Where
the wildlife is free to flourish (March 31, 2001)
by Jill Hartley
For the oil spill in the Galapagos to have
claimed only two pelicans suggests that the islands must
be divinely
blessed. Jill Hartley visits a pristine wilderness
My name
is Lourdes," said our cruise director with
a polished smile, "like Madonna's daughter." It
seemed like a pretty good opening line, but it was completely
lost on the Saga holiday group we had joined on board our
Galapagos cruise ship.
"
What did she say?" a friendly seventy some thing boomed
in my ear. "She said her name is Lourdes, is in miracle," I
replied.
It seemed fining, as the islands have just witnessed a
miracle. To describe their recent escape from a major oil
spill as luck seems a ludicrous understatement, Surely
it was the intervention of the Almighty.
As we boarded a dinghy on the island of San Cristobal to
take us out to the ship, we were amazed to see the wreck
of the oil tanker Jessica, just a few hundred yards offshore.
There she lay — a seemingly harmless piece of rust-bucket
scrap being lapped by a pristine sea. It was only four
weeks since she ran aground, but it was as if nothing had
happened.
In the water, we didn’t see one speck of her filthy load.
In January the Jessica was on its way to refuel our cruise
ship, the Galapagos Explorer II, when she struck rocks
and began to spill oil into the waters surrounding the
volcanic islands where the unique “tame'' wildlife inspired
Darwin to publish his “natural selection" theory of
evolution in On the Origin of Species.
Freddy, one of the on-board naturalists and our guide,
modestly played down his own role in being one of the first
to help with the clean-up process, and said we should give
thanks for the strength of the Galapagos currents which
had swept the oil slick out into the vast Pacific.
"
We were extremely lucky," he said. "We could
have been witnessing the world's worst ecological disaster.
In the end only two pelicans died.
" The doom merchants who say that vital fragile marine life
was damaged at the beginning of the food chain should remember
that these islands are no stranger to disaster. They have
faced volcanic eruptions, tidal waves and erratic weather
patterns."
The Explorer II, which can carry 105 passengers, is the
biggest of the 82 tourist ships allowed to cruise the islands.
She is also the most luxurious.
We had a cabin with a double bed and enough room for a
sprawly sofa, plus hot showers, airconditioning, five-course
dinners and a cocktail list as long as the Ritz's.
But the main attraction is on shore. As we have all read
often enough, the wildlife here has evolved without fear
of man. But nothing prepares you for the reality. T will
never forget our first Galapagos landing on the island
of Espanola. The shiny black rocks were alive with scuttling
Day-Glo orange Sally Lightfoot crabs and dozens of marine
iguanas, a subspecies unique to the island, flashed their
crimson and turquoise patches to the sun. Who says reptiles
don't preen?
We almost tripped over the ever-present sea lions, catching
some rays on the rocks, or snoozing in snuggled-up groups
on a perfect white sandy crescent of a beach (anywhere
else in the world, and there would already be a string
of hotels). All my fears that there would be too many of
us disturbing the animals were unfounded. The Explorer
team deftly split us into groups of no more than 12 for
on-shore expeditions and we were restricted to designated
paths to avoid treading on nesting sites.
I expected Sir David Attenborough to pop up from behind
a rock, boggling as we were at the totally fearless birds.
Cheeky mockingbirds jumped on our feet (in Origin of Species,
Darwin says one tried to undo his shoelaces) and soft,
grey swallow-tailed gulls with red-rimmed "mega-hangover" eyes
— all the better to see each other at night — nested in
our path, or among the rocks at eye level.
It's hard to decide who are the greatest scene-stealers.
For many it has to be the boobies, either masked (black
and white), blue-footed, or red-footed with sky blue beaks
and yellow eyes — so comic that they must surely have been
designed by Disney. For others, it's the magnificent frigate
bird, which we were lucky to see on the island of Genovesa
during the breeding season, when the inky black males inflate
their awesome crimson throat to impress the ladies.
The first Galapagos National Park rule is "Don’t Touch
the Animals", but there is nothing to say that they
can't touch you. inquisitive boobies pecked at our cameras,
and I felt a gentle nudge on the thigh when swimming one
day with a group of friendly sea lions.
Sadly, transgressions occur, even in the Garden of Eden.
We witnessed people cuddling up to boobies and lifting
iguanas into better camera poses.
Incredibly, for a party of alleged wildlife lovers, one
of our number even attempted to sit on a slumbering giant
tortoise for a holiday snapshot. Loud cries from the rest
of us soon stopped him.
Later, when we snitched on him to Freddy, he smiled knowingly
and said tourists did little harm. The real threat to the
wildlife, he said, came from unscrupulous local fishermen.
Over the years, whales, fur seals and lobsters have been
hunted to the brink of extinction. And only the week before
a sea captain had his boat impounded when port officials
found 800 illegally caught sharks on board, destined for
the lucrative Far East market, where they would end up
in shark's fin soup.
The temptation for the Government to give in to the developers
is huge, as tourism to the islands is Ecuador's single
biggest garner, injecting more million a year into the
economy.
Even though visitor numbers have soared in the past five
years (from 45.000 to 70.000), only 8 per cent of the islands'
4,500 square mile land mass is open to tourists, and then
only on strictly controlled itinerants with accredited
guides. A £245 return flight, plus a compulsory visitor
tax of £70 par person, both helps conservation and
keeps out the wrong kind of tourist.
Trying to keep the wrong kind of oil company out of Amazon
is a much bigger political issue, and far more of a threat
to the rainforest than tourism. Ever since Texaco Struck
rich reserves in the northeast of Ecuador in the Seventies,
vast swaths of jungle and many indigenous communities have
been destroyed in pursuit of the "black gold".
Canodros, the Ecuadorian company which owns the Explorer
II, has to be applauded for its noble efforts to protect
and help the Achuar, a group of blow-gun hunters, who live
ill simple huts on the south- eastern Amazon tributaries.
Fifteen years ago, in the bean of the rainforest, near
the Peruvian border, they invested £1.4 million to
build Kapawi, a 20-room ecolodge.
It took until 1994 for the Achuar to agree to a deal with
Canodros; this will give their community eventual outright
ownership of the lodge by 2011. Meanwhile, Kapawi pays
the Achuar £1,400 a month and instructs them in the
finer points of running a hotel. The plan is ambitious,
but worthy.
We joined a Heart of Dark-ness-style expedition by propeller
plane from Quito, landing or a mud airstrip, before making
a one-hour journey down-river to the lodge by motorized
dugout canoe. We saw groups of sunbathing turtles, the
flash of neon green parrots, huge cobalt butterflies —
and, yes, we can now say we have seen swallows in the Amazon.
I'm no lover of voyeuristic tourism, but for many visitors
the highlight was a visit to an Achuar village. Here we
learnt that these shy jungle dwellers had virtually no
contact with the outside world until the late 1960s, when
missionaries began establishing contact with them. Until
then they were naked polygamous hunters, frequently killing
each other in fights over hunting rights, of women.
Trough an interpreter we asked Guido, one of the village
ciders, if his life was truly better for Christianity,
T-shirts and tourists with greenbacks. He kicked at the
dust with his western travelers' sandals and answered shyly,
that yes, it was better because the killing had stopped.
Next morning, one of our group said he bad returned to
his room to find his pajamas laid out neatly on the bed,
with towels stuffed in the limbs. In the half light he
thought his room was occupied.
A harmless prank? An Achuar curse? No one knew. But if
you had the choice between running around naked in the
jungle, and stuffing a towel up the pajama leg of a lawyer
'from Fulham, which would you choose?
|