Mauritius and Pamplemousses garden
by Diana Studer
- gardening for biodiversity
in Cape Town, South Africa
Splendid birthday 4
Red Sea now our blurred memory (altho Splendida had second thoughts and is going the long way round, from Durban to Las Palmas this week). Next port last November was Mauritius. Named for Maurits of Orange. Maurice for French. We had three days to amble at leisure from Port Louis. Jogging track signposted along the waterfront.
Long walk back to the ship, ahead is open water |
For me it was an untethered, mostly 'lass dich überraschen' (let yourself be surprised) holiday. One thing I asked for was Pamplemousses garden. Disconcerted to find a very large funerary monument (Samadhi) to the first Prime Minister of Mauritius.
In the medicinal garden. Yellow Allamanda cathartica from Brazil. Asparagus umbellatus from Canary Islands. Ravenala madagascariensis (Strelitzia family) traveller's palm. Frangipani (Central America) covered in moss and lichen - while I think of it as a 'dry' garden plant. Olea lancea endemic to Mascarene Islands. Noni fruit of Morinda citrifolia from Indo-Malaysia.
Traditional medicine garden at Pamplemousses November |
Pink and white lotus each have their own pond. That fruit which looks like a showerhead.
Pink and white lotus Pamplemousses November |
Amazon lily, young leaves concertina open, shares its pond with water lilies in pink, white and blue. White spike is water banana.
Amazon and water lilies Pamplemousses November |
We criss-crossed the garden. Bois benjoin in Mauritian Creole. Buttress roots. African giant land snail. Bridge of sighs - Pont des Soupirs, even the stones grow green in this climate. Tapeworm plant has segmented leaves with tiddly flowers. Furled orange trumpet Cascabela thevetia Apocynaceae.
Pamplemousses garden in November |
Grateful to be on our balcony when the afternoon brought a tropical downpour. Then we understood the stepped stacks of pallets against the warehouse.
Tropical downpour |
Shopping for Mauritian tea. I found herbal and Earl Grey as well as Bois Cheri. Blue string of stars. God is looking after these people! - said the young Black ship photographer who needed my birthday for the Splendida app.
Blue string of stars in November |
From the ship we watched the light rail train climb the hill. Where does it go? Helpful staff at the ticket machines - where, how much, yes you can use your card. Employment for school leavers? We travelled inland to Curepipe, and up 580 metres. Comfortable way to enjoy the inland scenery - altho we were the only tourists or expats to use good public transport both ways.
Sleek modern train on Mauritius |
Mauritian sega (UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage) dancers performed for us on the ship. Wide full skirts to swirl and flourish. The dance is both slave heritage from the many countries flung together, and protest against slavery. Drum, washboard and triangle are the musical instruments. Intercontinental Slavery Museum was on our walking route into town. Mask of Dhiahilila dit Jasmin from Tanzania, from the ethnographic collection of Froberville. Mauritian Creole is a recognised language, taught in schools and the university, with a first dictionary in 2009. Sited at the former military hospital as a symbol of 'healing memories and souls'. For more justice in society - 'honouring the contribution of enslaved people'.
Intercontinental Slavery Museum Project |
We watched the island ferry loading. Mauritius Trochetia.
Mauritius Trochetia ferry |
On the right side to look across the city to the mountains, we left as the sun set. Ship staff have 8 month contracts. Bibi told us she usually flies away, a clean sharp break. But watching her mother weeping on the breakwater, was hard.
Sunset departure from Mauritius |
Mauritius has had some rough weather since.
5 Reunion Island and Jardin des Parfums et des Epices
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An interesting trip, all things considered. Perhaps best to have gone into it with no preconceived notions about what you'd see. I loved the Lotus flowers and the water lilies of course but I was also impressed by that giant snail's shell!
ReplyDeleteYour vacation posts are GREAT. You notice what most tourists pay no attention to (and pay attention to the plants not just the sights Really enjoyed this. Still thinking with amusement of the "Elton John" crystal staircase on the cruise ship...
ReplyDeleteThat seems like it would be a wonderful destination. Sounds like you had a great trip! Surprises are part of the journey, right? The plants are wonderful, and the Lotus flowers and Waterlilies, in particular, are magical.
ReplyDeleteLotus fruits look wonderful!
ReplyDeleteI hadn't realised that there would be more from your cruise! You had some very interesting ports of call. Mauritius sounds like an interesting (and exotic) country. Love the plants - like others, especially the Lotus.
ReplyDeleteDon't blame the cruise ships for taking the long way round these days.
Right now we are in the middle of a non-tropical downpour. Storms the year round, that's climate change...
ReplyDeleteMauritius is so different from what I expected! I would have enjoyed that botanical garden too. Such beautiful flora.
ReplyDeleteI learned today (thanks to your post) that you can take a cruise from Durban to the Mediterranean or Canary Islands. This has huge bearing as we hope to retire one day in the Canaries but will likely still have family in SA
We have done the West coast a few times. Holidays, or migrating between Switzerland and Cape Town. RMS St Helena was a friendly size.
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