Heather
Tchao Brasil !
09 September 2008,
Brazilian Africa
21 August 2008,
L'Afrique au Brésil
21 August 2008,
What is this vegetable? And do I have to cook it?
10 August 2008,
5 August 2008 – 10 August 2008
As we worked our way back up the coast of Brazil, the next stop on our itinerary was the Camamu estuary known for its abundant seafood, tranquil anchorages, and enormous marketplace. Although the main block of the main sail had broken in the Abrolhos islands, rendering it useless, we sailed northwards from there to the Camamu estuary easily enough with just our head sail.
Canoes resting on mangrove mudflats at low tide
Entering the estuary at night, as is custom on Moana, we anchored outside Sapinho. This settlement, like many others, runs restaurants mainly for weekend pleasure boaters. We decided to try one the next day.
Catato de siri (crabmeat stew)
The local specialty is crabmeat stewed with tomatoes, onion, cilantro, and coconut milk accompanied, of course, with beans, rice, manioc meal, and a salad of tomatoes and onions. With so many crab traps in the estuary, a bountiful bowl of delicious crab and all its accoutrements costs only €8 for two people. The estuary is also known for its small oysters clinging to mangrove roots, plentiful local fish, and even cheap lobsters. Although we solicited for lobsters with the local fishermen, though, none were caught for us during our short stay. Marc was much disappointed.
Rio Maraú
We motored up the Maraú river, a tributary to the estuary, to visit its namesake town. Mangrove riverbanks occasionally give way to sandy beaches with palm trees and perhaps a small, white fisherman’s house. There’s even an island for sale if you’re interested: Ilha Tatus.
Ruby Red
The church dominating the hillside of the town of Maraú is ruby red, the jolliest we’ve seen yet in Brazil.
Traveling butcher
This butcher makes his rounds to Maraú on Fridays, hanging his cow legs and ribs from the rafters of the town marketplace. Everything in this remote town is quite relaxed. Inquiring at a home/restaurant to find out the day’s menu, we spoke to the proprietress as a friend gave her a pedicure on her front porch and diners ate happily at plastic tables set in the street.
Local sweet
We bought a sweet made of manioc and coconut shavings, rolled up in a leaf one meter wide and baked. Goes wonderfully with a caipirinha.
Heather on the ferry
The town of Camamú is widely known for its Saturday market, and so we caught the 6am (and only) ferry from the estuary mouth to deep within the estuary to see it for ourselves. We couldn’t have motored Moana to the town both because of shallow sand shoals and because the settlers placed huge boulders in the river at the entrance to town to thwart English and Dutch invaders during the 17th century. Upon entering into the small bay outside the town, our ferry and the other local boats slalomed from side to side in the river to avoid the unseen stones.

Camamú bay
And here is the white-washed village of Camamú. The dugout canoeist is paddling with the outrageously long-handled paddles traditional in the estuary.
Traditional boat building
Massive, long pieces of wood are still used by traditional boat builders in the bay to fashion fishing vessels. The elongated bowsprit on these boats, though, indicates that these boats will be tourist schooners.
Escuna escolar (School schooner)
This yellow and black boat is the local “school bus” bringing remote children to town.
Faded glory
Walking the steep, cobbled road to Camamu’s summit, we passed beautiful old houses with elaborate, but now crumbling, facades. Young boys push wheelbarrows through the streets, offering to haul shoppers’ cartloads of foodstuffs up the hill to their homes. On our way to Camamu’s summit, we watched a scraggly boy breathlessly push a full wheelbarrow of dry goods as his matronly customer chastised him for who know’s what.
Another view from the summit
Marketplace
And the reason we came to Camamu: a marketplace full of fresh produce, 20% of which we’ve no clue what tastes like or how to prepare. Even with the help of the meticulous Eat Smart: Brazil guidebook, Heather was still occasionally at a loss when confronted by the profusion of obscure fruit varieties.
More produce
Abundance (Produce market)
The marketplace spilled out of the massive hall and onto the street where fruits and vegetables were arranged on mats and live animals were bartered over. In the background, men stand on the top of a VW bus to unload branches of bananas.
I like the one with the bigger beak
A vendor scooping through his wheelbarrow of chickens to find one that satisfies the customers.
Market days sure are long days
Suckling pigs
If only we had a barbecue spit…
Malagueta pepper sauce
A local sniffing a hot sauce made with malagueta peppers, a condiment especially popular in northern Brazil.
Big Fish
We also stopped in the fish market to check out the plethora of marine and estuarine fish, rays, oysters, mussels, and crabmeat on sale. Buying fish in Brazil is difficult for gringãos since the fish names change regionally and don’t correspond to any European/American fish. Nonetheless, we were happy with the fish we had scaled, gutted, and filleted for us that night (well Heather was, anyways. Marc just ate his fish like a good boy as usual).

Corn and cake vendor
And then it was time to grab a snack before heading back to the boat. This street vendor was selling several cakes, guava filled doughnuts, fried chicken dumplings, and even roasted corn on the cob.
Market Ferry
The ferry captain waits for each of his morning passengers to arrive around noon before making his way back to the estuary mouth. Thus, as people shop throughout the morning, they can drop off their packages on the boat and continue. Bags of rice and vegetables are piled so high in the ferry that the captain can hardly see forward.
After resting for one more day on the boat, we made a night passage to Salvador in what turned out to be excellent winds. We therefore arrived at Centro Nautico de Bahia marina in the wee hours of the morning, mooring by flashlight with the help of a security guard true to Moana’s grand tradition of night arrivals.
Fruits et légumes
10 August 2008,
Brigitte Bardot
29 July 2008,
Paris, on avait pas parié dessus...
14 July 2008,
Cruising the islands of Baia da Ilha Grande
23 June 2008,
Croisière dans les îles de la Baia da Ilha Grande
23 June 2008,
Paraty and the Mainland
02 June 2008,
Neil, Neil, Neil of the Jungle
06 May 2008,
Heather's brother Neil joins us for a week's worth of Brazilian hiking and sailing.Read More...
Neil, l'intrépide navigateur-explorateur
06 May 2008,
Southbound to Rio
30 April 2008,
Caipirinhas and Carne do Sol
05 March 2008,
Caipirinhas et carne do sol
05 March 2008,
Across the Atlantic on a String, a Chain and a Lot of Imagination.
03 March 2008,
La traversée de l’Atlantique, sur un bout de ficelle et une chaîne!
03 March 2008,
Bossman and Bosslady at the Hippo Stakeout
11 February 2008,
Bossman et Bosslady: Opération Hippo!
11 February 2008,
Toubabs in the Mangroves
16 January 2008,
Toubabs dans la mangrove
16 January 2008,
¡Hasta la vista, Europa!
15 December 2007,
La Gomera
27 October 2007,
Gran Canaria
17 October 2007,
Brittany, France
23 August 2007,
Sprechen Sie Deutsch?
01 August 2007,
Tenerife
06 July 2007,
Fuerteventura, Isla de Lobos, Lanzarote, and La Graciosa
14 April 2007,