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Arrival and Departure from Mauritius

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After months of preparation, the day of my departure finally arrives. To get to Mauritius from Chicago, I leave O'Hare around 5:00pm (1700) on Tuesday, November 12, and after two successive overnight flights (the direct flight from Paris to Mauritius takes eleven and a half hours), I arrive in Mauritius at about 7:00am (0700) on Thursday, November 14, where the expedition vessel, the Akademik Shokalskiy, is scheduled to depart Mauritius Harbor at 4:00pm (1600) the same day.
Quick Facts about Mauritius: discovered by the Dutch in 1505, later a French and a British colony, attained independence in 1968; population 1.2 million; area 1860 sq.km.; of volcanic origin; climate subtropical.
Around 0700 local time, Thursday, November 14: my first less-than-flattering view of the island (but notice the ocean in the distance and morning showers over the sea), from the customs hall at the international airport while I wait for my chance to present my passport and enter the country of Mauritius.
My hotel in Port Louis, Mauritius, where I dare not sleep (for fear of not waking up in time) but do enjoy a tepid shower and a pleasant breakfast beneath palm trees next to the swimming pool (in an interior courtyard). The Mauritian flag flies above the entrance.
A jagged peak looms in the distance; the French Embassy lies behind the wall on the right side of the street (near my hotel in Port Louis).
A narrow one-way street in Port Louis; the church on the right is l'Eglise Immaculee Conception.
A passenger boards the Akademik Shokalskiy, the ship that will be my home for the next thirty days.
A view of the harbor in Port Louis as the Shokalskiy pulls away from the dock, as scheduled at 4PM local time on a lovely tropical afternoon.
The rugged skyline betrays the island's volcanic origin as we leave the harbor.
As we enter the beautiful deep indigo blue waters of the tropical Indian Ocean, this will be our last sight of land for six days.

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