Sunday, March 24, 2013

Liberia 


Officially the Republic of Liberia, is a country in West Africa bordered by Sierra Leone to its west, Guinea to its north and Côte d'Ivoire to its east. It covers an area of 111,369 km2 (43,000 sq mi) and is home to about 3.7 million people. English is the official language and over thirty indigenous languages are also spoken within the country. Its coastline is composed mostly of mangroves, while its more sparsely populated inland consists of forests opening onto a plateau of drier grasslands. The climate is hot and equatorial, with significant rainfall during the May–October rainy season and harsh harmattan winds the remainder of the year. The country possesses about forty percent of the remaining Upper Guinean rainforest.

Along with Ethiopia, Liberia is one of only two modern countries in Sub-Saharan Africa without roots in the European colonization of Africa. Beginning in 1820, the region was colonized by blacks from the United States, most of whom were freed slaves. These immigrants established a new country with the help of the American Colonization Society, a private organization which believed that former slaves would have greater freedom and equality in Africa. African captives freed from slave ships were also sent there instead of being repatriated to their countries of origin. In 1847, this new country became the Republic of Liberia, establishing a government modeled on that of the United States and naming its capital city Monrovia after James Monroe, the fifth president of the United States and a prominent supporter of the colonization.

The colonists, known as Americo-Liberians, led the political and economic sectors of the country.
The country began to modernize in the 1940s following investment by the United States during World War II and economic liberalization under President William Tubman. Liberia was a founding member of the United Nations and the Organization of African Unity. A military coup overthrew the Americo-Liberian leadership in 1980, marking the beginning of political and economic instability and two successive civil wars that left approximately 250,000 people dead and devastated the country's economy. A peace agreement in 2003 led to democratic elections in 2005. Today, Liberia is recovering from the lingering effects of the civil wars and their consequent economic upheaval, although about 85% of the population continue to live below the international poverty line.

You Should Buy The Lonely Planet Guide for West Africa


Travel Alert: The UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office recommends against all non-essential travel to some areas, please check with your relevant national government.
After almost two decades of war, Liberia – a lush, rainforested country draped across West Africa’s southern flank – seems at last to have found some breathing room. With Africa’s first woman president at the helm, the peace, while still fragile, is holding and Liberians have thrown themselves with gusto into the work of rebuilding their shattered land.
If Liberia does stabilise and open up for travel, it will offer intrepid adventurers a fascinating glimpse into what was previously a wonderfully hospitable and fascinatingly enigmatic society. Liberia’s artistic traditions – especially carved masks, dance and storytelling – rivalled those of anywhere on the continent, and traditional culture was strong. This was especially true in the country’s interior, where secret initiation societies played a central role in growing up, and today still serve as important repositories of traditional knowledge and life skills. For now though, most of this cultural wealth remains inaccessible to visitors, and independent travel outside of the country's capital Monrovia is not considered safe.
Liberia’s dense, humid rainforests – some of the most extensive in West Africa – are alive with the screeching and twittering of hundreds of birds, who are kept company by forest elephants, pygmy hippos and other wildlife padding around the forest floor. Along the coast, deserted white-sand beaches alternate with humid river deltas and tranquil tidal lagoons, while inland plateaus rise to verdant hill country on the borders of Côte d’Ivoire and Guinea.
Though the situation is definitely looking up, it's advisable to get an update on local security conditions before setting your plans.




Traveling To Liberia, West Africa for Crew Change to the M/V POLARCUS ASIMA
This should be fun!

The Gulf of Guinea - Pirate Waters!

On the Road from Monrovia to Buchanan Port, 2.5 Hours through Jungle and Village


Crossing a UN Military Bridge



Buchanan, Liberia




Berths on the Crew Boat we took (15hrs) to the ASIMA

Some Time at Home, we went to Universal and Busch Gardens also 
Kelly Park in Apopka, Florida and swam in a Cave Stream









Melanie and Will at Rock Spring, It took some convincing to get Will in the Water.

Will Rides the Tiger


Hogwarts Express
Hogwarts at Universal - Islands of Adventure
Hogsmead Town Center
Dr. Suess' One Fish... Two Fish Ride
Blutos Barge... Melanie Got Soaked


They finally caught JAWS at Universal





Will and I found a Slide

Will found Friends... Our Hotel had a Waterpark inside it. It was quite possibly the best part of the Tourist Stuff.


Melanie and Walker on the Sky Car
Will After Amy's Wedding
Walker after Amy's Wedding

They Clean Up Well
Anyhow these are the people who put up with my random job requirements!






Travelling Home from Burma

Feet Up at the Thai Air Lounge in Bangkok finally a little civilization... and no civil war, air-strikes or gunfire!





Delta Air out of Tokyo, Direct to Atlanta... Hoot!
New Years and more of Burma (Myanmar) form the perspective of the crew of the
M/V POLARCUS NADIA

The New Years Feast was Excellent!

Chris Oxley our Medic at the Buffet Table


New Years Party on the Helideck

the Monsoon Crew - Awesome Guys - Excellent Cooks


Grilled Lobster - WOW!


That's one big beer!


The Guys at Crew Change, Waiting at the Hotel Compound for our Flight!
One of the rare times when both crews intersect at a hotel.
We Drank ALL the Beer in the Hotel... No Joke.
 

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Christmas on the Nadia

Christmas 2012 was spent away from friends and family on a booat in the Andaman Sea south of Burma.  I'm at ANTIPODE (look it up) from home.  Its a bit sad but holidays out here become arbitrary and are only noticed due to exciting feasts.
 
Santa did make it to our boat! I guess we were good enough after all!



 


I even got a present though I wasnt expecting one.

 
  
The Feast was Awesome... Steak, Lobster, Roast Suckling Pig and all the sides, except green bean casserole... these guys must be communists or something!

 
 
 
 
Here Piggy Piggy!
 
 
 
 
Lobster auGraten and a Baked Ham in addition to Steak and Pigs this is Awesome.  It's an Atkins Dream Feast! We don't need no stinking vegetables... but I'm sure there were some!

Friday, January 4, 2013

Burma and The Transfer Barge

Burma still has multiple Rebel Factions and is in an ongoing siege in the north and east of the country.  Thousands of refugees have flooded the southern cities and the place is FULL!  The tourist thing is still new to them so the prices are what they have seen in advertisements for VietNam and the French Riviera. At approximately 300USD a night for a hotel that is not on the water, but is safe enough to stay in with some style.  Plenty of backpack hostels and rooms are available but dont do that alone.  Crime is also a major factor and they say do not go outside of your hotel alone or after dark.

Cellphone service and the Internet are a MYTH.  They sell Sim cards at the airport for 30USD but those only work in a very few types of US phones and the same cards are sold to the locals for 300usd LAME HUH!?

I was inside Burma (Myanmar) for maybe 7 hours, in the dark and inside a building, so I didn't see much.  They shuttled us out to the harbor, in the late night/early morning and we got to see some of Rangoon (now called Yangon)

The town has great design elements but is in desperate need of a pressure-washing. It's a case of a large population in a small place which has just been opened up to the outside world. The Harbor was more like a trash-pile on the water and they loaded us on a fast transport boat at 2am and hustled us off to a accommodation barge about 150 miles offshore.


The Surfer 321 Fast Transport was as nice as any crew boat Ive been on.  Airconditioned and fast at 30+ MPH



The "Swiber Triumphant" Accomodation Barge, where I spent two days waiting on a chopper.


The "Swiber Triumphant" Maintains most of the supplies for the O&G platforms and work vessles in the area and it provides a transfer point between boat and helicopter. It is a floating hotel with rooms, food and entertainment for transitioning crews for the whole Andaman Sea



This is the funniest safety message I have ever seen and could only happen around here... Toilet Squatters... Really!?




Total Platform in the Distance...