The M79s at Nan Madol |
Nan Madol from above |
Map of ancient Nan Madol |
See any sharks? |
Front view of Nan Madol's main structure. |
Side view of Nan Madol's main structure. |
The path to Nan Madol. |
The channel I had to cross to enter Nan Madol. |
Nan Madol was awesome. We spent hours climbing up, over, and around
the rocks. We even ventured out to the
beach to get a good view of the ocean.
The entire time I kept my eye out for the shark swimming hole, but I was
not able to find it. As we were leaving
Nan Madol, I asked Garrison, our Training Manager (or Training Master as we
like to call him) about the sharks. He
informed me that we only explored a small portion of Nan Madol and that we intentionally
avoided the infamous swimming spot. He
also was able to clarify the reasoning for throwing a rock before jumping in
the water. You are supposed to throw in
a rock, wait for the sharks to surface, and then jump in as the sharks are
going back down. In this way you are neither
catching them unawares nor jumping on top of them. This explanation didn’t make me feel much
better about swimming with the sharks; I don’t think I will be swimming at Nan
Madol any time soon.