Getting there - the Rufiji Delta from the air |
Getting there part 2: transport across Songo Songo Island to get to the boat that will take us to Fanjove |
Got there! Fanjove Island |
Warm, crystal-clear
water laps at a white, white beach fringed by graceful coconut palms. The
colour palette ranges from palest turquoise to deep, deep blue as
I gaze out to sea.
At night, we set off in search of coconut crabs, monsters straight out of a really bad sic-fi movie, capable of scaling a palm tree, cutting down a coconut
then climbing down and eating the prize.
(If you’ve ever tried getting into a coconut, you’ll know just how big a
deal this last bit is, even if you gloss over the tree climbing and the rest of
it.)
And they’re huge: up
to a metre (over 3 foot) from leg tip to leg tip, and weighing in at over 4kg
(9lbs). (For an idea of just how big they get, click here)
We wander around in
suitable habitat, shining our torches – there! We find one in the act of peeling a coconut, thrusting its
claws between the nut and husk to push the husk off. It doesn’t mind our presence too much,
and we see that it is a gravid female, with lots of eggs under her tail. November is spawning time in this part
of the world, so with luck she will
make her way down to the water in the coming days to release all those eggs
into the waves.
She isn’t huge: a
couple of pounds at a guess, but what an extraordinary creature, and what a
privilege!
Underwater, more
marvels await. Before this, I’d
only ever seen such oddities as Shrimpfish, Leaf Fish and Snake Eel in books or
documentaries, but here they all were. (Click to see what a Shrimpfish looks like...)
There were also decent
numbers of live shells, a rarity along much of the Tanzanian coast these
days. I saw several Tiger Cowries
as well as Spider Conch, Helmet Conch and many species of cones and Money
Cowries.
We get lucky with
scary stuff too: there’s a pair of Leaf Fish hiding in plain view, exactly the
same colour and texture as the coral around it; under a nearby coral
overhang, there’s a pair of Lionfish, all floaty fins and long, elegant
spines. A Scorpionfish lies on
a chunk of coral, pale blue just like his background (some species can change
colour to match their surroundings). Later on, poking around in the
shallows, I spy a rapid movement. I
can’t make anything out at first, just a curved line, an oddity of texture. Then it leaps into focus - a Stonefish
looking just like the coral rubble it lives in. This gives pause for thought: I’m barefoot and these things
are all but impossible to see. I
tiptoe gingerly back to the beach…
But it’s not just
about the scary venomous critters: we see several Decorator Crabs, who 'plant' tufts and drapes of algae on their carapaces as camouflage. This works just fine until they start
walking across the bottom, an unlikely mobile patch of weed. (In some parts of the world, they stick
bits of rubbish onto their backs to achieve the same effect. A very modern adaptation...)
A shoal of squid hovers in the clear
water, keeping a wary eye on me.
When I move my hand they zoom off into the blue.
A pile of broken
mussel shells near a hole alerts me to the presence of a bandit. As I fin closer, a lump detaches itself
from the seabed and tiptoes bashfully into the hole, blushing at being discovered: an
octopus surrounded by leftovers.
All is not entirely
well though: a dearth of larger reef fish (Parrotfish, larger wrasses,
Sweetlips and Groupers) is an indication of overfishing over the years.
Later, on a dive on
the outer reef slope, I drift over a magical kaleidoscope of different corals,
a mesmerising array of colour, form and texture – a gorgeous, healthy coral
reef.
All of a sudden, the
fairytale underwater garden is no more, replaced by rubble, the majestic
architecture laid low, all colour gone: a drab wasteland in beige.
This is what dynamiting does. Fishermen trying to make a quick buck blast the reef. Stunned and dead fish float to the
surface, where they are easily harvested; a great way to earn a living, no?
EXCEPT that there is enormous collateral damage: the blast kills the reef, which is
a living organism, vital for future generations of coral fish; it also wipes
out large numbers of fish fry, the basis of those self-same ‘future
generations’; and effectively kills off the current parent stock so necessary
for regeneration. So, not exactly a model of ‘sustainable utilisation’ – yet another example of how our species
mistreats marine environments worldwide.
The owners of Fanjove
are working with local communities to try to bring an end to dynamite fishing and overfishing, to bring the reefs surrounding the island back to their former
glory. This will be a long
process, but a vital one.
Sadly, my camera shuffled off its mortal coil while diving, it becoming rapidly apparent that the waterproof housing wasn't totally, err, waterproof. I was inclined to be a touch miffed, until kind Jenny pointed out that it was rated to a mere 5 metres depth.....
In the meantime, do yourself a favour: grab your snorkelling gear (or a bucket and spade) and get yourself to Fanjove - you'll love it!
Island living |
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