Mauritius

A Mini India in the Southwest of the Indian Ocean


fresh water, salty tears
Hindu family photographed with Chamarel waterfall in the background.
steps of faith
Hindu believers ascend to the Sibra Subramany Hindu temple of Quatre Bornes, also known as Kovil Montagne.
Fishing for emotions
Father and daughter look out over the islet of Coin de Mire, off Cap Malheureux, on the northern tip of Mauritius.
Wet land
Visitors enjoy the tones of Terre des Sept Couleurs, in Chamarel, then dampened by some rain.
Christianity in Hindu Day
Residents and visitors of Mahébourg in the vicinity of the church of Notre Dame des Anges, on a Hindu national holiday Maha Shivaratri.
talk for the talk
Beach stall owners mingle while waiting for new customers, in the vicinity of Cap Malheureux.
an exuberant geology
Fishermen at the joint mouth of the Tamarin and Rempart Rivers with Lion Mountain
in a gaudy retreat
A faithful Hindu contemplates the houses of Quatre Bornes from the balcony of the Sibra Subramany Kovil Montagne temple.
Bois-Cheri tea
Sunassee Goranah describes the functioning of the Bois-Cheri tea factory, in the coolest and rainiest heart of Mauritius.
bathing weekend
Father and children bathe in the tranquil sea of ​​Trou Eau Douce.
Aapravasi Gate
The portico of the city of Port Louis passed through thousands of Indian workers who never returned to India
sweet road
One of several roads on the island of Mauritius that cross sugarcane plantations.
tourist family
Hindu tower
Gopuram (tower) of the Sibra Subramany temple, situated at the top of the Kovil Montagne.
The 2nd Landing Place
The Montagne du Lion projected from the Grand Port, a verdant bay where the Dutch disembarked for the first time, after the Portuguese had already done so.
Plantation & Tea
Balcony of the Bois Cheri plantation cafe with one of its plantations in the background.
rainy harvest
A tea picker from the Bois Cheri plantation works in the frequent rain of this elevated area of ​​Mauritius.
Port Louis
Houses in the capital of Mauritius, Port Louis
Trou-aux-cerfs
The crater and lake of Trou-aux-Cerfs.
In the XNUMXth century, the French and the British disputed an archipelago east of Madagascar previously discovered by the Portuguese. The British triumphed, re-colonized the islands with sugar cane cutters from the subcontinent, and both conceded previous Francophone language, law and ways. From this mix came the exotic Mauritius.

We were already used to contemplating endless cane fields as we roamed the island from one end to the other.

It was there, between Poste de Flacq and the vastness of the ocean, that we noticed, for the first time, the profusion of piles of volcanic stone that projected from them, their bases hidden in the green vegetation.

"Is this some ceremonial ruins?" we asked Jean-François from the depths of the sweetest ignorance and innocence. "What, that?" the native asks us back, somewhat incredulous and with a sarcastic smile.

"Not. Those are the stones that our ancestors had to remove from the field so that sugarcane could be planted. They ended up piled up like that.”

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, road between sugar cane

One of several roads on the island of Mauritius that cross sugarcane plantations.

We went down a little more in that Wild side of the Flacq region.

Through country and village interior roads that, among Hindu temples, small grocery stores disputed by saris of all colors, butchers and homes also gaudy and full of life, forced us to interrupt our march again and again.

The island of Mauritius that is confused with a corner of India

We were in eastern Mauritius. Any visitor more confused by the geography of the world could be led to think he had landed on the lush coastline of Karnataka or Tamil Nadu.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, Trou Eau Douce.

Father and children bathe in the tranquil sea of ​​Trou Eau Douce.

We passed Palmar and arrived at the bay of Trou d'Eau Douce, a picturesque but bipolar village that separates the domain below coral reefs of the large resorts from the more genuine good to the south.

There, fishermen keep their canes at the ready with only their heads above the water, side by side with the boats and catamarans that transport tourists on the crossings to Île aux Cerfs, one of the favorite turquoise bathing refuges in those places.

A series of riverside villages ensue between the Indian Ocean and the sugarcane plantations at the foot of Lion Mountain, which overhangs the emblematic Grand Port inlet.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, Lion Mountain

Fishermen at the joint mouth of the Tamarin and Rempart Rivers with Lion Mountain

The Landing of Portuguese Navigators and the Dutch Inevitable

In 1598, the Dutch landed in that exact place and named the island Mauritius, in honor of their Prince Maurice van Nassau.

This does not invalidate the fact that the unavoidable Portuguese navigators were the first to land there when it was still uninhabited.

Diogo Fernandes Pereira did it ninety-one years before the Dutch. He called the place Isle of Cirne but neither he nor the Crown – more concerned with the spice trade – paid much attention to it.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, Cap Malheureux

Father and daughter look out over the islet of Coin de Mire, off Cap Malheureux, on the northern tip of Mauritius.

The Dutch, these, fixed themselves.

Even so, their colonization attempts only lasted seventy years, until 1710, long enough to be accused of the extermination of the “dodo”, the large incapable bird that proliferated in the region before the arrival of European navigators.

The stuttering Dogson from "Alice in Wonderland."

We crossed the Grand Port. It is already in a kind of tropical oven that we reach Mahébourg.

At that time, it wouldn't be necessary, but the great cathedral Notre Dame des Anges confirms who the next settlers were.

Mauritius Island, Indian tour, church of Notre Dame des Anges

Residents and visitors of Mahébourg in the vicinity of the church of Notre Dame des Anges, on a Hindu national holiday Maha Shivaratri.

A minority of Christian inhabitants from the south of the island frequent it and the adjacent market, with the day off as it is a national holiday, dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva.

When the French Succeeded the Dutch

Five years after the Dutch had left for good, the French arrived, who already controlled the neighboring island of Bourbon, today Reunion Island. Shortly thereafter, they called it the Île de France.

They inaugurated a prolific sugarcane crop that would forever dictate the colony's commercial success, based on a new naval base commissioned by newly arrived Governor Mahé de La Bourdonnais, Port Louis, the nation's present capital.

Mauritius Island, Indian Travel, Port Louis

Houses in the capital of Mauritius, Port Louis

Mauritius was made of these curious sequences and fusions. Oddly enough, once the colonial period had passed, the nation surrendered to a delicious multi-ethnic stagnation.

We walk down a street devastated by the heat repelled by the asphalt and the infernal traffic when, unlucky enough, one of us suffers irreparable damage from a slipper.

We went into a supermarket to find a replacement pair. When we pay, the amount of alcoholic beverages registered by the cashiers is such that the private parties that would animate little could be sacred.

From the south-eastern tip of Mauritius, we can see the Blue Bay where the Indian blue returns to its most vivid.

Bois Chéri: the Abundant Tea that the British Harnessed

From there, we cut into the high interior of Bois-Chéri, the coldest and rainiest part of the island, also its first tea plantation, introduced on a considerable scale in 1892, as might be expected, no longer by the French.

It rains harder and harder as we wind through the fields carpeted by the plant. Still, dozens of workers in plastic robes work through the endless hedges.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, Bois-Cheri tea

A tea picker from the Bois Cheri plantation works in the frequent rain of this elevated area of ​​Mauritius.

Already too drenched, we turn around and point to the factory that receives and processes the fruit, or rather the leaves, of their work.

We are welcomed by Sunassee Goranah, a person responsible for the company's guide. He is elegant but sober, wearing a white shirt that contrasts with the dark brown of his skin and the intense black of his hair and full mustache.

With him, we toured each production sector – from dryers to sheets, to packaging – to the astonishment of the uniformed employees who no longer had visitors at that late hour.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, Bois-Cheri tea

Sunassee Goranah describes the functioning of the Bois-Cheri tea factory, in the coolest and rainiest heart of Mauritius.

In farewell, Sunassee again boasted the qualities of green tea and its production in particular.

When he handed us some packets for our hands, he added very dryly so that there would be no doubts: “if you want to drink it with all its properties, don't add milk to it. That's what spoils everything!"

We moved to the restaurant on the farm. We had lunch and enjoyed an exhaustive tasting of the best Bois-Chéri labels, on a porch overlooking a lake in the mist.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, Bois-Cheri tea

Balcony of the Bois Cheri plantation cafe with one of its plantations in the background.

The French never valued tea. Unlike the next owners and lords of the island.

The Conquest of the Island by the British and the New French Colonization

By 1810, the British had grown fed up with French corsairs' attacks on their ships in the Indian Ocean, had decided to take over their greed for the rivals' colony and seize it.

As it made no sense for them to own a territory called the Île de France, they renamed it Mauritius.

However, they allowed most French settlers to keep their properties, the use of French and the French civil and penal code. Cultural fusion would not stop there.

Until 1835, plantation owners had resorted to the labor of slaves brought in from mainland Africa and from Madagascar.

The Subcontinent Workers who Indianized Mauritius

With the abolition of slavery, most of these landowners used the funds they received as compensation to hire workers from the subcontinent. Same as they did in Fiji.

Between 1834 and 1921 about half a million Indians landed at the Aapravasi Gate of Port Louis today UNESCO World Heritage for its historical significance.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, island-mauritius-indic-travel-aapravasi-gate

The portico of the city of Port Louis passed through thousands of Indian workers who never returned to India

Not always treated with the dignity they deserved, the newcomers adapted to the French ways and dialect that prevailed but Indianized the island as much as they could. They reinforced the British armies in both World War I and II.

Two decades later, the Winds of Change blew in Great Britain and, in 1968, Mauritius gained independence.

As we head west, we continue to come across descendants of plantation owner families and their Indian workers.

This is what happened at the viewpoint over the mighty gorge of the River Gorges, at the waterfall and at the geological rainbow of the Terre de 7 Couleurs de Chamarel, around the verdant crater of Troux-aux-cerfs.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, Chamarel waterfall

Hindu family photographed with Chamarel waterfall in the background.

Or on the heights of Kovil Montagne, a temple full of deities.

And of other Hindu figures perched halfway up over the endless houses of Quatre Bornes.

Mauritius Island, Indian voyage, Sibra Temple Subramany Kovil Montagne

Gopuram (tower) of the Sibra Subramany temple, situated at the top of the Kovil Montagne.

Later, we had dinner with Sandrine Petit and Jean-Marie Delort, both employees of one of the most popular hotels in the west of the island. The theme of what identifies the Mauritians today encourages them.

After some consideration, Sandrine dares to theorize: “now an ad for our Phoenix beer is on TV that makes a snapshot of everything, but if I had to choose a single gesture, I would say it's the hello.

We say hello for everything and for nothing, be it good or be it bad.

Once, I was on the metro in Paris with friends from here and I said hello higher. Immediately, four or five people were standing there looking at me. At that very moment, we were sure that they could only be Mauritian!”

It was too undisguised to leave us in doubt about the enormous pride with which Sandrine ended her story.

Viti levu, Fiji

The Unlikely Sharing of Viti Levu Island

In the heart of the South Pacific, a large community of Indian descendants recruited by former British settlers and the Melanesian indigenous population have long divided the chief island of Fiji.
Cilaos, Reunion Island

Refuge under the roof of the Indian Ocean

Cilaos appears in one of the old green boilers on the island of Réunion. It was initially inhabited by outlaw slaves who believed they were safe at that end of the world. Once made accessible, nor did the remote location of the crater prevent the shelter of a village that is now peculiar and flattered.
Viti levu, Fiji

Islands on the edge of Islands

A substantial part of Fiji preserves the agricultural expansions of the British colonial era. In the north and off the large island of Viti Levu, we also came across plantations that have only been named for a long time.
Little India, Singapore

The Sari Singapore of Little India

There are thousands of inhabitants instead of the 1.3 billion of the mother country, but Little India, a neighborhood in tiny Singapore, does not lack soul. No soul, no smell of Bollywood curry and music.
Reunion Island

The Bathing Melodrama of Reunion

Not all tropical coastlines are pleasurable and refreshing retreats. Beaten by violent surf, undermined by treacherous currents and, worse, the scene of the most frequent shark attacks on the face of the Earth, that of the Reunion Island he fails to grant his bathers the peace and delight they crave from him.

Praslin, Seychelles

 

The Eden of the Enigmatic Coco-de-Mer

For centuries, Arab and European sailors believed that the largest seed in the world, which they found on the coasts of the Indian Ocean in the shape of a woman's voluptuous hips, came from a mythical tree at the bottom of the oceans. The sensual island that always generated them left us ecstatic.
Male Maldives

The Maldives For Real

Seen from the air, Malé, the capital of the Maldives, looks little more than a sample of a crammed island. Those who visit it will not find lying coconut trees, dream beaches, spas or infinite pools. Be dazzled by the genuine Maldivian everyday life that tourist brochures omit.
La Digue, Seychelles

Monumental Tropical Granite

Beaches hidden by lush jungle, made of coral sand washed by a turquoise-emerald sea are anything but rare in the Indian Ocean. La Digue recreated itself. Around its coastline, massive boulders sprout that erosion has carved as an eccentric and solid tribute of time to the Nature.
Shillong, India

A Christmas Selfiestan at an India Christian Stronghold

December arrives. With a largely Christian population, the state of Meghalaya synchronizes its Nativity with that of the West and clashes with the overcrowded Hindu and Muslim subcontinent. Shillong, the capital, shines with faith, happiness, jingle bells and bright lighting. To dazzle Indian holidaymakers from other parts and creeds.
Goa, India

To Goa, Quickly and in Strength

A sudden longing for Indo-Portuguese tropical heritage makes us travel in various transports but almost non-stop, from Lisbon to the famous Anjuna beach. Only there, at great cost, were we able to rest.
Guwahati, India

The City that Worships Kamakhya and the Fertility

Guwahati is the largest city in the state of Assam and in North East India. It is also one of the fastest growing in the world. For Hindus and devout believers in Tantra, it will be no coincidence that Kamakhya, the mother goddess of creation, is worshiped there.
hippopotami, chobe national park, botswana
Safari
Chobe NP, Botswana

Chobe: A River on the Border of Life with Death

Chobe marks the divide between Botswana and three of its neighboring countries, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Namibia. But its capricious bed has a far more crucial function than this political delimitation.
Herd in Manang, Annapurna Circuit, Nepal
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 8th Manang, Nepal

Manang: the Last Acclimatization in Civilization

Six days after leaving Besisahar we finally arrived in Manang (3519m). Located at the foot of the Annapurna III and Gangapurna Mountains, Manang is the civilization that pampers and prepares hikers for the ever-dreaded crossing of Thorong La Gorge (5416 m).
Sirocco, Arabia, Helsinki
Architecture & Design
Helsinki, Finland

The Design that Came from the Cold

With much of the territory above the Arctic Circle, Finns respond to the climate with efficient solutions and an obsession with art, aesthetics and modernism inspired by neighboring Scandinavia.
Era Susi towed by dog, Oulanka, Finland
Adventure
PN Oulanka, Finland

A Slightly Lonesome Wolf

Jukka “Era-Susi” Nordman has created one of the largest packs of sled dogs in the world. He became one of Finland's most iconic characters but remains faithful to his nickname: Wilderness Wolf.
Indigenous Crowned
Ceremonies and Festivities
Pueblos del Sur, Venezuela

Behind the Venezuela Andes. Fiesta Time.

In 1619, the authorities of Mérida dictated the settlement of the surrounding territory. The order resulted in 19 remote villages that we found dedicated to commemorations with caretos and local pauliteiros.
Bungee jumping, Queenstown, New Zealand
Cities
Queenstown, New Zealand

Queenstown, the Queen of Extreme Sports

In the century. XVIII, the Kiwi government proclaimed a mining village on the South Island "fit for a queen".Today's extreme scenery and activities reinforce the majestic status of ever-challenging Queenstown.
Meal
World Food

Gastronomy Without Borders or Prejudice

Each people, their recipes and delicacies. In certain cases, the same ones that delight entire nations repel many others. For those who travel the world, the most important ingredient is a very open mind.
intersection
Culture
Hungduan, Philippines

Country Style Philippines

The GI's left with the end of World War II, but the music from the interior of the USA that they heard still enlivens the Cordillera de Luzon. It's by tricycle and at your own pace that we visit the Hungduan rice terraces.
Swimming, Western Australia, Aussie Style, Sun rising in the eyes
Sport
Busselton, Australia

2000 meters in Aussie Style

In 1853, Busselton was equipped with one of the longest pontoons in the world. World. When the structure collapsed, the residents decided to turn the problem around. Since 1996 they have been doing it every year. Swimming.
Horses under a snow, Iceland Never Ending Snow Island Fire
Traveling
Husavik a Myvatn, Iceland

Endless Snow on the Island of Fire

When, in mid-May, Iceland already enjoys some sun warmth but the cold and snow persist, the inhabitants give in to an intriguing summer anxiety.
Ethnic
Gizo, Solomon Islands

A Saeraghi Young Singers Gala

In Gizo, the damage caused by the tsunami that hit the Solomon Islands is still very visible. On the coast of Saeraghi, children's bathing happiness contrasts with their heritage of desolation.
Sunset, Avenue of Baobabs, Madagascar
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio

days like so many others

Goiás Velho, Legacy of the Gold Fever, Brazil
History
Goiás Velho, Brazil

A Gold Rush Legacy

Two centuries after the heyday of prospecting, lost in time and in the vastness of the Central Plateau, Goiás esteems its admirable colonial architecture, the surprising wealth that remains to be discovered there.
Playa Nogales, La Palma, Canary Islands
Islands
La Palma, Canary Islands

The "Isla Bonita" of the Canary Islands

In 1986 Madonna Louise Ciccone launched a hit that popularized the attraction exerted by a island imaginary. Ambergris Caye, in Belize, reaped benefits. On this side of the Atlantic, the palmeros that's how they see their real and stunning Canaria.
Correspondence verification
Winter White
Rovaniemi, Finland

From the Finnish Lapland to the Arctic. A Visit to the Land of Santa

Fed up with waiting for the bearded old man to descend down the chimney, we reverse the story. We took advantage of a trip to Finnish Lapland and passed through its furtive home.
Cove, Big Sur, California, United States
Literature
Big Sur, USA

The Coast of All Refuges

Over 150km, the Californian coast is subjected to a vastness of mountains, ocean and fog. In this epic setting, hundreds of tormented souls follow in the footsteps of Jack Kerouac and Henri Miller.
lagoons and fumaroles, volcanoes, PN tongariro, new zealand
Nature
Tongariro, New Zealand

The Volcanoes of All Discords

In the late XNUMXth century, an indigenous chief ceded the PN Tongariro volcanoes to the British crown. Today, a significant part of the Maori people claim their mountains of fire from European settlers.
Mother Armenia Statue, Yerevan, Armenia
Autumn
Yerevan, Armenia

A Capital between East and West

Heiress of the Soviet civilization, aligned with the great Russia, Armenia allows itself to be seduced by the most democratic and sophisticated ways of Western Europe. In recent times, the two worlds have collided in the streets of your capital. From popular and political dispute, Yerevan will dictate the new course of the nation.
Ross Bridge, Tasmania, Australia
Natural Parks
Discovering tassie, Part 3, Tasmania, Australia

Tasmania from Top to Bottom

The favorite victim of Australian anecdotes has long been the Tasmania never lost the pride in the way aussie ruder to be. Tassie remains shrouded in mystery and mysticism in a kind of hindquarters of the antipodes. In this article, we narrate the peculiar route from Hobart, the capital located in the unlikely south of the island to the north coast, the turn to the Australian continent.
Boat on the Yellow River, Gansu, China
UNESCO World Heritage
Bingling Yes, China

The Canyon of a Thousand Buddhas

For more than a millennium and at least seven dynasties, Chinese devotees have extolled their religious belief with the legacy of sculpture in a remote strait of the Yellow River. If you disembark in the Canyon of Thousand Buddhas, you may not find all the sculptures, but you will find a stunning Buddhist shrine.
now from above ladder, sorcerer of new zealand, Christchurch, new zealand
Characters
Christchurch, New Zealand

New Zealand's Cursed Wizard

Despite his notoriety in the antipodes, Ian Channell, the New Zealand sorcerer, failed to predict or prevent several earthquakes that struck Christchurch. At the age of 88, after 23 years of contract with the city, he made very controversial statements and ended up fired.
View of Casa Iguana, Corn islands, pure caribbean, nicaragua
Beaches
Corn Islands - Islas del Maíz , Nicaragua

pure caribbean

Perfect tropical settings and genuine local life are the only luxuries available in the so-called Corn Islands or Corn Islands, an archipelago lost in the Central American confines of the Caribbean Sea.
Rostov Veliky Kremlin, Russia
Religion
Rostov Veliky, Russia

Under the Domes of the Russian Soul

It is one of the oldest and most important medieval cities, founded during the still pagan origins of the nation of the tsars. At the end of the XNUMXth century, incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Moscow, it became an imposing center of orthodox religiosity. Today, only the splendor of kremlin Muscovite trumps the citadel of tranquil and picturesque Rostov Veliky.
On Rails
On Rails

Train Travel: The World Best on Rails

No way to travel is as repetitive and enriching as going on rails. Climb aboard these disparate carriages and trains and enjoy the best scenery in the world on Rails.
Erika Mother
Society
Philippines

The Philippine Road Lords

With the end of World War II, the Filipinos transformed thousands of abandoned American jeeps and created the national transportation system. Today, the exuberant jeepneys are for the curves.
Casario, uptown, Fianarantsoa, ​​Madagascar
Daily life
Fianarantsoa, Madagascar

The Malagasy City of Good Education

Fianarantsoa was founded in 1831 by Ranavalona Iª, a queen of the then predominant Merina ethnic group. Ranavalona Iª was seen by European contemporaries as isolationist, tyrant and cruel. The monarch's reputation aside, when we enter it, its old southern capital remains as the academic, intellectual and religious center of Madagascar.
Howler Monkey, PN Tortuguero, Costa Rica
Wildlife
Tortuguero NP, Costa Rica

Tortuguero: From the Flooded Jungle to the Caribbean Sea

After two days of impasse due to torrential rain, we set out to discover the Tortuguero National Park. Channel after channel, we marvel at the natural richness and exuberance of this Costa Rican fluvial marine ecosystem.
The Sounds, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
Scenic Flights
Fiordland, New Zealand

The Fjords of the Antipodes

A geological quirk made the Fiordland region the rawest and most imposing in New Zealand. Year after year, many thousands of visitors worship the sub-domain slashed between Te Anau and Milford Sound.