Tsingy de Bemaraha

Tsingy de Bemaraha National Park

Madagascar has a wide array of ecosystems as a result of ocean currents, winds and the mountain range that splits the country from north to south. Rainfall is a the determining factor in forming these ecosystems with heavy rains in the north and east and relatively little rain west and south. The various national parks that we have visited all had very different climates themselves. Isalo is a prime example of Tapia woodlands and palm savannah, partly man-made due to heavy slash-and-burn clearing for farming (locally called tavy). This feels like a waste of natural resources to the Western traveller but is central to the Malagasy culture and way of living. With large parts of Europe cleared ages ago for agriculture and housing, it is hard to criticize what is happening here. Nevertheless, the ecosystems provide for a large amount of income from tourists and as such there should be an economic rationale to preserve them.

Ranomafana is a good example of montane rainforest at altitudes between 800-1300 m which makes it cooler than lowland rainforest, with lower canopy and denser undergrowth that holds many ferns, moss and lichen. This was particularly visible in the primary forest. Kirindy in turn is mainly dry deciduous forest, which must have covered large parts of Western Madagascar many years ago. It is less diverse in plant growth than the forests in the east but has a higher level of endemism. In the dry season, canopy leaves are shed and wildlife moves to the ground. Snakes, tortoises and other amphibians bury themselves in the humus on the floor with larger wildlife preying on them. When rain returns, the forests will return to a sea of green. We would have liked to do Andringitra national park in the south-west as it one of the few examples of cloudforest (rainforest above 1300 m), called this way because it is sometimes cloaked in mist. However this park was closed due to hostilities of local tribes towards tourists and it is unclear how long this will persist.

There is one particular ecosystem in Madagascar that is a must-visit for travellers, the limestone karst formations that are locally known as tsingy. They are found within the dry deciduous forests and hold a striking variety of plants and wildlife. The limestone formations are in essence ancient coral reefs that have been pushed upward due to geological activity. Once above water, they have been eroded by the heavy monsoon, creating a vast plateau of knife-edge pinnacles. We were told the Malagasy word tsingy means ‘to walk on one’s toes’ which is the best way to traverse the plateau. Another translation is ‘where one cannot walk barefoot’.

Ferry over the Tsiribihina river.

We visited the area of the most famous tsingy, the UNESCO heritage site Tsingy de Bemaraha. It can only be reached by road from Morondava and takes eight hours over unpaved tracks for which a good 4×4 is necessary. The track is sandy, rocky and adventurous and twice the car had to be loaded on a makeshift ferry (two large canoes with a platform) to cross a river. The trip itself is already very rewarding for those who like to go off the beaten track. The track will also take you early past the Allee des baobabs seventeen kilometres from Morondava, even before you reach Kirindy. As this is best viewed at sunset, most travellers stop here on the way back.
Roughly halfway the drive is a city called Belo sur Tsiribihina. Most drivers will stop here for lunch. There is a restaurant of remarkable quality called the Mad Zebu that is not to be missed. Intriguing how this restaurant is probably the only decent place for western travellers to get a meal but at the same time outperforms almost every other restaurant we’ve been to during our trip in much more densely populated areas (Chez Jenny in Antsirabe deserves to be be mentioned here as well).

View over the Manambolo river

Near the Tsingy de Bemaraha park lies the city of Bekopaka from which to plan the visit to the park. For the first day we booked a local pirogue (canoe) trip over the Manambolo river that took us past caves in the cliff walls along the river. We stopped at a number of caves to see stalactite and stalagmite formations and then the boatsman took us to a remote beach from where we made a three-hour hike to a local tsingy. This was a relatively tough climb and we had only expected this tour to be by boat. However, the tsingy plateau was beautiful and more rewarding than the popular Small Tsingy hike close to Bekopaka that we had booked for the afternoon. On the way to both tsingys we saw some lemurs and amphibians but nothing too special.

A cave visit by pirogue

The main hike to Grand Tsingy we had saved for the second day. This is a tough hike which involves a lot of climbing, some with the aid of ropes and climbing equipment. It takes you through caves, over ladders and small wooden hang-bridges to two viewing points over the Grand Tsingy that show the limestone formations in all their glory. There are supposedly eleven different species of lemur but we did not see many which was fine because that is why we visited this park. We ad late lunch in a place called the ‘cathedral’, basically a cave system with partly open roof, allowing in natural light and plant growth to develop. There were some red-tailed mongoose begging for our food that had no fear of humans anymore and we had to shoo them away.

The not so shy red-tailed mongoose

The tracks through the tsingy are narrow and on a busy day progression can be slow as the slowest group dictates the tempo. It will be interesting to see how this park is going to deal with the inevitable flow of more visitors in the coming years as Madagascar further develops. The trip itself is very entertaining and should be on the itinerary of every visitor to Madagascar but due to the long day drive to and from Bekopaka, it takes a decent chunk out of any holiday. It is possible to get charter flights to Bekopaka from Antananarivo but this is pricey and you’ll miss the great adventure on the road.

Small bridge connecting tsingy plateaus

The next day we made the long drive back and stopped at the Allee des baobabs to see the sunset. That night we finally did our first clubbing, in a very decent place in Morondava called Insomnia. A well-deserved break after two weeks of hiking through all the natural richness that Madagascar has to offer.

Sunset over the Allee des baobabs

Kirindy National Park

Around 160 million years ago, Madagascar was part of the large prehistoric continent Gondwana that consisted of current day Africa, South America, Antarctica and India, among many other landmasses. The eastern part of Gondwana, holding mainly Madagascar and India, first split off from the western part which included Africa. Subsequently Madagascar split off from Antarctica and then finally some 80 million years ago from the Indian subcontinent. It remained an island until today and as a result Madagascar developed into a biodiversity hotspot, with 90% of its wildlife found nowhere else on earth.

This includes the lemurs, descendants of ancient primates that once roamed Africa. Lemurs are known to have developed in Africa while it was already separated from Madagascar and the best accepted theory for their existence in Madagascar is that they accidentally crossed the Mozambique channel on rafts of vegetation. To allow for the evolutionary diversity, this must have happened a number of times over a period of millions of years.
Then around twenty million years ago, continental plates shifted and with it the ocean currents, rendering such rafting trips impossible. While in Africa lemurs started to compete with monkeys which evolved much later and had many advantages over lemurs and other primates, the lemurs of Madagascar had no such problems and developed into many different species, filling different evolutionary niches.

When the first (Asian) humans arrived in Madagascar about 2000 years ago, the country held well over a hundred different lemur species, some of which have now unfortunately gone extinct.

We had already seen various lemur species in Isalo and Ranomafana. Being ahead of schedule as a result of skipping the train ride to Manakara and boat ride over the Canal de Pagalanes, we decided to add another park to our itinerary. We agreed on Kirindy National Forest, close to the city of Morondova that was already on our list of destinations. Not only does Kirindy hold eleven different species of lemur but it is also the best place to see the fossa, Madagascar’s largest predator and family of the mongoose.

We arrived in Kirindy late afternoon after a fifty kilometre drive from Morondava, where we had spent the morning on the beach, and we immediately booked the night walk. This was a slightly disappointing experience as we were slow-going, paired with people that seemed unhappy with any type of adventure and formed too large a group in the dark. We only saw a limited number of animals and decided to start the morning hike particularly early the next day at 7am.

The experience the following morning was a complete reversal of the night before. Already at the start of our walk we encountered the fossa, a remarkable animal with a very long tail which helps it hunt the trees for lemurs. This fossa had discovered a waste dump while searching for food and we were able to get very close until our guide became nervous and pulled us away. Fearful of having to go through a rabies treatment if we dwindled any longer, we complied.
There are a lot of fun facts on the fossa and you can find more information on Wikipedia.

A prowling fossa
No really fossa, we are not after your trash pile, we just wanted…. run!!!

After leaving the fossa behind, we kept running into groups of maki (a type of lemur moving on four legs) and sifaka (using only two, making it seem like a dance), passing us by with their young at short distance as long as we remained fairly still. Others were jumping from tree to tree, remaining in view as long as we did not annoy them too much.
All of this and the occasional chameleon made Kirindy by far the best place we visited to see Madagascar’s wildlife.