Saturday 18 December 2010

Goodbye to most of that




We're preparing for our return now - the movers are about to collect our things (we hope) - and starting to think about what we'll miss: warm weather, cheap rum, sea views ... not all that much in fact but it's been an interesting year.

Our neighbour Margaret has also just left to return to Trinidad, which for her means going back to civilisation - she's distinctly sniffy about Guyana. It's a bit ironic therefore that we had a weekend in Trinidad at the beginning of this month and spent most of the time with no water, no power and not much else. Just like being back in Guyana in fact. To do them justice, we were in a pretty remote part of the north coast and there was heavy rain which kept bringing down the power lines. Between the rainstorms it was a lovely place, though. We were staying on one of the beaches the turtles use in spring to lay their eggs. No sign of them, but plenty of old eggshells and vultures hanging around waiting for their next meal. We also visited an eco-centre in the mountains - lots of humming birds and elderly British and American tourists; our demographic I suppose, but it didn't feel like it.

We've also been to Berbice along the east coast of Guyana with Penny's colleague Sam and her family. The Guyanese always speak positively of Berbice and it is indeed very pleasant and laid back. It's also got country (cows grazing in fields and that sort of thing) which you don't really get elsewhere in Guyana - it's either built-up, sugarcane or rice plantations or (generally) wilderness - and makes a nice change.

It's been rather odd having the build up to Christmas in temperatures of 30 degrees plus. The Guyanese are pretty enthusiastic about the whole thing - putting up fake Christmas trees and many houses are decorated with huge inflatable Santa Claus and reindeer. The Christmas cards feature snowy scenes that most have never experienced and have no wish to - in fact, dealing with cold weather, is the main concern Sam has about a possible study visit to the UK next summer. There is an air of mild surprise that we northerners - there's a Canadian museum 'expert' in town as well - actually feel there should be cold and snow at this time of year.

Hope to see y'all again in the New Year. We should be back by Christmas - snow and other travel hazards permitting - and no doubt longing for the sun again. Penny may get back to it again in the spring, as she has a bit of unfinished business (more detail on the archive experience in a following post).

Friday 24 September 2010

New venture into the interior



Going into "the interior" has a 19th Century colonial air about it but it feels a bit like that in Guyana. There is a fairly thin coastal strip which is more or less modern - fields, roads, electricity, telephone, running water etc. As you go inland the trappings of civilisation gradually start to fall away until none are left. It's great in a way for eco-tourism, which is what we've been doing, but it can also bring problems, as we found on our trip.

We started at the Iwokrama field station, and were travelling with Aidan and Isabella, two scientists from Newcastle - Isabella is Iwokrama's 'resident' scientist - and a rain gauge which they were going to install at a ranch further south. Our first port of call was the Amerindian village of Rewa and "port" is the right word as you have to get there by boat. It's about three hours down the river Rupununi from the nearest road. But first you have to find the river, which is more difficult than it sounds. In the dry season it has a more or less defined channel, about 150 feet wide, but in the wet season it spreads into the surrounding forest until it is around two miles across. Mid-season, where we are now, it is somewhere in between and though nominally we were heading for Kwatamang landing in practice you just go along until the road gives out and the water is deep enough for the boat, which could be more or less anywhere. Then it's about an hour of the boat picking its way through the flooded forest, basically by trial and error, before (with luck) you get out to the main river channel.

Still, we got to Rewa all right and it proved a lovely peaceful place. There were the usual hikes, boat trips and other wildlife spotting activities (sightings included squirrel monkeys, golden-handed tamarins and a huge fish called the arapaima), but we also spent some time in the village. It was preparing for the big event of the year, the climax of Amerindian heritage month of September, where a team sets off for the regional centre of Annai to participate in various traditional activities. We saw the rehearsals/heats for various competitive events which do not feature in the Commonwealth Games, like cassava-grating, hand cotton spinning and fire-lighting.

From Rewa we went by boat to Karanambu, our next stop. It's a good seven hours. The boat had metal seats and was a bit crowded with us, all our luggage and the rain gauge so by the time we arrived our bums were aching. Karanambu is run by Diane McTurk, a game old lady from a long established settler family who now does somewhat western style eco-tourism and takes in foundling giant otters before they eventually return to the wild. Our first activity, naturally, was another boat ride, but it was interesting enough for us to forget our aching bums - some of the time anyway. We saw a huge heronry where thousands of herons of various sorts roost for the night, then saw some lilies open. I know that sounds like watching paint dry but in fact it's fascinating. They were the huge Amazon lilies - the ones with the great wide pads. During the day the flowers are closed up tight and look a bit like coconuts. At twilight they open up into big white classically shaped lotuses, aiming to attract the beetles which help fertilise them. The process takes about half an hour and you can just about see the plants moving and certainly see the bettles diving in as promised.

We then started encountering some of the downside of being out of communication; we didn't know whether or when we could leave for our next destination, Nappi, which is inaccessible in the wet season. Eventually we set off but were told it was too late to get in that night and had to go to Lethem, the frontier town on the Brazilian border which we had visited in January. We set off early the next morning to start the 2 1/2 hour walk in to the eco-lodge from Nappi village at dawn. Our luggage set off separately by ox-cart, trundling along by a different route but at about the same pace as us (fortunately we had left the rain gauge in Lethem). The North Downs Way it was not; most of the walk was a wade through thick mud and from time to time we had to cross streams, which meant a difficult choice between getting your boots soaked or taking them off and walking barefoot through the muddy bottom (sandals or flip-flops didn't really work as they got sucked off by the mud). Still, we got there, only to find there was no water so the only way to clean the mud off was in the creek beside the camp. We had a good day, though, with some nature-spotting treks through the jungle (spider monkeys, capuchin birds and a bright red cock of the rock) only to find on our return that we had to leave at 3.30 the following morning and do the 2 1/2 hour trek back in the dark because of a mix-up over our flight from Lethem. So we were feeling pretty dirty and tired by the time we caught the plane but at least we managed to get back to Georgetown, which at one point had looked very uncertain, and it's from there that we are posting this blog.

Sunday 27 June 2010

Baganara



We spent last weekend, which saw some fairly British-style rain, and fittingly commemorated our wedding anniversary (the only day it rained in the summer of 1976), at Baganara, an island resort on the Essequibo river, another big river running in from the coast (Georgetown is on the Demarara). Getting there was quite a trek - most travelling in Guyana is fairly complicated - involving a taxi ride to Parika, a crowded speedboat down the Essequibo to Bartica, and a smaller boat across to the island. The rivers are really enormous and muddy, like lakes, and quite reminiscent of the Finnish lakes we saw last autumn (apart from the temperature), with trees and mangroves down to the shore. We passed ourselves off as 'experienced' canoeists, and kayaked round Baganara island a couple of times, in between the showers, seeing lots of birds and a howler monkey, and avoiding the large groups of day-trippers brought in to celebrate Father's Day on Sunday. The food, to be fair, was pretty good, compared to what is on offer in the eco-resorts, but given this is considered luxurious living in Guyana, it didn't really represent value for money in western terms. We came back on the firm's boat, open to some fairly heavy rain, and saw Eddie Grant's (of 'Baby Come Back' fame) abandoned house in the middle of the river, where Mick Jagger stayed when he visited to see the cricket.

Penny's project is progressing slowly but in danger of hitting the buffers with the Catch 22 of reluctance to 'build capacity' ie get some decent training, because any skilled people leave for better salary and conditions abroad.
UK visits planned over next month, so hope to see some of you then.

Water, Water everywhere



A long gap as we spent the best part of May outside Guyana, mostly in the USA, for nephew, Martin's wedding and in Penny's case getting up to the snow in Yosemite. June has been pretty wet but not noticeably cooler. Luckily most of the rain, which can be very heavy, occurs at night and occasionally wakes us up, as it is also very noisy on the corrugated tin roof (the usual roofing material here). Georgetown was beautifully laid out by the Dutch, with plots (a few acres each) separated by canals and drainage channels. On the outskirts they have been colonised by enormous lilies (the pads are used as plates - like banana leaves - at Hindu celebrations), so defeating their purpose, but becoming rather beautiful. That, and the cows and goats grazing on the verges, gives the area around us a very countryfied feel, more so as there are some houses with chickens and cows in their back yards, in a mainly residential area, with posh villas besides shacks that look like allotment huts, nearly all on stilts, the traditional method of building to cope with the floods. They did dredge out some of the channels after the first bout of heavy rain in April, but the vegetation has grown back within weeks.

As with a lot of things in Guyana, there are some upsides to the inefficiencies and lack-lustre economy. In many ways the rainforest is safer with no pressure of population and near impossibility of getting to it, It's a pity that the Guyanese lose out in order to keep it that way

Monday 3 May 2010

markets and economics in Guyana



Last weekend we went to Parika market. Parika is a port on the River Essequibo - which is huge, the third largest in South America and over twenty miles wide at its mouth. There are lots of islands in the estuary, mostly very fertile and on Sundays the farmers come over on speedboats to sell their fruit and veg in Parika. It's as busy and messy as you'd expect and we experimented a bit (with a little advice from Eddie, our taxi driver) buying some salted curi fish and some labba (a medium sized rodent like a small capybara). The fish was tasty but pretty bony and the labba was rather good, a cross between rabbit and beef and a welcome change from chicken and mince, so hope it's sustainable. They say that if you eat some labba and drink some creek water (which we've done in Iwokrama) you're bound to come back to Guyana so it looks as if our fates are sealed.

Anyway, it prompted some thoughts on Guyana's economy. Prices are much the same level here as in the UK but wages are much lower - which is tough for the average Guyanese and also a bit odd. Why aren't the low wages reflected in lower prices or a lower exchange rate? For what it's worth (comments from experienced development economists welcome) there seems to be a combination of reasons. First, Guyana's economy is very dependent on imports - the entire population is about that of a city like Sheffield and there are a lot of things it doesn't produce itself, including some fairly basic items. Prices therefore tend to be around world levels. Meanwhile the exchange rate is artificially sustained by remittances from overseas Guyanese (there are more Guyanese overseas than in Guyana itself); also by various forms of unrecorded economic activity, including illegal logging and mining, smuggling and the drugs trade (it's not a major transit route but for a small economy like this, the quantities that come through amount to a big number). What it adds up to is that around half the economy is illegal or externally generated, which makes life pretty tough for Guyanese working in the legal economy with no outside support no wonder so many don't stay.

Meanwhile, the rainy season is getting more settled in, which means it's also time for the World 20:20 cricket, which is the equivalent of Guyana's Wimbledon, though it only gets the first rounds (the finals are in Barbados). We get the weather about ten minutes before the cricket does(the opposite of our Wimbledon experience - it's ten minutes ahead of Lovelace Road) and we've been watching on TV rather than the stadium, I'm afraid. At least we can make a cup of tea when the rain starts.

Saturday 10 April 2010

Easter, kites and a haircut




One advantage of Georgetown is that it is quite easy to get out into the jungle, where we spent the Easter weekend at a resort called Arrowpoint connected with an Indian village. We managed to get in a variety of activities, kayaking, trekking, swimming, birdwatching etc - though all you really had to do was sit on the balcony and wait for dozens of macaws to fly past. Still, we did more walking than most of their visitors, I think - Penny needs to keep up her fitness levels for Yosemite in May. On one of the walks you encounter a crashed plane in the jungle - rather worrying as it looked like all the small planes we have been flying on in Guyana.

We were back in Georgetown for Easter Monday, when the custom is to fly kites from the sea-wall, with competitions for the biggest, highest etc. We even flew a small one ourselves (out of competition) which we'd got as a free gift one day at the shops.

But the boldest initiative was this weekend when Penny took the plunge and had a haircut, accompanied by our friend Margaret as her expert adviser - no photos of the result, I fear but you could call it a reasonable success!

Saturday 27 March 2010

a month later..


Another apology for being such unassiduous bloggers - put it down to our age (and Penny is a year nearer 60 since the last post). Malcolm made a trip to the UK in early March, and Penny practised single living in Georgetown and started a yoga class, which is run by an energetic Guyanese lady, in a circular wooden 'benab' in the grounds of the Pegasus hotel.

Penny went briefly to the Iwokrama forest field station to move the library under cover, and met a research team from Newcastle setting up river and weather monitoring equipment. She joined them for a night trip on the river, and saw snakes and caiman, and a fantastic array of stars, including the milky way.

Last weekend we were in Tobago - it's a bit of a change from Guyana; the sea is clear and blue and we went snorkelling with tropical fish, swimming with dolphins, and exploring the reefs. Everything is a bit more tourist friendly than in Guyana, including the food which is (slightly) more varied (though rather more expensive). We even did some sight-seeing - the island is dotted with beautiful little bays dominated by old forts built by the French or British depending on who was in charge at the time. But it's all very peaceful now and not yet too overrun by tourists despite the attractions, so we're likely to make it a regular weekend or holiday destination.

Wednesday 24 February 2010

After Mash

hi - a short post as not much to say - we've taken out a monthly sub at Pegasus, which allows us to use their pool and gym - not badly equipped and air-conditioned, so no excuse for Penny to go to flab. It's also just up the road from the Iwokrama Georgetown offices.
We also got our shipping in last week, so good supplies of tea and marmite, and a ton of toiletries, that we could have easily bought here.. still, it was fun unpacking the boxes - which are going to recycled for Penny's archive storage - and Malcolm's appreciating a few more changes of clothes - he'd been on holiday rations until now.
Tuesday 23 February, was republic day or Mashramani, with a sort of carnival parade - not quite up to Trinidad standards but still pretty noisy and crowded. We took an old disposable camera, so photos to come, if we can get it developed. We saw some floats from government departments, which I don't think happens at Notting Hill.
We're beginning to get used to the heat; our location,on the East Coast sea-wall, means we are not too plagued by mosquitos, and we have got into the habit of walking along the sea-wall most evenings before the sundowner on the balcony, so not too bad really. And now Malcolm's making bread again - it's almost home from home... only 30 degrees hotter!

Sunday 14 February 2010

First trip to the Field Station



Sorry for lack of post last weekend - fairly quiet apart from a birdwatching tour in the Botanical Gardens with a young rasta and enthusiastic Guyanese birder, who located the 'signature' bird of the Guyanese coast, the blood-coloured woodpecker, but as it was towards 6pm by the time we saw it, it looked like a little dark blob to us non-(or in Malcolm's case, incipient)birders.
This week, we've had our first trip to the field station, on the northern edge of the Iwokrama reserve, quite an idyllic spot by the Essequibo river. It involved a fairly long and bumpy drive along a dirt road, with critical timings across the old railway bridge at Linden and a ferry across the river just before the lodge. Penny did some work including finding out about sustainable logging and monitoring activities, and reinstating a library in a 'benab', a circular structure, open to the elements and the birds, who regarded the shelves as an ideal nesting area. We managed a trip out to Turtle Mountain, 'climbing' 300m and sleeping in hammocks and eating a tasty catfish cooked over a camp-fire. Lots of macaw, toucan and some monkey sightings but no jaguar yet.

Sunday 31 January 2010

Work and Play in Georgetown


the view from our balcony

We've now had two weekends in Georgetown, and have probably exhausted its entertainment options. Today's choice, the Princess Hotel (formerly Buddy's International)by the main cricket stadium, had a good size swimming-pool, but also ghetto-blasters. On Saturday we had a fruitless search for a heavy frying-pan, along the main shopping street, and found the 'foreigners' supermarket, and a wilting but fresh cauliflower. So we are managing an approximation of home cooking and early evening walks along the seawall (though today at high-tide the sea was sloshing over). For the archivists among you, the Iwokrama archive is fairly rudimentary and has so far been treated as a library system, so some challenges there too..

Tuesday 26 January 2010


Georgetown

We're settling in, more or less, in Georgetown. Some things are proving fairly easy - like finding the flat (with Atlantic views, though you can't really swim as it's full of river silt); some are a bit more difficult - like opening a bank account which we haven't managed yet. Our neighbours are mostly expats, but not European - the majority are from other Caribbean countries and work in the Caricom secretariat here. Anyway, for a while we will be more settled than in the jungle or savannah - we'll try to post some pictures of us there, looking less than settled, but at the moment the internet is resisting.

Wednesday 20 January 2010

Tour of the South

We've been round most of the south of Guyana since our last post. We visited part of the Iwokrama forest where Penny is going to work and walked along their canopy walkway, seeing parrots, toucans and the like. The second time we went we were helped (or hindered) by the presence of some serious American birders; they had all the right equipment so we had a look through their telescopes at tiny spots in the distance which turned out to be Guinness like toucan. They also had numbered lists to tick off in the evening (a bit like a Chinese restaurant - "OK, we got a 179 and a 218 this morning"). We then went off to an Indian village in the savannah and had a night camping in hammocks(fairly comfortably) in the jungle, having a go at fishing (not very successful but we saw some giant otters), shooting with Indian bows etc. From there we went to the savannah in the deep south, miles away from anywhere but managed some horse-riding (again, not very successful - pix to follow, we hope) saw a giant ant eater and swam in the creeks. We're now back in Georgetown trying to install ourselves in house, job etc. After a week in the country Georgetown,which had seemed very provincial when we arrived, now seems far too big and noisy!

Tuesday 12 January 2010

Here we go again

Hi everyone
So we´re back on our travels, appreciating the 30 degree rise in temperature over the last two days, if not the 26 hour journey, which included 4 hours with stranded Brummies in Bridgetown airport, two changes of plane and abbreviated nights camping out at the Westminster flat beforehand and at the airport hotel in Port of Spain on Saturday night.
On a softies´adventure tour for the first ten days (we briefly met up with some misguided souls, who were paying to do a jungle survival course, involving 3 days fending for themselves, a sort of iron John meets I´m a (non) celebrity). We´ve already done two journeys in 10 seater planes over the rainforest canopy: on Sunday, the day we arrived to Kaietur falls and Monday to a lodge on the savanna in North Rupununi (with apparently, the only swimming pool in the region). Reminiscent of Sri Lanka in many ways including troops of schoolchildren in immaculate uniforms and bare feet, and lush jungle landcape. The guides have all trained at Iwokrama, the centre Penny will be working for, and we are off to see the place itself, or the canopy walkway part on Tuesday.