Our Caribbean cruise is rapidly drawing to a close. We’re now into our final three days. It’s been an incredible experience, and the weather has been largely sunny and dry, with an occasional (and normally very brief) rain shower in two or three ports.
Today’s cruise highlights come from sunny (and humid) Trois-Ilets on the island of Martinique. The island is part of the French West Indies (Antilles) and thus is another one of those French territorial collectivities. Martinique is renowned for the active volcano, Mount Pelée, its most dramatic feature. Pelée erupted in 1792, 1851, and twice in 1902. The eruption of 8 May 1902 destroyed the town of Saint-Pierre and killed 28,000 people in a matter of minutes.
Our ship dropped anchor in the bay opposite Fort-de-France, the capital of Martinique. Garry and I then joined a tour to an open-air museum called La Savane des Esclaves. I was keen to see it after reading about its unusual history.
The attraction sits in the hills above Trois-Ilets, nestled within lush rainforest and features faithful reconstructions of traditional indigenous and Creole huts. These structures include woven cane walls (excellent cross ventilation in the tropical heat) and a roof often thatched with sugar cane leaves. Slaves on the island were typically housed in these structures for hundreds of years.
Various exhibits around the grounds provide an insight into the daily lives of two distinct populations: the pre-colonial indigenous people and the plantation slaves. We learned about their living arrangements, daily rituals and the impact of the island’s sugar cane industry. The grounds also included examples of local crops, spices and medicinal plants.
Incredibly, the entire complex is the vision of one man, Gilbert Larose. It was a passion project that kept him busy for decades. He constructed the huts, carved life-sized wooden statues of slaves going about daily life, and landscaped the grounds for more than twenty years. It was a genuinely memorable venue.
Sadly, the guide managing our excursion was the worst we’ve had on the entire cruise. She did an appalling job of directing and controlling the group. More than once she wandered off without explanation leaving us wondering where she’d gone, how long she’d be and what to do us while she was missing in action.
She then lead us around the grounds of La Savane des Esclaves in such a haphazard manner that Garry and I eventually gave up trying to follow her. With detailed and illustrated explanatory billboards posted everywhere, we decided we’d learn more if we simply peeled away and did our own thing.
Finally, she inexplicably decided to direct two-thirds of group back to the tour bus half an hour before the agreed departure time. Garry and I followed suit, assuming we were leaving early. Instead, we were left sitting on the bus waiting for the others to return at the original departure time. With limited time in each port, sitting around for no good reason isn't how you want spend it.
Our tour bus dropped us back at Marina de La Pointe du Bout, a small boat harbour sheltered by a narrow headland. Garry and I decided to take a short walk around the local shopping precinct before catching a tender back to our ship. It was a fairly typical resort village with a neatly manicured town square surrounded by faux-colonial buildings. Interestingly, Trois-Ilets' one claim to fame is that it's the birthplace of Joséphine, Napoléon Bonaparte’s first wife.
That’s
country number 85 for me. I’ll clock up one more before we finally depart the Caribbean.