The Carabobo Trail Including references to its history, flora, fauna, anecdotes and illustrations by naturalists Bellermann, Appun and Goering By Ernesto O. Boede Wantzelius Translation by John Holden 81 Un tranquilo paraje cerca del lago de Valencia, A halt on the way near Lake Valencia, James Mudie Spence, 1871-1872. 82 Introduction The Carabobo Trail, also known as the Spanish Trail, up in the Coastal Highlands between Puerto Cabello and Valencia, was of vital importance for Spain towards the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th centuries, since it was the main communications route between the central coastal region and the interior of one of its major colonies in the Caribbean. Originally known as the Carabobo Trail, it was jointly ordered built in 1761 by the Spanish Crown and a decree of the Council of Valencia. In 1801, its upgrading began with changes to the route and widening to receive wheeled carts. The San Esteban River Valley was chosen as the new route, and the Trail climbed the Carabobo Mountain to the San Hilario Heights as they were called at the time, to then descend through the Bárbula Heights to the Cabriales River Valley, in all a distance of nine leagues –about 43 kilometers– to Nueva Valencia del Rey. The Spanish engineers and surveyors kept to the paths used since time immemorial by the Indian people to criss-cross the mountains, and later remodeled and enlarged the road until fit to be called a royal way. Its construction was begun from both ends, from the north and from the south, meeting at the San Hilario Heights. Coming from Puerto Cabello, it passed through the Marín Valley to the San Esteban Valley, between the San Esteban River and Mount Las Vigías. Later there would be an alternative route through a pass up Mount Las Vigías known as Portachuelo. The latter was also used by the military to reach Fort Mirador de Solano. Borburata indirectly and Puerto Cabello directly, both of them key ports for the Spaniards, were vitally dependent on this royal trail. It was also silent witness to battles and movement of the troops who used it at the beginning of the 19th Century during the Independence War. The middle of this last century was the golden age of the Trail as far as natural sciences were concerned, since it was visited, described and illustrated by a great variety of naturalists, researchers and explorers from Europe, most of them from Germany, inspired as they were by the masterpiece of Baron Alexander von Humboldt, “Reise in die Äquinoktial-Gegenden des neuen Kontinents” (Journey to the Equinoxial Regions of the New Continent). The San Esteban Valley was like a paradise with its Carabobo Trail and it was not only the interest of the world’s naturalists that were awoken, but also European colonists and traders, several Germans settling in the spectacular Valley. They exported mainly cocoa, coffee and cotton, among many other goods, to the Old Continent through shipping companies established in the tiny port town of Puerto Cabello, and they also imported farm machinery. The Spanish Trail still runs through the extraordinary Valley and the San Esteban Mountains and, to a great extent, the town of the same name owes its very existence and is protected by the figure of the San Esteban National Park, an ancestral territory of the indigenous Arahuaco and Caribe people, whose petroglyphs decorate rocks on the mountainside and even within the town itself. The purpose of this enterprise was to travel the length of the Trail and also to investigate and document what is actually left of it and find the remains of the sites of interest that have stood the test of time as has a large part of the surface, remains of bridges, general stores and inns, different artifacts of the old days, the cobblestones, containing walls and drainage systems. To achieve this, different journeys and field trips were made over the space of several years, based on the bibliographical references of historical data, folklore and the paintings of the naturalists of olden times. It was not always easy to achieve the goals we had set ourselves in the mountains, because we had to contend with the typical dangers of the villages around San Esteban and the shantytown Los Mangos in Bárbula. Interestingly enough, we were not the only ones to have suffered this bitter experience, since in January 1844, the German painter and naturalist Ferdinand Bellermann, on an excursion thereabouts, was held up by two robbers who, to their anger and dismay found only pencils and an eraser when they searched through his pockets – no money! The Carabobo Trail is one of the icons and main attractions of this National Park. An alternative has to be found quickly for consolidating this emblematic landscape as an historic, architectural and ar- 83 cheological heritage, since apart from the scientific importance of the surroundings, with their extraordinary flora and fauna, it must be preserved for conducting scientific research that will unlock its secrets and pleasures for this and future generations. We would like to give special thanks to our invaluable traveling companions and field workers, to the wardens of Inparques, Luis Mendoza and Manuel Amaya, who with their experience, professionalism, spirit, good humor and friendliness made this undertaking possible; to Architect Lisselotte Salom, former Area Coordinator for Inparques, Carabobo State, and to Engineer Luis Barona, former Superintendent of San Esteban National Park, for sensing the importance of our Project and giving their all to coordinate the Institution’s support; to Architect Ullrich Baasch for providing maning sketches of the daily life in the San Esteban of yesterday; to Dr. Francisco Delascio Chitty for his review of the botanical data; to our editor Asdrúbal González, for having contributed his own valuable historical information; and to Hermann and Eckart Boede Wantzelius, for collaborating with the procedures prior to our respective contacts with the editor. Last but no least, I want to thank Henrik Blohm, Richard Römer, Guillermo Valentiner and Editor Carsten Todtmann, without whose help this book would not have been possible. The Carabobo Trail, witness to the history and natural sciences of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries One of the colony’s first ports, Borburata, was founded in 1551, and communicated with the interior of the country via a mule track called the San Jean Trail, which ascended the Borburata River Valley towards Mount El Novillo of the Coastal Mountain Range, then headed downwards towards Vigirima. In 1555 Nueva Valencia del Rey was founded as a necessary replacement for the town of Borburata, which was constantly being attacked by pirates and corsairs, just as the mule trains that used this trail were assailed by wanted criminals. Infamous English corsairs and pirates such as John Hawkins and Francis Drake assaulted the town in May 1567 and April 1568, burning down houses 84 and stealing the royal treasure as revenge against the Spanish governor for not agreeing to buy 200 slaves they had brought from Guinea in Africa. They also dispatched a troop of pirates from their crew along the mountain trail to take Nueva Valencia del Rey. Pirate assaults over the years were commonplace and in 1677 Valencia was sacked and razed by French pirates. The city of Puerto Cabello was founded much later, in 1730, since it was safer and much easier for the berthing of vessels. It thus displaced the port of Borburata, becoming the country’s main port. Around this same date, the Guipuzcoana Company began operations, landing support to the investment of private capital in the commercial activities of the colony. In 1761, the Council of Nueva Valencia del Rey decreed the construction of a road between this city and Puerto Cabello, which was originally the Carabobo Trail, then known as the Old Trail around the middle of the 19th Century and nowadays as the Spanish Trail. Its purpose was to directly connect with the central regions, the plains (Llanos) and even the Andes. To the north, from the coast, it was protected from Las Vigías Heights by the Mirador (Look-Out Post) of Fort Solano, constructed between 1778 and 1799, currently known as El Vigía Mountain and Fort Solano. This fortress, the largest of its kind among others scattered farther below, protected both Puerto Cabello, the mouth of River San Esteban, the aqueduct and the start of the colonial trail to the Marín and San Esteban Valleys, both vital for the port. Along their northern slopes, the impressive heights of the Coastal Mountain Range comprise, progressively, dry forests, rain forests and cloud forests towards La Cumbre (the Summit), sheltering the bed of San Esteban River. The southern slopes, with their heaths and the ravines with gallery forests form the course of the Cabriales River which flows through the city of Valencia. The European naturalists who came to know the Old Trail were impressed by the lengths to which the Spaniards must have gone to forge this mountain road, spending huge amounts of money and overcoming immense obstacles along the way, since they had to blast the overhanging rock that obstructed their planned route. It is not hard to imagine the Spanish craftsmen and engineers opening a way through the mountains and the dense forest, and the surveyors that had to choose the best mountain passes and slopes; the great boulders that were blown apart with gunpowder and used to build the road, the bridges, pave the surfaces and shore up the sides and sharp curves, and the all-important slaves who made this huge endeavor possible; and then, the travelers and traders who came and went on foot, on donkeys, on mules, on horseback, the soldiers and the wounded after the battles who died along the wayside, all of these images appear like silent witnesses to the road. Imagine, for example, on the evening of June 24, 1821, the day of the Battle of Carabobo, the Spaniards, defeated, having to retreat and hurriedly take to the trail, carrying their wounded to safety within Puerto Cabello; the combat and the skirmishes that were fought out under the command of the Republican troops on the way up the Trail at Cumbre Chiquita; the Rifles Battalion that set up the flanking line around Puerto Cabello and the meetings held by Simón Bolívar with his generals at the house of General Bartolomé Salom in San Esteban. On July 12, 1822, the Bravos de Apure Battalion, camped along the Carabobo Trail, substituted the Rifles in their holding of the line. On August 11, 1822, royalist General Francisco Tomás Morales, coming down from the San Hilario Heights with 1,800 soldiers fought the Battle of Sabana de la Guardia at the foot of Mount Bárbula against General José Antonio Páez with his 50 lancers, 50 militia and 300 cattlemen. This Battle is depicted in Pedro Castillo’s mural which is on display in Casa Páez, Valencia, and is but one of the pictures of the Carabobo Trail of the time. In the upper part of the mural we can pick out La Cumbre and the cliff with the inn where Ferdinand Bellermann spent many days and nights in January 1844, and where the German naturalist Karl Ferdinand Appun also lived for several years around the middle of the 19th Century. You can also see the road zigzagging down the Bárbula descent, down to the foot of the mountain. Bolívar and Páez planned the attack on the last bastion of the Spaniards, the November 7, 1823 storming of Puerto Cabello with care, Páez moving down the Trail with 400 foot soldiers and 100 lancers of the Anzoátegui Battalion to finish off a cruel war. (Page 42) During post-Independence times the road was almost abandoned and became known during the rest of the 19th Century as the Old Trail, since the new one, the one that was widened in 1848 as the Aguas Calientes Trail, coming from Puerto Cabello, passed through El Palito to Las Trincheras and as far as Naguanagua, always along the banks of the Aguas Calientes River. Nowadays this is the old Trincheras to El Palito road. Alexander Von Humboldt made reference to this path on February 27, 1800, on his way from Valencia to Puerto Cabello, when he came down the Aguas Calientes route towards the Carabobo coast. But it was in the 19th Century when the Old Trail had its moment of glory, as far as the visits and work of the great European naturalists and researchers in botany, zoology and anthropology were concerned. Notwithstanding the current belief that Humboldt was in San Esteban as he traveled along the Spanish Trail, this in fact never happened, since because of his very tight schedule and need to reach, if possible, the Orinoco River and Casiquiare stream during the dry season, he was only able to travel down the Aguas Calientes stretch and spend just one day in Puerto Cabello. However, he did commission and help with the financing of the trip of Ferdinand Bellermann, the German naturalist and painter, who traveled the length of the San Esteban Valley and the Old Trail in 1842 and 1844, recording the flora, fauna and typical landscapes in his beautiful paintings. Von Humboldt also helped another of the important naturalists and painters, Karl Ferdinand Appun. When news of the country’s bounties arrived overseas, the first wave of Europeans began to arrive in Puerto Cabello, Glöckler, Rühs, Blohm, Behrens, Kolster, Valentiner, Baasch, Römer, Ermen, Brandt, Lührs, Kerdel, Koenecke, Latouche, Starke and Stürup among many others (Page 12). The interesting thing here is that some of them would exert considerable influence over the German naturalists that came later to study the Old Trail, the mountains, the town’s surroundings and the San Esteban Valley. Thanks to its bucolic geography and to the fact that some of these immigrants built their homes, settled in the town, and opened shops during the middle and end of the 19th century in the Colonial urban district of Puerto Cabello, San Esteban became a beauti- 85 ful residential area with gardens that lent a pleasant European tropical nuance. Some of these century-old houses are still inhabited by direct descendants of the German pioneers Hermann Eduard Baasch, who arrived in Puerto Cabello in 1848, and Miguel Alejandro Römer, who came from the Dutch island of Curacao in 1849 and kept close relations with German circles. Their descendants have maintained the traditions of their ancestors and currently own one of the oldest and still active shipping companies, Eduardo Römer C.A., originally founded in 1848 as Baasch & Haeseler, and subsequently changed to Leseur, Römer & Baasch in 1870, and to Baasch & Römer in 1895, the latter mainly a coffee, cocoa and cotton exporting company. Arrival of the European Naturalists The pencil drawing by Ferdinand Bellermann of September 9, 1842, titled “Capilla en San Esteban” (San Esteban Chapel), (Page 25) and located in the Glöckler Residence, represents this époque. It depicts the corridor of the house, a chapel and the clearly emblematic vegetation, the Old Trail down on the right and the Breasts of San Hilario or Hilaria Peaks, known in San Esteban as “Burro sin Cabeza” (The Headless Donkey). The same day he arrived in Puerto Cabello, Bellermann met a German merchant named Glöckler, who asked him to do a painting of his house in San Esteban and while working, the artist submerged himself in the tropical landscape, carried away by its beauty. After 166 years the house is still there and inhabited by Eduardo Römer’s descendants. Bellermann was a guest of Mr. Glöckler for several weeks, during which time the artist became acquainted with the San Esteban Valley and Puerto Cabello. From January 25 to February 1, 1844, Bellermann traveled the Old Trail towards Valencia which he later depicted in his famous paintings. (Page 16) The European explorers Jean Jules Linden and Nicolaus Funk, the former a young Swedish botanist and orchidologist, the latter a German naturalist, traveled the Old Trail from Valencia to Puerto Cabello in 1842 while collecting orchids, classifying plants and drawing details of the landscape. 86 German explorer Karl Moritz, (Page 13) along with Bellermann and Funk, made excursions around San Esteban and its countryside in 1842 and stayed in the Römer Residence. Moritz lived and died as a founding colonist in Colonia Tovar, a town populated by German immigrants and located in the Coastal Mountain Range of Aragua State. When the German shipping merchant Karl Rühs, who lived in Puerto Cabello, visited the German botanist and geologist Hermann Karsten in Europe, the botanist was enthralled by the tales of the San Esteban forest. Between 1848 and 1852, Karsten collected and classified new varieties of quinine trees in these mountains, an important antidote for malaria. Karl Ferdinand Appun, (Page 16) another German painter and botanist, was also the guest of one of the German families living in San Esteban between 1849 and September of 1857, and lived most of this time in the inn and general store at the top of the San Hilario Heights, dividing his five-year stay in these mountains among other local stores and inns along the road such as La Soledad and Los Canales, respectively. But he always preferred the summit of the San Hilario Heights, so full of natural beauties and blessed with a soft and fresh climate, as he used to say. It was Appun who described in detail in his publication “Unter den Tropen” (Under the Tropics) the Old Trail and the forest, its inhabitants, plants and wild animals. He was also a hunter and taxidermist who sent treated skins to European museums, ultimately the main task given to him. August Fendler, another German botanist, also traveled the Old Trail between 1856 and 1858 and found the spectacular setting of La Soledad, which house and location were described by Appun. He was amazed by the stunning nature, and made important graphic paintings of the place. Anton Goering, (Page 16) German painter and ornithologist, came from Europe to Puerto Cabello in 1867, with a stopover in the country’s eastern region, and was hosted for long periods in 1869 by the shipping merchant Luis Federico Blohm in his large two-story residence, and from the lookout point of the Blohm Residence known as the La Torre del Pintor Ornitólogo or La Torre Zoológica del Pintor (Page 15) he sent his collections to England. He would talk emotionally of his deepest gratitude to Mrs. and Mr. Blohm and the warmest of welcomes they would give him, as well as their interest in art and nature, all of which was expressed in their sincere support for his work. The big old house no longer exists, but the location still harbors the new offices and parking lot of the Blohm Company. On the other hand, Goering was in San Esteban for a few weeks and stayed at the Römer Residence owned by the shipping merchant Miguel Alejandro Römer, using it as his base for his hiking trips to the mountains where he drew his beautiful paintings. Special consideration should be given to the presence in San Esteban of the well-known European geographer Wilhelm Sievers at the end of the 19th century. Sievers landed in La Guaira after the Hamburg Geographical Society entrusted him with the task of carrying out a geological survey of the Venezuelan Andes Mountain Range. Sievers stayed in Venezuela twelve months, devoted a few days to Puerto Cabello’s coastal region, and spent the Christmas of 1885 at the Baasch Residence in the idyllic San Esteban, as he referred to the San Esteban Valley. Henri Pittier, a distinguished Swiss botanist and father of one of Venezuela’s first national parks which is named after him, came from the United States to Venezuela for the first time in 1913 and carried out extensive herborization in Puerto Cabello’s southern forest. Finally, other famous biographers of more recent periods of the 20th century also visited San Esteban and its Colonial trail, including Alfredo Jahn, Eduardo Röhl, Francisco Antonio Rízquez and Francisco Tamayo. Journeys, tales and current state of the Carabobo Trail Anselme Michel de Gisors, Sergeant Major of the regiment from Guadalupe, came to Puerto Cabello at the height of the French Revolution in 1793, on board the La Ferme, the French King’s ship. The ship was berthed in the port for a year, during which time Gisors carried out in-depth studies on the city, its forts, buildings, residents, climate, flora and fauna, making his way along the Carabobo Trail and the areas surrounding the San Esteban River. His of great merit lay for in having described and published the first detailed observations of this region. According to Gisors, the trail began in Puerto Cabello west-bound, veered toward the south between Mount Las Vigías with its Mirador de Solano and the San Esteban River, and entered the Marín Valley. These lands were wooded hillsides, broad grazing lands, river meadows and lakes in low areas. The real trail then entered the green and fresh San Esteban Valley. Nowadays this first section of the trail no longer exists, taken over by the Sorpresa-Muelles expressway and the townships of Cueva del Lobo, El Fortín and the San Esteban housing development in the turn toward the Marín Valley on one side of Mount El Vigía, respectively. Part of the San Esteban River in this section was channeled, reducing its mouth to a simple outlet for seuvage. On the contrary, the surrounding areas still harbor a wooded area with royal palms Roystonea oleraceae, which are probably vestiges of the old river meadows that used to flood when the river levels rose. On March 1, 1800, when Humboldt was coming back from Puerto Cabello to Bárbula, on his way to the Aguas Calientes trail, he was enthralled by the valleys and tall mountains of the Coastal Mountain Range he could see to the south, writing in his traveling journal: “…mountains covered with vegetation and topped with peaks make up the backdrop of the scenery (he refers to the Hilaria Peak with its rugged crests, slopes and crags, the Hilario Breasts or Headless Donkey), whose outline would lead one to think is trapene rock. Close to the coast everything is exposed, white, powerfully illuminated, while the curtain of mountains is covered with trees with thick foliage that envelop the dark rocky lands with their vast shadows. When we turn away from Puerto Cabello to the Valles de Aragua, we stop once again in the Bárbula Estate through which the new Valencia trail is being routed.” This is how he described the Carabobo Trail which he observed from its southern slope at the foot of Mount Bárbula and which wound up the hill. This trail was fairly new for its time; it had been built close to 39 years ago and had been continually remodeled and enlarged to 87 make it accessible to wheeled traffic. In fact, seven years later the construction of the great lancet stone bridge Paso Hondo began over the San Esteban River on its northern slope, and nine years later its cobbled, paving and drainage was finished. Gisor’s narratives at the end of the 18th century were interesting because they described the traffic along the colonial trail, which were poorly known: “Mule caravans go to Puerto Cabello twice a year, bringing costly merchandise and gold and silver ingots from Popayán, Santa Fe (in Colombia’s Southern Andean region) and other places. Caravans may comprise from 80 to 100 mules in a row, each carrying two small chests” (merchandise to be loaded in Puerto Cabello, bound for Spain). Livestock and working animals were also herded from the plains and driven along this mountain trail to be loaded onto ships: “Every year 3,000 horses, 9,000 mules and 8,000 oxen are exported from the Mainland to the West Indies”. Arriero cargando los burros, Loading donkeys Martín Tovar y Tovar, 1862. 88 Humboldt reported that 10,000 mules were transported every year along the Carabobo Trail to Puerto Cabello to be exported, as well as cotton, grown on the Naguanagua and Bárbula Estates. Bellermann and Appun also reported on the lesser trade still taking place along the trail in the mid 19th century. Herds of work mules and donkeys and oxen pulled wagons frequently traveled from the plains to the coast using this trail. The large herds of cows, young bulls and sometimes grown bulls, shockingly thin from the long voyage from the plains to the coast, were allowed to come down from Valencia only twice a week on determined days due to the hazard they posed to those traveling this narrow trail. These “cattle farmers”, as the landowners were called, were responsible for moving the cattle and traveled the narrow forest trail with help from their foremen, farm workers and working animals. Another key activity was performed by the Postmen (“Los Correos”), who carried important dispatches from Puerto Cabello to Valencia every day. Lastly, there were “Los Paleros” (lit. the “Pole Men”), the name given to those who preferred to use the Old Trail instead of the new one, the Trincheras trail because it was shorter and more direct. Los Paleros were Indians and Mulattos from towns close to Valencia and the shores of Lake Valencia who transported chickens, parrots, monkeys, rope made from the algave plant Fourcroya humboldtiana and large baskets filled with pottery, clay plates, eggs and white cheese sold in Puerto Cabello, all tied to the long rods carried between two people. Wild animals teemed. Gisor’s narratives tell of how the wild or renegade cattle were tied up and forcefully tamed: “…a man trained in this task throws a lasso from twenty paces away with a sliding knot made with ox skin around the horns and immediately ties the other end to a tree. The ox comes and goes and finally hamstrings itself in such a way that it cannot move any more. They let the oxen stay tied for at least six days without any food so as to tame them. It is nevertheless necessary to keep an eye on them and be ready for any emergency because tigers (jaguars, Panthera onca) grab any opportunity to seize their prey. Lions (pumas, Puma concolor), do the most damage, leopards (ocelots, Leopardus pardalis), and specially tigers, which do not think twice about attacking a caravan if they realize it is not well guarded… herds of deer (white tale deer, Odocoileus virginianus, are common in the surrounding valleys and mountains), tapir, Tapirus terrestris, can always be hunted in pairs, but they are hard to chase up the mountain. Herds of Cercopitecos monkeys (capuchin monkeys, Cebus olivaceus) and land turtles abound (tortoise, Geochelone carbonaria, which people pick up in great quantities when the brush catches fire). “Harpy eagles, Harpia harpyja, who swoop down to hunt monkeys, sloths, Bradypus variegates, young goats and agoutis, Dasyprocta leporina, and king vultures, Sarcoramphus papa, fly with the black vultures, Coragyps atratus, eating carrion.” We now know, thanks to these tales, of the enormous numbers of crocodiles that lived in the flood streams and lakes of the Esteban River, as well as the coastal lagoons of Puerto Cabello. Gisors would go on thus: “In the sweet water lakes around Puerto Cabello there are crocodiles, (american crocodile Crocodylus acutus), of an enormous size. They are usually between 12 and 20 ft. long (supposing these to be English feet (30.48 cm) they must have been between 3.7 and 6.1 meters). Around the lakes where these amphibians live there is always a strong smell of musk.” Bellermann in this respect notes in his travel log for July 21, 1842: “I set out at 6 in the morning intent on drawing a picture of the beautiful view of the city (Puerto Cabello); it is in a way divided into three parts and between them there are almost empty spaces without constructions of any kind. When I reached the first of these intervening spaces, I saw a crowd of people on the beach busy cutting the head off an 8 ft. long (2.4 m) crocodile, that they’d hunted it in the streets of the town at least that’s what they were saying.” There were also sloths, howler monkeys Alouatta seniculus, armadillos Dasypus novemcinctus, pacas Agouti paca, aguatis and foxes Cerdocyon thous, that were so common that you could see them all along the royal road and populated areas of the valley, just as the German naturalists would later describe them. On to the village of San Esteban Bellermann’s impressions, recorded on January 25, 1844, as he bid farewell to Puerto Cabello en route to Valencia along the summit road, going into the San Esteban valley through the Marín valley, bear witness to the surrounding beauty. “I rode briskly out of the city, the countryside alight with the morning sun as the wonderful San Esteban valley stretched out before me, crowned by the Valencia Mountains and Hilaria’s Breasts, my goal for that day. The bucare trees (Erythrina spp.) were flowering in the valley, their tops like red flames; it was all like a floral display, convolvulus and vines shone white and blue in stark contrast.” Appun, on the other hand, went from Puerto Cabello to the San Esteban valley, not by the Carabobo Trail, but rather by skirting the eastern side of the El Vigía Mountain, along the path known as the Portachuelo pass. He made a short cut towards the west by the shores of the San Esteban Mountain, and then came down into the Marín valley. The Portachuelo trail originally went by the aqueduct and the water tank, then between two cemeteries, the Catholic one on the left, now destroyed and gone, and the Protestant one on the right, now known as the German Cemetery, rebuilt, refurbished and boasting a statue of Humboldt at its entrance. This route was also used originally to climb El Vigía Mountain to Fort Solano, and is now the main road that leads to the town of San Esteban. In the writings of Appun we read of the characteristics of the road at that time: “From up here at El Portachuelo, there is a wonderful view of all the houses of Puerto Cabello. The sea breeze can only enter the San Esteban valley through this pass between the mountains. To the left the trail now descends along a slope, while to the right, it drops down to the plain, offering a beautiful view over the low brush away to the light green-colored fields of sugar cane (Saccharum officinarum) next to Paso Real (the Carabobo Trail). Very soon one arrives on the plain where the road winds along the foot of the mountains.” Nowadays the national highway passes through the same opening in the mountain and descends the same slope of the old trail, known 89 as the Pitiguaos’ descent, passing the township of Valle Verde lower down, then to the left past the ruins of an old sugar cane plant, which was already collapsing as the time of Appun, then through the Valles of San Esteban housing development, to follow the beautiful wooded landscapes with a small mine hidden away, its lime oven to the left, close to the mountain, until reaching the ruins of the once glorious San Esteban Hacienda. Let us compare this with the texts of Appun: “The road passes in front of the cocoa hacienda buildings and after a brief tour, the valley of San Esteban opens with all its charm before the eyes of the traveler. Beautifully shaped mountains rise on each sides, among which the most impressive are the high walls of rock shaped into the Headless Donkey which gleam in the distance, and the cerrated peaks of the San Hilario Heights. The San Esteban River is born in these mountains and it twists and turns all the way along the valley.” Coming now into the village, on the right we find La Casona, as it is popularly called, constructed in 1882, Villa Vincencio, reconstructed and now transformed into the Ecomuseum of San Esteban, then the houses of the European immigrants. Here follow the accounts of Appun: “…the country homes of the foreigners who live in Puerto Cabello. Amid the exuberant and gigantic vegetation with its great shiny leaves, appear the mud huts of the indigenous people with their palm thatch roofs.” The construction of this section of the present national highway and of the old Carabobo Trail from Puerto Cabello to the town of San Esteban, was opened to tenders in 1857, modernizing it as a wheeled vehicle route, paved partly with coconut shells Cocos nucifera. The trip by horse, mule or quitrín, a horse-drawn cart (Page 43), took about two hours. On entering the town, the national highway is now called Royal Street and passes through the whole length of the Colonial part of the town. Among other old houses of the European immigrants we also find on the right Villa Friedenau known since 1885 as Casa Brandt, when Federico Brandt acquired it from Chacho Capriles, formerly belonging to Oscar Baasch. At the next curve on the left, we find the 90 house of Miguel Alejandro Römer, Casa Römer, owned by the family and still occupied by them since 1865. There are notary records of the house dating back to 1833. In the gardens of the house there are the ruins of an old general store dating back to the times of the colonial road. Anton Goering stayed here for a few weeks: “Once again I had the chance to experience the wonderful surroundings of San Esteban and at the same time enjoy the most generous help and hospitality and the view of family life in the house of Herr Römer, to whom I owe my most sincere thanks, and also to Mr Leseur and Mr Ermen. I would also like to thank Messrs. Gruner, Schieremberg, Reute, Becker, Baasch, Röhl, Valentiner, Gathmann, Bräuer, Lüdert, Nagel and other countrymen.” Herr Römer’s daughters also had their comments to make about their guest: “…Herr Goering’s visit with his vast experience and amusing stories was very entertaining; he collected plants and animals, dead and alive, among the latter a tortoise and several frogs (Bufo sp.), and he arranged some planks of wood to stop them escaping from his room.” Goering himself would describe his stay as follows: “…as I remember having observed in the town of San Esteban, just one hour away from Puerto Cabello Bay, where the roaring of those monkeys (howlers) hidden high up in the nearby mountains, often joined their shrieks with the songs of a far off homeland played on the pianos in those peaceful country houses. The drawn-out roars of the howler monkeys sound terrifying at dusk, like the distant thunder of a storm; nature was sending me a message that it could feel a storm coming.” Next among the neighboring houses is Casa Baasch owned, since 1872, by Hermann Eduard Baasch and subsequently by his son Oscar, who still resides there with his descendents, the Hugo-Baasch brothers. It is interesting and important to note the presence of an ancient medlar tree (níspero Manilkara zapota), which is referred to ever since the beginning of the 19th Century in old documents of the house, including its measurements. Its trunk is an impressive 5.10 m in circumference and 1.62 m in diameter, still standing strong and bearing fruit as sweet as honey, very popular by the birds of the area (Page 52). The exact date of the house’s construction is not known, but a good reference is an 1838 coin found on the land (Page 22). It is reported that it was sold in a ruinous state to the Molina-Permañer family in 1845, rebuilt it and later sold it to the Baasch. It was in this house that the geographer Wilhelm Sievers spent an unforgettable Christmas in 1885. Next door is the second Casa Römer, acquired by the family in 1913, where the descendents of Eduardo and Constanza Römer, who spent most of the 20th Century there, still live. From 1876 on it was known as Casa Sievers, prior to which, in 1841, it was called Casa Glöckler, and the oldest reference is to 1832 when it belonged to Eugenia González. It was drawn by Bellermann on September 9, 1842, entitled “Chapel at San Esteban” (Page 25), and it is important to emphasize that he attributed much relevance to the reproduction of characteristic traits of the vegetation and the countryside. This painting was an example of this. Behind the house can be seen a group of trees, casually distributed and representative of the local flora. There are, according to botanist Hermann Karsten: coconut Cocos nucifera, mamme-apple (mamey), Mammea americana, avocado Persea americana and pomegranate Punica granatum, while the vegetation characterizes the area’s climate, the geographical site is determined in the distance by the silhouette of the Headless Donkey. Bellermann also noted down his anecdotes in Mr. Glöckler´s house: “There were four ladies in the house, Madame Rühs, Madame Glöckler and the two daughters of the Lady of the house, Miss Lutschy and Johanna Todt. Mr. Glöckler and Mr. Rühs returned at nightfall, slept outdoors and rode on the next day to Puerto Cabello, two hours away.” Bellermann’s diary also tells of the uproar caused around the village by the appearance of a lion or puma accompanied by its cub, which stole chickens, scaring everyone by going into people’s houses while they were sleeping. Another time he noted, while painting a coffee plantation, the noise caused by a large black snake that made all the dry leaves rustle as it hunted small birds. His stories would continue: “Another interesting species of the animal kingdom is the wild dog. They roam around here, living by hunting and frequently tricking the hunters” (he was probably referring to the bush dog or bush badger Speothos venaticus, now the rarest wild canine in the country and at the same time the most difficult to observe. Within the Coastal Mountain Range it has been seen only in the San Esteban National Park). Not much has changed in these old mansions of the Römer and Baasch families since those days an in the gardens and land abutting the mountains the birdlife and wild animals still abound. This is especially so in the morning and early evening, as they move back and forth from their roosts: a pair of yellow-headed parrots Amazona ochrocephala, orange-winged parrots A. amazonica, chestnut-fronted macaw Ara severa and the green-rumped parrotlets Forpus passerinus, chattering away in the trees, and, flying high above back to the mountains, the flocks of blue-headed pionus Pionus menstruus. At the foot of the mountain, in a dead tree trunk, a pair of crimsoncrested woodpeckers Campephilus melanoleucos open out a hole for their future nest with a continuous drumming. There are nights when you can hear the whistling ducks Dendrocygna autumnalis flying high above the valley, which at times even have their chicks in the holes of the royal palms. Several different species come to gorge on the fruit of the ancient medlar tree, the more colorful among them being the brilliant silver-beaked tanager Ramphocelus carbo, troupial Icterus icterus and the crafty crested oropendola Psarocolius decumanus, with their acrobatic contortions and audible ringing cries. Sometimes snakes like the coral Micrurus isozonus or more often a lance-head mapanare - Bothrops spp. hide under a piece of pottery or an earthenware jug, or maybe a yellow-tailed cribo Drymarchon corais corais, a tigra Spilotes pullatus slithering quickly away up towards the mountain or maybe a boa constrictor. They are bolder in the summer, in the dry season, when they come down from the nearby woods on the lookout for mangos Mangifera indica and water; an unsociable red brocket deer Mazama americana or perhaps a white tailed deer, even a small group of capuchin monkeys is to be seen, a spectacled caiman Caiman crocodilus from a nearby river hides in the pond of an abandoned allotment. Bellermann had already referred to the caimans in the San Esteban River, once when he 91 was on a river excursion and saw what he called small 2-foot (60 cms.) gators, and Appun, when bathing in its refreshing waters, saw how these “gators” approached him without causing him any harm at all. The roars that so impressed Appun and Goering of the howler monkeys are still to be heard up in the mountains, and in the dead scythed brush on the land around the houses, the scandalous squawking of the (rufous-vented chachalaca - Ortalis ruficauda) gives a regular wake-up call. Then, of course, patrolling the chicken hutches at night, up to no good, is the occasional possum Didelphys marsupiales, fox, ocelot and jaguarundi Herpailurus yagouaroundi. As we continue down Calle Real, we cross a small bridge over the Contreras Stream. On our left are the rebuilt ruins of Casa Salom, which used to belong to General Bartolomé Salom, now turned into the Salom Museum where Simón Bolívar once stayed in November 1823. The house was given to General Salom in return for his military services and back pay due to him. Another one of the old German mansions completely abandoned and in ruins, that did not, unfortunately stand the test of time and where Appun probably once stayed, was Casa Ermen, which came to be known as Casa Vollbracht later on in the 20th Century. It was also on the left side of Calle Real but closer to the village, further down, after Casa Salom, but why don’t we let our fantasies fly by listening to naturalist Appun’s own description: “Filled with the deepest personal satisfaction upon contemplating the wonderful scenery, I stayed in the country home lent to me so kindly for the length of my stay in this paradise by one of the most important traders of Puerto Cabello. Everything there was interesting and new: the image of the impressive mountains, the graceful vegetation, the strange animal world and the dark-skinned people with their characteristic gestures and weird language. When I went into the dining room, shortly before dawn, and looked outside, the first thing I saw was that colossal mountain range looming in the distance. The fauna awakes! Strident cackling of wild turkeys emerges from the dense undergrowth; flocks of green parrots fly chattering off their nests; a drumlike roaring of the howler monkeys warns of approaching rain and distant rasping cries of black curassows (Crax alector) descend from 92 the mountains” (he was actually referring to the yellow-knobbed curassow Crax daubentoni). You carry on ahead, passing in front of the Catholic Church, rebuilt from its own ruins in 1801, surrounded by small multi-colored houses with the typical fronts of the Guzmán Blanco era. Some of them still have their same poinciana hedges Caesalpinia pulcherrima, a smallish shrub with lots of branches of bright red, orange or yellow blooms that give them a Caribbean feel. Vehicle traffic on Calle Real ends at a roundabout and from then on you have to proceed on foot over the old surface of the Spanish trail. The cobbles and containing walls of olden days can be seen again as you come across a rock with petroglyphs, the Indians’ Stone (Page 24), sketched and precisely documented in the tales of naturalists Karsten and Appun. Bellermann also visited these Indian hieroglyphs embedded in the wall of rock with Mr. Rühs, describing them as lunar phases, crosses, boats, faces and other designs crudely carved into the Stone. The Arahuacos (family of the Caquetíos tribe) lived approximately between the years 200 and 1600 of our era, around Lake Valencia and along the central Venezuelan coast, specifically in the valleys of the Rivers Borburata, San Esteban and Goaigoaza and in the Caribbean Antilles. They were forever hunted, attacked and enslaved by the Carib Indians and later by the Spanish conquistadors, until finally they had to move away westwards. They carved the rock with quartz, rubbing and chipping away, giving form to their characteristic ideographic writing known as petroglyphs. The final traces of the Arahuacos in the San Esteban valley, around the middle of the 19th Century, were also reported by Appun, when the owners of the last general stores remaining along the Colonial trail were by descendants of the Arahuacos, by then mixed with the bloodlines of the African slaves. From the Indians’ Stone onward, according to Appun, the Old Trail began, as he explained: “My walk through the village took me southwards towards the high mountains; the road winds along between the attractive country houses, some of them perched on small hills; this is the beginning of the “Old Trail”, built by the Spaniards, which leads from Puerto Cabello to New Valencia across the tall mountains through the pass at the San Hilario Summit, and just as with all the other great constructions made by the Spanish, they barely remain intact. My walk takes me, a quarter of an hour later, to the Indians’ Stone.” The petroglyphs, well maintained and cared for by the community of San Esteban, are now within the perimeter of the village and close to the first dam or water source for Puerto Cabello, built halfway through the 20th Century but already in disuse. In fact, the old cement aqueduct, known in San Esteban as El Arrasante (the Sweeper) follows the mountain slope at the side of the road all along this particular stretch of the trail. So on you go along the old cobbled way, the river always to your right down below, later joining the dirt road that also follows the original route as far as the Campanero Rangers’ Post at the entrance to the San Esteban National Park. These days the road is called the Spanish Trail and it starts here. The Municipal Aqueduct is also here on this land, where it picks up water from the San Esteban River from another dam, built at the end of the 20th Century. The Bucaral and Campanero Haciendas We leave the Spanish Trail for a moment to cross the river along one side of the dam and towards the other shore on the western side and take the old road through the coffee and cocoa plantations Bucaral and Campanero, where both Appun and Goering were amazed by the superb landscape, the farm buildings and by a curious bird. Hereabouts you can hear the typical song of the bearded bellbird Procnias averano, (Page 26) a small and very secretive bird, native to these mountains. It gives its name campanero to this hacienda and its powerful song is like a bell or, as the naturalists used to say, like a blacksmith’s hammer on an anvil. Goering and Appun had this to say about their visits to these haciendas: “After an hour you come to the last homestead of San Esteban, called Campanero, which is right on the road; behind, in the distance, flows the San Esteban River. The River runs between two of the hacienda’s houses. Campanero is in a beautiful spot, amid high mountains from which the river flows swiftly between tall boulders that fill its bed. The Campanero coffee hacienda is half a league (about 2 km) from the buildings and has more or less 30,000 coffee plants. If well looked after, a coffee hacienda is a beautiful sight indeed.” This road to Bucaral and Campanero heads south within the mountains; it was a three meter wide track for carts and was used exclusively by the haciendas, and is now a simple narrow path. Halfway along, there are the remains of the old house of the hacienda that so impressed the naturalists, but it is now in ruins and all that remains are its stone foundations and scattered pieces of tile and brick. Shortly afterwards we reach a hut that is still inhabited, Las Quíguas, the only remaining construction of the old hacienda, with its rudimentary production system (Page 26). Around it can be seen the old yards that are used to dry the coffee and the cocoa and to the right, 50 m from the road, are the scattered remains of the old watermill with its race and respective tanks. The powerful singing of the bell birds continues to impress the traveler and keep him company. In these woods there are still coffee bushes Coffea sp., cocoa Theobroma sp. and native tangerines Citrus reticulata. We searched unsuccessfully for the old sarrapia trees Dipteryx punctata, which, according to Brother Jesús Hoyos, distinguished botanist of the La Salle Natural Sciences Society, were brought by Appun from his expedition through Bolivar State and planted in this hacienda. This tree comes from Guayana and the Amazon regions of southern Venezuela and northern Brazil; it is a very valuable export, since the extract from its seeds, cumarine, was and is still used to perfume rape, tobacco leaves Nicotiana tabacum for snuff and cigarettes, soaps, perfumes, cosmetics, liquor and bakery products. The start of the Carabobo Trail We returned to the Park Rangers’ Post to set off again up the royal road, quite flat at the beginning, the river always down to our right and the slopes of the Headless Donkey to the southwest. At this point it is wide and easy to walk along, but as one starts to climb it becomes a narrow track that has been cut out of the rock, looking for 93 its cobbles and curbs one can see that originally it was 3.5 m. wide. You pass several creeks and can observe the earth movement and containing walls of the little bridges, which were then constructed with wooden logs placed over pillars and the edges of the river bed and the open spaces filled with compressed straw and mud. There must have been a total of six, without counting the large arched humpback bridge at Paso Hondo. At one of the first creeks leading down to the river you reach an old ford across the river with its pond called El Paují, depicted by Goering in his painting “A ford in the San Esteban River, Puerto Cabello” (Page 29). On the sides of the road you can occasionally spot a strange tree called the rose of the jungle Brownea grandiceps, about four meters tall with a thin trunk and lots of branches, long hanging leaves which look very pale when they are young but later take on a dark green color, their most curious aspect being their spectacular 10 cm-diameter flower-balls, which spring directly from the trunk or from the thicker branches. The road continues upward, narrow and winding, just as was observed and described by Goering in his letter “Anton Goering’s Excursion from Puerto Cabello to Lake Valencia”, translated and published in 1934 by Eduardo Röhl in a bulletin of the Venezuelan Natural Sciences Society: “The road is no easier to transit on horseback, the climb begins slowly here and there, the road gets narrower as it goes over a hill, presses close to the vertical cliff and way below the foaming river rushes.” Some minutes later you reach Chiquita Heights off to your right, now covered over by the jungle, but where there used to be a hut and one of the main general stores and inns of the époque, at about 200 m above sea level. This place was also described by Appun: “Then you arrive by an endless series of twists and turns, steeper and steeper, at a pleasant village called Chiquita Heights, where an open square surrounded by banana trees (Musa spp.) and papayas (Carica papaya), and the charred beams of an old hut with collapsed walls are signs that there was once a human dwelling there.” Here we unearthed a fragment of a multi-colored 19th Century European plate, which strangely had the same characteristics and design as those found at the other old store El Guayabo, as we will see 94 later, further up the mountain. There was a skirmish here, the Chiquita Heights Battle (Page 27), during the War of Independence, when the royalists defeated the patriots. One hour has elapsed since we left the Campanero Park Rangers’ Post. The Paso Hondo Bridge, La Soledad and El Guayabo general store Now we are walking up a quite steep and windy slope with many cobbled stretches, to then continue for about an hour on a more even keel. The road surface is quite well preserved hereabouts, built into the side of the cliff, about 3.5 m. wide on average, with lots of containing walls of up to two meters in height. Then you arrive at Paso Hondo, with its Paso Hondo Bridge or Spanish Bridge or Ogive Bridge, at 390 m. above sea level, described thus by Appun: “…further below, on the right side of the road, built on enormous pillars, there is a tall strongly-constructed stone bridge. It dates back to the days of the Spaniards who built it and which, just like everything else on the mountain trail, has been abandoned to its fate.” It can still be seen to this day, below the trail on the right-hand side and covered with undergrowth. If, on the other hand, you continue straight ahead along the narrow path, you reach a small brook by the side of the mountain where there were the ruins, according to Appun, of another shack and store which were originally the hamlet of Paso Hondo, and where the only visible remains are two stone lime ovens. It was here where, around the beginning of the 19th Century, the workers who were commissioned to build the great bridge were lodged. The ovens were used to heat, dry and preserve the lime which was an essential element for preparing the mortar or amalgam that made up the conglomerate of lime, water and sand needed to set the bricks and stones of the construction. This pass and the river crossing between the sides of the mountain where they decided to construct the bridge on that ideal spot, has always been known as Paso Hondo. The bridge was built between the years 1807 and 1808 but could never be completely finished because Spain would not guarantee the financing for the enterprise, mainly because of the French Revolution and the beginning of the War of Independence in Venezuela. Today, standing on the parapet of the bridge, we can appreciate the difference in height, and in the middle a brick wall which is none other than the vertical line of the bullet-shaped arch which stands out on top by almost two meters. This means that the road surface had still to be filled in. All the bricks for the bridge were hauled up on the backs of mules from the city of Valencia. The first structure to be built over the narrow bed of the river, resting on twin granite rocks, was its Gothic arch or ogive. A carpenter would have prepared the mold with planks that were then filled in with the mortar mix. Then from opposite sides, the columns were built using earth and rock inclines, reinforced outside with containing walls of brick and stone. The bridge is forty meters long and seven wide, and the height of the ogive above the river is approximately fourteen meters. Appun related that there was a rudimentary and poorly-built bridge above Paso Hondo, with a stone base and made of wooden beams, mistakenly believing that the trail had been diverted over this small bridge, but we now know that this was originally the sixth and last bridge on the Carabobo Trail. The problem with this bridge was that every time the river flooded during the rainy season, its beams were washed away with the current and it was semidestroyed, making it impossible to pass. This is why the magnificent ogive bridge was subsequently constructed. Scant remains of one of the pillars of the little makeshift bridge are still to be seen 150m up the road from Paso Hondo. The trail leaves the river here, along a sharp uphill curve to the southwest, quite wide and still bearing traces of its original cobbled surface. Forty minutes later, now at 500 meters above sea level, you reach a well-defined plain, reforested mainly with palm trees that do not leave much room to see the extraordinary panoramas described by the naturalists. This place, now known as El Palmar, was then called La Soledad, described by Appun as a one-house hamlet, and it was his home and base camp for a long time; he studied there, painted and collected and stuffed his wildlife samples. Stone foundations of the hut still remain. We looked around and found some shards of pottery, huge nails and iron hooks, charred wood, bits of knives, ma- chetes or sabers, a one-cent coin dated 1843, all of them witness to the fact that the place was inhabited years ago (Page 28). Appun also told of his hike along the trail from Paso Hondo to La Soledad: “…the trail gets steeper and steeper; the enormous mountainous masses arise around you more and more daringly towards the heavens. The wide road is so steep that it was paved in long stretches so that heavy rains would not completely destroy it. Thick jungle lines the trail. Then you come upon a more open area, quite flat, where there are some half-burned beams of an old house. The place is called “La Soledad” and offers a spectacular view of the rocky heights of the surrounding mountains.” This part of the trail is so beautiful that Goering also enthusiastically described it: “From here on the climb gets steeper and the undergrowth is more and more exuberant as we get closer to the Summit. We find an Ylang-Ylang or Milk Tree and when my guide slashes it with his machete a gusher of milk flows out, enough to quickly half-fill an empty wine bottle” (popular known as milk from the cow tree Brosimun utile this is in fact its white-colored sap, quite drinkable, rich in water, albumin, vegetable wax, calcium salts, magnesium, phosphates, gum and sugar). The considerable distance between this spot and the river allows a silence to reign over the mountain, broken by the roaring of a family of howler monkeys a roadside hawk Buteo magnirostris flying low through the trees. In this stretch we saw another lancehead (mapanare - Bothrops venezuelensis), dozing on a rock and a smaller one shedding its skin, draped over a bush; and heard the speedy and noisy fleeing of a yellow-tailed hunter and a parrot snake Coluber carinatus. We spotted some low-flying smaller birds, flocks of scarlet-fronted parakeets Aratinga wagleri flying very noisily, angrily almost, above the treetops, a swooping white-tipped dove Leptotila verreauxi escaping into the distance and a rufousnecked wood rail Aramides axillaris crossing the trail just ahead of us. We also saw the holes in the roadside cliffs where an armadillo had been scrabbling at dawn in search of the larvae of different 95 types of beetles. Goering had this to say about the animals he spied on this section of the trail: “The animal life does not seem to be in accordance with the rich vegetation, since it gradually abandons the traveler. One would walk for considerable distances without spotting a single bird, just from time to time hearing the sharp call of the grey tinamou or mountain hen (blue hen, Tinamus tao), or the whisper of the flight of some small bird. We killed several snakes…Which was somehow strange after one has visited the museums in Europe, where an infinite number of animals are on display. On the other hand, in different circumstances, if one was in a stream at first light, a wide variety of fauna would appear, or, for instance, when dark clouds shrouded the forest and lightning struck and thunder roared, then you could hear the sinister growling of the howler monkeys and other animals, harbingers of the approaching storm.” Appun, however, who lived here in La Soledad for a longer time, tells of his encounters with larger animals: “…just as before, I continued to spend my nights at La Soledad. As well as my firearms, I took my guide’s dog, big, black and fearsome, as protection against possible visits from jaguars or pumas, which I attempted to scare off with a big fire that I would light at the entrance to the hut. From the dense amates (higuerote - Ficus spp.) and Spanish cedar (Cedrela odorata) would rise the loud cries of the red-ruffed fruit crow (Pyroderus scutatus), a black bird with a red breast which can only be spotted by the experienced eye amongst the thick foliage, and not too far away, perched with an aloof air on the long dry branches of a golden trumpet tree (araguaney - Tabebuia chrysantha) is the black and grey-winged harpy, the fiercest beast among all the South American eagles” (the harpy eagle (Page 30), whose body measures almost one meter in height, is one of the biggest raptors in the world, but has now almost disappeared from this mountain range). From here on the trail becomes steeper still and more difficult. The great sandy walls and rocks through which the royal road wound can still be seen. On the right-hand side, every so often, you can observe cuttings in the slopes which were the old drainage 96 channels of the road’s surface, which at this point in time are occasionally up to two meters above the level of the trail, showing how erosion has worn down the trail. With difficulty one stumbles over cliffs, landslides and huge fallen trees, all heavily eroded and washed away by the rain. At this stage the original trail, between 550 m and 800 m above sea level, is all but destroyed and lost. At times one has to open up a path with a machete, trying to keep one’s bearings. In the white sandy soil of a recent landslide we see the prints of a tapir, a corpulent animal that has wisely steered clear of human beings with its very shy, nocturnal habits, always hiding in the dense forest undergrowth, keeping to the high ground. The Coastal Mountain Range is one of the last refuges of the tapir. A flock of small groove billed toucanet Aulacorhynchus sulcatus flies by, and a family of wood-quail Odontophorus columbianus, crouching and hidden silently in a depression on the edge of the cliff, flies hurriedly away at the very last moment as one gets close to them. Since the mossy surface was quite thick at this height, covered with decomposing leaves and trunks, we spotted the tracks left over a longish distance by a group of wild hogs or collared peccary Tayassu tajacu, which leave the soil upturned as they scavenge for seeds, roots and larvae, and once again the holes and soil uprooted by armadillos. Below the great pivijays Ficus pallida lay strewn theyr fig-like roundish fruit, bitten into or half-eaten by squirrels Sciurus spp., monkeys or peccaries. We also pass close to the highest trees in the forest, the giant “cucharón” or “niño “Gyranthera caribensis, with its immense wall-like vertical roots from which the country folk cut out chunks to make their bowls and utensils. After three more hours of hard climbing we reach a small esplanade at 900 m above sea level which was clearly used as a resting spot for the travelers of yore. At this height tree ferns Cyathea spp. abound and the imposingly tall and strange araque palm Dictyocaryum fuscum, standing atop its roots as if they were immense stilts. From here on the trail is in a better state, still inclined, but not so steep. Forty-five minutes later there is the only S-shaped curve; our altimeter shows 1,100 m and it was probably right here where Goering painted his watercolor entitled “Puerto Cabello Mountains, the Caribbean in the distance”, (Page 33) which is unquestionably one of the most picturesque depictions of the Old Trail. The painting shows how clear of trees and clean the trail used to be, with its splendid view over the Campanero hacienda, the San Esteban valley and out in the distance Mount El Vigía with Fort Solano, the sea and some ships anchored at Puerto Cabello. This view is no longer to be enjoyed, since the forest and its greenery have reclaimed their territory. However, if you go up to the very edge of the abyss, you can just make out the sight that inspired Goering. The road continues upwards for fifteen minutes more and in spite of the effort, which makes you sweat, it’s fresh and very humid. There are parts where its original structure has held up quite well, the side walls, the curbs, the cobbles and the drainage channels; the surface is fairly wide, 4.5 m. Ten minutes later and you reach a wide open space on the left of the road with the remains of the stone walls that were the foundations of the buildings of an inn and one of the main stores to be found along the road, we’ve reached El Guayabo stopover. Appun described it in detail thus: “After a long and difficult uphill climb you arrive again at a small resting place called “El Guayabo”. A small copse of guaba trees (Psidium guajava), orange tree with dark foliage (Citrus sp.) and balsa (Ochroma pyramidale), famous for its rapid growth, its huge round leaves and long pods full of a short wool (hairs that protect the seeds) are signs that there used to be a human settlement here.” There are no more fruit trees, since the forest has taken over everything again, filtering the entry of sunlight. Again we found samples of what had once, long ago, been a dwelling. We recovered fragments of clay pots, a glass bottle, china plates and cups made in Europe in the 19th Century, a large door hinge, charred wood, a hook and an iron key, a knife, a spear or saber point, two lead musket bullets, a necklace medallion and even a crown-embossed button, probably from a Spanish military uniform (Page 31). It is interesting that the fragments of multi-colored 19th Century ceramic pottery found here are the same as those unearthed by the store at Chiquita Heights, lower down. Could it be that the Spaniards used the same sets of china at the different stores and inns along the way? On January 25, 1844, Bellermann wrote in his diary as follows: “After a ride of three leagues I had breakfast in a general store and then continued quickly on my way…; the trail was very steep but well cared for. I was now in a region of palms and tree ferns, surrounded by the tropical jungle in all its splendor. I saw giant ferns forty feet high, as colossal as those at Cocollar.” Helmeted curassow, puma and tiger Ten minutes later and you arrive at a section where about sixty meters of the road has totally collapsed, brought about by a small stream that crosses the road that has worn it away over time. Immense fallen trunks of trees brought down by storms obstruct the sides; this spot is known as The Canals (Page 32), at 1,200m above sea level, another of the places identified by Appun: “…grey-white mists are dragged through the ravines and the road, covering the mountains from sight with their sinister veils; the trees drip incessantly and the traveler is conscious that the temperature up here is quite cool. Several streams open out onto the road, crossing it with their torrents of freezing water; high above, on both sides of the trail there are sharply vertical green corroded walls that threaten to collapse at any moment. Further on we found yet again a clearing still covered with guavas, rose apples (Syzygium jambos), bananas and breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis) which bear witness to inhabitants from the past. In the forest, perched on a hill, is a half-ruined cottage, surrounded by iriartesas and cecropias (yagrumos, Cecropia palmatisecta) with their silver leaves and slender ferns, this is The Canals, years back my first home in these mountains.” The new jungle growth does not let one see or appreciate the last of the places he describes. The name of The Canals came about because water was taken fron streams by lengths of palm split lengthwise to make channels for filling the earthenware water jars or maybe even to take the water down by gravity to the El Guayabo general store. 97 On this idyllic spot we pitched our camp, ready for the next few days’ work. At dusk, as we were resting after the tiring trek, drinking a revitalizing coffee, two golden quetzals Pharomachrus fulgidus with their brilliant red and green colors started fighting over a female, while band-tailed guans Penélope argyrotis, strutted from branch to branch pecking at shoots of fresh leaves, and far off the roaring of the howler monkeys could be heard. At night fireflies abounded with their flashing lights, trying to get close to our campfire with their clumsy flight, probably thinking it was the light of another firefly. We could also hear the barking of a nearby owl Ciccaba spp. Even though we slept in nylon hammocks, fully dressed, socks included, our jackets on and wrapped up in our sleeping bags, it was difficult to sleep with the cold freezing you to the marrow, the temperature way down at 10° C. On the other hand, the little waterfalls of the nearby stream and the drops of early dew on the leaves and on the plastic sheeting we used to cover our hammocks sent us to a very well deserved sleep. We were not the only ones to suffer from the freezing cold night, Appun himself, in an effort to ward off the cold, took to wearing typical mountain pajamas: “…I stuck my head through the hole in the middle of the blanket I used to cover myself that night; it hung from me in long picturesque folds…Because I slept with my shirt on, my pants and a piece of cloth wrapped round my head; this was the typical garb up there in the mountains – and it worked very well.” A helmeted curassow Pauxi pauxi (Page 34) up in the treetops woke us up with its nervous and strident cackling, obviously disconcerted by our hammocks and all the other camping accoutrement. Farther away, on the other hand, at home in its habitual privacy of the mountains, we could hear the same bird singing away by day with a deep and persistent panting uum- uum. Yet again we heard the yowls and snorting of a group of howler monkeys staking out their territory. The helmeted curassow, once plentiful in these mountains, is now deemed a species verging on extinction because it has been and is still hunted persistently. Its considerable heft and the characteristic protuberance on its forehead, starting from its iron grey beak, which is its sounding box, allows it to cast its deep groans so far away. Re- 98 cords from the past are witness to its abundance and common presence. For example, in these mountains we are describing, Appun explained in profound detail a hunt for these curassows among the Hilaria foothills and promontories. He, his guide Manuel and his dog crawled through the thick undergrowth of the mountainside, following the sounds of a group of curassows: “…the ever-closer groaning took us quickly to where the first prey was to be found. Among the thick foliage of some trees there was seated a group of eight of these black fowl. They are not much smaller than turkeys and in spite of the clever hide-out they had chosen, their white breasts gave them away. Flying heavily on cumbersome flights from one branch to another in search of tree fruits, they still had not sensed our presence. Each of us chose our target with care and two shots rang out simultaneously in the forest. Two of the biggest birds fell immediately from on high. The survivors, uttering short cries of alarm, flapped off through the undergrowth.” Goering was also impressed by the beauty of the site and the abundance of birds: “…we reached a very special place called The Canals. The vegetation here is superb and looks as if it has been arranged by an artist. Among the thousands, literally thousands, of plants there is a stream of crystalline freezing cold water that runs along a considerable stretch of the road. This half-lit part of the mountain was very attractive because of the infinite number of colorful birds.” From then on the trail is not so steep and in the moist soil we spotted the tracks of a big cat, one of those that still roam around these mountains, a puma or mountain lion. Goering also told of his experiences in this area with big cats: “While I was busy collecting some insect samples, my guide had moved away some 50 feet and I suddenly noticed that he crouched down and signaled to me. I ran over to where he was with his boy and he whispered “tiger” to me, and on the road I clearly saw the fresh prints of its paws and looked out towards where the Indian was looking. A jaguar, known hereabouts as a tiger, must have crossed the road ahead of him, because he had heard the noise in the brush and the fresh prints of course confirmed it. The jaguar, like other classes of felines, is quite common in the mountains of the Coastal Range and in the forests inland… the puma, the Venezuelans’ “lion” is to be found around the houses of San Esteban wherever there’s a pregnant woman. It makes a muted “juup” sound that even the best hunters confuse with the call of a bird that is known by the locals as the lion bird, the bluecrowned motmot (Momotus momota), because of the similarity of its call with the voice of the puma, and it’s found perched quietly on the branch of one of the trees atop a dark mound in the woods.” Hilaria Heights and their two trails A bit further on, 15 minutes later and 1,300 m above sea level, there’s a path, an opening on the very crest of the mountain, a track that veers to the left southwest of the royal trail as an alternative route. Following this trail over the top, a view opens up towards the south through the dense greenery, all the way to Lake Valencia. The cold mist blows strongly through this narrow gap in the mountain top. The shortcut is 3.5 m wide and you can get to the summit in thirty minutes instead of one hour. If you take this trail you can appreciate how steep the mountain is and how the trail is cut so deeply into the rock and protected from the abyss by containing walls. Halfway along there’s a spot to your left that’s quite flat and another on the right further up, with a panorama over Lake Valencia, the Josefina heights in the foreground and beyond that the San Diego hills with their characteristic summit, the Macomaco heights. On the upper esplanade we found some remains of what had been a hut, a number of big rusty nails with the squared-off edges that characterized them as being from the 19th Century (Page 35). This was where Goering painted his watercolor entitled “Lake Valencia seen from one of the surrounding mountains.” (Page 39) We can be sure of this because of another of his paintings, a self-portrait (Page 38) which is clearly made at this point, since you can see him seated on a terraced point before a house, accompanied by his guide, painting the Lake and its surrounding areas. He chose this small clearing with the trail below because of the pan- oramic view of the great Lake and La Josefina and Macomaco heights and because of what he would describe as his small studio up in the jungle of the Valencia Mountains. In just the same way we were able to appreciate the panorama; with the difference that nowadays all the growth is thicker due to the forest having regained its former condition. Goering also wrote: “…thanks to some good weather, I was able to draw several perspectives from the Summit of beautiful Lake Valencia, which extended into the distance below my feet. This artistic relief of the splendid landscape, the enormous variety of the colors of the undergrowth, the swollen surface of the lake, the contrasting plains, hills and mountains was all set off so well by the splendor of the tropical sky.” This alternative route now winds south, passing through a cutting, past some mud flats caused by the presence of a small stream, the spring called Agua Fría, where the prints left by the peccaries were a sign that it was used by them as a bathing and wallowing hole. It is very likely that the dwelling that used to exist on the flat clearing we had just passed and where Goering had painted “Lake Valencia seen from one of the surrounding mountains,” received its water from a trench dug from this nearby stream. The reason for this hypothesis is to be found in his painting which is made right on top of the summit, where it is not usual to find water unless it comes from a spring or stream. In the lower right hand corner there is a small pond, which could explain why Goering painted this detail into his picture. These 19th Century naturalists and their paintings reflected the landscapes and objects they were to emulate for eternity in their canvases, exactly as they saw them. Even though early black and white photography existed timidly at this time, it was used for interiors and human portraits, just as Goering had a portrait made of himself on September 25, 1872 when in Venezuela. For open-air work, with all the complications of the climate and the difficulties for traveling, a canvas and charcoal, oil paint and tempera were more practical. Following the road from Agua Fría, the jungle starts to open, moving upwards from below the Summit, but a major outcrop of ferns 99 (Sticherus spp.) makes it difficult to advance; our altimeter shows we’re at 1,320 meters above sea level. We retrace our footsteps until we are back at the pass, at an opening in the crest, where the trail divides at 1,300m above sea level. We set off again searching for the hidden royal road upwards, heading southwest, and facing the rocky promontories of Hilaria Heights. The path is much wider than the alternative route we’d just taken, at about 4.80 m. We continue upwards for another half hour, but it gets less steep by the minute until the trail becomes even wider, opening up to five meters when we arrive at Buena Vista, captured by Bellermann in his pencil drawing “View out towards Puerto Cabello” (Page 37). In this beautiful and descriptive northward-facing painting one can pick out the Old Trail piercing the forest, with a burned-out hut and in the distance El Vigia Mountain with its Fort Solano, part of the town of Puerto Cabello and the sea, and once again we can see how the trail was well cleared of vegetation and clean at the time. We can also make out clearly in the sketch the tops of the typical araque palms, the trumpet tree and bananas. What looks like a wall, to be seen in the foreground to the left of the trail, is still recognizable today here and is part of the side of the mountain that remained after cutting the trail along the mountain shelf. Now the forest has completely recovered and no panoramic view can be had. Fifteen years after Bellermann, Appun also recounted the following: “We climbed some more between high walls until the slope slowly decreased and some splendid vegetation appeared on both sides of the road, almost excessively exuberant. To the right of the trail there are once again traces of a bygone village: “Buena Vista”, with bananas, guavas and rose apples, a magnificent growth of ferns and a beautiful view of the Campanero hacienda far in the distance, of the San Esteban valley, of the town of Puerto Cabello and of the dark blue sea where the ships can be quite clearly seen.” The charred ruins of the building seen in Bellermann’s work of art reflect the reality of post-independence times. Resentment against the Spaniards was such that all the ranches, stores and inns along the route were destroyed, razed to the ground by the locals. Apart from 100 that, the people who moved off preferred to burn their dwellings rather than have them fall into the hands of others. So, following the narrow track that allows us to advance comfortably in spite of the thick mist which rises at midday and in the afternoon, we pass again before the only wellspring of The Summit, Agua Fría. The same watering hole that Goering also named where he slated his thirst and freshened up in its pool; a stream of water that is also crossed further down by the alternative route we mentioned before, which is in fact one of the sources of Cabriales River. We too set up our camp at this beautiful spot, but just a bit higher up than Los Canales, where the night chill was not so intense. Half asleep, rocking slowly in our hammocks under a starry sky high above the tree tops that waved gently from side to side, down below we could hear the snorting of some peccaries as they wallowed in the muddy bottom of the ravine. Upon waking, very early, we could again hear, off in the distance, the deep groan of a helmeted curassow. One more small hill, a bend to the right and you reach a large clearing in the forest, about 1,000m². You can just imagine the resting soldiers and their camp. Thus it was in 1822, when the Spanish General Morales passed through here with 1,800 troops, before descending to the foothills of Bárbula and fighting General Páez at the Battle of Sabana de la Guardia, or when the patriot battalion Bravos de Apure replaced the Rifles Battalion on its way across The Summit, in order to hold the access routes they maintained around Puerto Cabello, the last bastion of the Spaniards after the Battle of Carabobo. It is easy to appreciate that this was an open plain on this summit and that it could easily have held that number of soldiers. But let us allow Appun to tell the tale: “the trail curves around towards the southern incline of the mountain, along a grey and eroded rock covered with beautiful orchids (Spidendrum cinnabarium and Epidendrum cinnabarium) and copey vera with their thick skin-like leaves and purple veins, until reaching a higher point from where one can enjoy a beautiful panorama looking southwards towards the valley and Lake Valencia.” The road continues to the south, six meters wide at this point, the thick jungle opening, reaching a high point, covered by an immense growth of ferns just like the one described on the alternative route, completely free of trees; we reach The Summit at 1,390m above sea level. From here there is a spectacular view of Valencia and its surroundings. Bellermann had this to say in his diary on January 25, 1844: “From the summit there is a beautiful view of Lake Valencia, the city itself and all the surrounding areas and a no less beautiful view of Puerto Cabello, but the latter is very often covered by fog. I stayed in a lodging room at a general store while I painted the two views. Vicente, the owner of the store received me very kindly. I hung my hammock between four posts, since this was the best lodging I could expect, but his and his wife’s and children’s kindness, together with the fresh and healthy air common at that height, guaranteed that my stay would be comfortable. At night I couldn’t sleep much, not because of the cold, but rather because of the busy comings and goings of the mule train folk that invariably arrived making a terrible row, singing and knocking loudly at Don Vicente’s door.” But why don’t we let Goering’s words of the last days of August 1867 describe the same scene that amazes us to this day: “I cannot but give a brief description of the superb and artistic panorama laid out before me and which so suddenly catches the eye of the traveler. Way in the background of the landscape runs the row of stirrups of the Coastal Mountains towards the shore of the great Lake, whose surrounding areas are so fertile; above all this, to the south and southwest one can see all Lake Valencia with its charming groups of islands and beaches. In the misty distance are the bluish heights of the Cura and Güigüe mountains; turning one’s regard again to the south-southwest, one’s amazed eyes discover the plains of Naguanagua and Valencia, and there in the distance you can just make out the mountains of Nirgua, Montalbán, etc. The veins that leave the Mountain Range for the plains of Lake Valencia usually dry and bereft of vegetation, making for a strange image in the eyes of one used to looking at mountains.” Nowadays this stretch from Paso Hondo to The Summit takes between six and seven hours (with a backpack loaded with several days’ provisions), when, around the middle of the 19th Century, according to the stories of the times, it took around three to four hours; of course the trail is in worse condition today. From up there one can see clearly the Spanish Trail as it descends Bárbula to the foot of the mountain. This south face of the bare mountain is grassy and in the ravines there are gallery forests, just as the naturalists perceived the scene in the 19th Century. Appun described it thus: “From up there, and only for a few minutes, the trail descends almost imperceptibly; the dense jungle opens up, one sees a flat space that drops off sharply on three sides, and a house: this is the reason for our journey, the house on San Hilario Heights, called simply “The Summit”. Nothing is left of this house, which was also the main store of the trail and one of Appun’s favorite stopover places during his lengthy stay in these mountains. The naturalist would go on to report: “The foreground is made up of thick and tall virgin mountainous jungle through which the road zigzags down to Valencia. The town can be seen completely upon emerging from the virgin forest, along the abysses and high cliffs over bare slopes, on descending to the valley and upon arrival at the foot of the mountain. The mountain of The Summit is an unquenchable source of pure enjoyment, because both the flora and the fauna vie to offer those who seek them, their best treasures. Of course the wild element is not lacking, and savage beasts such as the tiger, the lion and ocelot are common up there. From my house close to the trail I often used to hear the roar of a jaguar as it padded past; nearby they also hunted down two huge specimens of this animal, and just next to my house one of them killed a donkey and a strong mule. But since the jaguar never returns to eat the animal he has killed, I couldn’t find him and kill him, although I hunted him for several nights.” Sad to say that since the last decades of the 20th Century there are no more signs of jaguars in the Central Coastal Mountains, no more sightings of these huge and formidable predators, nor signs of their pawmarks, of any prey hunted by them or evidence of any dead 101 jaguar killed by hunters; the tiger has disappeared from here, it is now locally extinct (Page 40). Not, however, the puma and the smaller felines such as the ocelot, the jaguarundi, the margay cat Leopardus wiedii and the tiger cat Leopardus tigrina, which are still there by the trail and in the forests. The impression made on the explorer and orchidologist Jean Jules Linden by the heights of San Hilario, which he climbed up to from the south from Valencia, was as follows: “One single spot where the vegetation was less dense, allowed us to penetrate into the mountain. It was terribly humid and the ground was soft and spongy, composed of several feet of debris. Tree ferns abound. Amid the trees and trunks I was able to collect an infinite number of orchids. This part of the jungle was even more majestic than the part I had visited some hours earlier. It was composed of enormous trees of a similar size, whose tops formed a dome that was so dense that it would not let in the sun’s rays. After half an hour’s walking along a rough track between the trees, dangerous because of the large amount of roots that were interlaced across the ground in all directions, we reached a clearing where we once again caught site of the domed sky.” (He was possibly referring to Buena Vista which was quite clear of vegetation at the time). It is not difficult to imagine how, in the 18th and beginning of the 19th Centuries the Spanish sentries up here were able to observe from the house or the store just who was coming up the trail, as well as having a broader view out over Lake Valencia, the plains of Bárbula, Naguanagua, the Cabriales River and the King’s New Valencia. The Carabobo Trail descends from the Bárbula Heights to the Cabriales Valley We begin our descent on the paving of the trail that immediately swings to the left, eastwards, yet in spite of the fact that it is easily recognizable along the side of the mountain, it is completely covered by robust ferns, grasses and shrubs which make it impossible to advance. To discover what is really left of this stretch, we move forward, 102 armed with machetes, for some 500 meters. It is 3.8m wide and reaches a small overhang with a gallery forest, but here the trail is lost. On the other side, however, one can see a hillside over which the paving continues, swinging south, now on the Bárbula Heights. We return to pick up the current walking track which descends straight down the cliff in a short cut that later meets up again with the royal road. We pass land with two cottages of the little coffee farm, La Haciendita; further on, right on the top of a hill, there is another coffee plantation belonging to old Francisco Alán Barrios; he has a donkey and a mule to go down to Bárbula with the harvests of the allotment and the sacks with the annual crops of coffee. The Colonial road is not passable at this point, since it is cut into the mountain by erosion in the form of a little canyon, five meters deep, completely covered with vegetation of medium-sized bushes. Further down it continues on a regular incline, with two diversions that meet up again later, the minimum width of the paving is 3.20m and the maximum is 3.80m. Halfway down another alternative route that comes up from the east from the Cabriales stream joins the trail on the left side, less steep than the one that follows the Bárbula Heights. Around this area in some of the collapsed sectors you can see the holes drilled into the rock for the gunpowder used to blow up the larger rocks. Today the hiker walks along narrow tracks that cut away and shun the Spanish Trail for long sections. However, we continue our reconnaissance work on the original road, still finding supporting walls and certain parts paved with stones. It descends more steeply to 600m above sea level, where the curves are sharper and quite wide, up to 5.8m, and there are two small clearings of about 100 m² each. On observing Pedro Castillo’s mural of the Battle of Sabana de la Guardia, it was here that the two cannons used by the Royalists were probably installed. Now the trail is quite steep, zigzagging down to the foot of the mountain at 500m above sea level where, to the right, looking down, is the monolith that commemorates the Battle of Sabana de la Guardia which was fought here (Page 78). The route descends a little more, turning away to the right where some of the road is still visible, but it dies in the township of Los Mangos that lies at the foot of the mountain on the Bárbula savanna. At Bárbula there is no sign today of the hacienda cited by Humboldt upon his return from Puerto Cabello to the valleys of Aragua, with their plantations of cocoa and cotton and the two incredible de-pulping machines, one driven by a vertical winch and two mules and the other by a hydraulic wheel driven by water from a nearby canal. In the olden times the Colonial road continued, passing through the village of Naguanagua, and on to the city of Valencia. The only part that could be preserved is a very short section on the grounds of the Botanical Gardens at Naguanagua. This old trail passes alongside a 400-year-old rain tree (samán, Samanea saman), the pride of the park and of the people of Valencia, silent witness to the movements of Spaniards, Royalist soldiers and patriots, heroes of the homeland, people in transit, traders and European naturalists of the past, who traveled along the route to Puerto Cabello or Valencia. Bellermann would describe this stretch of the trail close to Bárbula as steep and very different to the part closer to Puerto Cabello; the mountain is bare and arid with rocky outcrops, he would say, comparing it with the Colonial road from La Guaira to Caracas. He also told how when you reached the foot of the mountain, you rode to Naguanagua and to Valencia across an arid plain with some sugar plantations along the side of the road, crossed by small streams. Goering, however, upon concluding his journey along the Old Trail and descending by the Bárbula track towards Valencia, would write: “….we came down from the bare mountains towards the plains of Naguanagua and we reached there at seven in the evening. I was warmly received in the home of one of my bearers. The next day, Sunday morning, I strode off happily towards Valencia. The imposing presence of the Coastal Mountain Range at San Esteban National Park, with clouds embracing The Summit and Hilaria Heights, north of Valencia and south of Puerto Cabello should remind us of the historical, architectural and archeological heritage that is jealously guarded by their slopes and dense jungles. Calle Comercio, Puerto Cabello, Una calle de Valencia Jenny de Tallenay, 1880. 103 Picture captions 104 Page 6 Location of the San Esteban National Park, showing the Carabobo Trail, with the current route from San Esteban to Bárbula. Page 7 Map of Puerto Cabello by Joseph Luis de Cisneros included in his Exact description of the province of Venezuela (Descripción exacta de la provincia de Venezuela), printed in 1764, which shows the trail to the San Esteban Valley and where it enters the mountains on its way to Valencia. Page 8 South American Landscape by Ferdinand Bellerman, 1842, showing the San Esteban River and the Headless Donkey Mountain in the background. Page 10 The team on the Trail from right to left: Ernesto O. Boede Wantzelius, Juan E. Hugo-Baasch, park warden Manuel Amaya and, kneeling, park warden Luis Mendoza. The Carabobo Trail, Page 12 Miguel Alejandro Römer. Host of Anton Goering in San Esteban Luis Federico Blohm (1837-1911) and Clara Fehling de Blohm, hosts of Anton Goering in Puerto Cabello. Hugo Valentiner (1831-1915) and Sofia Stürup de Valentiner. Oscar Baasch, (1857-1910) he was born in San Esteban at Casa Baasch on February 28. Page 13 Karl Moritz Klein, Germany 1797, Colonia Tovar, 1866 Page 15 La Casa Blohm, Puerto Cabello, with the mangrove swamp in the background, Anton Goering, 1869. The German explorer and painter dispatched his collections from here to England. Page 16 Ferdinand Bellermann 1814-1899. His 1842 journey to Venezuela was financed by Frederick William IV, King of Prussia, with support from Alexander von Humboldt. Anton Goering 1836-1905, guest of Luis Federico Blohm in Puerto Cabello and Miguel Alejandro Römer in San Esteban. Karl Ferdinand Appun 1820-1872, spent five years between 1849 and 1857 in the San Esteban Mountains and was also helped by Humboldt. He died during a stay in British Guayana. Page 19 The docks of Puerto Cabello, Ferdinand Bellermann 1842. In this oil painting one can see The Summit and Breasts of San Hilario. Page 21 Sugar plantations at San Esteban, Ferdinand Bellermann 1842. Hacienda San Esteban and Breasts of San Hilario in the distance. Page 22 Coin (quarter or “cuartillo”) of 1838 was found by family members in the garden at Casa Baasch. This peculiar coin could be cut into quarters according the purchase price. Page 24 Comparison of a modern photo of the hieroglyphics on the rock showing a canoe, a monkey, a tiger’s paw print and human faces, among other shapes, alongside the Carabobo Trail and The Indians Stone, a drawing made by Anton Goering. Page 25 The Chapel at San Esteban Ferdinand Bellermann 1842, also known as Casa Glöckler. Page 26 Bearded bellbird (Campanero) Procnias averano. The remains of Hacienda Campanero with “Las Quíguas”, a humble dwelling and cocoa plants. The original Stone foundations where used for the hut. Page 27 Bayonet found in a ravine near Chiquita Heights. Source: Gerardo Hugo-Baasch Collection. Page 28 Fragments of period pieces recovered at La Soledad. Page 29 A ford of the San Esteban River, Puerto Cabello, Anton Goering, 1876. In the distance of the watercolor one can make out the ravine of the Headless Donkey. Page 30 Anton Goering, Harpy eagle Harpia harpyja, the largest raptor of the Central Coastal Mountain, now in serious danger of extinction. Page 31 Fragments and objects unearthed at the general store called El Guayabo. Note in the center the two lead bullets, the medal and crown-embossed button. Page 32 Thatched hut near The Canals (Los Canales) where Karl Ferdinand Appun stayed for several months. Page 33 The Puerto Cabello mountains with the Caribbean in the distance, Anton Goering, 1877. A view of the Old Trail above the San Esteban valley and Hacienda Campanero. Page 34 Helmeted curassow, a large and strange bird that lives in the forest at 1,200m above sea level. Page 35 Large, square-section nails typical of the 19th Century, unearthed from the clearing where Anton Goering painted the panoramic landscape of Lake Valencia, and where there was once a hut. Page 37 View towards Puerto Cabello, an undated pencil drawing by Ferdinand Bellermann. A good representation of the section of the Old Trail known as Buena Vista. Page 38 Lake Valencia (Tacarigua) seen from the Coastal Mountains with the painter’s palm-roofed shelter in the foreground. Self-portrait sketch by Anton Goering. For another reference, see also Goering’s painting on p. 39 Page 39 Lake Valencia seen from one of the mountains that surround it. Watercolor by Anton Goering viewed from the alternative route, 1877. See also the self-portrait on p. 38. Page 40 The Tiger. A drawing by Anton Goering The jaguar has been hounded by hunters, to the point that it is now locally extinct in the Central Coastal Mountains. Page 41 Clearing the way to uncover the cobbles and curbs. The 4.5m width of the paving may clearly be appreciated. Page 42 Sabana de la Guardia Battle, mural by Pedro Castillo on display at Casa Páez in Valencia, seriously deteriorated. The southern stretch of the Carabobo Trail can be seen. Page 43 The one-horse open two-wheeled buggy quitrín was the most suitable transport to get from San Esteban to Puerto Cabello. Page 44 Views from the northern slope towards the San Esteban valley; in the distance are the Summit and Hilaria Heights with their skirts and peaks, jealously guarding the Spanish Trail. Page 45 View from the southern slope, from Valencia-Naguanagua towards the mountains of San Esteban National Park. To the left in the background is peak Hilaria at the center the Hilaria Heights; to the right is the bare mountain of the Bárbula Heights, down which the Colonial trail descends. Page 46. Fort Solano, which used to protect Puerto Cabello, the aqueduct, the estuary of the San Esteban River and part of the Carabobo Trail. The view west from Fort Solano towards the Marín valley which was the old entry to the royal trail, heading for San Esteban, in the distance El Palito and the coast. Page 47 El Portachuelo, Pitiguaos descent, once an alternative to the Old Trail and entry to the San Esteban valley, now a main road. The Carabobo Trail zigzagged among the flat part of the San Esteban valley at the foot of the mountains, just as the main road does now, built over the same surface. Page 48 The charming San Esteban valley, with The Summit almost always covered by clouds, and the high rock faces of the skirts of Hilaria peak, locally known as the Headless Donkey. The San Esteban river flows through the valley with the exuberant tropical flora that so enthralled Bellermann and Goering, as witnessed in their paintings. Page 49 Panthera onca, the jaguar, or tiger as it is known colloquially, was very common 200 years ago in the mountains and valleys of San Esteban, causing havoc among the cattle and the mule trains. 105 Page 50 Coming into San Esteban, you can clearly see the width of the original road. Bottom left: Villa Friedenau, once known as Casa Brandt. Casa Römer, home to Miguel Alejandro Römer, who immigrated to Venezuela in 1849, where Anton Goering was also a guest. Opposite: Casa Villa Vincencio now the Ecomuseum of San Esteban. Page 52 Clockwise: Casa Baasch, where Wilhelm Sievers spent some unforgettable Christmas days in 1885. The garden of Casa Baasch with the 250-year-old medlar tree. The ruins of Casa Ermen, which later, at the beginning of the 20th Century, was to be Casa Vollbracht. House of General Bartolomé Salom, now the Salom Museum. Page 53 The Second Casa Römer, drawn by Bellermann in 1842 as “The Chapel at San Esteban”, when it was Casa Glöckler. Page 54 The overhanging shapes of the Headless Donkey, eternal guardian of the Calle Real of San Esteban once the Carabobo Trail. Page 55 The San Esteban River with its waterfalls and beautiful ponds always accompanied the traveler on the Colonial trail, here in the lower section of the northern slope. Page 56 The Indians’ Stone on the side of the Spanish Trail. Page 57 The Spanish Trail, close to the park wardens’ post at Campanero, is kept free of undergrowth, making it easy to appreciate the original paving. Pagina 58 A ledge with a containing wall and the pillar of one of the six small bridges that crossed small streams. Tree trunks were placed on top, covered with earth and compressed vegetable matter. Page 59 One of the lime ovens near the great bridge, at a spot which Appun would call the Paso Hondo hamblet. Page 60 Along the side of the road you can still find stretches of the original stone curbs, and some early stretches with their stones easily visible. Page 61 Almost covered by the jungle, one can nevertheless appreciate the Gothic arch of the Paso Hondo Bridge. Page 62 Dawn in Paso Hondo, with the road surface visible to the right. Page 63 La Soledad, which was, in the days of Appun, a great plain, free of forest, is now covered mainly by palm trees, the reason why our guides today call it El Palmar. Page 64 Up from La Soledad the current road reveals, to the left of the photograph, the drainage canals of the Colonial road. 106 Page 65 The surface and huge walls of the trail are clear to see, but the landslides in the background have destroyed a large part of the original path. Page 66 Tapirs Tapirus terrestres are still common in these woods, and they use the cuttings of the royal road on their nocturnal ramblings. Page 67 At a height of 900m above sea level, long stretches of the original trail is conserved, in spite of the invasion of araque palms with their strange roots. See also pages 32 and 38. Page 68 In the steep parts, higher up, large stones were used to surface the trail, for the flatter parts small stones were used, easily recognizable once the vegetation, humus and earth are removed and the paving is uncovered. In the background the present narrow part is to be seen. Page 69 Bigger trees that have fallen during a storm block our way at between five hundred and eight hundred meters above sea level, and a route has to be forged with a machete. The buttressed “niño” or “cucharón” Gyranthera caribensis, which grows up to forty meters tall, is common on the coastal mountain range and especially along the sides of the trail at altitudes from two hundred to eight hundred meters above sea level. Page 70 On the northern slope of the trail, the jungle envelops everything. Page 71 Cutting and opening in the top of the mountain of an alternative route to The Summit Note the steepness of the cutting into the side of the mountain and the narrower trail of 3.5m. Page 72 A 1.5 meter high containing wall, protecting the road in the steep ravines. Page 73 Current condition of the trail, a short section through the forest at the part known in Bellermann’s painting, as Buena Vista. Page 74 View west from The Summit, similar to the one probably enjoyed by the European naturalists of the 19th Century. Page 75 The Summit, the point where the trail comes clear of the forest to begin its run down the bare southern face, the road cutting still visible to the sides. Page 76 Clockwise: The Spaniards had to use gunpowder to blast the bigger rocks. Coming down from The Summit, which can be seen in the distance, a curve with its containing wall can be also seen. The course of the road across the savanna opens to spectacular views of the ravines with their gallery forests and nearby escarpments. Wide curves, sharp and steep run over the crest of Bárbula. Page 77 On this descent and pronounced curve, the absence of grass, caused by forest fires, allows one to clearly make out the cobbles and larger stones. On the Bárbula promontory one can see the road cuttings on the crest and in the ravines of the mountain, below are Naguanagua and Valencia. Page 78 A violent fire has uncovered the junction with another road on the southern slope, an alternative to the royal way. The surface of the road and a containing wall can be seen in the foreground. On this steep slope, the royal road makes its descent in zigzag fashion and the results of a grass fire make it easily visible. A view from The Summit towards the southern slope of the Spanish Trail; in the center of the photograph one can see the trail going down to Valencia along the crest of Bárbula. At the foot of the mountain, the monolith commemorating the Battle of Sabana de la Guardia, with the Hilaria Heights in the background. Page 79 Old Francisco Alan Barrios still transports the harvests he collects from the coffee plantations and small farms scattered around the wooded mountains, down the Spanish Trail to the city on the back of a donkey, just like in the olden days. Page 80 South American landscape, Ferdinand Bellermann 1842, showing the woods and the creek at Campanero. 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Tomado del Catálogo Ferdinand Bellermann en Venezuela, Memoria del Paisaje 1842-1845, Fundación Galería de Arte Nacional, Caracas, 1991. Página 12 Los esposos Valentiner. Archivo de la familia Valentiner. Los esposos Blohm. Archivo de la familia Blohm. Miguel Alejandro Römer. Archivo de la familia Römer. Oscar Baasch. Archivo de la familia Baasch. Página13 “Karl Moritz”, de Ferdinand Bellermann. Tomado del libro de Eduardo Röhl, Exploradores famosos de la naturaleza venezolana, Tipografía El Compás, Caracas, 1948. Página 15 La Casa Blohm, Puerto Cabello, con los manglares al fondo, Antón Goering 1869. Archivo de la familia Blohm. Página 16 “Retrato del pintor Ferdinand Bellermann”, óleo sobre lienzo. Tomado del libro de Renate Löschner, Bellermann y el paisaje venezolano 1842/1845, Asociación Cultural Humboldt y Fundación Neumann, Caracas, 1977. “Karl Ferdinand Appun”. Tomado del libro de Eduardo Röhl, Fauna descriptiva de Venezuela, Caracas, 1956. “Anton Goering”, foto tomada en Caracas el 25 de septiembre de 1872. Tomado del libro Dirk Bornhorst. Venezuela, Anton Goering 1836-1905, Asociación Cultural Humboldt, Caracas, 1969. Página 19 “Muelles en Puerto Cabello”, óleo sobre cartón, 1842, Ferdinand Bellermann. Tomado del libro de Renate Löschner, Bellermann y el paisaje venezolano 1842/1845, Asociación Cultural Humboldt y Ediciones Fundación Neumann, Caracas, 1977. Página 21 “Plantaciones de azúcar en San Esteban”, óleo sobre cartón, Ferdinand Bellermann. Tomado del libro de Renate Löschner, Bellermann y el paisaje venezolano 1842/1845, Asociación Cultural Humboldt y Fundación Neumann, Caracas, 1977. Página 29 “Un vado en el río San Esteban, Puerto Cabello”. Tomado del libro de Anton Goering, Vom tropischen Tieflande zum ewigen Schnee, Adalbert Fischer´s Verlag, Leipzig, 1892 Página 30 “Águila arpía”. Tomado del libro de Antón Goering, Vom tropischen Tieflande zum ewigen Schnee, Adalbert Fischer´s Verlag, Leipzig, 1892. Página 32 “Los Canales”, grabado de Karl Ferdinand Appun. Tomado del libro de Karl Ferdinand Appun, En los trópicos, Universidad Central de Venezuela, Caracas, 1961. Página 33 “Serranía de Puerto Cabello con el Mar Caribe al fondo”, Goering Anton 1877. Tomado del libro Dirk Bornhorst. Venezuela, Anton Goering 1836-1905, Asociación Cultural Humboldt, Caracas, 1969. Página 37 “Vista hacia Puerto Cabello”, Ferdinand Bellermann. Tomado del libro de Renate Löschner, Bellermann y el paisaje venezolano 1842/1845, Asociación Cultural Humboldt y Fundación Neumann, Caracas, 1977. Página 38 “Vista sobre el Lago Valencia (Tacarigua) desde la Cordillera de la Costa con choza del pintor en el primer plano”. Tomado del libro de Antón Goering, Vom tropischen Tieflande zum ewigen Schnee, Adalbert Fischer´s Verlag, Leipzig, 1892. Página 39 “El Lago de Valencia rodeado de montañas”, Antón Goering, 1877. Tomado del libro de Antón Goering, Vom tropischen Tieflande zum ewigen Schnee, Adalbert Fischer´s Verlag, Leipzig, 1892. Página 40 “El Tigre”. Tomado del libro de Antón Goering, Vom tropischen Tieflande zum ewigen Schnee, Adalbert Fischer´s Verlag, Leipzig, 1892. Página 43 Dibujo realizado por Ulrich Baasch. Página 80 “Bosque y quebrada en Campanero”, Ferdinand Bellerman. Tomado del Catálogo Ferdinand Bellermann en Venezuela, Memoria del Paisaje 1842-1845, Fundación GAN, Caracas, 1991. Página 82 “Un tranquilo paraje cerca del lago de Valencia”, James Mudie Spence, 1871-1872. Tomado del libro de Elías Pino Iturrieta/Pedro Enrique Calzadilla La mirada del otro, Fundación Bigot, Caracas. Sin fecha. Página 24 Antón Goering “Piedra del Indio, en el valle San Esteban”. Tomado del libro de Antón Goering, Vom tropischen Tieflande zum ewigen Schnee, Adalbert Fischer´s Verlag, Leipzig, 1892. Página 88 “Arriero cargando los burros”, Martín Tovar y Tovar, 1862. Tomado del libro de Elías Pino Iturrieta/Pedro Enrique Calzadilla La mirada del otro, Fundación Bigot, Caracas. Sin fecha. Página 25 Capilla en San Esteban, Ferdinand Bellermann, 1842. Tomado del libro de Renate Löschner, Bellermann y el paisaje venezolano 1842/1845, Asociación Cultural Humboldt y Fundación Neumann, Caracas, 1977. Página 103 Calle Comercio, Puerto Cabello y Una calle de Valencia, Jenny de Tallenay, 1880. Tomado del libro Souvenirs du Venezuela, Librairie Plon, París, 1884 Página 26 “Pájaro Campanero o herrero”. Tomado del libro de William H Phelps y Rodolphe Meyer de Schauensee, Aves de Venezuela, Princeton University Press, New Jersey, EUA, 1978. 110 Página 107 “San Esteban”, Ferdinand Bellermann, 1842. Tomado de Bellermann, Ferdinand. Landschafts-und Vegetations-bilder aus den Tropen Südamerikas, erläutert von Hermann Karsten, R. Friedländer & Sohn, Berlín, 1894. 111 112