Let’s Get Enriched: The People of Madagascar, by Damon Ramsey

In Silversea’s “Let’s Get Enriched” series, you don’t have to be onboard to feel your mind expanding into fascinating new territories as expedition and enrichment team members offer short takes on their favorite topics. Tune in as our experts share as much great info about their specialties as they do about the passions that fuel them.

Damon Ramsey, an enrichment lecturer aboard Silversea’s expedition vessels, tells us he is a biologist by trade who serves as a shark catcher in his spare time. Australian-born Ramsay is particularly intrigued by the culture and people of Madagascar, an island which lies across the Mozambique Channel from mainland Africa’s eastern coastline.

Enrichment lecturer Damon Ramsey completed his Biology degree at Charles Darwin University, Northern Territory, and James Cook University at Townsville and Cairns, north Queensland.

For the last decade Damon has worked as a guide and lecturer for various companies and institutes around Australia and the Pacific, including day trips, overnight jungle hikes, rock art tours, documentary film crew, 4WD safaris, coral reef cruises, cycle tours, expedition cruises, wildlife & bird-watching tours, and biology, ecotourism & other study programs.

In this exclusive lecture, recorded especially for Silversea’s guests, Damon Ramsay takes us closer to the people of Madagascar, introducing their customs, their way of life, and their culture.

What’s So Intriguing About Madagascar and its People?

  • Africa may be the island’s closest landmass but Madagascar was originally settled by Austronesians, sailing from what are now Indonesia and Borneo in Southeast Asia. Later, migrants came from East Africa, across the Mozambique Channel. “The result of all this mixing is beautifully exotic looking people today,” Ramsey tells us.
  • On Madagascar, it’s customary for all houses to face west. According to CultureTrip.com, Malagasy belief states that the best sunshine is in the afternoon as the sun starts to set, so all houses should open up facing west. In the traditional building process, the east façade is closed off with no windows or doors. Windows are usually only located in the north, and doors in the west.
  • Madagascar was the penultimate major landmass to be colonized by indigenous people, with the last being New Zealand.
  • Madagascar’s best-known cinematic moments are part of a three-part series of computer-animated movies, produced by DreamWorks. Its other claim to fame was that it inspired scenes in James Bond’s “Casino Royale.” Alas, it’s only one of a handful of countries that appear in Bond films without any real location shooting.
  • Madagascar’s best known crop is vanilla and it’s the largest producer in the world of this very expensive product. Rice is another important crop, as it’s a major staple of the Malagasy diet.
View towards mainland Madagascar from Nosy Hara/ Silversea
  • Keep an eye out for women who paint their faces. In Madagascar, a custom associated with women of the Sakalava tribe involves, according to travel2Madagascar.com, “beautiful patterns or flower designs in white and yellow paint.” It is a custom associated with the women of the Sakalava and Vezo tribes, among others. The paint patterns aren’t completely cosmetic; they also protect the skin from sun damage and mosquito bites.
  • The recently-extinct flightless and thick-legged Elephant Birds, the biggest birds that have ever lived, dwelled in Madagascar some 1,000 years ago. Though now extinct, you can still find the massive subfossilized eggs of these gargantuan birds in some markets today. And they are the focus of a fascinating essay penned by renowned author Paul Theroux when he visited Madagascar on a Silversea World Cruise in 2019. You can read his account and those of other distinguished creatives in the Tale of Tales eBook.