Árdís - 01.01.1956, Page 18

Árdís - 01.01.1956, Page 18
16 ÁRDÍS All oil companies combined employ thousands of workers and have done much to promote better working conditions for employees. Another point of interest is Pitch Lake, one of the wonders of the world, but certainly not because of its beauty. It looks like a lake gone dry. Someone has compared its surface to the skin of an elephant, and the irregular creases to the folds in its hide. When the sun is hot the temperature on the “lake” is around 110 degrees and the lightest football leaves an impression. It is neither pitch nor a lake, but about 114 acres of natural asphalt. Walking out on the “lake” we found a gang of negroes chipping out porous chunks of asphalt which were dumped into waiting steel cars on narrow guaged railroad tracks which have to be moved every few days to prevent their disappearing in the lake. And in 48 hours there is no trace of digging operations. At present they are experimenting with a machine to excavate the asphalt, but are having difficulty in keeping it above the surface. At a nearby factory the chunks are reduced to liquid and poured into barrels and then taken to La Brea port only a mile away. Many famous streets of the world have been paved with Pitch Lake asphalt, but cheaper petroleum has largely replaced it. Rain water fills the crevices on the lake forming small pools, in which tiny fish called “guabins” are frequently seen. They feed on mosquito larvae and algae, but how they get there is a mystery. Owing to the variety of its resources, Trinidad has suffered less from general depression than the other islands in the British West Indies. Our first swim was at Maracus Bay Beach. In 1941, Great Britain turned over some of Trinidad’s finest beaches to the United States under the destroyer-for-bases deal. As a treaty obligation, American Seabees built a mountain highway (North Coast Road) to this beach, formerly accessible only by sea. Although only eight miles from Port of Spain it is as yet untouched by commercialism and still has its jungle scenery. On our way back we visited a citrus plantation (Major Knagg’s) and there we saw the largest tree in Trinidad—the Saman tree. This tree covers over IV2 acres. It is beautifully shaped and is approximately 150-200 years old. It changes foliage four times a year, closes up its leaves when it rains and at sunset. And as a result rain can filter through, and grass and farm crops thrive
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