Destinations: Mount Roraima
Guyana, Brazil, Venezuela
5.1433, -60.7625
5.1433, -60.7625
(Note: this is a new part to this blog... I've been wanting to try and incorporate more of the 'wandering' into A Wandering Lens, talk about places I've been, as well as places I want to go. This is the first installment of the latter, with images that are not my own since I haven't been there yet. I hope you enjoy it.)
There are certain places that are simply otherworldly, beyond what you imagine a landscape to be, and Mt. Roraima fits that classification. It is located in the tepuis, a plateau of blocky landscape in the southeastern portion of Venezuela, and marks the triple point between the countries Guyana, Brazil, and Venezuela. It is part of the region known as the Gran Sabana, and the tepuis are almost permanently shrouded in mist and clouds, where rainfall is common on a daily basis. And unlike a conventional mountain chain, the tepuis are isolated table mountains that have been thrust up and then resisted the weathering over millions of years, forming these islands jutting into the sky.
This is an area that defies explanation. First witnessed by Sir Walter Raleigh in the late 16th century, this area wasn't really explored until the 19th century, when explorers made the first hiking ascent of the mountain to the strange top. The sheer promontory makes climbing exceedingly difficult, and the appearance of the mountain, sticking like a block out of the lush jungle, was reportedly the inspiration for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World. And, more recently, the team from Pixar used Mt. Roraima for ideas of Carl Fredricksen's destination in the movie Up.
While Mr. Roraima is the most famous of the tepuis, and the highest (2,772 m), there are certainly others worthy of visiting. The highest waterfall in the world, Angel Falls (or Salto Angel) falls from Auyan-tepui (2,460m) a 435 square mile heart shaped table mountain first discovered in 1937 by the pilot Jimmie Angel.
This sort of area is so strange, it is no wonder it has inspired books and movies since its exploration by Europeans. It looks like something created for a video game almost, I could see it as a landscape from Myst back in the day. While it is fairly barren on top, with little vegetation, the high sheer cliffs provide a base for beautiful, lacy waterfalls that dangle over the side. The only way to hike it is a long mountain path that was first climbed by Everard Im Thurn, an English Botanist,with Harry Perkins in 1884. The eponymous route is now the only way to hike to the summit. Climbing is even more difficult, as the cliffs of Roraima are inverted and very sheer (not to mention the permits and authorizations that go into climbing in a National Park in South America).
Roraima has a haunting quality that just begs to be experienced first-hand. It doesn't hurt that it is in the middle of the South American jungle either! But Mt. Roraima is firmly on my list of destinations to see one day, and I wanted to share it with you all. Enjoy.
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