Up the Creek

W2N 'Where to Next?'
Rob 'Bee' Clark
Fri 12 Dec 2008 09:50
13:23.6N 16:37.4W
 
There's something really 'Famous Five' or 'Swallows and Amazons' about being up a creek don't you think?
 
Well, up a creek is in fact what I is - am, and not in the euphemistic sense either - oh no. Oyster Creek in fact. And I can say, perhaps for the first time on this entire adventure - that I have stumbled across a remote anchorage that absolutely epitomises the essence of the voyage.
 
I had been in the port town of Banjul since arriving in Gambia at the mouth of the famous Gambia River (or infamous, such was the river's association with the slave market on James Island). Banjul, as you might expect, is as filthy and chaotic as any port town but the Gambian people are unreservedly welcoming, proud, friendly and generally happy. It's not without it's evident poverty but has the feel of a place where even the street robbers will ask nicely first, rob you and then, in all sincerity, welcome you to Gambia! I had arrived during Eid, a spirited Muslim festival that prompted a three-day public holiday during which, traditionally, goats and sheep are sacrificed and shared amongst the families and the poor. There's so much I could write about Banjul but if you will indulge me, I'd like if I may, to tell you about Lamin Creek.
 
When I returned to Canasta yesterday afternoon having been shopping for provisions, I was lazing (melting) on the boat when a small wooden craft idled past laden with incongruously white, blond tourists (from Sweden). Also, another yacht that had arrived the previous evening had gone and I recalled Dan, the skipper, saying something about heading for a creek somewhere near. Well, the Swedes disappeared back the way they'd come into a labyrinth of mangroves and I thought then that I should perhaps take a closer look at the charts and see if I might be able find this mysterious Narnia.
 
And find it I did.
 
Ghosting along through the narrow (and in places, shallow) Daranka Bolon bordered as far as the eye can see by endless mangroves and flat land (yes, flat - so for the first time since Morocco, I don't have to struggle for the words to illustrate how spectacularly volcanic and rugged it is - yey!), I made my way tentatively into the depths of the peaceful labyrinth. I kept to the main channel and it wasn't long before I could see above the low-lying mangroves, a tiny cluster of yacht masts. I headed for it and soon found, to my surprise and delight, a remote thatched wooden shack built amongst the dense mangroves with a landing jetty and an impossibly friendly welcoming committee. Lamin Lodge. I've just woken up and I can't think why the reference has just popped into my head but I'm looking at the lodge and I'm reminded of the Swiss Family Robinson story! I can't remember the story... oh, wasn't it someone and the Swiss...? Anyway, it might just be something from my childhood that makes no sense to anyone but for some reason, that's what has been dredged from the archives to describe this extraordinary place.
 
Ah, Crusoe... Robinson Crusoe... Of course!!
 
I was shown around proudly by my new best friend Soloman who seemed entertained by my surprise at seeing monkeys and parrots in the trees. Then, as the sun settled behind the distant palms, we sat on a log watching the fishermen preparing their nets as we waited for Dan and his crew to arrive for dinner. The setting was idyllic - perfect. It might even have been romantic if Soloman had been a girl! He wasn't - isn't - but that's not really his fault. A crisp, bright full moon was already casting long shadows as the sun finally disappeared. Feeling ultimately relaxed, open-minded - and with a renewed enthusiasm for the mischievous potential of the dice, I gave the it an 'odds/evens' choice of sharing Soloman's suspiciously fat cigarette... I don't smoke! It landed on a... well, I'm not going to tell you - dooode!
 
So, dinner was by candle-light on the top floor - the third floor of this impossibly rustic shack overlooking the moonlit anchorage. I'd been invited to join Dan, Anne, David and Patrick (and bats) for what turned out to be an absolutely outstanding seafood dinner. The local women harvest the oysters from the mangrove stems while the men go out fishing for... um... I don't really know what but I'm inclined to believe that whatever it was, it had been quietly enjoying life in the Gambia River earlier that afternoon . Well, it was magnificent. The company was entertaining, the service attentive, cheerful, friendly and even the mosquitoes seemed to respect our privacy and unblemished enjoyment. I've no doubt that the local village of Lamin is mercifully everything that Praia do Santiago, Mindello, Tarrafal do Sao Nicolau and Banjul... isn't. I'll find out soon enough.
 
So this is me - happy - in Gambia wondering if I might stay here a few days and disregard the plan to spend Christmas in Ascension Island.
 
Bye for now,
 
Bee