After breakfast we were scooted away in an air conditioned van. Me, Michael, Jim and two ladies who live here ... they were the best guides we could have had! Our first stop was to the place that was first settled in Natal in 1598. It is a fort, built in the shape of a star, named after the 3 wise men that came to see Jesus and because it was constructed around Christmas. ... the first photo isn't mine ... as there was no way to get that high up, but I wanted to show the shape. You can walk all the way around the top. In some places the walls are 15 meters thick to be safe from attacking cannon balls!

It is pretty neat. When the tide is out there are small pools of water around the fort, but when the tide come all the way in, it is like a giant moat all the way around. It was pretty cool to walk around inside. There are no rules, you are aloud to walk anywhere you want ... there was one set of stairs call the "less one" stairs ... so named because if you fell off them walking down, the town would be less one person ... ha!
Except for the one rope around this stone. Apparently people were carving parts away from it and making tea to drink, believing that it would bring great fortune to them. Originally it stood at the first place they landed, similar to the flag on the moon ... sort of claiming their spot. Now it lives inside the fort.
The stone part around the outside is where they slept and ate and kept prisoners. The large white tower in the center is the chapel. The stairs you can see going up the side leads to the room where they kept all the gun powder ... safe from the humidity so they say!
Here we are standing on the top ... city of Natal (which means Christmas in Portuguese) is off in the distant background.
In the breeze it is really quite pleasant. After the long walk back along the walkway we stopped for a coconut drink. He keeps them in a cooler of ice with the sides cut off like a cube. When you are ready to buy one he cuts a hole in the top for a straw. It was very refreshing.
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| I took this one when he didn't know, so he is smiling. |
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| I was trying to get him to smile here but he wouldn't! |
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| I'm not really that short, he was standing up on the rocks. |
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Then we went to see the worlds largest cashew tree. It covers almost one hectare of land. It doesn't grow very tall, but spreads out touching back down to the ground and rooting itself. Apparently they have tried to grow another tree like this but have not had any success. It is the only one.
I don't know if you can tell from this picture, but they have built a boardwalk all around underneath the tree so that you can walk around it. They also built a tower so you can climb up and take a photo from above.
There are little markets everywhere. The one we went to here had all sorts of great crafts. One of our guides was trying to discribe something to me about how these cloths were made. She went running off to find the lady who makes them, but she was gone to lunch. Usually you can watch her while she work ... but look at what she was doing! Bobbin Lace!
Last stop before lunch was where the dolphins swim and we actually saw 5 of them out in the water. This was a bit of a cove with cliffs, mostly so far we see dunes and sandy beaches.
I couldn't get a photo of them, they were too quick for me!
But the view was spectacular.