"The sea remembers what the land forgets. These wooden curves—weathered by salt and generations of hands—are more than boats. They are floating memories, living archives of the island. Each pirogue carries two stories: in the arabesques of its axe-carved wood, and in the wake it will leave no more. Modern fiberglass hulls glide across the water, but without the distinctive song of wood that has weathered monsoons and known the patient hands of shipwrights.
I captured their silhouettes in the magic hour when dawn makes them dance across the lagoon—final remnants of a bygone era. Seasoned fishermen caress these hulls like relics, with the quiet melancholy of those who know progress waits for no one. This is more than a nostalgic tribute. It is a visual testimony to an inevitable transition: when efficiency supersedes poetry, when the soul of a craft dissolves into modernity. Look closely—in a few years, only our images will preserve the memory of this wrought beauty."



















