Two out-of-town trips of late, one by air and one by van. This country is hard for travel but when you make it to a destination it’s pretty cool.
Work’s been nuts, and once the bone-crushing deadlines
passed, I took a flight to the west coast city of Mahajanga. Accompanied by a
visiting friend, we hit the beach, a couple of caves, a park with a legit baobab
tree, and of course lemurs.
I’d originally planned to go alone but one of my friends
contacted me in April and asked if she could visit in April or May. I was like,
you mean *this* April or May? Most people don’t plan trips to Madagascar on the
spur of the moment, but Foreign Service people aren’t “most people.” But since I
had the bone-crushing work project, it wasn’t possible for her to visit before
May 15, and I already bought a flight ticket to Mahajanga. Luckily, she was up
for not only a trip to the capital but there, so she managed to get on the same
flight as I had.
Since I’d originally only planned a super boring weekend, I
had to step up the plans and arranged a guide and driver. As a result, we had a
real itinerary, as opposed to the “read books by the beach” I had figured on. It
was a lot more fun with another person along, that is for sure.
The Cirque Rouge was possibly my favorite, outside of being
within sight of the beach. The Cirque Rouge is just a really cool valley-ish
walk in an area with red clay walls. Due to erosion, there were a lot of these
little stalagmite-type things, little baby towers (some of them really small)
that each had what appeared to be a rock sitting on top of it. But they weren’t
rocks – that was just how they eroded. For me, it was just fascinating. I felt
like I was scouting ideas for a Pixar movie – there were scads of these things,
and they almost looked like little cities.
My friend hadn’t seen lemurs and we went to two different
places with them. They’re cute little suckers; I think we saw two species. At
one of the same parks, there was a huge baobab tree, too. That was my first
one, and it was so big I could climb up in it and sit back leaning on the
trunk. It was huge, and, according to the guide, about 200 years old.
The trip was sightsee-y and culture-y, and we saw demonstrations of stuff like how these
really pretty papers are made, how they create aluminum pots and make some stone
items and what work goes into creating a little model bike, which is made from
mostly recycled parts. We ate traditional foods (and cooked a meal) and saw a
performance of dance and drums.
Winter is officially here and I’m already colder than I was
last year. I have no idea what’s going on. I can’t believe I am the same person
who lived in both Minot and Minsk. It’s about 45-50 in the mornings and I’m so
bitterly cold. Seriously, at that temperature in ND or Belarus, people are
still wearing shorts.
Today for some reason I decided to buy broccoli and on the
spur of the moment, I decided to make soup with it. It turned out really good
and it’s been nice to have something warm.
But now the days are getting a little longer. My dog doesn’t
like waking up in the dark, and since we lave for our walk around 5:20 a.m. and
the sun hasn’t been rising until 6:20, she is not happy. Then it’s dark by 5:30
p.m. and we don’t walk until 6. This is why on the weekends and we go out in
the afternoon, she just plops her but down in the sun and doesn’t move. Can’t
say I blame her.