BATHING IN A (MUD) VOLCANO IN COLOMBIA
CARTAGENA, COLOMBIA.
(© R Senthilnathan 2006)
“Don’t wait outside, friend, come join us,” the masseur stretched his arms inviting me. From my location in the narrow, circular bank, I looked at him, and then around him in the ‘pool’. Some were being massaged by his colleagues while some others were just relaxing.
I looked again at the pool, just about 4m in diameter, and what I saw sent a yukky feeling through me. The pool contained nothing but mud; naked, creamy-spinach like mud. How could people enjoy being in it? I would rather bathe in the tranquil lagoon beyond it.
Just as I was contemplating to climb down the rickety wooden stairs that I had used to climb the 15 m to reach the top of the pool, the words of a guide rang in my ears. According to him, among the many supposed curative properties of the mud is to promote hair growth.
I have been running a sort of a no-win battle with male pattern baldness (MPB), and with the arc-like baldness of my forehead expanding to meet the circular baldness of the crown, I was prepared to try any non-invasive method to win the battle.
I was already down to my swim trunk, and gently climbed into the mess, and gingerly held onto a wooden bar beneath the top of the pool.
That was it; I was now officially in a volcano. A mud volcano.
Mud volcanoes are not like the destructive lava-spewing ones we usually hear about. Usually forming a conical shape, they can be very small, some just a few feet above ground level, and geologists say they are formed when mud and sand kilometers below the earth’s surface are squeezed and pushed upwards.
Azerbaijan and the Caspian Sea are home to about 400 mud volcanoes, more than half the world’s total.
The El Totumo mud volcano, whose bosom held me now, is located about 50 km northeast of Cartagena, one of the most important port cities of Atlantic Colombia.

(more)