Pitch Lake

La Brea

Trinidad’s Pitch Lake at first appears to be a dense, unassuming blight on the landscape. For many locals it is “nothing special”. Indeed, interest in it is long-forgotten after elementary school trips to tour the location. Yet the Tourism Development Company (TDC) boasts of this attraction to international tourists and to gaze upon it as a tourist is quite a different experience.

The lake itself is the largest of three natural deposits of asphalt globally, though it is arguably less famous than its Californian counterpart. A working site, pitch mined from the region is used on roads, roofs, and other surfaces across the globe. Approximately 40 hectares wide and estimated at 75 miles deep, it is assumed that at current rates of extraction, the lake will be depleted in an estimated 300 years.

RALEIGH’S “DISCOVERY”
Discovery of the Pitch Lake, if one can call it such, was documented by European explorer, Sir Walter Raleigh. In 1595 while on a voyage in search of the infamous El Dorado, “city of gold”, Raleigh came upon Trinidad and Tobago. After attacking the northern regions of the island, Raleigh eventually sailed southward, scenting the tar while traversing the Gulf of Paria. He confronted the local tribes who took him to the site of the lake and it was there that he reputedly discovered its beneficial properties for caulking the hulls of his ships.

Tours of this wonder (with knowledgeable guides) can be arranged on site at the local TDC office. While tourists will encounter many locals who are willing to give them a tour, it is strongly recommended that you take a booked tour through the office. There is a museum on site as well which details the history of the region, including the town. However, at time of writing, the museum was closed for renovations.

CAPTURE: 2016
LOCATION: La Brea, Trinidad
CAMERA: Sony RX100
EXPOSURE: 1/250
ISO: 125


History Embedded in Myth

Trinidad’s history is enveloped in legends which “explain the unexplainable” and the history of the Pitch Lake touches upon one such origin story.

Like many other nations in the region, Trinidad and Tobago was long populated by native peoples prior to the European “discovery” of the islands. On the spot where the Pitch Lake currently exists was said to be the settlement of one such tribe, the Chima Indians. Many of their celebrations included the consumption of local flora and fauna, including the Colibri bird (hummingbird), for which the nation is now famous. Vast quantities of birds were consumed in celebration and their plumes were used to decorate and accessorize. However, the Chima people, “drunk in celebration” had forgotten that the hummingbirds were the spirits of their ancestors. Thus, their winged god, angry at their insolence, opened up the ground and swallowed the village whole, leaving nothing but the Pitch Lake in their place.

The myth that explains the existence of the Lake is substantiated by recent archaeological findings including wooden Amerindian objects, paddles, bowls, and mortars.

Seen in this photo is one of the many sulfur pools which pepper the lake.