TIMELESS TRAVEL: A JOURNEY OF 8400 NAUTICAL MILES ACROSS SEVEN SEAS !!
“We must go beyond textbooks, go out into the bypaths and untrodden depths of the wilderness and travel and explore and tell the world the glories of our journey.” – John Hope Franklin
1. What is it about travel that once a man is smitten by he finds no respite in anything else .I would find it a herculean effort indeed in the literary sense to try and explain this to someone who does have have the senses to understand the same .
2. For many of you this may seem bit of a plain tale considering that it does not speak of landscapes encompassing wide plains or towering mountains that normally TLs are made up of .This tale of mine is for those whose senses are alive to savor the yearn of travel other than that of the ordinary and conjure in their mind images that leap from the words written in these lines , for the journey starts in the Arabian Seas charts its course through the Gulf of Aden cruises through the Red Sea transiting one through the wonder that is the Suez Canal thereafter soaking in the Mediterranean after which as one gazes upon the Indomitable Rock of Gibraltar as we power ahead to the Bay of Biscay to meet up with the wild Atlantic and push ahead finding oneself in the icy green waters of the English Channel which soon make way to the seas of medieval yore that were the playgrounds of the Vikings who ruled realms surrounding the North Sea , the Norwegian Sea and the black blue icy waters of the Barents Sea. I do hope that the pictures do justice to the world that I saw and experienced!!!!!!
3. The Beginning : As with all journeys one has to begin a journey and mine began one fine afternoon in the
Arabian Sea off the coast of Mumbai as I turned my vision westwards and followed the setting sun .My course was to reach the Gulf of Aden , dance with danger in the waters infested with sea pirates .Socotra islands were passed to the left of us as Yemen appeared and went over in to the horizon. The vistas kept changing and so did the cloud formations and the spectacular sun sets .The myriad of colours and formations are something that one can never experience over land, a sun rise on the vast ocean is a sight that is best experienced in solitude. The total distance travelled from Mumbai to the Gulf of Aden is around 1100 nautical mile. Soon we were reaching the famed city of Djibouti which simmered in the afternoon heat in the distance. This voyage was to conquer the seas; land played no part in this .The strait of Bab El Mandap beckoned us as we marked our entry in to the Red Sea. Numerous companions passed me on my journey and they came in all kinds of colours and shapes. Some were leviathans that thundered past displacing over quarter of a million tonnes while some were more modest.Some had lengths that extended beyond 350 mts while others were well within the 100 meters mark. On a city street or a town street when one passes another there is not much attention that is given but in the vastness of the ocean each traveller is looked upon with interest and warmth at the heart for in the wild blue yonder the sight of another does gladden the heart immensely.
4. The Gulf of Aden lies between the Somalian coast on one side and Omani and Yemeni coast on the other. The Gulf leads one right to the straits of
Bab El Mandap which form the gateway to the Red Sea. This area is the bee hive of all piracy with numerous piracy reporting’s heard almost every day. The civilized world has established IRTC (Internationally Recognized Transit Corridor) which are patrolled by multi nation naval warships which guide merchant vessels safely through the Gulf of Aden acting as ferocious but cautious guard dogs shepherding docile sheep from the cunning and ever present wolves of the seas.
5. As soon as we crossed the
Gulf of Aden we were in the
Red Sea, having covered a distance of 2000 nautical miles. The passage through the red sea has the kingdom of Saudi Arabia to the right while to the left we have the war torn country of Sudan. The Red Sea is a sea water inlet lying between Africa and Asia. North of the Red Sea we have the Sinai Peninsula, Gulf of Aquaba and Gulf of Suez. It is through North that I was headed onwards. The Sea is one of the most saltiest in the world and historically was associated with the exodus of Israelites crossing a body of water which parted to give way. I crossed several atolls on the way which had arisen from the sea. The 2250 km long sea was crossed over a period of three days. Moments spend at sea have their own charm as one is restricted to a limited space within which one must adapt oneself. Many a evening was spent playing volleyball on the high seas with the sun setting in the distance or sometimes it was a tranquil afternoon reading some literature while on some other days it was filled with tossing and turning as the sea proved to be very wild and angry.
ALL BLUE ALL AROUND
EVENING PLAYS I THE RED SEA
FLOW OF COLOURS
RED SEA PASSAGE
GULF OF ADEN COMPANIONS
SLICING THE OCEAN
HEAD ON
THE STRAITS OF BAB EL MANDAP
6. On the evening of the fourth day I glimpsed the Suez Canal and Port Tawfiq where I stopped for the night in order to prepare myself for the journey through one of the most famous of all canals –
The Suez Canal. The Suez Canal is an artificial sea level waterway in Egypt which connects the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea .Constructed over a period of 10 years it allows passage between Europe and Asia without having to go round Africa and the Cape of Good Hope. The Canal is 193 km long and 205 mts wide with a depth of 79 feet. The canal is owned, maintained and operated by the SUEZ CANAL AUTHORITY and can be used “in time of war as in time of peace, by every vessel of commerce or war, without distinction of Flag”. This was my second visit to the Suez and I took the opportunity to explore the canal to its hilt as I spend almost majority of the transit looking with interest the world that moved by .
7. The canal is a single lane transit with passing places at the Ballah By Pass and the Great Bitter Lake which in itself is a salt water lake in the Suez Canal. The passage through the Canal which commenced at two in the early morning took 16 hours as I travelled at a speed of 15 km/h or 8 knots .The views are quite unique as one transits through the canal with the Sinai Peninsula at one side and is the only part of Egyptian territory located in Asia as opposed to Africa thereby effectively serving as a land bridge between two continents. This land has been historically the site of numerous conflicts and is also known as the “Land of the Turquoise”.
8. One also crosses two significant constructions on the Suez Canal , one is the Friendship Bridge also known as the
Egyptian-Japanese Friendship Bridge built 70 mt over the canal while the other is the
El Ferdan Railway Bridge which holds the distinction of the longest swing span bridge in the world having a span of 340 mt or 1100 ft.The moment one completes the passage and crosses Port Said , he is welcomed in to the Mediterranenan Sea.I have travelled close to 3000 nm by now and it has been 12 days on the sea and as I transverse through time zones I am now 4 hours 15 min behind IST.
ALL LOADED UP FOR THE MED
THE EL FERDEN RAIL BRIDGE
ARMED ESCORT
BLUE AGAINST THE BROWN
THE FRIENDSHIP BRIDGE
GOING UNDER
ALL LIT UP COMPANIONS
COMING ACROSS ALL DECKED UP
THE MOON LIT PASSAGE
EARLY MORNING BEGINNINGS
MYSTICAL EGYPTIAN EVENINGS
NIGHT LIGHTS SYMPHONY
SPLENDID
ARMADA ASSEMBLES
THE MIGHTY SUEZ
THE WAR MEMORIAL