I suspected
there was something unusual about Nieuw Nickerie. Most Surinamese friends of mine did not want
to go to Nieuw Nickerie. They said there
was nothing to do there. I wondered why
and set out on my first trip, alone.
About 240 km from Paramaribo, my adventure started at the Nickerie-bound mini-bus depot at Dr. Sophie Redmondstraat. It was almost 9 a.m. and after paying the 13.10 Suriname Dollar (SRD) one-way fare, the bus began its journey through Kwattaweg in an almost direct westerly route towards Guyana.
Saturday
It was market day. At the parking lot, I had a superb Hindustani meal - roti kip (chicken and Indian flat bread) at 4 SRD. Vendors were selling meat and fish items I have not seen in Paramaribo’s much larger Centraal market. Mafrau Fraser advised that I buy some fresh snapper for lunch. She braised the fish and it was wonderful.
We climbed up the 20 steps or so and landed at the top – where there was a pathway stretching along the whole eight kilometers of the dike. I was stufipied by the vista before me – the grand and magnificent Corantyn River. The mouth of the Corantyn River which opens to the Caribbean Sea was so wide, about 20 kilometers long.
We walked
further down, bought some sodas, sat and enjoyed the spell of a dramatic
sunset.
Sunday
Friday
About 240 km from Paramaribo, my adventure started at the Nickerie-bound mini-bus depot at Dr. Sophie Redmondstraat. It was almost 9 a.m. and after paying the 13.10 Suriname Dollar (SRD) one-way fare, the bus began its journey through Kwattaweg in an almost direct westerly route towards Guyana.
Once we passed
Paramaribo’s outerskirts, we entered a tropical forest, hopping over wide
rivers including the impressive Coppename River - broad, picturesque and thick
with red-green mangroves along its banks.
It took us quite a while to cross the river. At the other side we stopped for snacks at
the very Dutch town of Totness. A slice
of a heavy cassava cake called Bojo satisfied my hunger after being on the
mini-bus for two hours. Soon the
tropical jungle cleared and we were surrounded by rice fields. By then I knew we were in the district of
Nickerie. It will be another two hours
later when we would finally reached Nieuw Nickerie’s city center.
Nickerie comes
from a local Indian word for the oily awara nut. Nieuw, new in Dutch, is in reference to the
fact that Nickerie has been running away from the sea. Its first two locations were claimed by the
Caribbean Sea. An 8 kilometer sea wall since
the 1940s have protected the “newest” location.
Hardly a city in
appearance, and more like a town, the tallest structures never go higher than
the Royal Palm trees lining its main boulevard.
Unlike Paramaribo, Nickerie is divided into square blocks and neat –
which makes walking less stressful.
The bus let me
off at a local hostel. As I sauntered into
the yard, I heard the voice of Mafrau Fraser on the phone, who informed me the night before of room
available for 35 SRD a night. My room
was pleasantly cool with wooden floors and a window overlooking a creek and
star apple trees. Right there and then I
knew I would enjoy staying in the quiet, clean and simple hostel.
With my legs
itching to walk for discovery, off I went the minute I set my bags on the floor
and finished the usual payment pleasantries.
The Brasaplein
town park was crowded and filled with stalls.
The locals were celebrating the 30th Year of Suriname’s
Independence. At the stage in front of
the Commissariaat, Javanese women in their sixties were wiggling their waists,
Hindustanis chanting and singing, and Chinese teens mimicking the movement of a
bird. Later there were some impromptu
breakdancing by young men who were “drunke, drunke” according to Wilma Gadun, a
Creole and a local nurse kind enough to translate the proceedings from Dutch to
English. The program showcased
Suriname’s multicultural society.
At dusk, I
lolled around Nieuw Nickerie’s dramatic West and Oost Kanaalstraats divided by
a 15 feet-wide lily canal lined with tall Royal Palm trees. At one end was the park and market. At the other end were more bazaars and shops
including a number of Roti restaurants and Javanese warungs. Soon I headed home to avoid the district’s
famed mosquito and sandfly population.
It was market day. At the parking lot, I had a superb Hindustani meal - roti kip (chicken and Indian flat bread) at 4 SRD. Vendors were selling meat and fish items I have not seen in Paramaribo’s much larger Centraal market. Mafrau Fraser advised that I buy some fresh snapper for lunch. She braised the fish and it was wonderful.
The midday sun
was just too hot and my cool room was very inviting for an afternoon nap. Mafrau Fraser asked whether I would like to
bike with her later that day. Of course.
At 4 pm, it
looked like it was going to rain but as we biked outside the gates, we saw the
sun peeking out. It was breezy as well
and there were few cars on the road. We
passed the market, now empty, the silent rice mills, and just right before
entering the dike road walled in by a ten feet dike - a sloping high green hill, we saw a
lovely garden with a tall blossoming plant called Bonanza Rose.
The road
upon entering along the dike changed from asphalt to dry hard flat mud. At the west side - a sloping grassy green slope dike and on the east side is the much smaller Nickerie river
profused with ferns and islets of
trees. It was very lovely and
serene, the perfect place to bike at leisure and talk about life, silly and
serious.
At some point,
Mafrau Fraser stopped and asked whether I would like to go up the steps of the
dike. In her dignified operatic voice,
“Would you like to take a look up the dike?”
We climbed up the 20 steps or so and landed at the top – where there was a pathway stretching along the whole eight kilometers of the dike. I was stufipied by the vista before me – the grand and magnificent Corantyn River. The mouth of the Corantyn River which opens to the Caribbean Sea was so wide, about 20 kilometers long.
What was grassy
incline on the road side of the dike turned out to be a bed of rocks on the
Corantyn River side. A flock of goats were
hanging out on the rocks giving the whole scene a pastoral ambience. Across the distance, 13 kilometers away was
Guyana. The panorama made me giddy with
delight.
Buses leave for
the capital throughout the morning. I
was sad to leave Nieuw Nickerie. Back in
Paramaribo, I felt like arriving in New York City after spending a week in the
Florida Keys. And I wondered again why
my Surinamese friends were not interested in a weekend in Nieuw Nickerie. I will be going back.
No comments:
Post a Comment