Thursday 6 June 2024 – The room that we had this time at the Hotel Relais des Plateaux was directly above the one we’d had on our first visit. It was very similar in size and organisation, however, the bed seemed a great deal less comfortable; but at least we had a chance for more sleep than on our first visit.
After breakfast, we met our driver from last night again. He had brought Kenny, our guide, with him, and I think we’re going to get on well with both of them. Kenny speaks excellent English and has a wealth of knowledge about local matters, including the correct way to spell our driver’s name, which is Haja (with a silent H).
As soon as we got under way, it was clear that it would not be long before our brains were full, as Kenny started explaining things. Some Madagascan history: it used to be split into several separate kingdoms which were perpetually at war with each other until the chap who ruled over what is now Antananarivo used 1,000 soldiers to establish some order and himself as overall ruler – thereby providing the name an (to) tanana (place, city) arivo (1000): the place of a thousand. Some politics: the island became independent from France in 1960; it has six regions, each split into multiple communities; it has a president, a prime minister, a house of representatives and a senate, along similar lines to the French model. He pointed out various plants and trees; told us about many of the places around us, whose names we haven’t a chance of remembering; some useful Malagasy words – excuse me, thank you, goodbye – which we also have no chance of remembering; and all in all it became clear that he is going to do a great job.
The first thing we had to do was to get through Antananarivo. Given that Madagascar has a population approximately half of that of Great Britain, spread over two and a half times the land mass, and given that the population of Antananarivo is less than a third of that of London, you’d expect that to be an easy job. You’d be wrong. The traffic was ludicrously heavy, and it took us the best part of an hour before we were free of the capital. However, we learned a few things as we ground our way slowly along.
As well as the colourful and traditional buildings in many of the streets, there are quite a few funky modern buildings.
There are old cars being used as taxis (this is a Renault 4); heaven knows how they keep them going.
Unless you’re bang in the centre, there will always be rice paddies to be seen.
There’s a sort of “mobile phone taxi” service; if your mobile phone has run out of credit, you can pay for just a few minutes to make your calls.
The influence of France is still very clear.
The entrepreneurial spirit is strong, whether in formal market stalls
or chancing it in the traffic jams.
Madagascar imports fuel wholesale
and appears to operate an informal retail operation on the side.
The outskirts of Tana have many scenes of very colourful (and probably quite ramshackle) buildings,
and as you get further out of the city, the roads can turn feral.
I suspect that the road surface suffers badly because the road we were on, National Route 2, which leads eastwards to Andasibe, also continues on the the island’s main port, Toamasina; hence there’s a very significant amount of very heavy lorry traffic in both directions.
There is actually a railway connecting the two
along which freight is also run.
Kenny explained that some 80% of Malagasy people are farmers, tilling the fields both for subsistence and for selling. Rice is the main crop, and the people consume it in huge quantities, but there’s still enough left over to export. However, farming is not a full-time occupation year round, so many farmers have sidelines. One such is using the clay on their land to make bricks; ovens dotted our route, but we couldn’t get a satisfactory picture, sadly. What we could get photos of, though was another major activity, which is quarrying granite.
This activity is responsible for some of the gashes in the landscape we could see on the flight down from Maroantsetra. There are other gashes, too
and the impression we got from Kenny is that this is erosion which has deforestation as its root cause. It will be interesting to revisit those photos from our plane journeys, when we have time, to see how much more of the story this extra understanding reveals.
We also noted the dreaded eucalyptus trees, which so dominated parts of our travels in Spain: however here these seem to be non-commercial plantings representing another land owner’s side hustle, as they can be harvested quickly and the timber either used to make charcoal (much used in rural areas for fuel) or used for building work.
Going from the city of Antananarivo through the countryside to Andasibe also revealed a change in architectural styles. For example, this house shows a typical Tana style,
brick built, with sloping roofing and balconies. Our route took us out into the country, where clay and mud become a significant building material, based around timber frames and with thatched roofs
and then as we approached Andasibe, into rainforest country, wood becomes the principal building material.
We went through Moramanga, which is a substantial – and busy – town,
which is where we first came across cycle rickshaws as a mode of transport. You don’t see these in Tana because it’s too hilly. In the UK, these are used only for ripping off carrying tourists, but here they are a common mode of transport. It’s ubiquitous, but not quite public transport. This comes in the form of minibuses; different coloured minivans cover different destinations, but a common theme appears to be the bus conductor, who ushers people on and off and collects payment, quite often whilst hanging off the back of the bus.
What else did we see? Piglets;
Traffic management for roadworks (known as “go go girls”, apparently);
the rather ritzy railway station at Andasibe, from the days when the railway carried passengers
and which is theoretically going to be used for passenger transport at some stage in the future, but which has done service as a hotel in the past, with lodgings opposite it;
and a slightly weird version of milk for your coffee, which we took at a slightly weird lunch stop at Pizzeria Diary, just outside Moramanga. (Diary in Malagasy means something completely different from its English sense; I’ll try to find out what for you.) We had tourist stuff (pizza for me, and tilapia & vegetables for Jane – whilst Haja and Kenny went off to a different part of the place (a staff canteen or something, we posit) and had pork, rice and beans, a traditional Malagasy meal which we would much have preferred to eat. After the meal we ordered coffee with milk, and this is what we got.
This was (sweetened) condensed milk; adding it to coffee made it sweet enough for me to drink, but it had a weird, gloopy consistency.
Quite soon after lunch we arrived at our accommodation for the next three nights, the very swish Mantadia Lodge. To get there, we went through Andasibe village and I hope we get a chance to wander round with a camera, because I think it’s really quite photogenic.
I suppose because we’d “wasted” most of the day getting to the lodge, Kenny had organised a night walk for us which was to happen before dinner (don’t forget that darkness falls with a crash here at about 6pm); this made dinner rather later than we would have liked, but actually I guess there was no other way to organise it, and it gave us a couple of hours off during the afternoon to draw breath.
The walk was at the VOIMMA Community Reserve, a wildlife reserve managed by the local community, just a ten minute drive away, and we were led by a guide called Abraham. The route was through rainforest, but the conditions were dry, which made everything more pleasant for us. There are prepared trails through the park, which gives it a more manicured feel than we experienced at Masoala, but there was a profusion of magnificent tree ferns, which we hope to go back and look at in more detail and daylight over the next couple of days.
We didn’t see any lemurs during the walk (barring the glint of a mouse lemur’s eyes at a considerable distance) but there were other creatures to admire.
Finally, Jane found another chameleon just outside our room at the lodge.
We eventually established that this is a male Elephant Ear Chameleon.
Dinner at the lodge completed the day, which, despite being spent almost entirely on the drive, was content-rich and quite satisfying. The morrow’s plan is for a longer walk around the Mantadia National Park, which is primary rain forest and brings the prospect of some more varieties of wildlife. Today was a lemur-less day; what will tomorrow bring?