Mauritius -has just two seasons: a warm, humid summer from November to April and a relatively cool dry winter from June to September.
We were fortunate to spend a week in ‘Beautiful Tropical Mauritius’. We stayed in 'Pointe aux Piments', an area on the Northern side of Mauritius. We got to see and experience most of Mauritius via a four day tour with a tourist company and our own travelling with local transport, which proved to be an interesting one.
"Church
in the Park"
How
beautiful is this... a church at the seaside under the trees...
Pointe
aux Piments
Touring The North side was very interesting, with vast Panoramic views of Port Louis and its harbor from the Citadel Fort. Port Louis is the capital and largest city in Mauritius.
It is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations and the African Union. Port Louis is the country's economic, cultural and political center, and most populous city. Expansion of the tourism industry in the late 1990's led to considerable development in Port Louis, with many shops, hotels, and restaurants being built in the Caudan Waterfront area.
The city is full of numerous buildings and monuments that reflect its rich and diverse colonial history. Near the city center, there are several French colonial buildings that date to the 18th century, including Government House. Other prominent traditional elements include the Jummah Mosque, the majestic English Saint James Cathedral, the Indian Tamil Temple, the elegant five-tier colonial Port Louis Theater, the Champ de Mars Racecourse, and the nearby Chinese Pagoda. –Wikipedia
Grand Bay/Baie which is located on the northwest coast of Mauritius is really beautiful with its white-sand beaches, glass-bottom boat trips that provide a window on the underwater world, snorkeling which was one of the most magical experiences for me in Mauritius. Crafts shops, touristy shops and stalls, craft markets, shopping mall etc.
L'ILE Aux Cerfs
If you wanting to go ‘Under sea walking, parasailing, tube riding’ etc. then this would be the place for you. We also got to travel in a high speed boat on a huge river to a take in the view of a beautiful waterfall and then to L‘Ile Aux Cerfs Island’, where we had lunch on the private owned island.
Mauritius does experience seasonal cyclones. So of course we were caught in one (cyclone) whilst on the boat on our return trip from L’ile Aux Cerfs Island. We were hit by this gushing storm (“Cyclone” we were told after we got off the boat), that rocked our boat around wildly over the rough sea... with no vision of any land any where around us. We were drenched and so were everything else on the boat. It kind of reminded me of the movie, “Life of Pi”… Oh my Gosh!!! An experience never to forget that lasted for about 20 minutes, but felt like much longer though.
On the South Side we got to visit the ship model factory shop and other souvenir shops.
As well as ‘Volcano crater Bassin’ an extinct volcano from which we had a beautiful panoramic view of Curepipe and its beautiful mountain range.
At Grand Bassin we visited the holy lake of the Hindu faith as well as the 108 feet statue of Mangal Mahadev and the statue of the Goddess Durga.
This magnificent amphitheater valley offers instant inspiration to nature lover – the colored earth and indigenous flora and fauna, views of a range of natural landscape comprising of plateaus, mountains, valleys, craters, a volcano skyline, ponds and waterfalls.
They also have other activities like quad biking, zip-lines, 350 meters Nepalese Bridge walk etc. at European prices of course.
The people of Mauritius are multi-ethnic, multi-religious, multicultural and multilingual.
Mauritius has a population of about 1.3 million according to the 2011 census made by ‘Statistics Mauritius’. Hinduism is the largest religion in Mauritius, representing approximately 51.9%, followed by Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Chinese and other. Creoles (of African descent or mixed-race) are about a quarter of the population.
Mauritian Creole is spoken by an estimated 90% of the population and is considered to be the native language of the country, although the Mauritian Constitution makes no mention of an official language. Thus the citizens of Mauritius speak English, French, Mauritian Creole, French-based Creole, and ethnic languages such as Hindi, Telugu, Tamil, Urdu, Malayalam, Marathi, or Mandarin.
Did you know that Mauritius is ranked second in an ‘air quality index’ released by the World Health Organization in 2011, just goes to show, being on holiday in Mauritius can be good for your health – firstly, a wonderful opportunity to avoid the traffic fumes back home and secondly, fun in the sun and of course its beautiful white-sand beaches.
Mauritius was created by volcanic activity some 8 million years ago. Together with ‘Saint Brandon, RĂ©union, and Rodrigues’, the island is part of the ‘Mascarene Islands’. These islands have emerged as a result of gigantic underwater volcanic eruptions that happened thousands of kilometres to the east of the continental block made up of Africa and Madagascar.
The island is situated approximately 2400 kilometres off the South East Coast of Africa. The island covers an area of 1,865 square kilometres or 720 square miles, with 330 kilometres of coastline. Mauritius is 65km in length and 45km in width.
Some History
Formerly a Dutch colony (1638–1710) and a French colony (1715–1810), Mauritius became a British colonial possession in 1810 and remained so until 1968, the year in which it attained independence. It became a republic in 1992.
This blog won’t be complete if I left out the ‘Dodo bird’. The island is widely known as the only known home of the extinct flightless dodo bird - family of pigeons and doves. The Dodo was made extinct by human activities shortly after the island's earlier occupants. The closest living relative of the dodo is the Nicobar pigeon which can be found in its typical forest habitat on isolated Southeast Asian islands.
Pyramids
Well before leaving for Mauritius I did a bit of ‘googling’ on Mauritius and came across an article about the Pyramids in Mauritius, and of course who wouldn’t be intrigued. Fortunately the tour guide agreed to show it to us via a super short stop. We took some photos…from a distance though, actually from the freeway across the road. Unfortunately, the viewing of the Pyramids is not part of or on the list of ‘things to see in Mauritius’. There has been some controversy about these Pyramids though; you can read more about them here: http://blog.airmauritius.com/seven-pyramids-mauritius/
Oh yes before I forget, (for the South African readers), it is very easy mistakenly feel that you are in KwaZulu Natal with the abundance of ‘sugar cane crops’ all around, between the towns.