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The
Journal
Easter Island
An Adventure
January 13-14, 2000-- Plus One
Easter Island- An Adventure
January 13-14, 2000-- Plus One
By January 13, the 600 of us on Ocean Explorer had traveled over
10,000miles together. We'd been eating, looking at the stars at
midnight on the sun deck, exploring exotic ports, and generally
getting to know each other better. But as we approached
Easter Island, a little over one third of our journey
completed, little did we know that our stay on
this community would feel
about the journey-and each other.
It took a night of
torrential downpours, with some people stranded in zodiacs
circling helplessly for almost two hours in a raging sea,
hanging on and sick as they searched for a safe harbor.
Others, drenched to the skin, were huddled together wet and
muddy and waiting for shelter on the dock as the lightning
striking all around us lit up the blackened waters and jutting
rocks of the dangerously narrow channel. And finally,
an entire village of Polynesian natives banded together to
volunteer their help in an emergency no one could have predicted
eight hours earlier.
We were caught unexpectedly in
the most violent and sudden storm Easter Island had seen in 30
years. All the elements for a grand adventure
were there, but we were too miserable to enjoy the implications
until the experience was over a day later..
Our visit to Easter Island began
uneventfully enough.
We had been well briefed on this
island its inhabitants have called "the navel of the
world." We had seen slides, heard lectures, and
discussed the mystery of what precisely may have happened to
cause an entire Polynesian civilization on Easter Island to
vanish without a clear explanation. The mystery is
magnified by what the civilization left behind-over a thousand
gigantic stone statues-called moai-- that stand sometimes as
high as 60 feet high, many with the distinctive red
topknots that mark them as existing only on this tiny island.
Why these statues were erected
and why the people who created them suddenly vanished without a
trace still remains a mystery, but on a brilliantly sunny day in
January, the Ocean Explorer passengers landed, maps in hand ,
and determined to learn as much as we could in our two-day stay.
It would turn out that we would learn as much about
human response in times of stress as we did about the incredible
human feats of skill exhibited by this lost Polynesian
civilization.
Well before January 13, four of us had
settled on our own plan to explore Easter Island, called Rapa
Nui by its Polynesian inhabitants. The story began several weeks
prior to January 13. My friend Suzy and I had
decided we wanted to stay overnight on the island in order
to have maximum time to scout out every possible moai., cave,
caldera and beach without wasting time on zodiacs going back and
forth to the ship.
Suzy, Glenn, a travel
writer from Toronto, Bobbie, a professor of nursing from Texas, and I had
booked rooms at Chez Cecelia a small guest house just outside of
town. We also had made arrangements to pick up a jeep for
a day-ultimately this would expand to two.
Easter island, described in
tour guides as the most remote, barren and isolated island in
the world, lies midway between Tahiti and Chile, 2,350 miles
from the South American coast that we had just left. Its
population of about 1,600. Very few cruise ships stop
there and those like ours must bring their passengers through a
narrow channel to land by zodiac or tender. The island is
triangular, with an extinct volcano at each point of the
triangle. It is 14 by 7 miles, with a total area of 64
square miles and a number of dirt and gravel roads (all of which
we traversed several times in the next two days).
Arriving at the Easter Island
dock on a day of brilliant sunshine and puffy cumulous clouds,
we took a taxi to Chez Cecelia. We found a modest
establishment, well hidden off an unmarked dirt road---
clean rooms, a covered patio and brilliant yellow
tiara flowers, along with abundant roses, and succulents filling
up all available garden spaces with fragrance. Maria, the
proprietor, showed us into a spacious living room and served us
cold fresh pineapple juice she whipped up in the blender.
To our surprise, a
handsome chestnut horse grazed on the lawn. Over the next two
days, we saw beautiful horses (and cows) everywhere-- grazing on
lawns, standing on roads and along rock fenced fields, near the
moai on lush green hillsides, sanding on black
volcanic rock strewn fields, and scattered among the many loose
cattle wandering on the sharp lava cliffs that drop
precipitously into the aquamarine seas.
We headed first for one of the
three extinct volcanoes at Orengo and gaped into the
viscous green swampy waters of the caldera, the heart of the
volcano. Quickly, I got used to hopping in and out of the back
seat of the Suzuki jeep, maneuvering my backpack and
backing out rear end first. Glenn proved to be an agile jeep
driver; he tooled over the pitted gravel roads with ease,
and we hit our heads on the low ceiling as we careened
along on the trail of the mysterious moai.
At first we
thought these giant carved statues of volcanic rock would be
elusive targets, and hoped with luck to find a few dozen.
Soon we saw we could stumble across them anytime---along the
sea, tumbled on their sides or lying face down in rows in a
farmer's field or standing in a neat row along a volcanic
rock wall. Up on the mountainside in the middle of
the island, we hiked to the quarry where they are partially
carved out of the rocky volcanic mountainside where they were
created and rolled on long tree runners to an eventual resting
site somewhere else on the island. Sometimes they stood in a row
of fifteen; other times one stood alone on a bluff or facing the
sea.
The tall gaunt moai have
elongated faces and ears and sometimes have hands crossing their
stomachs. They say that five clans who lived on the island
demonstrated their strength by erecting these huge statues and
transporting them on wooden rollers made from cutting the
island's forests.. The red topknots that some have were added
later. Over several centuries this stone carving slowed down and
finally stopped due to deforestation of the land because of the
roller production and damage to the soil. Many
of the trees were destroyed, and today efforts are being made to
plant eucalyptus groves.
We found that, despite what we
had read, the island was not as desolate as described, and
in fact was beautifully green and lush, much like the
green springtime California hillsides I remember as a
child growing up in Sacramento.
The weather was gorgeous, sunny
and in the mid eighties; we hiked up to the source of the moai
carvings on the mountain quarry, rode along gravel roads
adjoining beautiful cliffs dropping down into the blue-green
sea, and changed into our swim suits at one of the most
beautiful pink sand beaches I have ever seen-bobbing in a gentle
sea for what seemed for hours. We wanted to stay forever.
At dinnertime in the only
village--Hanga Roa-we sat along the sea at sunset and ate
ceviche, a Chilean delicacy of raw tuna and limejuice. In
between pisco sour drinks, we dashed across the road to take yet
another photo of a moai situated along the ocean against a blood
red sky at sunset. We sat well after the sunset at 10 p.m.
talking about this tranquil island society and hoped
commercialism wouldn't change their gentle culture.
The second day appeared as beautiful as
the first. We hiked, (shopped, of course), met many of our
comrades at the now familiar pink beach for a second day of
luxurious swimming in calm seas, and drank pisco sours
manufactured on a rocky ledge by our resourceful traveler Glenn.
We planned to turn in the jeep at 6 p.m. and hike into town
where we were expected to return by zodiac to the ship at 7:30
p.m.
But
as we hiked down the dusty road, we could see the sky clouding
over, and by the time we reached the waterfront, we heard
there'd been a delay in zodiac leaving time because the ship was
still "bunkering." which means taking on water or fuel
at sea.
Whatever happened to the
bunkering schedule, it hadn't gone as planned, and the Ocean
Explorer was well behind schedule, we were told.
In the meantime,
we watched the horizon as ominous black clouds began to
gather . But, we thought, this was a cause for concern only of
the ship's staff, and Bobbie and I strolled along
taking our time, for the two- mile hike back to the dock.
Everything seemed doable for an 8:30p.m. departure.
But when we reached the
dock-situated out on a point beyond the town--it was clear that
things had deteriorated.
Storm clouds now hovered
like a vast black umbrella in the sky; lightning began to strike
repeatedly, lighting up the dark water and coming closer and
closer. Meanwhile, an hour before, three zodiac boats each
filled with 14 passengers and a tender with 40 passengers had
headed out to sea where the Ocean Explorer was drifting.
By the time the rubber rafts
approached the ship, high seas made disembarking impossible.
Darkness had come, and the black slick zodiacs were tossing
about almost invisible and unable to return in the dark through
the narrow rocky channel to the dock without the benefit of
lights. Far out on the water, the passengers on the ship stood
on deck, binoculars in hand, helplessly watching their friends
in the zodiacs as lightning lit up their plight.
On the shore, about 200 of
us stood in the mud on the dock and the heavens opened up on us.
A torrential rainstorm wiped out any vision of ship, zodiacs,
land, or light. We stood in the downpour, drenched, and
waiting for instructions. Some were able to huddle
together under a nearby metal shed roof; others waited in the
open, trying to stay covered in raingear and under umbrellas as
the mud rose around our sneakers.
The staff now decided that
we could not board the ship that night, and started to make
other plans. The town's entire fleet of taxis and vans had
volunteered to mobilize and take us to the one hotel that would
hold us all in the lobby temporarily while other plans were
made.
At first, I was one of the
lucky ones. I was standing in the downpour, but had put on
my backpack and fanny pack under my rain jacket. My feet and
shorts were soaked but at least I had protected my other
important clothes, overnight gear, etc. But my luck didn't
hold out.
I stood in the pitch black
night, like the others, waiting for transportation to the warmth
of the hotel lobby. When my turn came, the Polynesian
driver of the taxi I was to board went to the trunk and tried to
open it. He said, "Take off your jacket and backpack and
put them in the trunk." I knew I'd be soaked if I did
this and refused. He insisted. refused.
Finally, I, being of meek mind, obeyed. Instantly, I was
soaking wet in the torrents of rain that continued to fall. The
driver could never open the trunk. My raincoat was off and wet
to the core, and I waited again in line.
Many long hours later, at one
a.m., a final few of us huddled in the hotel lobby got a room in
a rundown b & b where we were taxied. Broken sink.
Broken toilet. Scalded by hot water in the broken shower.
But I had a bed. It rained all night.
But there was a bright side to
the story. My roommate was buddy Hwa. She had bargained
for a beautiful Easter Island bowl that day. I wanted it!
She wouldn't sell it. So, at 9 a.m. the next morning,
after a sleepless night, as we waited for something good to
happen, we called the little store nearby where she had made her
purchase. We said we wanted to look at another bowl. The
store owner, delighted, met us and opened the shop. I
bargained-down from $200 to $60---I got my bowl and a permanent
memory of Easter Island. We now had two heavy wooden
carved bowls to carry back to the ship on the zodiac!. Beautiful
bowls. Beautiful island. Unforgettable memory of
Easter Island and the worst storm in 30 years.
Back on the dock at 11 a.m we learned
the ship was about to leave-without us! They didn't
realize that about 20 of us were still there waiting for a
zodiac..
Tonight, everybody
has gathered together to compare notes and tell his or her own
horror story. Where did you sleep? How wet did you
get? Who got lost and how did they get found? It was
a great experience, everyone agreed. We all pitched in
together.
Today's ship newsletter says:
"We would like to thank each and every person that helped
us last night and today when we all needed it the most. The kind
and heroic efforts bestowed upon us by passengers, staff, crew,
and most especially the wonderful people of Easter Island, were
so appreciated and heartfelt."
And that's true. Everyone on the
island--taxi and van drivers mobilized and drove muddy,
exhausted people to resting places in the pitch black night,
those with beds to spare in the town opened their doors as one
a.m. They stayed awake all night and put together a breakfast
for us to eat in the morning. Polynesian dancers and
musicians stood in mud and rain singing, dancing, drumming,
using flashlights to light up the dark and keep us entertained
as we stood in the mud.
After we returned,
that night we all gathered in the Mayfair Lounge once more and
retold the many stories of sharing, singing on the zodiacs,
borrowing dry clothes, sharing food and water, holding each
other when we were cold, and being kind and thoughtful to those
who were ill, caught without their medicine, worried about a
spouse, or otherwise in distress. It was an emotional
evening. It brought us together as an extended family,
everyone agreed.
To be sure, this
changed us all in our attitudes toward each other and toward our
voyage.
An adventure to be sure.
A memory of a lifetime.
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