Last Chance to See. Douglas Adams

There are no woodpeckers in Madagascar, and no woodpeckers in Papua New Guinea. This means that there is a food source – the grubs under the bark – going free, and in these two cases it is a mammal which has developed a mechanism for getting at it. And the mechanism they both use is the same -different finger, same idea. But it is purely the selection process of evolution which has created this similarity, because the animals themselves are not related.

Exactly the same behaviour pattern had emerged entirely independently on the other side of the world. As in the gift shop habitats of Spain or Greece, or indeed Hawaii, the local people cheerfully offer themselves up for insult and abuse in return for money which they then spend on further despoiling their habitat to attract more money-bearing predators.

‘Right,’ said Mark, when we found some dinner that night in a tourist restaurant with plastic flowers and muzak and paper umbrellas in the drinks, ‘here’s the picture. We have to get a goat.’

‘Here?

‘No. In Labuan Bajo. Labuan Bajo is on the island of Flores and is the nearest port to Komodo. It’s a crossing of about twenty-two miles across some of the most treacherous seas in the East. This is where the South China Sea meets the Indian Ocean, and it’s riddled with cross currents, riptides and whirlpools. It’s very dangerous and could take anything up to twenty hours.’

`With a goat?’

‘A dead goat.’

I toyed with my food.

‘It’s best,’ continued Mark, ‘if the goat has been dead for about three days, so it’s got a good smell going. That’s more likely to attract the dragons.’

‘You’re proposing twenty hours on a boat…’

‘A small boat,’ added Mark.

‘On violently heaving seas…’

‘Probably.’

‘With a three-day-old dead goat.’

`Yes.’

‘I hardly know what to say.’

‘There’s one other thing that I should probably say, which is that I’ve no idea if any of this is true. There are wildly conflicting stories, and some are probably just out of date, or even completely made up. I hope we’ll have a better idea of the situation when we get to Labuan Bajo tomorrow. We’re. flying tomorrow, via Bima, and we should be at Denpasar airport early. It was a nightmare getting these tickets and the connecting flight and we mustn’t miss the plane.’

We did. Fresh eruptions of hell awaited us at Denpasar airport, which was a turmoil of crowds and shouting with a sense of incipient violence simmering just beneath the surface. The airline check-in man said that our flight from Bima to Labuan Bajo had not been confirmed by the travel agent and as a result we had no seats. He shrugged and gave us back our tickets.

We had been told that serenity was the best frame of mind with which to tackle Indonesia and we decided to try it. We tried serenely to point out that it actually said ‘Confirmed’ on our tickets, but he explained that ‘Confirmed’ didn’t actually mean confirmed, as such, it was merely something that they wrote on tickets when people asked them to because it saved a lot of bother and made them go away.

He went away.

We stood waggling our tickets serenely at thin air. Behind the check-in desk was a window and from behind this a thin airline official with a thin moustache, a thin tie and a white shirt with thin epaulets sat smoking cigarettes and staring at us impassively through narrow wreaths of smoke. We waved our tickets at him, but he just shook his head very, very slightly.

We marched serenely over to the ticket office, where they said it was nothing to do with them, we should talk to the travel agent. A number of decreasingly serene phone calls to the travel agent in Bali simply told us that the tickets were definitely confirmed and that’s all there was to it. The ticket office told us that they definitely weren’t, and that’s all there was to it.

‘What about another flight?’ we asked. Maybe, they said. Maybe in a week or two.

‘A week or two?’ we exclaimed.

‘Moment,’ said one of the men, took our tickets and went away with them. About ten minutes later he returned and gave them to a second man who said, ‘Moment,’ and went away with them in turn. He returned fifteen minutes later, looked at us and said, ‘Yes? What do you want to know?’ We explained the situation all over again, whereupon he nodded, said, ‘Moment,’ and disappeared again. When, after a longish while had passed, we asked where he was we were told that he had gone to visit his mother in Jakarta because he hadn’t seen her in three years.

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