Coconut Paradise OF BADAGRY
The Badagry Idyll, defined by nature and nostalgia, is a bliss wrought by coconut grove.
Coastal
towns of Badagry offer refreshing retreats away from the stuffy suburbs
of Lagos. There, I often find my dearest dream of natural nirvana, in
sun-soaked beaches with Caribbean character where the Atlantic rages and
rolls and the waves beat hard and howl against pebbled sand bars, a
backdrop of towering coconut trees.
On a bustling day, bevvies of beachgoers
frolic in seductive swimsuits, with the air resonating with their
chatter and laughter. Their orgies of fun––uninhibited and tempered with
élan and exuberance––depict youthful innocence that reminds that life
is worth living. This bliss I discovered on the coconut beach of the
Suntan resort.
Though not as vaunted as the Lekki
beaches––those aristocratic, uppity playgrounds on the island––Suntan,
nevertheless, is not poorly patronised. It is a popular getaway for a
multitude of Lagosians from the inner city metropolis, perpetually
besieged by a crowd of fun-seekers on weekends or holidays.
On the Suntan stretch, the beach has a
coconut palm canopy, and there are huts for picnickers to sit, eat and
watch the ocean waves. There is also a horse riding option. The last
time I was there, the beach was congested. The crowd was crushing. The
air vibrated with excitement. Revelers frolicked and swam with amazing
zest. If the razzle-dazzle does not appeal to you, then you can amuse
yourself with the side attractions of live dramas of eccentricities and
emotions around you.
This I did.
Right in front of me, a sumo-sized young man haggled with a gawky lad who peddled boxer shorts at the rate of N100.
Biggie asked: “Do you have a boxer my size?”
The boy replied: “Yes, the one that fits you is N400.”
“Why the extra N300?”
“Because you are ‘extra-big.’”
When the lad pointed at his huge torso, an infuriated Biggie terminated the transaction.
A little distance to the front, a man
with a balding pate and a Hitler moustache wore a woman’s one-piece
swimming suit. Yes, a woman’s bikini. He strutted about the beach, his
gangling form absurdly garbed in the bathing suit, was the butt of jokes
and he didn’t care in the least.
To my left, a teenager spectacle unspooled. The girl was engrossed with a plate of rice. The
boy fresh from a swim in the sea, still dripping water, sat beside her.
She offered him the bowl. Instead of a few spoonful, he wolfed down
everything in double-quick time. The girl who could not hide her
displeasure broke down in tears. “But, I thought you gave me
everything?” said the boy, who spent the next few minutes petting her.
Funny.
Then, a couple came into focus. After
emptying a bottle of wine, the male strolled off, leaving his lady with
her friend to carry on their feminine talks. He strayed away to sit
beside a fair-complexioned, baby-faced damsel. The women he left behind
gossip but watched him with half eyes.
His fiancée declared: “I am not
disturbed. Even if he likes he can disappear inside one of those huts
with her. All I care is I am the one he would be going back home with.”
Her friends countered: “How can you say you do not care about what he does behind your back?”
“Men will always be men, the important thing is for him to find his way home after his ‘cheap’ flings.”
“I can’t live with that, o.”
The lothario returned to a melodrama. The fiancée, who earlier claimed not to be the jealous type, flew into tantrums.
“What were you discussing with that
lady?” back and forth they argued. The male walked away with his pride
in exaggerated annoyance.
“But I thought you said you wouldn’t be bothered?” the fiancée was reminded by her friend.
For an answer, she wiped tears from her eyes.
A little to the left, another couple sat,
engrossed with the usual goings-on that often happens when boy meets
girl. Both fancy each other, and unabashedly played the romantic chess,
the male trying hard to woo, the female playing hard to get. When he
muttered in her ears––sweet nothing I guessed––she giggled. Él le dijo que te amo.
A COCONUT PALM-INSPIRED DÉJÀ VU took me
back in time to another Badagry beach experience on Gberefu Island.
Gberefu, a tropical rainforest island facing the Atlantic, is severed
from the Badagry Peninsula by a lagoon. Populated by a pocket of
natives, its natural ecosystem is untainted and undisrupted by
modernity, its beach is the most exclusive in Lagos, lined, by tall
coconut palms as far as the eye can see into the distance, Gberefu is a
place for pleasant solitude. Good for solitary campers.
My last visit was during a three-day
retreat of “unmarried 14 young men and play mates.” After we crossed
the lagoon by canoes from the Badagry Marina, we foxtrotted through
verdant vegetation and villages until we found ourselves at the edge of
the Atlantic where the beach was clean, calm and vacant, and strips of
golden sand stretched endlessly. No beach bum. No urchins. The natives
went about their fishing without as much as paying us any attention. Our
coterie included a DJ and a video cameraman and we had enough
provisions for a mixed odd of 26 campers. We set up our dome tents on
the beach facing the Atlantic Ocean.
First, we kindled a big bonfire. Always the bonfire. A dancing revelry followed. Then,
dinner by the fireside. The following day began with a physical fitness
drill. Afterwards, we played beach soccer and volleyball. Others chased
crabs. That morning, we relished the exquisite taste of fresh coconut
water. Roasted coconut and fish kebab served as between-meals snacks.
Local berries, picked from thorny plants, served as dessert. The
lemon-size berries, with tomato taste and mango flavour, are aboriginal
to the island.
Later, we broke into smaller groups. The
splinters drifted apart in pairs for cosy “two-aside”. In the evening,
we had a proper football contest against the natives––a ritual they
demand of us each time we visited the beach––and they got the better of
us with two unreturned goals.
The outing was a classic beach experience
we found difficult to replicate in the last few years. For obvious
reasons––wives and babies came along and there was never time enough for
such meet-up.
Air of fruity flavour, quasi-Eden
tranquillity, homes in rustic surroundings of palms, ferns and banana
trees––the Badagry Peninsula easily worms its way into people’s heart. A
solitary stroll on the beach of Gberefu or Suntan can have a calming
effect on a reveller’s soul as to precipitate a spiritual
self-discovery, a sober reflection or the sudden awakening of a
slumbering muse.
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