Cape Maclear, Malawi
(Click on thumbnails below for pictures, slideshows, and notes from a journey to Mozambique, Malawi, and Zambia, Sep/Oct 2015.)
Cape Maclear lies on the tip of a peninsula jutting into the southern end of Lake Malawi. It’s a tiny tourist town, a single lane of tourist lodges along the waterfront. A kilometer offshore is Thumbi Island, where we went by boat to snorkel in the placid, crystalline waters in a region of the lake protected as a national park and UNESCO world heritage site. The lake glimmers green from above, but as we eased down into the water with our snorkeling masks, an astonishing azure viewscape opened up, dappled with multicolored fish cruising about us. Lake Malawi is famously home to some thousand species of cichlids, and in a single glance, you can see at least a dozen kinds, from thumbnail-sized to hand-sized, from powder blue and peach colored to fluorescent indigo, orange, and purple. Rock cichlids congregate among the rocky shallows and picturesque boulders that hover near the shorelines where we swam. Oddly, the fish hung around close to us, utterly fearlessly; in fact, our guide demonstrated how easy it was to catch them by hand using a piece of bread, grabbing two of them within two minutes. (Apparently, they’re not good to eat, though; too many fine bones.) The fish intermingled casually between species as they swam, and seemed to include us in their accustomed range of cichlid diversity. But when we stood still too long, they’d come nibble at our legs—just as they nibbled at the rocks—a brief, hard little scrape against the skin that left no mark. Cruising around the lake, our guide threw out some fish so we could watch the fish eagles swoop down and scoop up their food. Before throwing the bait, he whistled and called out to each eagle by name, recognizing each individual, who loiters every day in the same area with the same mate.
The eastern end of the Cape Maclear beach lies in front of Chembe village, where it’s crowded with fishing boats, fishing nets laid out to dry, long tables of drying fish, and local people washing and playing in gentle surf and soft sand. We walked through Chembe with our guide, Dudu, who showed us its busy little market, two schools, two maize-flour mills, and three adult drinking establishments, two of which primarily sell their own cornmeal moonshine. The two elderly women who own and operate one of them were happy to show us their tub of fermenting mash and their still, steadily steaming away in the back. Most of the village women grow small plots of maize, the staple food of southern Africa, while most of the men in the village work as fishermen, selling their catch in the markets of Lilongwe and Blantyre. But the lake is now heavily overfished, so more villagers are looking to the growing tourism of Cape Maclear for employment opportunities.
Chembe is a Chewa village, a matrilineal society, so land and immovable property are owned and inherited by women. Most Chewa are Christian, but some are Muslim and this village of 15–20,000 people boasts at least a half dozen churches of different denominations, and a mosque. But here, as throughout Malawi, people intermarry freely between religions and even across ethnic groups. We learned about the Chembe Water Project, set up by a local lodge to provide clean drinking water to the whole village from public taps, by distilling lake water, but its pump had been broken for 2 months at the time of our visit and was still waiting to be fixed. [—Usha Alexander, October 2015]
On the shores of |
Drying fish |
Street behind our lodge |
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Children of Cape Maclear |
Evening on the lake |
Lake Malawi sunset |
Lake Malawi sunset |
Lake Malawi sunset |
Lake Malawi sunset |
Lake Malawi sunset |
Nsima with vegetables |
Boat to Thumbi island |
Thumbi island |
Near Thumbi island |
Snorkeling area |
Snorkeling in clear waters |
Colorful Cichlid fish |
Diving fish eagle |
No end in sight (more) |
Lake Malawi vista (more) |
Otter Point in the distance |
Approaching Otter Point |
Otter Point |
Sculpted rocks |
Many hues |
Clear fresh water |
Snorkeling |
Water at Otter Point |
Around Otter point |
Shades of green |
Boating on Lake Malawi |
Fisherman |
Coastline |
Coastline |
Lake Malawi vista |
Coastline (more) |
Village homes |
Parked fishing boats |
Beach at Cape Maclear |
Street behind our lodge |
Domwe island |
Lake Malawi sunset |
Lake Malawi sunset |
Chembe Village | |||
Kids welcoming visitors |
Village homes (more) |
Village meat shop |
A corn flour mill |
Classroom under a |
A school |
A brick kiln |
Local couple with child |
Shop named after |
Village kids |
Chembe village kids |
Village chief's house |
Village lane |
Village lane (more) |
Village lane |
Village lane (more) |
Market lane |
Eateries |
Market lane |
Food for sale |
Uncle Charlo Booze Den |
The bar |
Art inside the booze den |
Men drinking |
Fish drying in the sun |
Fish from the lake |
Drying/smoking the fish |
Smoking the fish |
Fishermen resting |
A boardgame called bao |
A rigged up pool table |
Boat with night lanterns |
Village life by the lake |
Village life by the lake |
Village cemetery (more) |
Drinking water, provided |
Government school |
Girls playing soccer |
Main road coming |
Chembe village from afar |
Local moonshine distillery |
A drinking den |
Beer in cardboard carton |
Clinic, by Billy Riordan |
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