So we are safe and sound back in São Paulo. Guillaume and I arrived back here last night, Christmas Eve, after 17 days in the Amazon, smugly cheering on the fact that we had not gotten malaria. Hehehe. Well, we were cheering ourselves on in the plane until we heard one of our fellow passengers loudly recounting how someone he knew nearly died from malaria just as he returned from Manaus. Then we were like:
Shocked Guillaume and Shiva
But it's okay, if we don't have any problems within 2 weeks, we are in the clear. Anyway, I think it is all my preemptive de-jinxing which saved us, i.e. my mad obsession with the prospect of us getting sick 'worried' the threat off. This is my raciocínio, anyway. Moving on from my slight OCD...
Why did we go to the Amazon? The professor of Tupi (an extinct indigenous language of coastal Brazil) was lancing a didactic grammar of Nheengatu (a contact language between Portuguese and ancient Tupi which is still used today orally in small parts of the Amazon). We don't study those languages, but were allowed to tag along for the trip up to Manaus and São Gabriel da Cachoeira. There was a mix of students and non-students of the language. Each of us helped get a portion of the books up there in our luggage.
When we arrived, we spent one night in the capital city of Amazonas, Manaus. A relatively large city, it sits on the banks of the Rio Amazonas and the Rio Negro. The first day there, it was a religious holiday (All - Saints, perhaps?) and so the city was on holiday. We were shocked by the 'New-Delhi-ness' of the city: street vendors as far as the eye can see, the never-ending smell of various bodily wastes, wheelbarrows full of strange fruits and vegetables for sale on every street corner, uncomfortably close bodies jammed together on the sidewalk, and those types of bikes with huge baskets to carry goods in weaving through the very randomly organised traffic.
Those bikes with huge baskets that, I imagine, one might see frequently in New Delhi. Okay, the bikes in Manaus weren't quite so full, I may be exaggerating.
Another thing that you notice about Manaus while you are wading through the rubbish on the streets is the ridiculously high number of evangelical churches. I can't refrain myself from saying it: opportunistic evangelical church! Sorry, sorry, I said it.
Also remarkable about Manaus (and as it turns out, São Gabriel, too; maybe it is the whole Amazon, who knows?) is the extremely ravaged-looking dogs which roam the streets. I have never seen so many three-legged dogs in my life. Sure, in Brazil it is normal to see stray dogs all around, but every single one of the dogs in the Amazon look like they have just given birth to 10 pups and then walked through a bushfire on the way to the sidewalk to rummage through the rubbish. All of the female dogs up there have swollen tits. They stop and take naps in the middle of the road. They don't care about anything, they have already taken on all of natures challenges it seems, what's a car, what's a car to them...
So anyway (!), the next day, before taking a boat to São Gabriel da Cachoeira, we had a boat tour of the Rio Negro, were we saw some little settlements on the river, had an 'amazonian' lunch (amazing salads they have there - we later found out that the secret ingredient was ... chicory), patted an anaconda and an alligator (held up nonchalantly by an eight-year-old indian boy in his floating river-house), saw the 'Meeting of the Waters', and had a swim in the Amazon. The Meeting of the Waters or Encontro das Aguas is where the Rio Solimões meets with the Rio Negro. The water of the Rio Negro is basically black in colour while the Rio Solimões has a more muddy hue, and when they join together, the waters do not mix immediately, so this is what you see:
Encontro das Aguas, Manaus, AM. It's hard to get a good photo from within the boat but viewed from a plane it is delicious. (Did I just use 'delicious' to describe something positively in English? I think I am becoming Brazilian.)
That evening we got on our (evangelical) boat, Genesis III, to begin our three-day-long trip to São Gabriel. São Gabriel da Cachoeira is a small town of 40,000 and is the county with the highest percentage of indigenous population in Brazil. The port where we left from in Manaus was located right next to a small favela, which I found interesting because this one was a bit different to the ones that you see in São Paulo:
Favela on sticks: Manaus, AM.
Location of São Gabriel da Cachoeira, AM, Brazil, very close to the borders of Colombia and Venezuela. Yes I stole someone else's screenshot; I don't know how to do that myself, hah.
In the boat our sleeping arrangement was....in any possible spot you could hang your hammock. I'll put up my own photos later, but now, to give you an idea of what I'm talking about:
Hammock arrangement on Amazon riverboat. High possibility of being smothered by your neighbour's buttocks while trying to sleep.
That was, well, interesting. Three days really gives you the chance to discover the versatility of your hammock as an all-in-one bed, chair, and blanket. And it seems that the indigenous Brazilians use their hammocks for more than just boat-travel. From what I saw in São Gabriel, it is quite commonly used as one's regular bed up there. In the Amazon, the stores sell hammocks like they sell imported Chinese clothes (i.e., with excellent frequency).
On the boat, there were three levels. I think there were about 80 people crammed into that space, as well as whatever 'luggage' they may have desired (suitcases, crates of beer, motorcycles, puppies, inflatable kiddy pools...). Getting back to your space (i.e. your hammock) required an odd dance to weave oneself through, under, and over the other hammocks. It was not uncommon to feel a little head crawling underneath your hammock at unexpected moments, or, if you were lucky like me, to be kicked by the two-year-old indian baby in the neighbouring hammock in the middle of each night. Oh yes, the hammocks were that close.
Our escape was the third level, the deck, where we could enjoy the river. Noticeable about the Rio Negro is that it is full of huge rocks, which made the texture of the water change regularly. The scenery was beautiful. I think I may finally 'get' why people go on cruises...
The three days we spent in close co-habitation with indigenous Brazilians lead us to a slightly disturbing discovery, however: indian women seem to be expressly against shaving their legs. As in, 99% of them have probably never picked up a razor in their life. As in, BUSH. That's okay, though, I guess. OMFG
When we arrived we spent the first night in the hotel 'Deus me deu' ('God gave me' - surprise, surprise in the evangelical Amazon) and the rest of the time in the town diocese, as the priests there are sympathetic of local language work and knew our professor. The first day, I was feeling ill in my stomach, probably from something I ate on the boat. The professor commanded me to have some acerola juice at the local snack bar. (The typical Brazilian practice of prescribing juice to cure any ailment!) It worked, and I found my favourite new Brazilian fruit.
Acerola. Tastes kind of like a cherry but awesomer.
So, it's 2AM at the moment (perfect calling-Australia-with-the-thirteen-hours-times-difference-time now), so I'm finishing up for now, for tonight anyway. In my next post, I will talk about São Gabriel itself. My impressions of the Amazon are not done with, though! Bye bye..