by
Mykel Board
ENTRY 12
Nov
12, 2013-
Nov. 15, 2013
ENTERING
FRENCH GUIANA FROM THE FRONT.
[Recap:
From the start, it didn't look good for this trip. Everything went
right... always a bad sign. Nothing portends disaster like
everything going right.
Easy
subletter in New York, smooth flight to Miami, promises of “meet
you at the airport/seaport” for the whole trip. $10 a night
accommodations in Guyana, the rest free.
Uh
oh! Too good. The better the news before, the bigger the fall later.
And things get worse. (Better) The Miami trip goes so smoothly you
could cry. The only problem was a lot of rain-- heavy rain. The
streets were rivers. There were waves in the pool. I got wet. Very
wet.
Then
on to North Trinidad, where my friends pick me up at the airport,
take me around drinkin'. Then, I move South to San Fernando T'dad,
have some fun adventures, meet a Goddess... er... Empress of a girl.
Go back to the airport and fly to Guyana.
In
Guyana, my facebook friends from KEEP
YOUR DAY JOB! meet me at the airport. From there, we go to
Jamal's. This is the only time I have to pay for a place to sleep: 15
days for $150US. Not bad. No, it doesn't go perfectly. But it goes,
and I meet some great people in the country. My trip to Kaiteur
Falls in the jungle is literally (741 feet) a high point.
The
two weeks of my stay in Guyana were adventure-filled, and
beer-dulled. Most days, it rained. Sometimes for just an hour or two
in the afternoon. Sometimes all day.
“I
don't get it Mykel,” Jamal tells me. “This isn't the rainy
season.”
The
plan is to travel to Suriname with Keep Your Day Job! I'll be
a roadie! Mykel tours with a band... again. Yowsah! But, uh oh... a
drummer problem. (Hard to imagine, huh?) Two drummers had agreed to
tour with them. One, a close friend, the other, more PUNKROCK. They
ditch the friend for the punkrocker. He bails at the last minute. The
now former-friend does not answer emails. I cannot play drums. This
cannot work out. We go to Suriname anyway. It works out.
In
Suriname, I stay with a punkrock student and his super-generous
parents. I mention a local synagogue; they arrange a tour. I mention
a trip to “the interior,” bang, we're there... surveying monkey
meat. When dad can't do it, they get the poor son, Jose, to chauffeur
me around, as if he doesn't have enough with schoolwork and his own
band ADHD. I can see
he hopes for rain... it's an excuse to stay home. Often, there is
rain.
Then
it's on to French Guyana. There, Florian, the brother of one of my
top ten pals, Simon, lives with his girlfriend Marie. Two blog
entries ago, I'd just arrived in French Guiana.
BUT,
there was a lot I left out of the Suriname adventure. I did a little
back-tracking track last time: My Chinese Restaurant Lunch
Terrorist Adventure©, and the general
nastiness of my being A BAD GUEST. Suriname was great, except for the
rain... the goddamn rain. Every day.
“This
isn't rainy season,” Jose assured me.
Yeah,
right.
Dad
tells me that Saint Lauren, my destination in French Guiana, is “very
primitive. It's just dirt roads and mud huts. And crime... wow!” He
says something in Dutch.
“It
means criminals up the wazoo,” translates Jose.
“Sounds
like my kind of place,” I tell him.
He
laughs.
So
it's off to FRENCH GUIANA. I take a small boat there. The captain
lets me choose “legal or backtrack?” I choose legal. Once landed
at immigrtion, I annoy the white immigration officer by asking for a
passport stamp. They give it to me and try to hustle me away. I'm as
hungry as shit and don't know where I am.]
Usually,
I can't get out of immigration fast enough. But today, I need their
help. Usually, immigration officers want to chat, either to be
friendly or to insinuate that I should be slipping them a few extra
shekels before they'll release me to their proud homeland. Usually,
they speak English because that's what the tourists speak. BUT, this
is French Guiana! If there are tourists, they are French. The customs
officers are also French --NOT French Guianans, but French
French. You know, like white people.
[NOTE:
Unlike England and Holland who release their colonies into
independence, France absorbs its colonies. It makes them
prefectures... like states. Giving the locals citizenship and forcing
them to pay national taxes. It's similar to what the U.S. did to
Hawaii, except the Hawaiians got to vote on it.]
I
try my best with the immigration guys.
“J'ai
faim,” I say. “Où puis-je trouver un place pour manger?”
One
of the officers looks skyward... like an American teen just about to
say Whatever! He brushes his hand vaguely toward the street in
front of the little customs hut.
So,
back-packed and computer-cased, I walk tout droit through St. Lauren.
The place looks like a full-fledged city. The roads are all paved. No
mud huts. Buildings, stores... no bars to speak of. And so far no
criminals wazoo or otherwise.
I
count the rues and at deux I turn gauche. I walk among the buildings.
No food shops of any kind. Just some wide streets with a bookshop on
one side, what looks like an automobile parts store on the other.
Again I walk tout droit. A shopping center... a mall... appears out
of nowhere. I forget what it's called... some letter combination... C
and J maybe.... It's a mass of bright yellow buildings, as ugly-- if
a bit smaller-- as anything you'd see in New Jersey. I enter the
complex and find a bakery/sandwich shop.
Inside,
two black women take care of the counter. In their early 20s, they
wait on a bearded young white man in his early 30s. Behind the
counter sit a few refrigerators. Right outside the restaurant is a
small enclosed courtyard for people to sit, eat and diddle around on
the internet. I'll sit there after I buy my sandwich.
“Vous
avez Quel genre de sandwichs?” I ask.
She
says something. The only words I can understand are O
and avec fromage.
To avoid ordering a dingleberry special, I say, “Je voudrais l'une
avec fromage.”
That's
when I notice the drink. It's in the freezer in a soft plastic pouch.
It looks like a picture of a Durian on the front. The drink is called
JACK'S FRUIT. Most of the label is in German! How can I pass up
something like that?
I
take my sandwich (in a bagu-ette, of course) and my Jack's Fruit drink
(German edition) out to a table in the court- yard. I pull a chair up,
open my computer, then suddenly notice the people around me. They're
so white it hurts my eyes.
While
there were mostly Caribbeans on the street-- Black, Indian, no
Asians-- at every table here sits some white guy or girl... most in
their late 20s to early 30s... all with a computer typing away. I
haven't been with so many white people since I started this trip.
What's up with that?
[NOTE:
In the future, I'll ask my hosts about this. They'll tell me:
Teachers, Doctors and Gendarme. Those are the white
jobs in French Guiana. The French government pays French French (as
opposed to Caribbean French) big bucks to go out to the colonies to
teach, doctor or gendarme. That's why they're there.
There
is no medical school in French Guiana. French is not the native
language of most of the French Guianese. (That language is Nenge
Tongo. More about that later.) So they need French French
to teach it to them. And this is the Caribbean! You need
authoritarian people to be gendarmes! Except for a few politicians in
a few islands, Caribbean people do not have the energy or the
personality to be cops. So you gotta import 'em!]
So
here I am, in a den of imports, probably teachers, since the doctors
probably have to work and these guys are too young and hirsute to be
cops. In my pocket, along with a very primitive map to where I'M
GOING, I have directions:
Prendre
la route de Saint Jean, passer le pont de Balaté (le pont jaune) et
rouler 200m. Prendre à droite l'entrée de la résidence des rivages
et tout de suite à gauche dans l'allée de la résidence. La
première maison est la bonne. (n°1)
At
my table, I connect to the internet and try to Google my destination.
No luck. I finish the sandwich, and Jack's Fruit®.
(The
drink is delicious-- just like Durian.)
Then,
I walk over to the bearded young man facebooking at the next table.
“Ou
est la route de Saint Jean?” I ask.
He
gives me directions that include highway
and ne
pas loin d'ici.
And that's all I understand. I ask him to dessiner
une carte.
He smiles, pulls out a pen and scribbles a map on a napkin.
[NOTE:
I know the image of the French. The arrogant, xenophobic, annoying
FROG. The unhelpful, insulting, brusque, cheese-eater. This image is
RIGHT-- for about half the people of France. The rest are friendly,
helpful, funny, down-to-earth. In French Guiana-- don't forget the
locals too, are French-- the percentage is different. All the French,
except the immigration officers, are great! There isn't one person I
meet in the country... er... prefecture (except the immigration
officers) who I wouldn't want as a next door neighbor.]
My
new bearded white friend, gets up from behind his laptap, walks with
me to the exit and points to the street I take to the route de Saint
Jean.
I
put away my own computer, pick up my backpack, thank my new friend,
and walk... and walk. I go to the first street. Turn left. Then walk
three very long blocks up to what looks like a main street. I turn
right on the main street and look back at the map. On this street is
an arrow that points... somewhere off the page.
I
walk some more. Another long block. And another. Both the computer
and the backpack gain weight with every step. My shoulders are in the
clutches of a VULCAN DEATH GRIP.
I
don't even know if I'm going in the right direction. I walk along the
highway. Looking for someone to check with.
[NOTE:
If I need proof of my oft-stated contention that I am NOT a man, but
a myn... here it is. I ALWAYS ask directions. Not only once, but
twice, thrice. Whenever I'm out of eyeshot of the previous askee... I
ask again. So take note, you accusers of macho male-chauvinism or
whatever it's called in the 21st century. I am NOT one!]
There
is a guy down the road pasting up a sign, an advertisement for some
kind of soap. He looks like a Caribbean beatnik, tanned, dark shaggy
hair, a scruffy beard. He's wearing overalls and handles a large
stick full of paste.
I
show him my map and ask him, “Je vais le droit chemin?”
He
puts down the stick, nods, points in the direction I was going, and
then says something back to me. I know he's speaking French, but I
have no idea what he's talking about.
I
shrug.
He
points to his truck.
“Oui,
beau camion,” I say.
He
shakes his head. I thought I was giving him a compliment. Maybe I
said something bad.
I
shrug again.
“Mykel!
Mykel!” a voice comes to me like a dream. Uh oh, that Durian drink
was spiked! Now, I'm hearing voices.
I
turn to where “the voice” is coming from. There's an attractive
white girl on a bike, riding up behind me.
“Are
you Mykel?” she asks.
She
looks like neither a government official nor an American feminist, so
I answer, “Yep, that's me.”
“It's
me, Marie,” she says getting off the bike.
I
run up to her and give her a hug and a huge-but-chaste kiss on the
cheek.
“I've
been trying to speak to this guy,” I tell her, “I have your
directions here, but I just wanted to check.”
The
guy says something to her. She laughs and then speaks to me. “You're
about a kilometer away,” she says.
I
look skyward, thinking about my pain.
“But
that man says he will take you in his truck” she continues. “You
only have to wait until the poster is posted.”
She
talks to him again. Then to me.
“You
can meet me in a shop right near where we live. He knows where it
is.”
“Great!”
I say to her.
“Merci
beaucoup,” I say to the posterer, “very beaucoup.”
And
before long we're in the truck and out on the small highway that is
la route de Saint Jean.
It
seems like miles before we turn off the road, drive through a
construction site, and end up at a small shop near a traffic circle.
I wonder if I should give the guy a tip... he's so nice. But he's
French. Ask any New York waiter or waitress... the French don't know
shit about tipping. They say tipping's an insult. The last thing I'd
want to do is insult my new friend.
I
just thank him again, shake hands, watch his truck fade into the
distance and sit down in front of the store to wait.
She
won't show up. I think
completely irrationally, “I know she won't show
up. It's all a trick to get rid of me.”
After another 10 minutes of thinking this, the bike appears with
Marie on it, wearing a smile as big as my backpack.
The
house, as it turns out, is right around the corner from the store. A
two story affair with a side entrance, a kitchen, living room,
upstairs and with an extra bed, “office,” bedroom, back yard with
a swimming pool! Though not the kind of pool you're likely to meet in
say, California.
(this picture is from later in my stay-- first time I wore a bathing suit on the
entire trip)
|
Besides
Florian, Marie shares the house with two cats and a tank of goldfish.
My room, it turns out, is in an open space upstairs... a double
mattress on a balcony, next to “the office.” Key benefit...
MOSQUITO NETTING.
While
Marie shows me the layout, I hear what sounds like pebbles on a tin
roof... first a few... then louder, faster, harder.
“It's
the rain,” she says. “I don't understand it. It's every day. It
shouldn't be. This isn't the rainy season.”
Florian
is on his way back from work. Both he and Marie are teachers. Marie
is in elementary school. Florian teaches the older kids. My
connection?
Florian
is the brother of Simon... If you read LAST YEAR'S AFRICA TRIP, you'll remember that Simon
is one of the guys I visited in Strasbourg in 2012... and winner of
Mykel's Best Friend Award for
2009... or was it 2008?
Besides
being more fun than a coffee enema, Simon is a great cook, and took
care of Marilyn and Jody in that capacity for a few weeks on Fire
Island.
If
you'd guess brothers would have similar personalities and cooking
abilities, you'd guess right. Marie is Florian's girlfriend, a
co-owner of this house. If you'd guess she, too, has cooking ability
and a wicked sense of humor, you'd guess right.
[Aside:
One of the many things I like about writing is the power it gives
you. You can perform deeds impossible for other mortals. Want to see
me swallow steel girders and shit the Eiffel Tower? POW! There it is!
How'd you like that? Ok stockbroker, YOU try it! So, it's time to
bring Florian into the picture. POW! There he is!]
Just
now there is a rustling at the door. It's Florian, returning from
school. (See how easy that was?)
I haven't seen the guy since he, Simon, sis, Mom and Dad were together in New York for a Drink Club orgy. No, that's wrong. In 2012, I was in Strasbourg having dinner at the Hebtigs house. It was there that Florian made the fatal mistake of telling me he was moving to French Guiana.
I haven't seen the guy since he, Simon, sis, Mom and Dad were together in New York for a Drink Club orgy. No, that's wrong. In 2012, I was in Strasbourg having dinner at the Hebtigs house. It was there that Florian made the fatal mistake of telling me he was moving to French Guiana.
[WARNING:
Never tell me you're moving anywhere! If you do, chances are I'll
show up on your front porch-- in the rain.]
Now,
Florian looks exactly the same as I remember him, only a bit wetter.
Not bronzed as I expect, just this friendly white guy.
“Hey
Mykel,” he says in English. “You have any trouble getting here.”
“Non,”
I reply in my best French. “J'ai été très facile.”
He
laughs.
“I
think you'd better speak English,” he says. “At least here.
Otherwise you might embarrass yourself.”
“What'd
I say?” I wonder... but don't ask.
That
night, Florian makes dinner... lots of fruits... everything fresh
from the market. Fish just cooked at home... and it's a good thing I
love seafood. I have it almost every one of my 7 days in the
country... er... prefecture.
We
talk about plans for my week in French Guyana. I'm going to take a
canoe trip through the Amazon swamps, go to a huge festival sponsored
by the school, take a class in Nenge Tongo-- the local language (a
weird mix of African languages, Dutch and English... an escaped slave
creole), and explore the exiled prisoners camp in the center of town.
Here
we are, the prince with the king and queen of the castle.
But
it's getting late, and I'm really tired. I thank my hosts and go up
to my bed. I crawl under the mosquito netting and tuck it in after
me. I fall asleep quickly but awaken to thunder and the
pat-pat-pat-pat of falling rain on the roof. I fall asleep again.
This time I'm awakened by an earthquake.
The
mosquito netting is shaking. Waving back and forth. The mattress
shakes with a thump. Then again. Then the netting shakes. Then a
thump. I wonder if the house is going to tumble down around me.
Should I put on my pants? I don't want to be discovered dead in my
underwear. I don't... and I'm not.
It
is not an earthquake. It's one of the cats. He loves the mosquito
netting and jumps from the mattress to the netting... crawls up the
side... then to the netting... then drops down on the mattress again.
I push against the netting to dislodge the cat. He thinks I'm playing
and digs his claws into my thumb.
I
pull my bloody hand away and squeeze my body into a safe zone in the
center of the bed. Next thing I know, it's morning. I'm awakened by
the shuffling downstairs. Then a whirr. I crawl from beneath the
netting, put on my pants and head downstairs.
The
whir is the sound of blender blades turning a myriad of fresh fruits
into fresh juice. Next to the blender is a teflon frypan, and a
pitcher full of white batter.
“I
hope you hate crepes,” Florian tells me as he leaves the kitchen.
“That's what we're having for breakfast.”
I
laugh, trying to act like crepe-making is part of my normal breakfast
routine. Actually, I love crepes, but have only ordered them from
waiters with mustaches. I never actually made one.
After
Florian is out of eyeshot, I confess my ignorance to Marie. She opens
several packets of things... each wrapped in individual wax paper
pouches.
“Here
are chicken pieces,” she says opening a packet. “And here is
pork.”
One
by one, she continues to open the packets and display the contents.
“This
one has cheese,” she continues. “This one has jam. And here are
pieces of fruit: pineapples, apples, pears...” and something I
didn't catch. It looks like cat fur. I don't ask.
“First
you spread out the flour on the frypan like this...” she pours the
batter onto the pan. “Then you put in the ingredients,” she takes
some jam and puts it in the center of the crepe.
“Then
you wait a minute, and finally roll up the crepe and put it in a
plate.” She does it with perfection. “Now you try,” she tells
me.
I
pour the batter into the pan. It sizzles and bubbles but soon lies
flat, very crepe-like.
“Which
ingredients should I put in?” I ask her.
“Whatever
you like?” she says.
So
I throw in a few pieces of pork, some chicken bits, some pear slices,
and cover the whole thing with jam.
Marie
laughs. Laughs harder. “You put pork and jam together?”
“You
said put in what ever you like,” I answer.
“Florian!”
she yells. “Mykel made a crepe with pork, chicken and jam!” Then
she laughs more.
“It's
supposed to be what I like, right?” I say, stubbornly trying to
defend myself.
Florian
comes out of the bedroom, looks at my crepe and also laughs out loud.
Wise
guys.
Okay,
they think they can laugh at my Poulet-Porc Avec de la Gelée.
I'll show them... Here come my magic powers at the keyboard. Pow!
The
rain comes... hard!
--end
(more next month)
Oh
yeah, besides my great hosts, I owe some special thanks to Assia
Franz, my friend and French teacher in New York. I couldn't have
managed even this without her.
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