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Square on a corner in Sao Tome town. |
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Sao Tome's coat of arms with a falcon on the left and a parrot on the right. |
In August we travelled to São Tomé
and Príncipe for 10 days. Two small islands, they were the site of
sugar and later cocoa plantations. These days São Tomé is a rather
sleepy place, but with quite a lot to see both in the capital and
around the island (we did not make it to Principe, which is expensive
and/or time-consuming to reach and features mostly high-end tourist
accommodation). São Tomé and Principe were formed by a volcanic
mountain range that includes the extinct Pico Basile of Bioko Island
(Equatorial Guinea),
Mt. Manengouba,
Mt. Oku and the dormant Mt.
Cameroon (still on the list to climb!).
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(Top) Buildings in Sao Tome; (bottom) Ana Chaves Bay. |
Our trip was bookended by a few days in
São Tomé town, and we enjoyed walking around and admiring the old
housing, Ana Chaves Bay and bits of public art and murals, as well as
trying out unfamiliar fruits (sap sap, jackfruit, breadfruit, etc.). São Toméans
on the whole were very friendly, and many spoke a bit of French which
helped as our Portuguese is very poor.
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Jackfruit: tasty and extremely sticky. |
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Educate children so that it is not necessary to punish adults. |
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Sao Tome traffic. |
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Breakfast:yogurt, salami sandwich, sumo sap sap. |
While most of the cacao crop is
exported for refinement, some cocoa is used to produce chocolate on
the islands. We went on a tour of one such chocolate factory owned by
an Italian who runs Terreiro Velho, a plantation on Principe. Claudio
Corallo was something of a cacao radical, very meticulous about his
chocolate and indeed what should even be deigned chocolate. The
presentation/diatribe was entertaining (and more comprehensible when
he chatted with French speakers at the end) and the chocolate was
very tasty. Of course, the old refrain about whether the workers who
harvest the cacao can afford the final product is even more apt with
non-industrially produced cocoa that serves a niche market.
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Claudio Corallo, proselytizer for high-cacao chocolate. |
While in town, we checked out the
presidential palace and Parque Popular (the latter mainly known for
its lunch establishments for government workers), considered taking a
dip in the museum beach (it was a bit hectic so Blair took a swim
further south), and visited the national museum and CACAU art space.
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The main transport around town. Motorcycle taxis only accept one passenger -
quite different from Cameroon and other countries. |
Transport around town was difficult
later at night – with such a small population it seemed that motos
turned in early. Restaurants serving dinner were not very plentiful
either, at least outside of hotels (witness our ill-fated trek to
O Pirata). But we usually found
something good to eat (invariably seafood) and were offered several
rides to our AirBnB lodgings outside the town centre (including a
lift from Antonio who worked in the ministry of finance).
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Delicious grilled fish and breadfruti lunch from a shipping on Ana Chaves Bay. |
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Food truck with painting of Cao Grande, a major landmark on
the road south to Porto Alegre. |
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School mural near our lodging: A book is like a window. Who does not read it is
like someone who was far from the window and can only see part of the landscape.
- Kahlil Gibran |
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Murals at Liceu Nacional, showing the importance of cacao, and safe sex. |
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Wherever there are women and men, there is always something to do,
there is always something to teach, there is always something to learn. |
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Home of an art gallery and bar, Pico Mocambo. |
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Our stay for the last few days was in a recently renovated house south of downton. Our
host, Edmin, had a birthday to celebrate so we were able to join the festivities. |
Edmin's friend Rui arranged our stay, and
we had a nice time chatting to him about São Tomé, London (where he
has spent half his life), and central Africa. The party had an
eclectic mix of boiled plantains, boiled snails (as opposed to the
grilled “Congo meat” variety in Cameroon), birthday cake, and a
large slab of prosciutto.
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Prosciutto and birthday cake. |
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Interior and garden of our lodgings in Sao Tome town. |
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Sao Tome and Principe is among the small client-states that Taiwan
has turned to to argue their case in the United Nations. The Gambia
left the fold a few years ago in favor of China's largesse. |
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Poster for a recent art festival; colonial architecture in town. |
On our last day in São Tomé we
visited the Museo Nacional (forthcoming post), did a little shopping
for tea, then went to check out Asas de Aviao. Unfortunately, this
multi-faceted attraction was closed.
Asas de Aviao is a bar/restaurant/etc.
built around two abandoned planes that were used by the Portuguese to
supply the independence fighters during the Biafran War in the late
1960s. For reasons unclear to me, the Portuguese opposed the British
and the USSR, and defied the embargo enforced against Biafra, with
São Tomé as their waypoint and supply centre. The long-abandoned
planes eventually were converted for use as a bar.
The lunch spot we ended up going to instead was quite pleasantly arranged around a central tree, although the stray dogs were bothersome at times. (While Cameroon and other countries have stray dogs around, all with the same light brown hue, São Tomé has legions of them.) We enjoyed one more grilled fish meal, then headed to the airport.
We were promptly pronounced late
for check-in, which ended 5 hours earlier with the incoming (perhaps
inappropriately named as it's banned from flying to Europe) CEIBA
Intercontinental flight, but were still allowed to board the outgoing
flight. In some fortuitous timing, we were able to get a couple of
Rosemas (referred to throughout STP as Nacional) to tide us over at
the gate before the staff left for their respective breaks.
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As backup lunch spots go, one could do worse (stray dogs not pictured). |
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Advisory in the men's room at Sao Tome International Airport. |