capital’ of road-less Mafate, nestled in a passing cloud that created an eerie
little village with giant spider webs frosted with water droplets. The next day
we were off to the lush green valley of the îlet of Marla, up a big ol’ mountain
then down Col du Taibit to the Cirque de Cilaos. It’s all names of places and
ting, but the pictures say it all. Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful.
‘Maman,
ou koz pa kréol, fé pa semblan’ – When the Hadlums came to town
A couple of weeks ago, the Mum and the Matt
came to visit the island. As a 24/7 translator and organiser, it was hard work,
but in the end we got to see a good few places on the island and a snippet of
the best it has to offer. From snorkelling around the teeming coral reefs of La
Saline-les-bains and walking around Cilaos to see breath-taking views (well,
for newcomers, of course) and tumbling waterfalls, to dolphin-watching and lava
field from-the-coach admiration, we tried to fit in whatever was possible with
the short time they spent here. Apart from my Mum trying to flag down an
ambulance as a taxi when we got stranded in the South, and me trying not to
translate what the nice Créole couple at the gîte in Cilaos were saying about
sharks and Dengue fever in La Réunion (“No, Mum, he said sharks off this coast
are vegetarian”), it was a good ol’ time. It’s kind of cool to show people
around somewhere that you have some knowledge about too.
Other
ting (never under-appreciate the effort of writing a blog)
So my usual punny, eloquent and stylistic
self has become a lazy old blogger ; I shall summarise with bullet-points of
other goings-on:
- - At the University Theatre there has been an
artist called Pink Floyd who has been doing exhibitions and performances for a
couple of months on campus. I’ve met him and he lives up to his standards of
being slightly off-the-wall and going off on the steepest tangents I’ve ever
known, but all at the same time sharing his varied snippets of wisdom and
knowledge. One of his exhibitions is supposed to include him lying down on a
bed in a paddling pool somewhere on campus for the day. Yeah, I don’t know why
either, but what’re you gonna do. That’s art!
- - I was asked to do a professional translation for
one of the university professors recently; it consisted of an academic article
about sports tourism in La Réunion. And by Jimmy was it difficult. I should
FINALLY be out swimming with the dolphins next week, if all goes to plan. The
documentary has officially been sent to a film festival in Tehran, and some
other places that I can’t remember. It’ll be interesting to see how the
research project has developed in any case.
- - Last Saturday we went to go and see the Tamil New Year celebrations in Saint André. Except we didn't see a lot because, being the East coast, it rained. There's a little photo shown though of the triumphantly determined members of the parade that came into Saine Suzanne despite the downpour.
- - I got back from a weekend at the Forêt Bélouve
today; a steep but short hike up from Salazie up to the tropical rainforest
plains stretching for miles (oh, sorry Frenchies, I mean kilometres), the most
dense wilderness you can imagine rolling over gentle hills then grasping onto
sheer-faced mountains. Due to rain-mania this morning, it was a soggy little
walk around the forest today, but yesterday I enjoyed a WOW sunset (pfft, who
needs fancy adjectives?) and the most WOW stars I’ve ever seen in my life. The
lack of light pollution means you can see everything in the night sky as clear
as day, or night, or whatever – imagine even being able to see clouds of stars
that form our galaxy. Yeah.
- I've seen three chameleons now. YEAH.
- I've seen three chameleons now. YEAH.
C’est tout pour l'instant de la petite Sophie paresseuse – next time,
you can have more jokes, puns and anecdotes; I know my standards are slipping
but it’ll come back to me.
Dorr for now-now,
Dorr for now-now,
Sophie (who else would it be?)
No comments:
Post a Comment