Saturday 19 April 2014

Diving the Blue Hole, Nassau




The weather was perfect for the outing to the Blue Hole and the trio were ready and eager!
Diving was exceptional - Caribbean Sharks, Green Turtles, Nassau Grouper, Spotted Ray and a myriad of gorgeously colored fish.








Friday 18 April 2014

Inagua National Park

The park encloses all of Lake Rosa, the largest salt water lake in the Bahamas.The birding was a treat and here are some of the highlights of our visit. 
A skulking Clapper Rail
Bahama Mockingbird

Reddish Egret


Real special for the trip - Roseate Spoonbill

Gorgeous adult Spoonbills

White-cheeked Pintail
Spotted Redshank

Thursday 17 April 2014

Snorkeling Inagua

Up in the northwest corner of Inagua, some drive from Matthew Town, you can walk off the beach and swim a few metres to a reef to snorkel.


Not a single person in sight and you dip your head into a new world, coral and colorful fish…




A story of Fillymingoes and Salt


The Inagua landscape is dominated by either the Morton Salt company's vast reservoirs or the salt pans where it produces salt by solar evaporation. It is a stark and harsh landscape. 


We wound our way along the edges of the pans and reservoirs to access the Inagua National Park to get to Lake Rosa. The preservation of these 'fillymingoes' which is how the Bahamians pronounce flamingoes - has been a joint action between Morton's and the Bahamas National Trust, and these birds have been brought back from near extinction to more than 50000 birds here on Inagua.


Phoenicopterus rubber,  are gorgeous birds with vividly pink feathers and they stand 120 to 140cm high. They were hunted for their meat, especially the tongue, and for their feathers, Fred was so frustrated trying to get  a good photo which was almost impossible  as they are very skittish!  The birds like the many salt ponds on Inagua that supply their favorite meal—brine shrimp and also creates the famously crimson color.
Caribbean Flamingo

A poem message from Inel in Australia

Untitled
by Dawna Markova

I will not die an unlived life,
I will not live in fear
Of falling or catching fire.

I choose to inhabit my days
To allow my living to open me,
To make me less afraid,more accessible, 
To loosen my heart
Until it becomes a wing,
A torch, a promise.

I choose to risk my significance; to live
So that which came to me as seed
Goes to the next as blossom
And that which came to me as blossom
Goes on as fruit.

Tuesday 15 April 2014

Great Inagua Lighthouse


    Built in 1870, the Great Inagua Lighthouse is one of only three remaining and (still operating) hand-wound, kerosene-burning lighthouses in the Bahamas. Standing 120 ft. tall, and easily visible from my balcony position here in Matthew Town. We climbed the stairs including the steep last ladder section to take in the view across Matthew Town. 

    As always the sea is gorgeous. We strained to see a glimpse of Cuba which is 80 kilometers west but could not quite make it out
    We signed the dog-eared guest book, Fred and Sharon were here.




    love this interior view of the lighthouse


    view across to Matthew Town

    straining to see Cuba!

    Birding Inagua, Bahamas

    As always birding takes me into the most unusual places in the world and Inagua, one of the Bahama Out Islands, is just such a place. 
    No cruise ships, no high-rise hotels, no crowds, in fact less than 1000 people on the island, not a coconut palm in sight, dry scrubby bush, 3 flights a week into Matthew Town, only industry is Morton Salt,no fresh produce to be found, but it is also a haven for birds, so here I am.
    First lifer for the trip was a confiding Burrowing Owl watching us cautiously…


    The owl has prominent white eyebrows and a white "chin" patch which it was expanding as we watched and an endearing habit of bobbing the head as we approached.
    From the balcony of our lodging (where dinner is dropped off in your room at 2.30 as the staff go home!) we watched the Rose-throated Parrots in a tamarind tree. They are rock stars around town, noisy and move in a gang.


    Sunday 13 April 2014

    Photo highlights of our first week in the Bahamas

    • The bird photo for the week is the Hairy Woodpecker which we heard drumming on our walk at the Clifton Heritage National Park. It was happily foraging along the trunk of a tree on our path.


    • The food photo of the week has to be the bucket of mojito at Compass Point on the night we arrived. Good way to get over being in the air for more than a day!




    • The sunset photo for the week, a pier in Nassau.


    • The art photo for the week, "Sacred Space" sculpture installation by Antonius Roberts, a representation of slave women carved out of Casuarina trees still rooted in the ground on the cliff edge at Clifton Cay. Since I was last here he has added the luminous headscarves.


    • The seascape photo of the week is the turquoise sea through the window of the loyalist era Johnston Plantation ruins.


    • And the best photo of the week has to be the crystal clear waters of Exuma...



    Thursday 10 April 2014

    Saddleback Cay, Exuma through the GoPro lens

    I have a feeling, that forever I am going to yearn to go back to see the waters of Exuma. 


    Cerulean Sea





    And underwater is just as breathtaking….