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Grande Anse d’Arlet, Martinique:
March 24, 2011
Danger du Mort:
Exploring Martinique
in a rental car

On Monday, we saw a cow eating a baguette – how perfectly French! – the long loaf sticking out of its mouth like a cheap cigar. On Tuesday, we saw a tarantula crossing the road…shortly after we passed a highway sign that warned (en français) “Danger of Death.” (The sign and the spider were not related.) But I get ahead of myself. If you’ve followed our adventures, you’ll know that Steve adores driving in strange places. No matter which side the steering wheel is on, no matter how twisting and rutted the roads (in fact, the more the merrier), he just loves to rent a car and go.

Which is why I found myself tucked into a newish, well-maintained Fiat Panda this week – definitely not an SdJ (Shitbox du Jour) like most of the other rental cars we’ve been assigned – although, according to Steve, it had an engine about as powerful as a lawnmower’s. The map in one of our guidebooks had a route through the mountains labeled “pretty road,” as irresistible to Steve as …well…a baguette to a bull. Steve had highlighted this road – called Route Forestière de Rivière Blanche – in yellow on our full-size, standard tourist-issue map of Martinique, and worked out the route to get us there, and then on to the northeast coast and attractions such as the Musée de la Banane and, quelle surprise, a rhumerie or two.

Call me trusting, but despite our experiences driving in the Dominican Republic (recounted in The Spice Necklace) and to Dominica’s Miracle Lake last year, I still expect that a road marked with a solid line on a map will take you from A to B without requiring the fortitude of a stunt driver.

en_cas_de_cru
How high is too high?: This river crossing was much tamer
than our first – but its sign prohibited crossing "in case of flooding."

Not so the road that took us from St. Joseph to the start of the Route Forestière. We descended a hill to encounter the Rivière Blanche in front of us – but the road was no longer a road. Rather, it was a spillway taking the river from one side of it to the other. No pavement was visible, and there was no way to tell how deep the water was – but it had rained earlier that morning and, believe me, it was a gushing, rushing cascade as it spilled over the lip of concrete on the downriver side. Even Steve agreed instantly they we would have to turn back.

Until, that is, a car approached from the opposite direction and as we watched, open-mouthed, the driver blithely (if slowly) kept going, setting up a wall of water on both sides. He made it. When he reached us, Steve leaned out his window. “Il est possible!?!,” he said to the driver, half a question, half an exclamation. “Simple!” the driver replied. Shit. I knew what was going to happen next. I buried my face in my hands and refused to look as Steve piloted the little Panda Fiat with its toy tires across the invisible roadway. The rocker panels were barely submerged, he reported.

Yeah, we made it too, but I calculated the danger level about an 8 when Steve whooped and pounded the steering wheel when we reached dry road on the other side.

There were two more such river crossings between there and the Route Forestière, but the river was beaucoup tamer at both of them. The third one was at a forest reserve, the lush and lovely Coeur Bouliki, and immediately beyond it, we could see that the road veed. While Steve was taking photos, I took our map and asked (in my pidgin French) a forestry employee who was working nearby which branch was the one we wanted. My conversational French is almost non-existent, but several of the words in his response were unmistakeable: “Fermé.” Closed. “ Interdit.” Prohibited. I called in my translator for elaboration. “Trust me, it’s closed,” another forestry official said to Steve, without elaborating. So much for the “pretty road.” We would have to backtrack (luckily, not as far as that first river crossing) and take another route through the mountains. The forestry guys gave Steve precise directions.

danger_de_mort
For the record, we kept going: We had no previous warning that the
road we were on gave us a chance to flirt with death
It was a lush, curvaceous road, fun for the driver, nothing to traumatize the passenger…at least until the “Danger of Death” sign appeared as we rounded a bend. The pictograph that accompanied the words showed rocks tumbling down. There was nothing to indicate how high the danger of death was that day, but since the forestry officials had directed us to take this road, we kept going.

So we were tooling through the Danger of Death zone when Steve suddenly yelled “tarantula” and screeched to a halt. Take it as a pretty good indication of the spider’s imposing stature that Steve spotted it while the Panda was doing 40 klicks. A little after-the-fact research helped us identify it as a Martinique pinktoe tarantula, close to the species’ maximum size of 6 inches. The pinktoe is large enough to eat a lizard, for goodness’ sake, though it’s apparently docile as tarantulas go. It can jump up to 30 cm in the air, however – a fact I’m glad I didn’t know as we bent over top of it for a good look. And pinktoes have also been known to throw their fecal matter as part of their defense strategy. Merde!

pink_toed_tarantula
My spidey sense was tingling: Martinique pinktoe tarantula – as wide as my
spread-fingered hand (which I wasn't putting next to it in the photo for comparison)

Post tarantula, post Danger of Death zone, apparently not yet having had our fill of danger, we picked up a couple of hitchhikers. They didn’t look at all dangerous, however. In fact, they were from France, taking a hiking vacation in Martinique. They had walked the Route du Forestière. They knew why it was closed to vehicles: It was blocked by rocks from a landslide.

We did eventually reach the Musée de la Banane and the St. James rhumerie. Interesting spots both, but positively tame, not a speck of danger. In this case, getting there was definitely more than half the fun.

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4 comments on “Grande Anse d’Arlet, Martinique:
March 24, 2011
Danger du Mort:
Exploring Martinique
in a rental car

  1. Natalie on said:

    Oh, you two…a poo-throwing pink toed tarantula and Rhums? Sounds like an amazing song…call it Riding with Steve. Glad you didn’t get swept away or bonked with a rock; whatever would I do for my midday belly laughs then?

  2. Gilly Armstrong on said:

    Enjoying The Spice Necklace, whilst at my home in Great Harbour Cay The bahamas,(we are from the UK) IF EVER you get this way again, we would love to meet with yo. I have your other books which I will take back home with me. Your journeys sound just amazing ! Please continue with them !!

  3. Rachel @ The Crispy Cook on said:

    Enjoyed reading “An Embarrassment of Mangoes” for Cook the Books. And Dingis’ curried lobster recipe was divine!

  4. Susan Ager on said:

    Hi, Ann! Wanted to tell you how much I loved “Spice Necklace,” which I found at the Charlotte NC airport as we departed for a first trip to St. Martin. Thanks to you, I was ready for the lack of fresh local products, though we did buy a snapper and a spiny lobster @ the Marigot market, and found some organic local potatoey items. We cooked for ourselves, and one night made your Trini-Style Curry Shrimp, which has become a regular in our home.

    Next time we go to the Caribbean I’d go to Grenada or even Trinidad, thanks also to your descriptions of the produce there. Thanks for all you do.

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