The position of San Fernando on a great navigable
river, near the mouth of another river that crosses the whole
province of Varinas, is extremely useful for trade. All
that is produced in this province, the leathers, cocoa, cotton
and top-quality Mijagual indigo, is washed down past
this town to the Orinoco mouth. During the rainy season
big ships come upstream from Angostura to San
Fernando de Apure and along the Santo Domingo
river as far as Torunos, the harbor for the town of
Barinas. During this season the flooded rivers form a
labyrinth of waterways between the Apure,
Arauca, Capanaparo and Sinaruco rivers,
covering a country of roughly 400 square leagues. At this
point the Orinoco, deviating from its course, due not
to neighboring mountains but to the rising counter-slopes,
turns east instead of following its ancient path in the line
of the meridian. If you consider the surface of the earth as a
polyhedron formed of variously inclined planes you will see by
simply consulting a map that between San Fernando de
Apure, Caycara and the mouth of the Meta the
intersection of three slopes, higher in the north, west and
south, must have caused a considerable depression. In this
basin the savannahs can be covered by 12 to 14 feet of water
and turned into a great lake after the rains. Villages and
farms look as though they are on shoals, rising barely 2 to 3
feet above the water surface. The flooding of the
Apure, Meta and Orinoco rivers is also
periodic. In the rainy season horses that roam the savannah do
not have time to reach the plateaux and they drown in their
hundreds. You see mares followed by foals, barely sticking up
out of the water, swimming part of the day to eat grass. While
swimming they are chased by crocodiles, and some carry
crocodile tooth marks on their hides. Horse, mule and cow
carcasses attract numberless vultures. |