Savu Island Indonesia, Etc.

…at one point I turned off down a coral path and tipped out on to dunes which were cov­ered in gi­ant clam shells. There were hun­dreds of them, some more than a me­tre across, all grin­ning toothily up at the sky, each filled with grey wa­ter, slowly evap­o­rat­ing down to a crackly sand. Salt pro­duc­tion, Savu-style. I stuck my fin­ger into one of the shells, ex­pect­ing the flaky sweet­ness of Mal­don sea salt. The so­lu­tion was vis­cous, al­most oily, bit­ter on the tongue.
 The beach swept around in a long, pow­dery arc. There was not a soul around, only vague re­minders of hu­man life. An out­rig­ger ca­noe lay on its side in the brush. Be­side a tum­ble­down shel­ter of palm fronds, a fallen tree trunk. The only sound was a tiny rip­pling of waves. It was a plea­sure to be still in this shim­mer­ing place. I sat down on the tree trunk to read.

salt

‘I’m sorry, I’m go­ing to have to chop that up.’ I leapt up and found my­self faced with a mus­cled torso, dark, shiny with sweat. Above it a thick beard, a mouth of black­ened teeth, red­dish eyes, wild curls crin­kling slightly grey at the tem­ples. The man was swing­ing an axe.
 We stared at one an­other. Then he smiled. ‘Come, meet my wife,’ and he called her out of the tum­ble­down shel­ter next to which I sat.
 The man was a fish­er­man, but dur­ing the west mon­soon, when the sea was rough, he and his wife turned to cook­ing salt. He needed the tree I was sit­ting on to feed into the fire that smoul­dered un­der an oil-drum of sea­wa­ter, boil­ing it down into pure white salt.
Elizabeth Pisani; Indonesia, Etc.

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