By Ryan Shorthouse
In 2004 CCC ran the Travel Writer of the Year Competition. Participants
were asked to write about their expedition experiences in no more
than 1500 words.
The competition offered a rare opportunity for volunteers and field
staff, both past and present, to demonstrate their travel writing
skills. The competition prize was a free three-week CCC expedition!
Response to the competition was excellent, with entrees of a very
high standard. Judging the competition was the Founder & Managing
Director of CCC and three Directors. We are pleased to announce
that Ryan Shorthouse, a Volunteer on Project Bay Islands Honduras,
was selected CCC Travel Writer of the Year 2004.
CCC would like to thank everyone that entered the competition.
Articles submitted will be used to inform and inspire other Volunteers
to join CCC’s global conservation efforts.
Winning Entry: Reflections on my first days living in a small coastal
Honduran village in the middle of the Caribbean Sea
Saturday 14th August 2004
After two days of tiring travel, I have finally arrived at Coral
Lodge- quite literally, a wooden hut on what feels like the edge
of the world. Romantic, really. Yet, I’m exhausted from jet-lag;
Honduras is seven hours behind, so sat here now in the mid-afternoon
sun is equivalent to when I should be tucking up into my soft, comfortable
bed. I go to pick up my hot milk and cookie in fact…but
then am brought round by the immense heat. English evenings rarely
exceed thirty degrees centigrade, I remind myself.
Opposite our dock is Rose Keys, an island covered with lush mangroves,
and further still is the mountainous mainland, a dark shadow looming
on the horizon; this view, which I still haven’t got round
to fully appreciating (mainly because the screams of a baby on the
long-haul flight are still ringing in my ear), is occasionally interrupted,
the locals rushing by in their motor boats, crying greetings, or
wolf-whistles, if the girls are indulging in some sunbathing. Quite
simply, this is beautiful- far from the lines of cars and streets
of concrete that embody London. Tiredness does not affect you that
much here- there are no traffic jams to cause a headache, no critics
to impress with a flawless, no bags under the eyes, appearance.
Living in the heart of Santa Helene, the clear Caribbean Sea all
around you, life is brought into perspective- at last there is contentment
with what you have, for me a landscape few experience and many still
dream of. Yet, there should be gratification. For doubts creep in…
...The toilet: it reeks. My bedroom is charming, luxury compared
to what I expected. Living with four guys, bunks galore, is a reminder
of school trips and scout camps, with plenty of boisterous misbehaviour
to come. But behind the curtain lies a terror legions of volunteers
from Coral Cay have failed to remove, probably because an environmentally
concerned Expedition Leader bans the flushing of the toilet after
a wee, permitting it only after the much awaited ‘Poo O’clock’
(even then, the paper must be put in a separate bin liner, always
a pleasant surprise for the person on Toilet Duty who has to burn
all the paper at the end of the day). Consequently, the whiff of
wee infiltrates the sleeping area, only biogradeable soap used for
body wash after a bucket shower a strong enough cure. Still, I should
stop complaining; I have strategically placed myself on the top
bunk, becoming the principal recipient of a nightly breeze through
the window, forcing the smell down to the poor bugger on the bottom
bunk.
Such a minor grievance is clouded over by the knowledge that I
have just completed my first snorkel in the Caribbean Sea. Seeing
an abundance of colourful fish and city of corals, I feel immensely
uplifted. Plus, the Expedition Leader has just called for all the
toilets to be bleached. Hallelujah! Evening fast approaches, by
six it will be dark, and I am sat playing cards, socialising and
drinking a local favourite- a quasi-‘Lilt’, commonly
called ‘Reef’. My earlier tiredness, punctuated by the
immense heat, has disappeared; anyway, a regular jump in the cool
sea will counter the high temperature.
The stars are soon plentiful, and there are blazing storms on the
horizon; this is the place people only get to dream of. I may be
sunburnt, slapping on the calamine lotion to soothe the pain, and
this basic life is far from home comforts- bats in the bedroom and
no hot showers- but I am so glad to be here. Tomorrow, I join a
team called Ming- aptly named after the tropical disease. I will
be thrown into cooking; let’s hope my first major impact on
the group of twenty plus people is not food poisoning. Cockroaches
may jump into my bed, but we will sleep well tonight- me and a few
bugs.
Thursday 19th August 2004
Dan, our boat driver and a somewhat respected gentleman of the
village, has warned of a hurricane. He speaks as if it’s a
big football match, the whole village excited about its arrival;
for me, it’s not the most reassuring thought to wake to, especially
at 6am when the head is still light. This must be a dream..No, the
soggy cereals and stale bread for breakfast indicate to me that
this can be no other than Coral Lodge. It’s the first morning
that it’s been cold and wet. Normally, a shaft of sunlight
filters through the wooden shutters, easing the process of waking
with a reminder that we are living in a type of paradise for a few
weeks of our lives. Yet, we cannot fool ourselves that this is utopia
for the Santa Helene villagers; life is tough- water cannot be acquired
through the simple switching on of a tap, some walk miles to get
three or four buckets of water from the well.
The group is grumpy, specially as many of us are wearing the infamous
rain jacket that we bought but thought we’d never wear. Weary
as I am of the forecasted hurricane, a prediction made somewhat
more believable by the fact were smack bang in the middle of the
Central American Hurricane season, it would admittedly be quite
fun to have to hide in the Mission at the heart of the village as
gusts of wind throw wood and, wait a minute, probably my thousand
pounds worth of diving equipment, through the air. Oh well, who
ever knew how to use that bloody dive compass anyway? We would make
world news as well, if it’s the mammoth Hurricane Bonny, which
recently caused havoc in Florida and is now heading our way, via
Cuba…
..Dan has just informed us that the hurricane has passed, and is
heading for the West End, which our Expedition Leader, with a small
spit, calls Plastic Town. Quite disappointing really. At least parents
won’t worry. The plus side is that we get our two dives for
the day. I am beginning to master the skills, apart from buoyancy
which I guess still needs to be refined- the clue lay in the dive
trainer tapping her tank as I caused sand storms with my flippers
(oops, fins!) and became a hazard for fish as I flapped my arms
in an attempt to stay neutrally buoyant in an oh so sleek pro diver
way. Underwater, there comes a rare feeling of peace: all is tranquil,
quiet. It’s just you and a boundless ocean. Well, apart from
your buddy who keeps making an ‘O’ with their index
finger and thumb. “Yes, I’m bloody ok! Let me just enjoy
the Fair Basslett, ok?!” After practice, and theoretically
when you’re a fully certified Advanced Open Water Diver, just
like those cool people on the video from the eighties with big hair
wearing ultra-shiny Lycra, you begin to breathe effortlessly, swimming
streamline just above the ocean floor; you metamorphose into one
of the ocean’s creatures for thirty-seven minutes of your
life. Or at least I thought I swam as smoothly as a ray, others
thought an octopus was a more fitting description.
I swing in a hammock, reflecting on the past couple of days. Even
the lows, regular sea-sickness due to choppy water, have coloured
the whole experience so far. And strangely, the feeling after being
sick is quite euphoric, particularly when you rise from the side
of the boat, leaving last night’s carrots for the barracuda,
to see a clear blue sky, the odd pelican flying overhead, and the
turquoise water going ever on till the horizon, where the world
seems to end, the kingdom of water finally meeting the sky. There
is no rush here, no desire to have food in your mouth five minutes
from ordering it. I am no longer constantly searching for something;
I am just waiting; waiting for the sun to set, watching a golden
light fall upon the whole village, stirring warm thoughts.
Sunday 22nd August 2004
Rest day- and much deserved. Waking up at the crack of dawn is
not so bad, but a lie-in now and then is a rare treat. The Science
Officer plans to take us to the northern side of Santa Helene, snorkelling
for penicillus capitatus and..well..other algae. We trek for a good
twenty five minutes, passing the friendly locals, the elders greeting
us politely and the children running up with an excitement that
can only make you smile. Then we approach a small jungle, passing
through a tapestry of shapely trees, ducking for stray branches,
avoiding any deviance from the path as for fear of snakes. Eventually
we reach the northern shore, a fitting emblem of the juxtaposition
that exits within Roatan: beauty surrounded by poverty. A dead dog
and a collection of litter come into sharp contrast with the gorgeous
white sand.
Still, such troubles, even the smelly toilet, unbleached for five
days I tell myself, adds to the novelty of the experience. Literally,
three weeks in Santa Helene, is not long enough.
By RYAN SHORTHOUSE, Winner of the CCC Travel Writer of the Year
2004
To find out more visit:
http://www.coralcay.org
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