Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Cosmic Landscape

An entry by Luc Perrot in the National Geographic 2011 Photo Contest.



This is what the photographer has to say about it: 
"This photo was done in the mountains of Reunion Island in the middle of the night. We can observe the center of our Milky Way and the constellation of Scorpio. In the lower part of the picture is my silhouette, illuminated by my headlamp, which appears between two old tamarin trees."
(Links are mine).

For more posts with L. Perrot's photos, follow this link.

Saturday, 26 November 2011

Garden production

First home-grown production from our prolific bananas since we arrived back on Reunion from South Korea.

mmm!

Thursday, 17 November 2011

Back to Salazie


Although I've been to the cirque of Salazie many times (I even worked for nine years in a company located at the entrance to the cirque), this was the first time we'd been back there since we returned to Réunion after spending three years living in South Korea.



The word 'Salazie' is thought to come from the Malagasy word soalazy which means ' a good refuge', although I have also seen it explained as coming from salazane which means '(sentry) stakes'. I think there's even another explanation saying it comes from salazhon which means 'tripod for a cauldron' ... as you can see, nobody is really certain where the name comes from.


Salazie is located on the windward, east coast of the island which means it's the wettest of the three cirques (the other cirques are Cilaos and Mafate), and also the most accessible (Mafate is only accessible on foot, and the road to Cilaos is very long and winding). All the rain means the vegetation is extremely lush and green, as you can see in the photos, and when visiting you should get an early start as the cloud cover will generally thicken during the day.

see what I mean by lush vegetation?

When you enter the cirque the road leads to the main town of Salazie, called ... Salazie. There are some shops and restaurants here, but most people travel further into the cirque.


A few kilometres further on is the photogenic Cascade du Voile de la Mariée ('Bridal Veil Falls') which you can see on the other side of the road.



Cascade du Voile de la Mariée

A short distance after the falls there's a fork in the road, and you can either turn right to go to the village of Grand Ilet, or left to continue to the village of Hellbourg.

"view from a bridge"

Grand Ilet is mainly a destination for those planning to enter Mafate from Le Belier via the Col des Boeufs ('Ox Pass') hiking path. The village has a beautiful shingle-covered church, Saint Martin. On this day out however we were only going to Hellbourg.

en route to Grand Ilet

About one kilometre before Hellbourg is a lovely viewpoint called Panorama du Point-Du-Jour ('Daybreak Viewpoint').

part of the view from Point-Du-Jour

If the weather's good you can see across to Grand Ilet, and you will also see the magnificent 1352m-high Piton Enchaing which has a distinctive flat summit.

Piton Enchaing

Legend has it that a runaway slave called Enchaing took refuge on top .





passion fruit growing wild on a banana tree

Hellbourg's unusual name comes from Anne Chrétien Louis de Hell, a former island governor (1838-1841) and a man, despite his name! 

aerial view of Hellbourg (from Wikipedia)

In Hellbourg one of the most popular tourist attractions is the Maison Folio.

fountain in the Maison Folio garden

I was lucky enough to visit this traditional Creole house for the first time in 1993 before it opened to the general public two years later.

Maison Folio garden

Now it's a major tourist attraction in the village, with a wonderfully luxuriant garden of tropical plants which grow in profusion in the humid climate.

"Trompette la mort" flowers (Brugmansia aurea?)

Hellbourg has the distinction of being the only member of France's Les Plus Beaux Villages de France ('France's Most Beautiful Villages') located in an overseas department.

A house in Hellbourg main street

There are a couple of guétali in the village too. These are typically Creole pavilions in the corner of a garden, from which, in days gone by, the occupants used to observe passers-by without being seen themselves.

guétali of Barau Villa, Hellbourg

the former Hotel des Salazes, closed since 1988, currently awaiting renovation

Locally Salazie is well-known for its chou-chou...

chou-chou aka chayotte, christophine, vegetable pear ... etc (photo Wikipedia)

... which, when it grows, spreads as a vine over anything within its reach.

chou-chou vine

chou-chou vine

Bamboo also grows well in Salazie

Because of the landscape when you leave Salazie you notice a tall waterfall you didn't see when entering: Cascade Blanche.

Cascade Blanche - 640 metres high

This post is by no means exhaustive about Salazie - there are plenty of other things to see and do too: an eco-museum, a trout farm, visit to the Old Spa in Hellbourg alone, not counting good hikes all over (and in and out of) the cirque.



Follow this link for more posts about Reunion.

Monday, 7 November 2011

Press article round-up

Here's a (non-exhaustive) round-up of some articles about Reunion that have been published in the written press over the past ten years.

Heaven's hotspot - (South African) Sunday Times, February 26th 2012

in the cirque of Cilaos (photo © Daniel Born)

Belle Réunion - Australian Gourmet Traveller, February 2012

A little bit of France in the Indian Ocean - The Times, October 15th 2011

A rum do on Reunion Island - New Zealand Herald, July 28th 2011

Vive vanilla on Reunion - The Australian, May 14th 2011

Vanilla, coffee and spices are the prized products on
Reunion Island. (Picture: © Jo Kerozen / Wikipedia)

Adventure Island hits the mark - Adelaide Now, March 19th 2011

Reunion on volcanic island - Queensland Times, March 9th 2011

Grande Passion - Condé Nast Traveller, 2010

Peak season: Indian Ocean adventures in La Réunion - The Independent, April 11th 2009

French Toast - The Scotsman, February 2nd 2008

Joyful Reunion - Daily Mail, August 22nd 2007

Short Breaks - in search of plant life in Reunion - The Independent on Sunday, January 18th 2004

Spice Island and How Reunion brought vanilla to the world - The Independent, December 6th 2003

Island rendezvous - The Guardian, July 23rd 2003

"A million miles from Paris ...
it's easy to while away the
afternoon lounging under a tree".

Blown Away by a Rugged Beauty - 'The Telegraph', October 24th 2001

Réunion: It's France, but not as we know it - The Independent, August 13th 2001

Under the Volcano - 'Time' magazine, April 16th 2001

Gallic charm in a tropical setting - The Telegraph, April 4th 2001

See also:

Le Monde Diplomatique timeline of Reunion's history (in English):  Island Past

The French empire strikes back - The Sunday Times, January 3rd 2010, with a translation into French. (Article written by Rosie Millard, who wrote Bonnes Vacances! A Crazy Family Adventure in the French Territories and filmed "Croissants in the Jungle" with her husband for The Travel Channel).


Do you know of any other articles you'd like to see added to this list?