Monday 29 August 2011

SA and home...

Writing this from the comfort of my couch in Greystones with electricity, hot water, my bed and my jeans!!!.... what a wonderful trip...still zonked (just got home yesterday) and re-adjusting but will get there...

So South Africa...well flew out of Lilongwe airport on the 17th...were very happy to find a taxi with petrol to drive us to the airport and glad to leave before any protests/riots started.  Since we have left the Prime Minister has removed all his cabinet so does this mean a dictatorship??  MMmmm...not sure...

Delayed in Jo'burg airport for hours so arrived in Port Elizabeth v late on the Thursday night.  We were hoping to say hi to the Bennet family but time went against us unfortunately... left PE on Friday after an amazing nights sleep in a bed, with hot water, electricity, a lovely toilet and a TV...we didn't know ourselves... 
Drove to a small village called Jobertina (on the R62 route on the Garden Route) and stayed there for 3 nights.  It was a beautiful cottage in the middle of no-where... with no electricity again... so out with the torches/night-lights again...was kind of funny!  Met lovely people and the quote of the stay there was 'Jobertina is a one horse town...at the weekend the horse is dead'...when we asked if there was an internet cafe... .  At night all we could see were the stars...beautiful....also became friends with the biggest spider I have ever seen!!!! 
Drove then, on Monday, to Arniston Bay...about a 8 hr drive, down the beautiful Prince Alfred Pass, into Knysna for lunch and then across wine country to Arniston - a fabulous seaside town with lots of cottages, cliff walks, beaches etc... Unfortunately the rain came but that didn't put us off and as we sipped rum in the hotel, beside the open fire, we thought life wasn't too bad!! 
Then three nights in Camps Bay, just 15 min from Cape Town...what can I say - Out of this World..!  We were staying in absolute luxury, over looking the Atlantic, waves crashing (the only thing we heard)...just incredible.  After shopping in Cape Town we settled back into 'western life' with sundowners, fish and sleep... popped into a spa for a massage and fish eating our feet (all the rage apparently!)...and chilled... and then flew from Cape Town - Heathrow - Dublin arriving home yesterday...

Good to be home and cant wait to see everyone and catch up.... but what an amazing summer...have really been bitten by the travelling bug and would love to head back to Rwanda for a while... also maybe Zimbabwe and Mozambique (must learn how to spell it first!).... Have our Malawi Table and some other bits and pieces to remind us of an amazing summer.... You should all do it...!

Tuesday 23 August 2011

Bye bye Zanzibar.....hello Malawi and SA

Hello all...sorry it has been 10 days +...really limited internet/electricity in Malawi and then in SA until today so here goes...hope I remember it all...

So Zanzibar, as I said, was just incrediable...really beautiful part of the world...sandy beaches, blue, transparent sea, amazing fish... Headed out snorkling, ate bbq tuna on the beach...where do you get it.... and all got burnt to a crisp...despite the large amounts of sun lotion (Eoin still peeling..looks like he has a skin disease!)...  Ended up at a semi-full moon party in Kendall Beach (dont ask!!!)... and spent the rest of the time recovering.....Got the ferry back to Dar Es Saalam and stayed one more night before leaving at 4am to cross into Malawi... (did I tell you - we got tuc tuck from the camp to theferry on the way over to Zanzibar...they are teeny little cars - like golf cars, and our driver was a lunatic...driving on the footpaths, practically knocking down people etc...! so we got a taxi back after Zan...I want to live a little longer!!)...

Malawi.... crossed the border into Malawi from Tanzania...just before we did we met Mr Cool...the blackmarket money exchange guy who was able to give us 1.80 kqatcha to the dollar (the banks have fixed it at 1.40 to the dollar)...was really wierd..meeting this guy with a large suitcase of money....at the side of teh road....but that seems to be the way things are done.... so just went with it...

Spend 5 nights at Lake Malawi...wow...one of the biggest lakes in the world - looks like the sea...honestly. amazing.  Spent the first two in Chitimba and then the last three in Kandi Beach.... A nasty worm thingy lives in Lake Malawi (Bilhowzie...or something...._..) and so as we were showering; paddling/swmming etc. we have to take these anti-bilhowzie tablets on the 23 sept..to stop these worms growing in our intestines - UUURRRGGGHHHH!!!!  Anyhow, Lake Malawi just fabulous...really nice.  Spent some time in the local villages with fabulous people.

Desperate poverty in Malawi - most probably the poorest country we have been in. There is a fuel crises at the moment; limited food (difficult to find potatoes etc.), 1 in 4 people have HIV/AIDS etc.. Awful poverty... yet the people are so friendly and nice.  Very few people saying 'give me money' as in other Countries we had been in though.. in one village... it was awful...one girl curtiosed (cant spell it) me... the perception of the white person is just awful... following us around, wanting to touch our hair, skin... feeling 'priviledged' to meet us... bowing at us .... and yet these people are malnourished, have absolutely nothing... something wrong with the world....

Left the Lake for Lilongwe and were there for 4 days... limited electricity, no internet but again lovely people.  Meant to be riots on one of the days we were there but they were cancelled at the last minute.  I believe the government have all been fired by the president now...

Anyway, have to run...internet crashing... will update again when I can... xxx

Thursday 4 August 2011

Zanzibar...what can I say...

So..left Arusha for a tough, bumpy 14 hour drive to Dar Es Salaam... however it was really worth it... stayed in a backpackers (Macaki Beach) right on the Indian Ocean.. absolutely amazing... blue 'picture postcard' sea, golden sand... cant believe we are here...  One of the couples on our trip are getting married in New Zealand in December so, in order to 'prepare them' for that we organised a 'mock wedding' on our lovely Oasis Truck 'Jozie'.  Well, it was just wonderful, all dressed up (well, with musty, sandy shorts etc... flowers in our hair..), and the Indian Ocean as the back-drop...

Next day we got the ferry over to Zanzibar Island and stayed in Stone Town for a night...did a Spice Tour which was incrediable... Vanilla Pods hanging from trees, Cinnamon Trees, Tumeric, Cardamon etc... great to see and experience... we also did a small tour of Stonetown, which played a massive part in the Slave Trade... and we were guided around the former Slave market etc..terrible what happened to so many people. 50,000 people per year were 'kidnapped, born into or cohersed' into the Slave Trade per year and that was solely in Zanzibar...

On a cheerier note, that evening we went to the fish market... woweeee.... just unbelievable sight (and small!)..there must have been 50 or more food stands selling all types of fish, meats, breads etc... so we tucked into tuna, kingfish, prawn, lobster kebabs...just delicious...and funny having to barter for our food too... You would all love it...even if you are not too keen on fish...

Up in Nungwi, North Island now for a few days... wet and cloudy (Nooooooo...) though still super hot...so hopefully the sun breaks through the clouds.  Leave here on Monday and then head to Malawi....

Keep in touch... x

Friday 29 July 2011

Tanzania

Greetings from Arusha, Tanzania.  Here for 4 nights while some of the gang go to the Serengetti... as we were lucky enough to go to the Massai Mara we are just taking it easy... staying in snake park, about 30 minutes outside Arusha, with snakes and crocs - eek!!  Not so sure about that...  In town for a few minutes to buy dinner for the next 3 nights so took the opportunity to say hi!

Not much to say about Tanzania so far - much more barren and dry then any other Country we have been in so far.  A large Massai Community here, like Kenya, which is interesting.  Freezing at night and in the am and then a heat wave from about 11am - 4pm so getting used to this!!  Spent 2 hours handwashing all our clothes..oh I miss my washing machine!  Eoin's turn next..

Chat soon - should be online again in 5-6 days! x

Tuesday 26 July 2011

Back in Nairobi

Hello from Nairobi... just back today for two days before we head off to Tanzania...

Had a great time in Uganda.. Eoin, as I mentioned, went off White Water Rafting and came back with a split lip, bruised and bleeding nose but a massive smile - he loved it. They were Grade 5 rapids (for those of you who know what that means... I think that means they are big and scary so I opted for a read the book on the banks of the Nile day!!)...

After a jet-boat up the Nile (Eoin again..I'm a chicken!) we headed off to Lake Navasha..a lake in Kenya where hippos live.  Well it was absolutely amazing. Went out on a boat to go hippo spotting and there were millions...ok, probably about 60 but wowee... incredible..and then, while eating dinner (we take it in turns to cook, 4 in a cook group) beside our tents we see hippos about 100 mtrs away from us (we are protected by an electric fence..thank goodness!);..it was incredible... so we fell asleep to the sound of hippos.

Stopped at Joy Adamson's house (Born Free) for afternoon tea and the Gariffe Santuary.. which was good and now reloading, washing and getting ready to head off on Thursday to Tanzania..

Half the group on our truck are finishing here in Nairobi tomorrow so that is kind of sad... and we will get another 12 new people... but I'm sure they will be as lovely as the last crowd...

Final words... you MUST come to Africa... honestly folks, it is just out of this world and you would all love it!!!

Catch up soon, hope you are all well and sorry for all the important birthdays, anniversaries etc that we have missed.... Miss you all xxxx

Thursday 21 July 2011

Kampala to Rwanda - arrived Rwanda 15 July. Days 14-17 in Africa

So, had a great time in Kampala - went into the city on a motorbike taxi - hillarious!! and had lunch, pottered around and really enjoyed it.  Really friendly city with less people staring at us muzungos (white people) then in other cities, which was much more relaxing.  Two of our group nearly got pick-pocketed which is not so good but things can happen like that in any city.  There are loads of vultures flying around which is slightly creepy ....


 So... left Kampala on 15th to head into Rwanda... What can I say about Rwanda.. the most AMAZING country I have ever ever been in.  Honestly, you cross the border (after bargaining with border control so that the Irish and Ozzies only had to pay 12 dollars for a visa instead of 60 - as you do!) and you are met with massive forests, tea fields and people picking tea everywhere, baboons in the trees, fields of crops and such friendly, warm people.. it keeps getting better.  Had no mobile/internet for the time in Rwanda nor access to ATMs etc.. it seems they have no international access at all....

arrived in Kigali, Capital of Rwanda to go to the Genocide Museum...absolutely heart-wrenching.. the genocide only took place in 1994 and so many people were murdered, injured etc.. absolutely horrific.  The museum is done really tastefully and definitely leaves you thinking about why the International Community sat by and let this happen...it put things into perspective ...  During our time in Rwanda we kept seeing people affected by the Genocide and when you think about it, everyone over 20 will remember it...

Spent 3 nights in a fully little hotel in a town called Rhuengehiri (or something like that) where we ate plantains, beans, rice, ground nut and other delicious local food... Upgraded to a posh (in inverted commas) room as I really wanted a nice toilet and a hot shower.. and my wish was granted.. amazing how you get used to cold showers and holes in the ground but every so often one needs a little luxury....  also, I really appreciate washing machines now... after Eoin and I spent 3 hours washing all our clothes... it is really hard work and they still dont look clean...

Tried to break into the Congo while in Rwanda... as you do (are we crazy!!..) but for various reasons we couldn't... a)too dangerous ... b) costs 300$ for a visa c)we'd have to exit Rwanda and pay re-entry visas for both Rwanda and Kenya as we had left East Africa... and so instead 6 of us, with a lovely border guard, walked up to the no-mans land, seperating Rwanda and Congo... the GPS on one of the girl's cameras said Democratic Republic of Congo... so we were happy... looking across at the Congo town of 'Goma' we realised how well off Rwanda is in comparision... the roads just stop as Goma appears... there is rubble, shacks, so many people with absolutely nothing, guys with very large guns, no roads, no sign of infrastructure etc.. really unsettling and a bit scary... again, makes you think a little...

Last thoughts of the day... in Uganda now camping beside the River Nile and will blog more once on a better internet connection.. Eoin currently white-water rafting and Im about to head into Jinga to post some cards... but Africa is an amazing Country, the levels of poverty are frightening, and then on the other hand the wealth, living side by side leaves such a bad taste in your mouth... Churches are everywhere, and are massive and stand out as sore thumbs when placed beside the shacks\slums that some people are living in... there are large guns everywhere... toilets are terrible... mozzies still love me... 15 bites and counting..no matter how much deet I apply...people are lovely and so friendly and somewhat a little crazy!!!

Wednesday 13 July 2011

the journey to Kampala

So I think the last time I was able to update was when we were back in Nairobi..(should have checked before starting to write here - oops!)... anyway... after really enjoying Nairobi we met up with the Overland Truck last Saturday, 9 July in Karen, just outside Nairobi.  There are us and 22 other people... all really lovely, from all over the place - NZealand, UK, Australia, Canada and we are waving the Irish Flag!

Just by the way, I have never had so many conversations about toilets in my life... once the truck left Nairobi we seem obsessed... we are mostly met with holes in the ground or toilets which look like they haven't ever been cleaned, with dead insects etc.. yuck! so we all get very excited when we come across a nice clean, tiled bathroom... and it is a bonus if we can also have a shower... and occassionally we find a hot one too!

Left Nairobi and drove over the East Rift Valley to our first campsite, beside Nakuru national park.  Everyone was allocated a tent and a cook group (we take it in turns to cook dinner & breakfast) and off we went... Spent the next day in Nakuru National Park where there was fabulous birds, rhinos (black and white), giraffes and of course the Lion - amazing... 

Yesterday we drove through Kenya, across the Ugandan border.. the Irish didn't have to pay for a visa -  (however for Tanzania we pay twice what everyone else pays!)....and arrived in Kampala at 6ish last night.  The landscape has changed dramatically from the dry, barren land of Kenya to a lush, green, forestry Uganda...

We are having a brilliant time, the people on the truck are great, the Africans we are meeting are really friendly and welcoming, the food interesting and the sun shining... (most of the time...occassional tropical type downpours!)...

Having Goat Stew for dinner tonight... we'll let you know how we get on... and then up at 4am, take down the tent and head through Uganda to Kibale where I am on dinner duty - help!!!