OpenRoad Driver Volume 12 Issue 1 | Page 75

Volume 12 Issue 1 » 73 heritage homes and new Dutch-styled enterprises like Royal Plaza. Pretty in pink, its shops sell bargain Colombian emeralds, high-end European fashions and other merchandise sans sales tax. On the nearby northern coast, luxury resorts line white-sand Eagle Beach. Among tall palms, gnarly Divi Divi trees bend toward the Caribbean. The Butterfly Farm offers tropical gardens fluttering with kaleidoscopic colour opposite the shoreline. Bubali Pond stretches behind. Opposite a red 1800s windmill, we enter this designated bird sanctuary and listen to joyous birdsongs atop the observation tower. Of the one hundred species attracted here, we sight snowy egrets, purple gallinules, cormorants, coots and a heron. Those interested in Aruba’s Aloe Museum and Factory turn inland. There, Hato Plantation has cultivated aloe vera since 1840. As appreciation increased for this source of healing antioxidants, the aloe crop covered a full two-thirds of the island, making Aruba the world’s largest aloe exporter. Passing Malmok Beach’s countless one-storey holiday rentals, we ascend a large knoll topped by a classic lighthouse. Here, we enjoy sweeping panoramas of the now distant resorts. “That lighthouse memorializes the SS California, a wooden sailing ship that sank just offshore in 1891,” explains a friendly snack truck vendor, adding, “Like to try my delicious, nutritious coconuts?” We buy one and sip the refreshing chilled milk through straws. We continue on to Arashi Beach that stretches below the hill. Plunging into the warm, crystal waters, we snorkel toward a rocky outcrop and encounter translucent reef squid, gold-speckled blue angelfish, Moorish idols and other beguiling creatures. All swirl colourfully above grey brain, purple fan and yellow pillar corals. Once ashore, we lounge under a thatched palapa, enjoying the soft Caribbean breezes. Our drive proceeds through pretty neighborhoods of small, ranchstyle homes freshly repainted for holiday guests. One eccentric owner whimsically adorns his front yard with workaday-dressed manikins, simple furniture and crockery. Old license plates declare Aruba: the Happy Island and are tacked onto Caribbean pines. We arrive at Alto Vista Chapel atop another hill, and park beside a red party bus emblazoned with Mi Dushi, meaning “my sweetheart.” Like us, these fun-loving tourists are interested in this site where Arawak Indians converted to Christianity in 1750. Outdoor benches form a large semi-circle hinting at overflowing Sunday services. As we depart, we count roadside white crosses and later learn how the chapel hosts Good Friday pilgrimages. At noon, our car radio plays multilingual, musical renditions of the Lord’s Prayer on Aruba’s twenty stations. This national religiosity accounts for the many churches spotted on the island. Minutes later, Casibari Rock rises inexplicably from the desert floor. Native pink Robinia trees and flowering yellow acacias surround this huge, dome-like boulder formation. This is home to iridescent blue lizards that lurk around small garden cacti. A steep, carved path and winding stairway lead us to the top of this natural sandstone marvel. We are presented with spectacular 360-degree views. The route downward requires us to twist our bodies through a very narrow tunnel. To reward our dexterous achievement, we cross the road to a café for chicken-filled pastiches, a delicious Aruban snack. Driving slowly onward, we study the distinctive desert life. Bristling with needles, the towering Kadushi cactus is often used for soup by the locals. The slightly shorter Yatu Cactus is often seen planted for fences. Birds seem to love both these cacti. An orange-breasted, black-and-white Trupial – an island oriole – lands ahead on a Kadushi. Meanwhile, a tropical mockingbird flicks a long, whitetipped tail perched atop a prickly pear, and above us, an Aruban eagle swoops lazily. But we fail to spot other well-known Aruba wildlife: wild goats, donkeys or cottontail rabbits, whose ancestors arrived centuries ago. The Aruba Ostrich Farm materializes amid this arid landscape, so we do sight ostriches and emus. Many head for this east coast farm to learn about these raucous ratites … then sample “big bird” steaks and omelets! Straddling a nearby ridge, Bushiribana is an abandoned smelter that looms like an ancient fortress. In 1825, it processed gold ore from local mines. Inside the black, basalt walls we look through a rock window frame at jeeps racing along the hard-packed shoreline.