Cocos Islands

NORDLYS
David and Annette Ridout
Fri 1 Jun 2007 05:36
Cocos Islands
12:06S 96:53E
Direction Island, Cocos
Keeling
1st June 2007
During flying training I developed the habit of
entering in the back of my log book any new airfield, at that stage they often
were grass strips, that I landed at. As time went on these changed from
Staveton, Swaffam, Littlehampton to such as Karachi, Rangoon, Hong Kong.
Thirty years later the list was large and also included such as Helsinki,
Stockholm, Templehof and Beijing. The one thing a pilot never
sees is the puff of rubber smoke given out by tyres as they go from still to 120
knots in an instant however smooth the landing. Thirty years of service
but nothing more than a lot of rubber marks created. I say this because
many years ago my eldest son said to me, 'I could never do your job Daddy
because you create nothing'. Now while I understood his attitude, he is
now an architect, this never bothered me perhaps because I am not an artistic
type. What you may ask has all this to do with life anchored off
Direction Island part of the Cocos Atoll. Well atoll life for
yachtsmen is totally hedonistic. White sand, turquoise waters, lots of
waterborn wild life to be viewed through a face mask and absolutely nothing
created other than a lot of knowledge gained from reading. At our age it
is doubtful how much of this sticks in the 'little grey cells' inside our
skulls Combine this with some very squally winds, lots of rain and
high humidity and millions of mosquitoes ashore and the result is that Annette
and I are beginning to think that we have reached the end of our atoll visiting
lives. We still have one more to go and despite the above are looking
forward greatly to it. Salomon atoll, part of the British Indian Ocean
Territory is uninhabited and comes very highly recommended. It is we
understand a jewel of its kind and should make a grand finale for us. It
is still 1500 nautical miles of Indian Ocean away.
Cocos Atoll has a colouful history that any reader
can look up by the simple expedient of clicking on www.wikipedia.com but the modern result
is that on Home Island there live about 600 Muslim Malays and on West Island 120
mainly Australian whites. The two communities interact quite happily and
school teachers, administrators et al cross by ferry each morning the four
miles to Home Island while many workers go the other way. Home Island
is muslim and the local ladies wear long dresses with sleeves and
always have head scarves. The men are not seen in shorts. Many on
Home Island only speak rudimentary English. Both islands are well supplied
by the Australian Government with equipment and services. I am glad I am
not an Australian tax payer, a lot of my money would be going into this island
that produces almost nothing. No crops, no minerals and minimal tourism.
Home Island is .95 square kilometre. There are many small quadbike type
vehicles and not a few cars up to and including 4wd Toyotas. All is
financed by the Australian tax payer. An Australian teacher at the
local school told me that anything he asked for came. I used one of the
six modern computers in his classroom. The whole building and any
room I looked into was most impressive. This school only caters for up to
11 years old. After that the children commute to the High School on
West Island. All pregnant mothers are required to go to Perth for their
confinements. They and their partners are given free air transport.
I am sure you get the picture. Thank goodness they are not still British
Islands.
Have no fear dear readers we are far from
unhappy. It is all part of the experience of long term travel. I am
simply trying to be honest about our adventures, so many writers pretend that
everything is nirvana but we all know that life is not like that. I will
send short reports and positions when we get underway on the trip to
Chagos. Start date is set for 8th June but we will not go unless the
forecast shows the trades to be settled.
Happy times
David
![]() Don't worry we are not suffering too badly.
West Island is in the background.
![]() Everywhere is very clean and there are signs of much civic
pride
which is nice to see. This applies to both inhabited
islands
![]() The super Market on holm Island. Usually muslim ladies
drive
these machines sedately around, if they are not in cars.
The
distance from this shop to the average house is five
minutes walk.
|