(Apologies for lateness) In my usual style, some brief history/context about Manaus. (Pronounced MAN-ow-s)
It is a port city located about 2-days-sailing into the Amazon River. The Amazon is the largest river in the world, and a relatively new river which is continuing to expand. It is the capital of the state of Amazonas, and a popular eco-tourism destination, which as a now-seasoned traveler of the city, I understand to mean code for there’s-not-much-to-do-other-than-exploring-the-river-and-jungle-areas. That being said, I had an AMAZING time and upon returning to the ship, I was quite worried that no other countries would be able to rival the time I had in Brazil. In addressing the famously mixed population of Brazil, rather than a lot of various races, though there was diversity, traces of indigenous people was the most common race being the strongest survivors of the slavery period due to their familiarity and ability to survive in the Amazon jungle. Economically, Brazil is facing an issue with an increasingly large gap between rich and poor with a remarkably small amount fitting in middle class. There are rough areas called favelas where people literally live and shacks and get by any way they can with problems of violence and drug/alcohol abuse. The main areas with favelas are in Rio de Jenaro and Sao Paulo and I read a book for class which was a published diary of a woman who lived there in the ‘50s called Child of the Dark. Didn’t really interact with that aspect on my trip, but a very big issue in Brazil. My last fun fact to share is that Manaus also happens to be the birthplace of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and Mixed Martial Arts.
Day 1: I had no planned trips and due to the growing increase of school work which had begun as classes got rolling on the ship, did not get a chance to check out a guide book from the library. The policy here, as I learned that day – is that guides can be checked out for the span of 2 hours, and you must read them in the library and cannot take them to your room. Anywho, that didn’t happen, and the campus store was selling guide books for a whopping $25, so no guidebook preparation was done, expecting a city with more tourist attractions and things to do. In addition, only the night before at our pre-port briefing did we discover that almost no one spoke English, and would only understand a LITTLE Spanish if attempting to communicate that way. So:
Rachel, my roommate and I step out of the boat and look out at Manaus excitedly freaking out and saying “WE’RE IN BRAZIL…THIS IS CRAZY” etc., we stop by the tourist center which conveniently has an ATM and the tourist guide speaks English and gives us a fun map to use. We then step out into the city and are overwhelmed with little stalls completely lining the street on each side for what seems like an eternity selling everything from food to toys to fresh fruit and everything in between. After managing to communicate enough to purchase some grapes the noon-time sun gets to us and we can’t handle the humidity and walking down all of these stands. We decide to take a taxi somewhere and with our map IN PORTUGUESE with some drawings on it, pick one that looks nice to point at for a cab driver. In response, they point at a DIFFERENT drawing far away from the one we pointed at and insist "SHOPPING MALL, SHOPPING MALL," after a while of back and forth with the occasional response of "OPERA HOUSE?!" we say "ok, shopping mall," and get in the cab. On our way, the cab driver takes initiative to go to the one tourist spot in Manaus and let us take pictures outside while the meter is running. So we got some pictures outside of an historic opera house and continued on our way to a mall….on a Sunday…..in a religious Catholic country. That means: no stores were open.
So, abandoning any plans of buying cute Brazilian bikinis we happened upon the one area of the mall that was open – the food court, which, conveniently has a bar that serves alcohol at 12:30 p.m. From the month I spent living in Spain, I learned some valuable words in Spanish, some of which are the same in Portuguese – in this instance, “cerveja” really came in handy, and Rachel and I proceed to get our buzz on while laughing and giving in to the fact that we don’t speak either Portuguese or Spanish, and have no idea where we are, what to do, how we’ll get a cab back to the ship, and what to do with the rest of our day(s) to samba music playing in the background while sitting next to a man whom we eventually decide is a drug dealer after many minutes of observation watching him accept phone calls publicly with one phone, privately with the other, and occasionally leaving for a few minutes only to come back and keep drinking. We eventually find that we’re actually enjoying ourselves despite all this, and the ludicrousness of the situation only makes us enjoy it more and laugh about how nice it would be if a super-sexy Brazilian man approached us who spoke English and took us out to see Manaus, which is more what we thought our day would be like…basically a Mary-Kate and Ashley movie circa late ‘90s/early 2000s. After much discussion and preparation, we manage to order what seems to us as a very Brazilian dish – it consisted of chips (French fries), rice, steak, salad and steak with a fried egg on top, and was called “Carne du Sol,” which I suppose means something involving beef and sun? It was pretty good. Then our luck changed:
As we tried and failed to explain that we wanted to split the bill between our 2 credit cards, a woman nearby who spoke English came to our rescue! Being the first person who spoke English we’d interacted with we jumped on making friends with her. We were basically like, we’re in Manaus, it’s a Sunday, we don’t know what to do blah blah blah. She explained to us that she was an accountant from Sao Paulo and also a tourist of Manaus but had a cab driver assigned to her for her trip, so together they took us to this Brazilian version of a country club which was apparently what everyone in Manaus does on Sunday. There was a pool where a lot of kids were playing and an outdoor area with tables and music where they served drinks, food, and there was dancing. We sat down and had a few drink and, despite being the only non-Brazilians there, eventually got up the courage to dance. Old drunk guys taught us how to samba, which I eventually became pretty good at the humor of everyone watching, I’m sure, while I didn’t know what to do, and we spent the rest of the afternoon talking, relaxing, and dancing. It was great!
That evening, after getting a ride back to the port with our new friend, Thiaga, I decided to join a lot of other Semester at Sea kids in going to a rehearsal for Manaus’ performance done on Carnival. Professors, Lifelong learners, and students all seemed to be there and after a pretty cool performance of drumming and dancing, we all joined it. It was super humid and everyone was covered in sweat from dancing so hard, but it was CRAZY and they ended the night with a few ‘70s classics, and then we headed back as a group to the port.
Day 2: Didn’t do much in town, but had lunch on the ship with a few friends, and headed off for a jungle overnight excursion to learn survival techniques and hike. We took a boat from the port where our ship was for about an hour to a beach with the jungle looming mysteriously behind it. To get off, we had to walk in the Amazon River marshy-area to the beach which was GROSS, plus the guides got me nice and psyched-out because I was wearing shorts and they made me wear Rachel’s funny looking knee socks with my otherwise athletic wear, there are pictures, it’s absurd. But anyway, they talked me into it with the threat of snake bites, which I was NOT ready to deal with by catching the snake to know what type of poison it had injected me with…so point blank: think hiking shoes and argyle knee socks…classy. First things I noticed after reaching the beach area were a) snake holes/animal burrows, b) GIANT dragon flies who did not seem threatened by the 98% deet formula I was armed with, and c) that it was BOILING HOT with the kind of humidity that causes a strange mixture of air moisture and sweat to literally just SIT on your skin with no evaporation. Very Apocalypse Now.
Once we got started it turned out to not be that bad at all other then being a big sweaty mess. We learned some survival stuff like how to climb trees to get the fruit at the top, what fruit is safe to eat (anything monkeys can eat, we can eat), how to set traps, various types of shelters, and start fires w/o matches or lighters because they seemed to think that we’d be more likely to have materials handy such as AA batteries, steel wool or gunpowder, which I’m not so sure would apply to me when going to the jungle. We were led by a guy in the Army Amazona with a HUGE machete and a guide who would translate what he said. We came back to our camping area and picked out hammocks for the night with no more shelter than a mosquito net, but luckily it didn’t rain that night. When we went back to the area where the army guys were staying to get some more chicken for a late night snack, they went shirtless, shoeless and without mosquito nets! It looked pretty badass, but I have no idea how they didn’t get completely bitten up. There were huge spiders everywhere that kind of freaked me out, but I put a TON of deet all over my hammock which I like to think worked and that I didn’t eat a spider in my sleep. They brought out some really good chicken for dinner which I suspect they caught with some of the traps and prepared with their many machetes. During dinner and afterward, I became engaged in a conversation with a guide who spoke very good English as well as one of the Army guys who didn’t speak great English but managed, and proceeded to have the most interesting conversation of my life! All of the Semester at Sea kids were just talking to each other, but I didn’t care because it left the guide and Amazon guy open to completely tell me everything from Army man’s year spent living with an Amazonian indigenous tribe called the Yanomami (I had actually seen a documentary on them last semester in an Anthro class) with a few other soldiers from the military, what the experience was like for him, what their customs are, their relationship with other tribes, the Brazilian government, childbirth practices and everything in between. He told us about his personal history, his life and how he ended up founding the jungle overnight program which we were actually on. The guide had a little bit of a different history being mixed race between being descended from an African slave who was as recent as his great grandmother who was brought from Africa, and somewhere along the way was mixed with indigenous people of the jungle as well. He grew up in communities who are not indigenous and don’t live lives as traditional as many of the tribes, but still live in the jungle rather than society as we would think about it. For instance, they have houses in the jungle rather than living in hammocks hung with no other shelter but a roof to protect from rain. He did however tell us about how he’s had all kind of wild jungle animals as pets such as tapir, monkey, deer and many others. How he hunts in the jungle at night and they both told us different jungle legends and stories many of which are known in the tribes as well as in the city. One of them, a story about a floating fire ball which is seen around the jungle, the Army guy claimed to have seen himself. After a while we were about to go on a late night hike with a few people, but then someone went to go get bug spray, and next thing I know everyone wants to go so we had to get all of the Army guides to come with us and it was a whole debacle BUT we hiked back out to the beach, looked at the stars and went swimming in the brown dirty-looking and disconcertingly warm waters of the Amazon River. I got a foot infection in a bug bite on my foot which flared up a few days later and caused me to be quarantined to my room for a few days, which I suspect that may have been the cause, but I guess I’ll never know. At around 4 am, someone’s hammock broke which was pretty hilarious but other than that, we got up at 5 am, walked back to the boat and sailed back to port as the sun rose.
There was a bit of an event getting back though, because at one point, I got stuck in a branch or something, and when I got myself free, everyone in front of me was out of sight. It was dark, the trail was hard to see, and there were a bunch of people behind me who also had no idea where to go. I started to walk where I THOUGHT the trail was supposed to be, and we would shout to the people in front of us to wait and they wouldn’t answer (later we found out they couldn’t even hear us), but somehow my guesswork actually got us out of the jungle. Why everyone trusted and followed me the entire way like I knew what I was doing, I have no idea, but it was pretty scary up until we reached the beach.
Day 3: Mostly got spent at the mall again, luckily a different mall then before, but with no guide book or way to get in touch with our Brazilian friend before, Rach and I were pretty lost and had to just submit to the cab drivers’ insistances to go shopping. Relatively uneventful, but I did get a cute overpriced jacket.
Day 4: Got to walk around and explore the city a little bit more this day. I went on an incredible service visit to a nonprofit orphanage for special needs kids who have all been abandoned and we took them to the zoo. It was amazing because none of them had ever even been to a zoo and despite the language barrier, we could still have fun with them and tell that they were having a great time interacting and looking at the animals. One girl named Juju kind of adopted me. She was very bossy and funny; she took my camera and took pictures of everyone together, the animals, as well as insisted that a few other people and I all link arms with her as we walked around and had us jump into peoples pictures. She had a little crush on one guy on the visit which was soooo adorable because she didn’t let go of his hand the entire time. The kids were all sorts of ages, and even though many of them were shy I got to spend a little time with a lot of them, just smiling, high fiving, making funny faces, and laughing was enough. I brought some plastic medals that say #1 on one side and “winner” on the other. I think they’ll like them, but they had a really nice system where they collected all of the little gifts that people brought in one big pile to redistribute among all of the kids, including the ones who were not healthy enough to go on the trip. We also had a tour of the facility which I was extremely impressed with. All of the living spaces were very nice and pleasant, the children seemed very well cared for, and everything was really bright and hopeful about it.
I got back at noon, and met up with Rachel to get lunch and hit the town. We met this girl who came with us named Jamie who I still hang out with on the reg now. We walked around the market area which was pretty interesting. They sell all sorts of things in markets – not so much touristy stuff, and at first I was worried I wouldn’t really find any good souvenirs, but everything from hardware to hammocks to clothes and school supplies. When we got to the food area, they had all the usual stuff; fruits, veggies, candies/snacks all looked awesome, but when we got to the meat and fish area it was an FDA agent’s nightmare! The seafood and meat literally just sits out in the hot air, tons of flies and bugs, AND they had a huge wheelbarrow in the middle of the aisle to walk in full of the scraps and bones which were covered in all sorts of who-knows-what…I had to hold my breath. I suppose there had to have been hundreds of years where meat and fish just sat out in the market, but it was probably the biggest culture shock other than the language barrier through the whole trip. We eventually found the tourist-directed market, and I bought some cool stuff but it was also fun to just look around; most of the coolest stuff wouldn’t have really travelled well, but they had some amazing woven baskets and wooden masks. I wish I had taken more pictures of that. When we stopped to get some drinks, these super cute little kids who were walking around the market started coming up to us and hung out with us for a while. Despite the language barrier, we managed to communicate pretty well. They were super adorable, and don’t worry, I got pictures! On the way back, this police man stopped us and gave us his business card….he moonlights as a male stripper! That was the last day, so we were just like “thanks!” and skidaddled on to the boat to head to Ghana, but definitely a humorous way to end the trip.