No Hurry in Africa

February 5th, 2008

Several months ago, I planned to spend Wednesday in Moshi at the Kilimanjaro Centre for Community Ophthalmology, so that I could perhaps get a feel for the kind of work being done in an East African health clinic. So that morning, I parted ways with Katie around 07:00 and then hailed a taxi to get to the clinic.

I must say, I am impressed by the flagrancy and boldness of the locals in their negotiations with tourists. Prices are almost universally quoted at 4-5x above the normal price; the results is that often the amount one pays is the same if not more for how much one would pay in the States or Europe. It took me awhile to find a taxi willing to take me to the clinic for only double the normal amount ($6 instead of the normal 2 or 3).

The complex in which the clinic lies is quite impressive. It, the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre, was founded by Christian missionaries about 40 years ago. It has since evolved into an entire health science center, with a teaching hospital, outpatient clinic, medical school, and other training departments and space for (mostly foreign) research groups.

When I found my ophthalmologist contact, I was a bit disappointed to learn that she had incorrectly written down my date of arrival by a day, so rather than go out with a team into the field, I would end up spending most of it at the centre. It proved to be an interesting day, nevertheless though. I spent a few hours on her grand rounds as she supervised residents and also had time to interact with her Tanzanian staff which I also thoroughly enjoyed. They nearly all had masters degrees and I found that we had quite a lot of things to talk about. During lunch I noticed that I also wasn’t the only mzungu there; I saw a few young residents from UV and a handful of other young, idealistic visionaries.

The most striking sentiment that I heard was one that has become increasingly more common for me to hear. Many of the Western doctors had also worked in Asia and they expressed a certain frustration with the work they’ve done in Tanzania. They said that Africa’s health problems are unique because of its relatively low population density as well as what they characterized as a significantly decreased sense of “work ethic,” or more broadly speaking, perhaps less driven towards the self-help route. Amazingly, each cataract surgery costs about $75 (almost all the supplies are imported from India); the clinic usually gets about $15 of payment from the patient. In spite of this, many people opt not to get the surgery. Generally speaking though the clinic was quite well stocked and the physicians sufficiently proficient.

Not wanting to pay a lot to return back to the hostel, I simply crammed in with the locals into a daladala. Interestingly, along the road from the hospital were a number of tiny shops selling coffins. It was quite eerie seeing them outside, just along the road as one left the hospital.

We were thrilled when Thursday arrived and, by midday, we finally made it to Zanzibar via a noisy dual propeller plane. What immediately struck us as soon as we arrived was the island’s Muslim population. Our guidebook suggested that perhaps around 90% of the island is Muslim and I would certainly believe it– every woman had her head covered
and some still wore a full nigab. Though we were a little disappointed in our hostel as it didn’t have quite the beachfront that their pictures online seemed to suggest, we figured that its prime location in the center of the island would be very conducive to making day-trips.

Stone Town, the largest town and capital of Zanzibar, is a fascinating city. It’s streets are unable to accommodate cars but not bicycles or scooters, so it is often necessary to hug one of the alley’s walls as someone unhesitatingly zooms by. Much of it reminds me of Venice, at least the eastern residential sections. Though a few maps exist of the city, it is unlikely one would even find one to be useful– few of the alleys are labeled and to find something in the city one must really just walk in that general direction and hope to find it. Shops are quite narrow and the owner often just peaks through a small opening in his huge wall of goods to speak with a customer.

One thing we are a bit exhausted of is the the innumerable touts that we encounter. We almost wish we could just be invisible– it is impossible to walk seemingly anywhere without some “friendly”individual offering to take us to his “favorite” shop. Worse, it makes us a bit jaded whenever we do encounter genuinely friendly people who simply want to meet and chat with foreigners.

To combat this ever growing problem, Katie and I while in the city speak to each other in Spanish and whenever a tout approaches us wanting to buy something from him, I speak to him in Polish and claim that my English fluency only extends far enough for me to be able to say, “No English,” all the while giving him an innocently huge smile. It has been fabulously successful.

On Friday morning we crowded onto a daladala to head to the northern-most point of the island, the village of Nungwi, where some of the best beaches and diving spots are supposed to be. It is interesting how comfortable we have become with our surroundings; namely, getting cramped in the back of a converted pick-up trucks ($1.10 one way, per person, 90 min drive), or seeing cows stroll alongside the road no longer surprise us.

We were thrilled when we finally arrived at the beach—the water was the clearest blue-green we had ever seen. It actually didn’t take too long to find a reputable diving center either. I ended up spending the better part of the next several hours diving off two coral reefs. What surprised me as well was the number of Slavs here. One older gentleman on my boat was from Warsaw and several of the other people my age were Slovakians living in the UK. The diving was superb except for the very strong current and choppy waves on the surface. By the time we finished, I was quite exhausted.

What has been most striking in the past few days has been how limited the “infrastructure” is. Very few receipts are ever given for financial transactions, sidewalks don’t exist, and roads are limited. Along the way to the beach, the bus was stopped at several police “checkpoints” and I saw a lot of bills being discreetly handed out by the driver. That night after we had gotten some food in Stone Town, to turn on the bus’s only light, there was no switch to flip. The daladala boy simply twisted two metal wires together. It is also quite sad to see how much trash is simply left alongside the roadway.

We had planned to spend our Saturday on a completely different side of the island, in the eastern village of Paje. We had made a mistake in not asking our hostel how much to expect to pay for the ride over there. Since hardly anything in Tanzania seems to ever run “by the book,” we learned later that we had been overcharged twice as much, though it still frankly wasn’t that much.

Pretty much all of Saturday was spent lounging on the beach and reading on some empty lounge chairs we had managed to find for ourselves. We also ran into the two Polish physicians that we had met on our safari several days prior.

Obliged to accept their offer to share a drink with them in the late afternoon, we returned to Stone Town in the later evening and made a dinner from various street-vendors by the wharf. Of particular note were these inventions they called “Zanzibar pizza” (bread filled with cheese, vegetables, and meat that was baked in a charcoal oven) as well as fresh-squeezed sugar cane juice that was also infused with spices and lemon!

On Sunday morning, we were struggling to find the Catholic church that we had passed by several days prior. When we started to get worried that it was only a minute or two before mass was scheduled to begin, I noticed that on one alley were several women who were walking with neither their heads nor their arms covered- nearly scandalous by the standards that we have seen thus far. We thought that perhaps we should follow them at a distance. Sure enough, they were Catholic and heading to mass as well. An interesting note about mass is that the church was separated by sex. We spent our final hours in Zanzibar taking pictures of all of our favorite buildings. Upon returning to the hostel, sweaty and dirty, all I could think about while showering before the flight was that Cairo would be having cool weather!

Safari

January 30th, 2008

It has been an eventful few days since our last post. We caught a bus from Dar es Salaam to Arusha, the gateway town to the Serengeti. The ride was unremarkable, except that we were appalled when the attendant tossed whole plastic cups of coffee out of the window when passengers could not finish them. This kind of mindless littering seems as prevalent here as it was in South America. I think it comes from the fact that for hundreds of years the people in these places lived simple, rural lives, and all of their waste was organic and could be tossed outside without worry. Now they do the same with plastic and paper products, and they litter the roadsides. By the fish market in Dar, there were people snorkeling and fishing in the bay, and not ten feet away waste and trash was being dumped into the water that gives these people their livelihood. It is a sad situation.

Still, the constant stream of tourists who come to see the natural beauty of the Serengeti and surrounding parks ensures that they, at least, are strictly protected. We were among the many who arrived in Arusha to go on safari. Our company, Shidolya, picked us up from the bus station and put us up for the night in the hostel at the Catholic center in town. The next morning they picked us up in a heavy-duty Land Rover and drove us to the company’s offices, where we waited for everything to be finished processing. The parks are very strict about permits and payment, and they do not accept cash. Special debit cards must be purchased in order to pay at the park gate. Once we had everything we needed, we set off.

It was a long drive from Arusha to the first campsite, about 2 or 3 hours. The scenery slowly began to look like the African plains one sees in pictures. We passed a great many Maasai villages and shepherds with goats and cows. The Maasai are a pastoral people who still retain many of their ancestral ways. They wear special blankets and carry sticks or spears and daggers. Both women and men wear beaded jewelry and sometimes sport large holes in their earlobes from spacers. Many of the Maasai have capitalized on the many tourists passing through the area, and when we stopped at a market to buy some food, we were bombarded with Maasai selling jewelry, t-shirts, and other souvenirs.

Now, when Tommy and I were looking for a good safari company, we read that some led camping safaris. We laughed at this and referred to it as “feeding the lions” for the remainder of our search. That is, until we found out that the only safaris that would be remotely within our budget were, in fact, camping safaris. When we arrived at our first campsite, we saw just how wrong our first impression has been. This was not out in the wilderness, but in a small town. There was a walled-off grassy area surrounded by souvenir shops where several different safari companies pitched their tents. There was also a hotel (complete with bar) and swimming pool. Our cook served up a simple lunch, and after waiting around a little longer than we would have liked, we got into the Land Rover and headed to the nearby Lake Manyara around 2:30 pm. The top of the Land Rover could be raised so that we could stand up and look out as we drove. The winding paths of the park took us through some lovely forest and savannah, and to a big lake filled with hippos and waterbirds. We also saw elephants, giraffe, buffalo, impala, baboons, and lots of birds, including two species of hornbills and African Crowned Cranes. Our guide thought it was humorous that I “liked the birds more than the animals.”

Unfortunately we only had about three hours in the park and had to head back. The next morning we began the long drive to Serengeti National Park. It is necessary to drive through the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in order to reach the park. This required a transit visa. It was very foggy, and we couldn’t see down into the Crater yet. We did come upon a safari vehicle that had somehow tipped over on the muddy road, and no one could get by. Several men pushed it back upright, and we were able to continue.

Around noon we stopped at Olduvai Gorge, probably the most important site for early human fossils. There is a small museum and some shaded picnic areas overlooking the gorge. It was a very powerful feeling, to be looking down there and remembering that you were walking on the same ground on which our early ancestors most certainly walked. As proof of this, the museum had a cast of the Laetoli footprints, early hominid footprints preserved in hardened volcanic ash which were found nearby. They were immensely important to early hominid evolution, as they proved that humans were walking upright much earlier than anthropologists thought. The actual site has been re-buried to protect it.

From Olduvai, we pressed on to the Serengeti. We had pictured some massive gate that we would drive under while the theme from “Jurassic Park” played, but on the contrary, it was a very tiny wooden sign. In fact, Ngorongoro and Serengeti used to be one park, but they were divided because of the Maasai. In the fifties, they had many conflicts with park authorities. Now, the Maasai may only live in Ngorongoro, and Serengeti is only for the animals. Where there had been Maasai villages and herds dotting the plains of Ngorongoro, once we crossed into the Serengeti, we saw none at all.

We began to see wildebeest and zebras on the horizon, and they steadily increased in number until we were surrounded by hundreds, if not thousands of them. This was the massive migration we had heard so much about, and it was breathtaking to behold. They dotted the plains as far as we could see. The Serengeti is vast. It’s almost incomprehensibly vast for someone used to the size of National Parks in the United States. Once we crossed the entry, we drove for an hour before we saw anything besides the plains and the animals. We came to a small hill where the official park entry center is located. Again, we were quite underwhelmed by it all. The Serengeti charges foreigners 50 US dollars per day to enter the park, and yet the visitor’s center was tiny. The bathrooms were run-down, and there was one small souvenir shop selling barely anything.

The permit and payment process took about an hour. We’re still not quite clear on whether this is normal or if something was wrong. Every time we crossed a park gate, it seemed there was an entire ordeal to undergo. Every park official looked at our documents with great suspicion and scrutiny. Our cook and driver seemed unconcerned. It was here that we learned a very popular phrase: “No hurry in Africa.” Believe it or not, “Hakuna matata” (“no problem”) is also very popular. While we waited, we climbed to a vantage point where we had a 360-degree view of the plains, dotted liberally with wildebeest and zebras. Again, the sheer number of animals and size of the park were breathtaking. As we drove on, the animals only grew thicker, and the sheer biomass of the mammals was overwhelming. I have never been surrounded by so many large animals before.

We drove for another hour and a half before arriving at our campsite, on the way spotting many animals such as elephants, gazelles, hyenas, hartebeest, buffalo, and topi. This campsite was far less tame than the first. It was positioned on a slight hill, and there was nothing protecting it from the vast and wild Serengeti. There were many other tents, some primitive restrooms, and enclosures for the cooks to prepare meals. We watched the sunset over the plain, and enjoyed another delicious dinner. Our cook turned out to be fantastically skilled, especially considering the facilities he had to work with. We thoroughly enjoyed each of our meals.

We survived the night without any lion attacks, and set out early the next morning. We watched the sunrise from out in the park, and then continued our game drive. First we took a lonely road that didn’t yield much by way of large mammals, but showed us a great diversity of birds. I was especially excited to spot secretary birds, lovebirds, and an African hoopoe. We ate breakfast on the hood of the Land Rover in view of a vast herd of buffalo.

We took a new road which appeared busier than the first. We began to pass more safari vehicles. Our guide would ask the other drivers what they had seen, and so he knew where to take us. We could usually spot something good from a ways away, because there would be at least four or five other safari vehicles stopped on the road, and all of the tourists in goofy hats and vests were peeking their heads and immense cameras out. We pulled up behind the first such group and looked in earnest into the tall grass, trying to figure out what was causing so much excitement.

“Lion,” our guide said. Squinting, we saw it. It was a foot. The lion was resting on its back, one foot propped up against the tree. Everyone was frantically snapping pictures. Our guide ensured us we would see more. We took a couple of pictures of the foot just in case.

We drove until we came upon another group of cars, this one much larger. There, we saw a beautiful male lion resting under some palm trees. Driving a little farther, we managed to get a back view. He was resting on a riverbank, and below him was another male devouring a baby hippo carcass. Across the way, a group of tourists who had paid for balloon rides that morning was having a fancy champagne brunch.

Before the day was out, we saw several more female lions and a leopard lounging in a tree, as well as many more of the animals we had seen the day before. We had to return to camp around noon for lunch and to pack up. Our Serengeti permits lasted 24 hours, so we had to reach the entrance of the park by 3:00. Once we exited (with much more waiting and scrutiny of our permits), our 24 hour Ngorongoro permit began. We drove to our campsite in the Conservation Area, and this one was the wildest of all. It was positioned at the edge of the crater with an amazing view down into it. There were Marabou Storks wandering aimlessly around the tents, and guards with AK-47’s patrolled around to keep animals away. A few minutes after our arrival, an elephant strolled up and took a long drink out of our water tank. We realized that Jonathan had not been joking when he asked us if we wanted to set up our tent with a view, or with the elephants.

The next morning we drove down into the crater. It was, if possible, an even more breathtaking landscape than the Serengeti. Where the Serengeti had been flat, the crater was enclosed by steep sloping mountain walls. There were many lakes, one which was filled with thousands of flamingos. We drove through thick forest and had to drive behind a slow-moving elephant for a time. We came upon a group of female lions and cubs devouring some kind of animal carcass. And we saw the last two African mammals we had been missing from the day before: rhinos and cheetahs. The rhinos were somewhat far away, but the cheetahs strolled right by us and across the road. No less than 13 safari cars stopped to watch them, hoping to see them chase down something. All of the zebras and impala watched them warily. But they merely paused to poop and then walked on.

We again only had time for half a day, and so we returned to camp at noon, ate lunch, and then drove back to Arusha. We caught a bus to Moshi, a town at the foot of Mt. Kilimanjaro. Our hotel has a perfect view of the mountain. Today I am going through our hundreds of photos, while Tommy visits the Kilimanjaro Center for Community Ophthalmology.

Pictures are taking a while to upload, and video even longer, but check back–they’re good ones!

Jambo!

January 24th, 2008

Last night, after dark, we arrived in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. While the terminals were indoors, once we left security with our baggage we were in a vast open-air building in the nighttime heat. We were avidly pursued by a taxi driver as we withdrew Tanzanian shillings and purchased tickets to Zanzibar for next week. He said his name was John, and he took us to our hostel. It’s run by an Italian NGO called CEFA, somewhat outside of town. It’s a lovely white building of tile and plaster, with airy verandas, a gorgeous rooftop view of the water, mosquito netting over all of the beds, and (our personal favorite, we must admit) air conditioning!

This morning, a delicious breakfast of bread and guava jam, we caught a daladala to Kariakoo market in the city proper. Daladala is the Swahili name for a phenomenon we have noticed in many a foreign city, a minibuses that go from place to place, cramming as many locals into their seats as possible while a barker hangs out the sliding side door shouting the name of their destination. We rode the half hour into town shoulder-to-shoulder with several locals.

Kariakoo market is a large collection of shops and stands selling just about anything you could want or need. It was not the beautifully organized display our guidebook implied, but instead a fantastic chaos of people, sights, and smells. I must admit, we felt more than a little out of place. We were definitely the only mzungu there, and while many people encouraged us to look at their wares, others gave us uncomfortable stares. We passed over most of the practical items, but we were quite excited to buy a kanga, a cloth worn by East African women with a Swahili proverb written on it. We still aren’t sure what ours says, except that the first word is “wife.”

We walked from the market to the Scandinavian bus terminal to purchase our tickets to Arusha for tomorrow. Then we walked along the coast the entire length of the city, from the bus terminal to the Kivukoni Fish Market. The looks and stares we got on the way were much friendlier than those we encountered at the market. Many people smiled and told us “Hello!” or “Jambo!” We paused along the way to step into the Catholic Cathedral, and also to buy some fried plantain and roasted meat from street vendors. We asked one of them what his name was, and he said, “John.” The day was very, very hot. We were dripping with sweat after walking for only a few minutes.

Finally, we came to the Kivukoni Fish Market, a collection of large open-air structures filled with interesting sights and sounds. As we walked through, people called to us, offering us all manner of seafoods, from fish and prawns to squid and lobster. Everything was freshly caught, and some of it was still alive. We had not gone far when we were cornered by an eager man who brought us out near the water to show us his catch. “Very fresh,” he kept insisting, pointing out the clear, moist eye of a large silver fish. He told us he “had fire,” and we gathered that if we purchased the fish, he would cook it for us. As it seems we often do before our best travel experiences, Tommy and I looked at each other and shrugged. “Okay!” we said.

We followed the man to a table where he gutted the fish right in front of us. People all around him were doing the same. There were many large pink fish on the table, along with some raw squid. One man came up and tried to get us to buy his prawns, while another offered us two live crabs, which he said he would kill immediately if we asked for them. Most of them spoke at least a little English.

Once our fish was gutted, it got a thorough wash and then the man beckoned us to follow him across the street. We passed some more large stands selling beautiful seashells and assorted fruits and vegetables. The seashells were amazing, but we regretfully shook our heads at the vendors, since we have read that gathering them is endangering coral reefs. We came to another open structure where lots of seafood was being cooked. It was dark and filled with smoke and heat. We could see brightly-dressed women sorting and frying tiny anchovies. Our fish was liberally salted and then tossed into an immense pan of oil fed by a wood fire. When it was done, the man doused it in limon and wrapped it up for us in a bag. He told us his name was John. Three Tanzanians, three Johns… Tommy and I were beginning to suspect at that point that we were not receiving real names when we asked. We took it back to the waterfront to eat with our fingers. The salt and limon had fried the skin crispy and delicious, and we picked every bit of meat off that we could. It was absolutely wonderful.

Walking in the heat had been draining, and there was not much left of Dar that we were eager to see, so we headed back to CEFA early that afternoon.

Burnt in Durban

January 24th, 2008

While we were a little sad to leave the beautiful and comfortable hostel in Port Elizabeth, we anxiously and excitedly left for Durban. Durban was dramatically more humid than Port Elizabeth, with good reason– it’s significantly farther north and receives more of the warm Indian Ocean currents. By sharing a taxi with an elderly couple, we were able to save a few rand. It was an interesting experience riding in the taxi, observing the street signs. Understandably, the black majority has over the past decade been attempting to “reclaim” as many sectors of the country as possible. Therefore, street signs are being changed from names such as George or Victoria to more local names (often, a new sign sits on the old one, with a red line crossing it out). In the case of our hostel, Point Road was now Mahtma Ghandi Road, reflecting Durban’s significant Indian population. The major Black ethnic group here is the Zulu people. Afrikaans is fairly uncommon in comparison to the Western Cape though English is still fairly well spoken.

The hostel is worth mentioning because Katie and I loved the style in which it was built. It was a former warehouse/industrial building and that theme was carried through into the new hostel as well, with lots of unfinished metal and concrete floors, accented by bright colors and African motifs.

Seeing as it was Sunday, we tried to find a Catholic church to attend mass. We ran into problems however when we discovered that despite having a population of nearly 4 million people, only three catholic churches existed in the city. Though one was actually close to our hostel, it was completely sealed off by a large barb wired fence. Calling revealed that they had only one Sunday mass, 8:00 AM, and no other masses would be held until Tuesday. The only other church that we could locate was in a terrible neighborhood, so we felt it most prudent to wait till Tuesday’s daily mass.

We went to a shopping area called the Workshop, which had many restaurants and a large flea market. Durban’s Indian population has invented a fabulous dish called “bunny chow,” which we couldn’t wait to try. It consists of serving a curry dish inside of a hollowed out piece of bread. Delicious.

In the evening when attempting to charge the PDA, I realized that we had blown the step down transformer in Knysna. I tried asking the hostel staff where I could buy a new one, but frankly, had I shown them a Martian space gun, they probably would have been even less surprised.

Therefore, Tuesday morning was spent searching for one. We went to every hardware or electric store we could find. Not only was the concept of such a device wholly foreign to them, they could not even suggest where I could find a new one. I shouldn’t have been too surprised though– to call many of these stores “electronic shops” would be a stretch anyway. They mostly sold TVs, radios, cell phone accessories and were staffed by a non-technically educated staff. Considering that really only Americans would have a use for such a device, we thought why not ask the only other Americans we knew in the city—the staff of the US consulate. We were saddened to discover that they were in fact closed because of what the African guards referred to as an “American holiday,” and we realized it was in fact Martin Luther King Day. Later in the day, however, I passed by an Indian who was selling lots of inexpensive plug converters on the street. Though he did not have a transformer, he knew where I could probably get one—South Africa’s answer to Radio Shack. As soon as we walked into the store, A1Radio, and saw dozens of digital multimeters on display, I knew we had found our mecca. The staff immediately knew what we were looking for and, for only $7, we were back in business.

But what I haven’t mentioned is how we spent the middle of the day, between the US Consulate and A1Radio—laying on the beach reading books. Though we reapplied sunscreen regularly, we still got sunburned quite badly.

We had dinner at an Indian restaurant that Wikitravel recommended, and spent the 40 minutes prior to their opening at a beautifully quirky cafe next door called Bean Bag Bohemia.

Sleeping that night proved to be quite painful and restless as my back rubbed against the sheets, so the following morning, I ended up staying in bed while Katie went out birding to the botanical gardens.

Our major activity of the day was visiting the Victoria St. Market. It is in the middle of the Indian district and is essentially a huge flea market. The first floor of this market was filled with mostly tourist oriented items, but there were many interesting Indian shops selling spices, everything from curry and masala to “mother-in-law exterminator” and “KFC spice.” The other floors and areas around the market proved far more interesting, most notably the fish and meat market. There was a bit of a rotten meat smell lingering in the air and it seemed like there were more entrails or whole goat heads for sale than actual slabs of meat. Outside of the building, stalls were selling all kinds of bark, herbs, and animal pieces (including horns, hooves, and gutted birds), presumably for ritualistic purposes. We saw many ads for ritual healers in the area too. We were getting more stares than usual so we thought it best to leave and start heading more towards the beaten path.

A little tired of curry, we ended up settling on chicken/cheese schwarmas for our early dinners and caught a public bus back to our hostel and went to mass. In the church, there were paintings of the Divine Mercy and Our Lady of Czestochowa on the walls. Adjacent to them was a marble slab with an inscription in Polish. It was erected a few years in ago in celebration of 50 years of involvement between Polish priests and the Zulu people. From my conversation with someone after mass, Polish missionary priests have been in South Africa a very long time.

We flew to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania early this morning and arrived twelve hours later at our hostel.

Photos from Durban

Elephants, Zebras, and Kudu (oh my!)

January 19th, 2008

We woke up in Knysna on Friday morning with two more days to drive the Garden Route. We ended up spending nearly the entire day in Tsitsikamma National Park. It’s a beautiful  preserve with a dramatic coastline of boulders and crashing waves. We took a trail along the coast called the Otter Trail, which took us through some lovely forest as well. It became tough going as the trail led down to the coast, where we had to scramble over boulders and rocks. We were sore and exhausted by the time we reached the trail’s end, a lovely waterfall where the Storms River meets the Indian Ocean. While it was a more difficult hike than we expected, it was quite worth it for the lovely views and the adventure.

We stumbled into our car, hungry and exhausted, and drove next to Jeffrey’s Bay, a famous surfing town. We were hoping to find some dinner, and stopped at a pizza place to see the menu. We were about to walk out and perhaps find somewhere else, when the owner informed us that in twenty minutes there would be a scheduled power outage for two and a half hours, and that we should order quickly if we wanted food. We decided it would be prudent to eat there, if the entire city was about to lose power. This explained why there had been power outages once a day since our arrival in South Africa–there are scheduled blackouts due to a power crisis in the country.

We had a small adventure trying to find the road to Addo in the fading evening light, and ended up rolling into the much larger city of Port Elizabeth after dark, where we are staying at the extremely charming Hippo Hostel. The owners were away when we arrived, and suggested we go the Boardwalk Casino to kill time. Whatever we were expecting from this casino, we were quite suprised when we arrived. It was a very stylish commercial area, a boardwalk with restaurants, bars, arcades, stores, and rides. The casino was very upscale. We thought we might spend a few Rand playing slots, but discovered that you had to register for a gaming card in order to gamble.

This morning, we got back in our trusty rental and headed to Addo Elephant National Park, about 50 km north of Port Elizabeth. Coming from this direction it was easy to find. A lot of people do guided safaris, but seeing as we had a car and have already booked a guided trip in the Serengeti, we decided we’d try our luck on our own. We drove into the park, fingers crossed that we might see some wildlife.

We came to a watering hole after sighting a couple of Kudu, a kind of antelope, and Tommy stopped the car. I began to peer through my binoculars at some shapes in the distance.

“Are those elephants?” Tommy asked.

“No,” I said, “They’re ostriches.”

“Not those,” he said, pointing as I lowered my binoculars. “Those.”

I looked, and my mouth fell open. Coming straight towards us in the distance was a herd of elephants, more than I could conveniently count. They were stirring up an immense cloud of red dust. I fumbled for the camera and began frantically snapping pictures. They came closer and closer, and finally converged on the small puddle of a watering hole we were parked in front of. We couldn’t believe how close they came; less than 100 yards from the car. We took so many pictures we had to put a new SD card in our camera. They were magnificent, and so much fun to watch. They began to wallow in the watering hole, rolling around and splashing themselves with their trunks. They stayed there at least a half an hour, and we stayed there as well, transfixed. Finally, they seemed to make a collective decision to move on. We smiled as three or four adults had to use their trunks to help a clumsy youngster out of the water.

I never thought I would say the words, “Oh, keep driving, it’s just another elephant,” but it happened quite frequently today. That first encounter set the pace for an amazing time in the park. We saw zebras, kudu, hartebeest, warthogs, ostriches, countless small birds, flightness dung beetles, and tons of elephants. They came close to the cars without fear or agression. Our favorite encounter was rounding a bend and finding a massive male in the middle of the road. I was afraid it might approach the car, but we backed out of its way, and it merely strolled by, its feet making gentle scraping noises against the dirt road. It was truly spectacular. We were only sorry we didn’t see rhinos or lions, the park’s more elusive residents.

We stayed nearly until the park closed, and then drove back to Port Elizabeth. We decided to save some money and cook a dinner at the hostel, so we set out in search of a supermarket. We found a tiny place with a relatively good selection and began discussing what we could make when one of the workers came up to us. He told us that most of the food in the store had been sitting there for a year or more, and that there was a supermarket with a much better selection right down the street. He gave us excellent directions. Grateful but very confused, we went there and bought ingredients for a delicious vegetable curry. Our evening was spent editing the 400-something photos we snapped in the park today.

Pictures from Addo National Park

Elephant Video

The Many Sides of South Africa

January 18th, 2008

We spent the early part of Wednesday in the Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens. We read that they’re amongst the world’s best and Katie and I both felt that they very likely were! To get there, we took a “Rikki” taxi, a converted London taxi that works on a shared-ride basis. As you are enroute to your destination, it is totally possible that you could divert and pick someone else up before you arrive. Being in the taxi and then later in the gardens reminded me of an interesting part of South African culture–its 11 official languages! Amongst the white population in the Western Cape province, Afrikaans is the language most children will learn first. Afrikaans is a Dutch variant that evolved from the earliest Dutch settlers in the 17th century (what Cajun is to modern French, Afrikaans is to modern Dutch). The native black African population in the West speaks a language known as Xhosa, but thanks to the consequences of the 17th century arrival of the British, nearly everyone in the country speaks some English as a second language. This is what makes getting around so easy!

After we had spent a sufficient amount of time in the gardens, we called for another Rikki and went over to Cape Town’s waterfront, which was a quite lovely area. On the walk back to our hostel, we also stopped for a late lunch at what best can be described as a “gourmet hamburger restaurant.” I got an ostrich burger with beets, whereas Katie’s had a tuna steak with a mango sauce. I should also mention that we passed by Bentley and Jaguar dealerships. Sometimes the poverty of South Africa can be easily hidden.

I have been very surprised by the number of luxurious cars that I have seen around the city. If you’re white and living in Cape Town, there seems to be a very good chance that you will drive a Mercedes, BMW, or Audi. The book I am currently reading puts South Africa in an interesting context. If you took just the white population of South Africa (about 10%) and looked at all the general indicators of its economic fitness, the country would seem to rank comfortably amongst the Western European nations. If one looks at the whole population of South Africa, however, the country doesn’t seem to fare much differently than any other African nation. Most of the population lives in stark poverty.
 
From the drives we’ve done around and out of Cape Town, the remnants of the apartheid system are still visible. Townships (immensely huge slums) are still where most of the black, “coloured,” and “Indian” population live. Also, two phenomenon which are almost non-existent in Latin America and Europe exist here–strip malls and suburban neighborhoods. I think that these can be partially explained in the context that the historically very wealthy white population always was able of purchasing cars and with there being no real “middle class” the need for public transport never arose, as it did in the cases of Latin America and Europe. The consequences of this artifact we felt right away on Wednesday when we tried to get around the city without a rental car! Almost no public transportation exists!

We flew through an internet café to post a quick entry off our PDA, then went to the city’s bus station to catch our bus to George. It is funny how bus stations, in the US or abroad, never seem to be nice places, both in terms of their physical appearance and clientele. The bus we took was also a bit of a dud. We sat on the second story in front of the windows, and every time we stopped, these small cockroaches would emerge from the air conditioning vents. And because the driver would stop the bus seemingly every hour for no other apparent reason than to smoke, we ended up arriving an hour late (though safely I must say) to George, right around 2:45 in the morning. After a cell phone call to our hostel, we were soon asleep in their very lovely place.

Freedom returned again on Thursday when we got our new rental car, a beautiful Honda Jazz. We spent the day shamelessly lying on the beach, birdwatching, and exploring both the nearby wilderness and the resort towns.
 
Another interesting South African reality– the black population suffers from a very high unemployment rate (~30%) so they have a way of “making jobs” for themselves. One example is unofficial parking attendants. There will be a few males in literally each parking lot that will direct you to the closest free parking spot, help you back out, and supposedly also make sure your car doesn’t get jacked while you’re gone. In return, a small tip is expected.
 
The Garden Route, the name given to the 400 km roadtrip we’re making over the next few days, makes for a neat setting because both mountains and the Indian Ocean beach are within just a few miles of each other. Towards the late afternoon, we found a great hostel in a small town called Knysna and called it a day!

I must admit, the suburbs, strip malls, and coastal condos make us wonder… are we in Africa, or Florida?

Pictures from Cape Town

Pictures from the Garden Route

Left is Right, Right is Wrong

January 16th, 2008

As we drove along the coastline of Cape Town, gazing down at pristine white beaches gently kissed by sparkling blue and green waters, one thought kept entering into our minds: this is only the first day.

It was hard enough to believe that we were actually leaving on Sunday, when we loaded our packs into the back of the car and drove to the New Orleans airport in the dark of early morning. A quick flight brought us to Dulles Airport in Washington, where we found an excellent way to pass our six-hour layover: the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum near the airport, where all the large planes and space vessels are on display. A quick shuttle took us there and back. On the return trip, we were on it with two flight attendants and two pilots, whose conversation drifted into the subject of getting very drunk. Halfway through they stopped and looked at us, slightly alarmed. “Where are you flying?” they asked, hoping we weren’t on their next flight.

The rest of the layover went by quickly, and soon we were boarding a massive South African Airlines plane via a large shuttle that took us across the tarmac. We looked curiously at the other passengers, wondering what each of their stories was, and what brought them to South Africa. It was a diverse group, but as we’ve found so far, it is a diverse country.

We hadn’t slept much the night before, thinking that with the eight-hour time change, we should try and be as exhausted as possible when we boarded our flight across the Atlantic. It certainly worked. Tommy didn’t even remember takeoff; I remember tiredly lifting my head and then going back to sleep. It was a good flight. Near the end, we gazed down at the ground below us and marveled, “That’s Africa!”

We landed in Johannesburg and had to pick up our bags to go through customs. Because we had arrived in D.C. so early, they were on the bottom of the pile. By the time we had them, our flight to Cape Town was leaving in only 30 minutes. We flew through customs as quickly as we could and then ran to the domestic departures gates, which were in a separate building entirely. Airport employees who saw us running asked where we were going and quickly arranged for help. One of them grabbed our bags, rushed us through security, and got us to our gate. We made it with only nine minutes to takeoff. They ended us holding the plane until all of the connecting passengers made it anyway, but I suppose it was exhilarating trying to make it on time. Tommy and I have already established on numerous past occasions that it’s not really a vacation until you have to frantically run somewhere.

By the time we reached our hostel, it was after 8 pm, so we didn’t see much of Cape Town that night. We went out for some beer and a little food, and toasted the beginning of our trip. It was hard to believe we were really sitting at the tip of Africa at that very moment. It had taken us a lot of hard work and planning to get there.

The next morning, over breakfast, we decided on all of the things we wanted to do in the area. Then we asked the hostel staff what would be the best way to get around. Their answer was to rent a car. It would only be thirty dollars for the day, and it would be at the hostel in a half hour. We looked at each other and shrugged–why not?

In less than the promised 30 minutes, we were cruising down the coastal highway–the left side of the coastal highway–in a much-abused but still functional Fiat Uno. It was a little overcast, but the sun was sparkling over the water, and the beaches looked pristine and white. Towering over it all were immense mountains, including the majestic Table Mountain, all cloaked in fog. It was breathtaking. And seeing it all in our own car gave us a marvelous freedom. All we had to do was remember to keep to the left side of the road!

We drove down the Cape Peninsula to the Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve. We had stopped for birding along the way, but we got our first real taste of African wildlife at the Reserve entrance. We were paying the entry fee when Tommy said, “Oh my god, baboons.” Sure enough, there was a whole troop of them wandering around and even sitting on top of a parked car. There was one big male, a female with a baby clutching her chest, and several smaller individuals. Tommy turned to the woman in the toll booth. “Are they friendly?” he asked hopefully. She gave him a flat stare I’m sure she reserves only for foolish American tourists. “No,” she said. “Roll up your windows.”

Once we had taken a sufficiently ridiculous number of photos, we drove on into the park. The landscape was interesting, covered in the unique fynbos vegetation that is only found in the western Cape. We went all the way to the tip of the peninsula, where we hiked up to the lighthouse for a breathtaking view. Driving back out of the Reserve, I made Tommy slam on the breaks for our second big wildlife sighting: an ostrich!

Our next stop after the Nature Reserve was the town of Boulders, famous for its penguin colony. I’d consider any day in which I saw both penguins and an ostrich ornithologically successful, and Boulders did not disappoint. There’s a board walk along a shrubby beach, and there are African Penguins everywhere, right next to the walkway. I have to say… they were pretty darn cute.

We had lunch in the charming town of Kalk Bay and then, realizing how much time we still had, headed out to the wine region of Stellenbosch. We stopped at the Spier vineyard for a great tasting for only 10 Rand (roughly $1.40) and then some coffee and cheesecake in their lovely gardens, where ducks and weavers begged for food. As we made our way back to the city, we recounted what a wonderful day it had been, and marveled at how little we had spent. Not only that, but we hadn’t gotten in a single driving-on-the-wrong-side-of-the-road-related incident. Definitely something to be proud of. Exhausted and still a little jetlagged, we called it an early night once we made it back to Cape Town.

Pictures from Cape Town

The Packing List

January 13th, 2008

When we started traveling and going abroad, we got in the habit of writing a post about what we were bringing with us. It proved to be an invaluable way to help us pack for the next time. So, here’s what we’re bringing with us for the next six months! All in all, Tommy is carrying about 40-50 lbs and Katie around 30-40. Our parents are meeting us in March and will bring us some new clothes, take off some of our cold weather clothing, and replace our reading material.

Gear:

– 2 internal frame backpacks, 105/90 L capacity

– 2 booksacks

– 2 cotton towels

– money belts (passports, immunization certificates, credit/debit cards, international/us drivers license, international student id cards, health insurance, scuba diving license)

– nylon travel hammock

– PDA + collapsible keyboard, charger, SD to USB converter, and 2gb SD card (2007 CIA World Factbook, entire Wikipedia sans images, English dictionary, Eng/Spanish dictionary, entire IMDB, international dialing code spreadsheet, unabridged Shakespeare, US Army survival manual, The Count of Monte Cristo, Civil Disobedience, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, wikitravel articles on all cities we’re visiting, all hostel reservations, airline reservations, trip budget spreadsheet)

– Ipod + charger, all of our combined music libraries, podcasts (Advanced Spanish grammer, introductory Arabic), Polish for beginners course

– cell phone + charger, world SIM card

– rechargeable batteries (8), charger

– books (His: The Fate of Africa, Yugoslavia’s Bloody Collapse, The Haunted Land, In Spite of the Gods, Palestine and the Arab-Isreali Conflict, The Pol Pot Regime, Spanish verbs; Hers: A Short History of the World, A Guinea Pig’s History of Biology, The Selfish Gene, The Lying Stones of Marrakech, Colloquial Polish beginner’s course with book and CD’s on iPod)

– birding field guides (Princeton Field Guides: Birds of Africa south of the Sahara, Birds of Europe, Birds of India, and Birds of Southeast Asia; Birds of Australia by Graham Pizzey and Roy Doyle)

– binoculars

– field bag

– 2 Moleskin notebooks and pens

– sketchpad, pencils, eraser

– converters, step down transformer, extension cord

– sunglasses

– handheld digital scale

– magnetic chess set

– Leatherman

– lighter

– bug spray

– toilet paper

– clothes line/retractable reel

– utensils in linen cloth

– locks (cable, padlock, three-wheel)

– lexan wineglasses and wine bottle opener

Princeton tec impulse flashlight, Petzl TIKKA headlamp

– small pillows

– digital cameras + 2 2gb SD cards, 2 4gb flashdrives, pelican strongbox, manual, small tripod

– Repair Kit (zip ties, sewing kit, spare batteries, duct tape, electric tape, twist ties, zip lock/garbage bags, rubber bands, spare straps, connectors, paper clips, safety pins, shoe laces, pencil, marker, carabiner)

– First Aid kit (doxycycline, ciprofloxacin, malarone, acetazolamide, ibuprofen, immodium, benadryl, fibercon, melatonin, midol, fluconazole, zyrtec, tape, gloves, betadine, alcohol pads, band aids, ors powder, theraflu, activated charcoal, tweezers, eye drops, earplugs, neosporin, antibiotic drops, iodine tablets, gauze, space blanket, scalpels, needles, thermometer, vomit bags, cavi wipes, ace wrap, moleskin, hand warmers, handsanitizer, Field Guide to Wilderness Medicine)

– toiletries (standard stuff)

– document wallet (flight reservations, plane/rail tickets, insurance policy, dive charts, extra passport photos, passport xeroxes)

– compasses

His clothes:

– Socks (6 calf, 5 ankle length)

– Boxers (4 cotton, 3 under armour)

– pants (1 khaki, 1 jean, 1 NorthFace converter, 1 Hyvent rainpants, brown leather belt)

– beanie, gloves, nack gaiter, thermal underwear

– Marmot Radiator 300 wt Polartec fleece

– NorthFace Hyvent rainjacket

– undershirts (1 longsleeve cotton, 2 underarmours)

– shirts (3 longsleeve, 1 cotton polo, 1 coolmax polo)

– shorts (1 nylon, 1 cotton)

– rubber overshoes

– reef flipflops

– Lands End ankle hiking shoes

Her clothes:

– pants (1 pair of jeans, 1 pair of Northface converters, rainpants, gym shorts)

– skirts (1 short, 1 long)

– shirts (4 short-sleeved cotton, 2 long-sleeved, 1 tank top, 1 underarmor)

– Marmot fleece with rainjacket

– light jacket

– hat

– gloves, neck gaiter, thermal leggings

– 7 pairs of underwear (4 cotton, 3 Ex-officio)

– 3 bras

– Reef flip flops

– Lowa hiking boots

– socks (4 ankle-length, 3 higher smartwool pairs)

Around the World in 190 Days

December 28th, 2007

Two and a half years ago, we got a crazy idea. What if we graduated a semester early and took a six-month trip around the world?

Well, it seemed crazy at first, but somehow we knew it had to be possible. After factoring in hostels, budget airlines, and a few helpful hours of AP credit, we realized that we would have the money and time to do it. And we would never get another opportunity like this.

So, on January 13, 2008, we are setting off on the adventure of a lifetime. This blog will document our travels with stories and photographs. You can check our itinerary by clicking on the link to the right, and the photo thumbnails will take you to our Flickr photo page. Currently we have some shots up from our trip last summer to Argentina, Peru, and Bolivia.

So if you’d like to follow our travels, check back frequently during the next six months!