Irish Daily Star - Chic

Way to Mo’

Sarah marshall

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Washed clean by a high tide overnight, the long, empty stretch of sand running along Maputo Bay is remarkably pristine. Only one set of prints runs from the sand dunes, considerab­ly larger than my own. “I dream of finding an elephant down here,”muses park warden Miguel Gonçalves, who has seen plenty of evidence to suggest these large mammals cross towards the ocean.“maybe one day.”

Forming part of the recently amalgamate­d Maputo National Park, a 1,700 sq km mosaic of marine, coastal and grassland areas prese nt an unusual safari offering, giving visitors a chance to see elephants, giraffes, turtles and humpback whales (potentiall­y) within the same day.

Running along a border with South Africa, this region has always been part of an important elephant corridor, although numbers dropped dramatical­ly in the 1980s during the country’s civil war.

Now numbers are on the rise, game viewing is rapidly improving and investment in tourism looks set to make Mozambique a premier safari and beach destinatio­n in years to come.

Dreamy beaches

Having spent a day exploring the park inland, Miguel is driving me along the empty beach to watch humpbacks breaching on the horizon.

Hugging the hillside in a sheltered bay at the end of the beach, 22 suites sparkle in the dunes, part of the White Pearl Resort in Ponta Mamoli. Wooden furnishing­s and floaty linens are decorated in a palette of colours inspired by silky sands, weathered driftwood and frothing waves rolling in from the Indian Ocean.

Best of all, however, is the neverendin­g view of sky and sea. I spend hours watching the sun dip and rise above the horizon, while listening to the heaving gasps and sighing roars of powerful swells. On morning runs along remarkably empty beaches that stretch into infinity, I’m frequently overtaken by screeching fish eagles, who eventually find a perch in clusters of fynbos climbing up the coastline. By the time I return to the resort, day beds are already set up in the sand and my butler (who serves me every meal in either the restaurant or my room, depending on how I feel) is preparing a breakfast of fresh fruits, pastries and homemade granola. Although there are options for horse rides, turtle walks, kayaking and dolphin sea safaris, the main purpose of a stay at White Pearl is to relax.

a striking city

It’s a two-hour drive from White Pearl to Maputo, Mozambique’s capital and the exit and entry point for internatio­nal flights.

Although independen­ce was won in 1975, vestiges of Portuguese colonial rule include the language, excellent fusion cuisine and remarkable — albeit crumbling — architectu­re.

On a walking tour with Maputo a Pe (maputo-a-pe.com; 2,500 meticals/$42

USD/€38.50), I discover some of the city’s highlights. Constructe­d by the British between 1908 and 1916, with a grand dome designed by an associate of Alexandre Gustave Eiffel, the railway station is ranked as one of the most beautiful in the world, my guide Herminio proudly tells me.

Tall pillars and wrought iron latticewor­k decorate the cream and mint-green structure, where trains still trundle to the city suburbs.

Elsewhere, the architectu­re is a curious mix of Art Deco homes and geometrica­llypleasin­g social housing designed by famous post-modernist Portuguese architect Pancho Guedes in the preindepen­dence years.

But some of the most colourful public displays are murals and sculptures from local artists, who have contribute­d to a thriving scene over the past few decades.

In the downtown district, close to the National Museum of Art, Guilherme is one of several traditiona­l sculptors working in an open studio belonging to the Associatio­n of Makonde Sculptors.

His store is filled with masks and towers of tumbling bodies, all reflecting beliefs in the afterlife.

Outside the Franco-mozambican Cultural Center (CCFM) are attentiong­rabbing pieces by Goncalo Mabunda, who has transforme­d guns, missiles and tank tracks used in Mozambique’s long and debilitati­ng 15-year civil war (1977-1992) into works of art.

The most influentia­l and internatio­nallyrenow­ned artist, however, was painter, poet and political commentato­r Malangatan­a, who captured the country’s transition from colonialis­m to independen­ce. I find several pieces of his work in the National Museum of Art, an institutio­n he helped establish.

His signature style of densely-packed, colourful figures curling into one another is instantly recognisab­le in several murals around the city – including one in the gardens of the neo-gothic Natural History Museum. This attraction is perhaps the most unusual stop on my city tour, namely because one of the exhibits is a series of glass cabinets featuring the different stages of an elephant embryo during its 22-month gestation, all preserved in formaldehy­de.

Although it appears mawkish and macabre today, the collection was intended for scientific studies and no doubt seemed like a good idea 50 years ago, when elephants were being culled in their thousands. But fortunatel­y — for now — the thriving species is far from being a dusty relic in a museum cabinet.

Even if you can’t always see them, there are always those footprints in the sand. ■

“THIS ATTRACTION IS THE MOST UNUSUAL STOP...

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SERENE: Hotel Carduso in Maputo; (left) the White Pearl Resort (also top); and (above left) tour guide Herminio

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