Driving, Me Crazy

Often, when one group of people ignore the rules of the road, it’s a catalyst for chaos. South Africa is a good example of this. So, in Haiti, where even basic traffic rules, like which side of the road to drive on, are treated as mere suggestions, it is astonishing that it all seems to work.

According to ITV, repairing all the potholes in England and Wales would cost £14 billion. If that were accurate, repairing all the potholes in Haiti would cost more than the UK’s gross domestic product. It isn’t a coincidence that almost everyone drives SUV’s. Going to the shops feels more like an expedition than an outing. And, because the city spreads up the side of a mountain, with hills radiating from it like fingers, there are only a few arteries from ‘downtown’ to ‘uptown’. The seven kilometer journey uptown to the supermarket in Pètionville can take over an hour.

Ironically, the worst section of road in the city is the kilometer or so outside the US Embassy in Tabarre. There, the potholes are reversed: little islands of tar sticking out of the dirt waiting to rip the sumps from the bold or the unwary. A constant pall of dust hangs over the embassy, fading the colours of the flag that hangs listlessly outside. It’s probably Haiti’s way of saying ‘thank you’ for interfering in their politics.

Tap tap taxi

In a city with choked roads and knackered cars, the potholes slow everything down. Where there are potholes, accidents are slow, almost graceful affairs, but on the few smooth stretches of road, things often turn deadly. In our first two months, we saw two motorbike riders lying dead in the street; a newly dismembered Tap Tap appeared one morning. It still lies on its side on one corner as a memorial to those who were in it when everything went wrong.

Speed bumps calm things down in the suburbs, where the roads are generally in better condition. They aren’t the long, rolling speed bumps that SUVs sneer at as they cruise by at warp speed, but the short sharp ones that reach up and tear the guts out of the disrespectful.

Our daily commute to work is a good example of what it’s like to get around. There are two main routes, the shortest one is unremarkable, but during rush hour, nothing moves. So we often take the back route through Vivy Mitchell. It’s a bit of a roller coaster ride. It starts off innocuously enough along the back roads out of our gated suburb to the foot of Rue Vivy Mitchell. That’s where the cog engages and the car tilts up for the big climb. It rattles to the top, bouncing over the speed bumps and potholes. The next section is harmless: a sharp left turn, followed by a sharp right. Then the road plunges down, past a police checkpoint and on to the bottom where it swerves right and starts to climb again. When we plunge down the second drop, I brace for the loop.

Traffic near the airport.

About halfway we reach the flat lands, leave the roller coaster and board the bumper car. It’s easy to avoid the other cars on the straighter roads at the bottom of the hill; stray goats, dogs and cows are the main obstacles. But closer to the airport, where the road widens, the action picks up again. The roads there are heavily potholed and everyone seeks the path of least resistance: swerving back and forth like drunkards, veering from one side to the other, undertaking and over-braking, all in an effort to stay on the tar.

At first, we relied on Sanley, our driver, to get us around. But we wanted our independence and were determined to venture out on our own. It’s one thing to sit passively (if you don’t count the clenched teeth and white knuckles) while someone else negotiates the mayhem. It is a completely different tin of tuna to do the driving yourself.

We made an arrangement with Sanley to hire his car. It is a Ford double-cab and has seen better days. Half the indicators didn’t work, the windscreen wipers had no blades and the bodywork was held together with wire. We dubbed it The Beast.

The Beast standing out a bit at the Pètionville Club

We quickly learned that there are many intersections, but few stop streets. Nobody pays any attention to either. Most intersections need some extra caution, because it’s seldom obvious who has right of way. Even when it does seem evident, it’s always good to remember that assumption is the mother of all fuck-ups.

The busier intersections are more of a challenge. Traffic from four or more directions meets in the middle and grinds to a halt in a Gordian knot. One by one, the cars, taxis and trucks disentangle themselves from each other, working their way carefully through the snarl until they are free again. It requires just the right balance of passive aggression, and it wouldn’t work anywhere else in the world. But here, nobody gets stressed. When we first made it successfully through one of the big intersections, we both whooped, high-fived to celebrate.

On one occasion, we had to cross a line of cars that was bumper to bumper in the opposite direction. We settled in for a long wait, but a taxi in the queue reversed to try to let us through. There still wasn’t space to turn. We couldn’t reverse because the traffic behind us was equally backed up. Then the guy on the motorbike behind us made space and signalled for us to reverse. We made the turn, squeezed through the line of cars and were on our way: synergy amongst the chaos.

One-way streets are not always signposted and it is not uncommon to meet someone coming down the wrong way. In our case, we managed to go the wrong way a couple of times and met cars coming the right way. There was little more fuss than a quick flash of lights to let us know that we had cocked up.

Our first foray out of town was to one of the beaches north of the city. We had passed the airport and were almost out of town when a policeman pulled us over. He was very smartly dressed and extremely polite. The conversation went something like this (in French and a little Creole):

‘Bonjour.’ He said, smiling.

‘Bonjour. Koman ou ye?’ Nicky had already learned some Creole.

He smiled, came straight to the point. ‘I’m okay, but I’d be much better if I had as much money as you have.’

My heart sank, but I kept smiling.

‘Too bad,’ Nicky said.

‘Yes,’ he said. ‘Where are you going?’

‘To the beach.’ I pointed to the others who had seen us being pulled over and had stopped a little way ahead. ‘With our friends.’

‘Have a nice day,’ he said. And that was it. He could have fined us for an almost endless number of things, but The Beast doesn’t exactly exude wealth. We’ve come to love the car because it allows us to blend in.

The open drains are deadly for the unwary.

After almost four months, driving here has become normal. The open drains, the Mack trucks that hog the road, the fact that nobody indicates all add to the challenge. They are just part of the daily commute.

Haiti

The alarm went off at two the following morning for our our five fifty-three flight to Port-au-Prince. We made our way, bleary-eyed, to the airport and found ourselves in a sleepy departures hall with all the shops firmly shuttered and not a cappuccino in sight. With Hurricane Matthew making its way steadily through the Caribbean, we checked the weather channels to see if it would make landfall in Haiti. It was veering towards Haiti’s south-western peninsula and was expected to arrive within forty-eight hours. We began to wonder if we would get there before the airport closed. But boarding commenced on schedule and we were soon on our way.

I had an aisle seat and Nicky was in the middle, so when we started our descent, there wasn’t much for us to see. I craned to get a view of the island, but could only glimpse patches of green, white and blues: the indigo of the Caribbean and the lighter blue of the sky. Reassured that the hurricane hadn’t arrived, I retreated to my book.

We touched down just before nine and emerged into a tropical clammy heat that felt like West Africa.

Neither the airport buildings nor the arrivals hall dispelled the notion that we might be in Africa. But the posters advertising Caribbean beach resorts just north of the capital gave away our real location. We were met by the base manager, Patrick and driver Sanley, who drove with a nonchalance that belied both the traffic and the state of the roads.

Dusty, garbage strewn roads with potholes that stretched all the way across and beyond provided a battleground for a helter skelter of cars, taptaps and motorbikes that weaved in amongst each other in seemingly random trajectories.

Port-au-Prince hugs the foothills of Kenscoff, the cloud-shrouded mountain that overlooks the city, and hugs them hard. Its many foothills are precipitous, growing in stature and steepness as they near the mountain, turning the twelve-kilometre journey from the airport to the crew house into a thirty-minute rollercoaster ride.

The Crew House
The Crew House

In its place was a voluminous six-bedroom house, situated in Belvil, a gated suburb, and one of the sanctuaries where wealthier Haitians, and UN staff, retreat from the mayhem. It seemed deserted, its doors ajar to take advantage of the breeze. We were shown up to our room, where we dropped off our luggage before exploring our new home.

Despite the obvious lack of a swimming pool, it was more than we’d ever expected from a crew house. Apart from the six bedrooms, there were two lounges, one with a television and the other on a lower level. The kitchen was a good size and seemed well equipped, if a little dated. When I had a closer look at the four-burner gas stove, I let out an involuntary shiver. It was wretched. The sort of wretchedness that eventually accumulates when something hasn’t seen a scourer since it was born: last century sometime.

The Pergola
The Pergola

The rest was typical of a crew house: stale food in the cupboards, bottles of water stacked haphazardly outside an empty cupboard in one corner and dirty dishes in the sink. In contrast, the garden was beautiful with a profusion of tropical flowers and a scattering of coconut palms. In one corner, a vine covered pergola looked like a good spot for Sunday lunch.

‘Where are the other crew?’ I asked Patrick.

‘In their rooms.’

Nicky and I looked at each other. ‘Here?’

Patrick looked at me strangely. ‘Yes.’

‘But it seems so quiet.’

Patrick shrugged.

One emerged a few hours later. He seemed to by a nice guy, but he soon retreated to the darkness of his room. The other didn’t emerge from his bat cave until the following day.

Cleaning the Oven
Cleaning the Oven

So once we had unpacked, with no-one to talk to, Nicky and I rolled up our sleeves, boiled up some water, dug out all the cleaning stuff that we could find and began the long and arduous process of dismantling the stove piece by piece and giving it the first thorough cleaning of its life.

By the time we put the kettle on, our first day in paradise was drawing to a close. And Matthew had yet to make landfall.