Back in Paramaribo, back to work
First up was our appointment with the vet. We like the Dutch vet here she recently fixed Rusty’s hotspots with the greatest of ease. This time she updated his rabies shot, gave us a solution for his ear wax buildup and checked his health and general vaccinations. Plus she organized Rusty’s exit papers for French Guiana. The European Union requires a titer test which, luckily Layne got done before we left. The test measures the dog’s response to the rabies vaccine and if the vaccinations are kept up it’s good for life. There are a handful of labs that do it and it takes months to get it done. And Rusty has a titer test thanks to Layne. This whole process including submitting the paperwork to the Department of Agriculture will end up costing us US$300. He’s worth it.That was when we met Cynthia Alouf who had a cage of puppies for the vet. She feeds strays and rescues dogs around Paramaribo and loves the life I wouldn’t mind with 60 dogs at home. She loves our van so the admiration was mutual. I gave her a hundred Euro and hope she never loses her enthusiasm.
Up next: a final malaria check at the public health office.
Up next: a final malaria check at the public health office.
There was a doctor visiting to report another case of malaria in Paramaribo so they were getting ready to fire up their lab.
We got a clean bill of health, both of us, no parasites lurking in our blood but then I have a second dose of blood for Layne to practice using the home testing kit.
For us Suriname is pretty organized and advanced. It’s all in your perspective I guess.
I’ll admit we got a lump in our throats as we said goodbye. It’s back to being by ourselves off the beaten track. Our plan is to drive to the Maroni River Monday and cross on the ferry to French Guiana. We’re hoping to see a rocket launch at the European Space Agency on Tuesday in the town of Kourou. We’ve reserved an apartment in Cayenne the capital for four days when we want to take a tour to Devils Island where Papillon was incarcerated.
Layne is back to her energetic self so between now and Monday we have sightseeing plans as well as doing laundry and that sort of thing. School was out obviously:
The bicycle was towing the moped but everything is backwards in Suriname and yet it works. This country cracks me up and as much as I want to continue traveling I know I will miss this place.
We left with two malaria kits so if we get any symptoms we can test our blood and then treat ourselves. Plus we have started the malaria prevention pills they gave us. This public health office is on top of it.
One court with the disease was enough for Layne and we have thousands of miles of tropical jungles yet to drive. Meanwhile my nephew Solais sent me a photo of rain in Scotland from his back home cab. I miss them all. Anyway we then had a date with Dale before he flew out of Paramaribo. We are very grateful to him for being with Layne while I was at the wedding. He had to return his rental car and lunch was at the Marriott, his natural habitat and he cracked us up by describing Suriname as the most third world experience he’d had. For us Suriname is pretty organized and advanced. It’s all in your perspective I guess.
I’ll admit we got a lump in our throats as we said goodbye. It’s back to being by ourselves off the beaten track. Our plan is to drive to the Maroni River Monday and cross on the ferry to French Guiana. We’re hoping to see a rocket launch at the European Space Agency on Tuesday in the town of Kourou. We’ve reserved an apartment in Cayenne the capital for four days when we want to take a tour to Devils Island where Papillon was incarcerated.
Layne is back to her energetic self so between now and Monday we have sightseeing plans as well as doing laundry and that sort of thing. School was out obviously:
The bicycle was towing the moped but everything is backwards in Suriname and yet it works. This country cracks me up and as much as I want to continue traveling I know I will miss this place.
One day at a time.
















2 comments:
Additional reading for your Devil's Island tour
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/René_Belbenoît
The book isn’t available on US Kindle. Grrr.
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