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Palm Oil and Small Chop (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R538
Discovery Miles 5 380
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Palm Oil and Small Chop (Paperback, New)
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Loot Price R538
Discovery Miles 5 380
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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Palm oil is the quintessence of West Africa - it is complex, an
acquired taste and reckoned to be rather unhealthy. Small chop is
the addition of ingredients that make it palatable for European
taste. From the unique perspective of working aboard merchant ships
trading to the area, the author provides a viewpoint of the first
25 years of West African independence - it is simultaneously the
story of the final years of many of the British Merchant Navy's
liner trades where fortunes largely depended upon imperial routes.
The author served in ships of three very different shipping
companies, two British and one Nigerian, and from this unusual
breadth of experience, a fascinating story of ships, their crews,
their cargoes and the peoples from Senegal to Angola is told. The
last of the famous surf ports, the navigation of the twisting
waterways of the Niger Delta and the ascent of the great Congo
River are vividly described. A colourful picture is painted of the
astonishing variety of cargoes and how ships almost literally felt
their way across treacherous mudbanks, picked their way through
mangrove-bordered creeks with local pilots boarding from canoes.
The reader also meets the local inhabitants who include
hard-working men from the desert interior, their more wily brethren
from the coastal regions, itinerant traders and plausible rogues,
the cowed workers of Portuguese Angola and, above all, the famous
Kroomen of Freetown who helped work the ships around this
intriguing coast of crashing surf and foetid creeks. With the
fortunes of the new nations faltering, the Palm Line ships are
forced to find work in other trades. The author experiences daily
life in Poland under martial law, later finding himself on voyages
to Brazil, the Indian sub-continent and Australia aboard ships
primarily designed for the West African ports. Told
sympathetically, yet with a keen eye for the absurd and downright
funny, this is a lively, informative story of ordinary people
trying to make a living in a world where events, over which they
have no control, change their lives irreversibly.
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