Still no water

Today we went to the north of the island….we left the shit hole of an ‘apartment’ and headed to the guesthouse dean booked on line that had great reviews….

Feeling hopeful watching England play Columbia…

We don’t need to go into details, but this afternoon we ended up buying a 1.5lt bottle of water, pierced the lid with Dean’s knife and took turns spraying each other with it to wash.

We actually had a bit left in the bottle when we were finished!

“Matias wake up, we’re going out for dinner”

“Ok I come too, need wash first”

“You can’t, there is no water”

“Paradise here huh!”

new lows…

Our penthouse apartment in Zanzibar

It was always going to be too good to be true but I underestimated just how bad it could be.

‘Apartment sleeps 10 with kitchen, bathroom, washing machine (the first I’ve heard of since we left home), hot water and WiFi, $15 USD per night’ says booking.com…between 3 of us?! A whole apartment? How bad an it be? Awesome! Luckily I only booked two nights…

It started with the hour wait at the ferry terminal for a guy to take us to the apartment – why we couldn’t just have the address I’m not sure.

He walked us through lots of tiny run down streets to get to the place. Zanzibar has a European feel about it whilst the people, predominantly Muslim, look more Arabic and Indian as opposed to African.

He walked us up the stairs to the apartment which smelt of mould to a ‘chill out’ area of cushions on the ground where we had to take off our shoes. This usually implies the floor is clean 😳

The chill out area

We were shown one room with 3 single beds and another with two doubles, nothing flash, very basic but what we expected for the price (not sure how 10 would sleep here though)

Maybe here…?

I noticed dirty plates in the kitchen and random cups scattered around….

‘is anyone else staying here?’ I ask

‘just me, I live here’

Right.

No problem. A bit weird…not quite whole apartment, but we are in Africa.

‘wifi?’

‘i need to charge my phone first’

Oh yeah…we know the drill here.

We leave our stuff and go for a walk around the old town. Rainy season is supposed to be over by now however it seems to be hanging on just for us 😬

It was a Sunday so the streets were a little quieter than usual however there was still a huge food market of fish, fruit, veg and spices. The city would have been very beautiful once upon a time but now sadly, everything is in decay, like so much of Africa. Lots of burqa action here too which makes the place even more depressing and reminds me how much I dislike travelling in Islamic countries.


The rain came, we tried to stay dry but eventually gave in when we had to walk through streets of running water to get back to the apartment.

An interesting prison like cage hanging from the ceiling…

This is when I realised how dirty everything was…and the 10cms of dirty stagnant water in the washing machine….and the missing window in our bedroom…and the dirt on the floors (my shoes are staying on) and the dribble of water that came out of the shower head (neither warm or able to wash you) and most of all….my most despised smell of all time…dirty head smell in the bed. Truly vomit worthy.

I cover the bed with another sheet that looks like it may have been washed at some stage in its life, I used my sleep sheet to cover every centimetre of my body and the pillow but somehow, from somewhere it still smells 😷

Pretty sure this hasn’t been used for years

And just to confirm I’m not just being a fussy girl, Dean has just come back from the ‘shower’ with a look of distaste on his face

‘babe, don’t bother….there’s no water, the bathroom stinks, nobody washes in there, I’m pretty sure I left a clean spot on the floor… I don’t understand why they take their shoes off!? I can do cold water, but no water at all is a stretch, and it really fucking stinks in there of something…’

Thats the smell of lots of old urine.

Not just me.

And Martias has covered his bed with his hammock as he felt things biting him.

Not just me…one more night…

“Puto Australianos di mierda, es esta camino realmente necessario?!”

Sal tells me our last blog post was from Nkata bay in Malawi, which feels like a lifetime ago, in reality it’s only a couple of weeks but anyway, this will take some time…

So from Nkata bay we went to another spot on Lake Malawi just outside Livingstonia called Mushroom Farm. It had been recommended to us by some other travellers as having a great view, and was half way to the border so seemed like a good spot to stop.

The ride there was nothing too special, but the surrounds changed from dry and dusty to subtropical, and we stopped for a nice lunch of fish and rice on the side of the road just 11km from the farm.

At that point the road turned off the tar to a small mountain track. There was a guy in a little wooden shack at the corner, whose sole job it was to find travellers headed there, and sort out a ride up the mountain track in a 4×4.

“It is very rocky, mostly bike people go a little way up and then come back”

Matthias read a review by some guys on F800’s who took 45min to make the 11km track, but they were riding solo…

“Hmmm”

Well we didn’t come to Africa not expecting some challenges, and it was only 11km of track so we buckled up for the attempt. Most of the credit goes to Sally on this one, it was incredibly bumpy and rocky, but nothing Betsy couldnt handle, and Matthias on the little bike found it comparably easy, but Sal got the hardest workout hanging on for grim death in a series of about 50 steep hairpin rocky bends.

I was pouring with sweat at the top, but the cold beer and the view was pretty amazing. We camped in an overlanders area overlooking the lake, watched a bit of world cup, cooked dinner over the campfire, drank some wine and then headed back down the rocky track the next day to the Tanzanian border.

Border formalities were the usual, except for the insurance which we needed to buy for the next 5 countries called COMESA insurance. As usual it was being sold by some random guy hanging around at the immigration desk, who led us to a tiny office around the corner, overfilled with badly smelling people, three broken computers, two broken chairs, no power, and no signage.

The initial price was quoted as $90 which we knew was too much, I countered with $60, they went to $75 but wouldn’t budge from that.

“Ok no problem, we buy it in the next town”

I conferred with Sal and Matthias, and we agreed that none of us was really sure what to do.

We tried to get to the stinky office without the runner from immigration, figuring he was getting a cut on the sale, and we’d get a better deal without him around, but he saw us coming and headed us off before we got back to the office, not helped by me not being able to find it again…

Instead we ate lunch there at the border to ponder the situation for a bit.

Full stomachs didn’t improve things much, and the consensus was that we should cave into the $75 price and just get it over with.

As we continued to discuss the situation in the street, another runnner came over introducing himself as the person for insurance… I asked him how much it cost, and after a brief discussion, that among other things involved Mathias’ need for sympathy after Argentina losing the football, we settled on $55ea. Too good.

Another half hour in another stinky office without power and more broken computers, and we were the new owners of COMESA insurance, which SHOULD take us all the way to Egypt 🙂

That problem solved we headed to the closest town Myeba, found a hotel to sleep in and went out for more rice, beef and veg, the standard food around here for $1 each.

Next moring we discussed the two options for heading north to Kilimanjaro, the 800km normal way, or the 500km of dirt road way… Of course the dirt road way!!

2 hours into this and we were not so sure we’d made the right decision. The road was rocky, potholed, dusty, sandy and everything else you cant imagine.

Late afternoon we arrived in the only ‘town’ marked along this route, which turned out to be a tiny village that only exists to serve the buses that ply this route. There was however a place to sleep in the back of the village, somewhere that sold cold beer, another few small restaurants for the bus passengers and plenty of interesting things to look at, including Matias having his hair platted by some friendly ladies at the ‘liquor store’

Another 200km of dusty dirt road the next day took us to the tar again, where we had lunch and did some repairs on Matthias bike after all the vibrations shook his pannier rack loose and he lost a bolt and spacer.

That night we were pretty keen for a wash and somewhere nicer to sleep, and for a change made the right decision about where to sleep deciding not to push on into the afternoon, instead opting for a relatuvely nice hotel for $12 a night :))

One of the questions we asked the hotel guy was whether he had the football playing on the tv in the hotel, which of course he said yes to. (he also said that the wifi worked…). On finding this was not true, Sal was not impressed, which seemed to scare the hotel guy into taking us to the nearest ‘hall’ to see the game. The ‘hall’ turned out to be a muslim hall, where beer was not allowed. Turns out Sal is more scary than a room full of muslim men though, so our hotel guy went and fou d some beers nearby, and returned with them hidden in a plastic bag 🙂

This was a great strategy until Matthias burst through the front door, shouting and yelling profanities about loose women and beer (fortunatley) in spanish, and holding three beers in his hands thrust to the air for all to see. The Imam sitting in the front row took great offence at this, and tried to take the beers from Matthias, which he thought was a joke, so a dodged the little man with the strange white hat and sat down next to us still cursing about something…

Much discussion followed between our hotel guy and the Imam who was insistent for us to leave, but again, it seems Sally was the more scary option and we stayed and drank and yelled and shouted profanities in spanish, mostly to smiles and laughter of the guys present (the imam left at half time)…

Stoning averted, the next day we road about 350km to Kilimanjaro, long straight and fairly flat.

We were greeted with a great view of the snow capped mountain, and formed a plan to camp the next night on the slopes. Cue more looking around for a restaurant showing the football, more beers, crazy shouting from Matias and an early night.

Next morning we headed across the road to a local market square to stock up on vegetables and meat for a bbq that night. It took some courage to buy from the open air butchers, but Matias seemed pretty confident that we could keep the meat unrefrigerated for up to ten hours without any problems. We bought a kilogram of beef ribs for $3.50 🙂

The plan was to do the circuit around Kilimanjaro that day, find a place to camp and cook the ribs with a lovely view of the mountain. Of course nature conspired against us and the peak was covered in clouds so we couldnt see a thing.

Then the road up turned into a construction site, very bumpy gravel for about 100km, followed by a small winding mountain road for another 50ish km. We stopped at the top for some lunch of beans, rice and tomato in a little village where children pumped water to carry to mud huts kilometers away.

While waiting for lunch the local (staggering drunk) policeman came by to introduce himself, and try to seem important by asking us for permit papers and other rubbish. It took a few sentences to realise he was drunk, a few more to get Sally to calm down, and a final few to tell him to go away.

It was mid afternoon by that stage but at 2200m altitude it was obviously going to be too high (cold) to camp and get any sleep, so we decided to head back down the mountain and look for somewhere at lower altitude. We had a campsite in mind, which was along the shores of a lake, about 20km down another crappy African dirt track. Arriving there, we were greeted by the park rangers who asked us for US$90 to spend the night in our own tents… wtf.

Back up the crappy dirt track and after an hour of looking for somewhere to wild camp, we gave in and camped in an overlanders stop for $30. Pretty crazy that it cost us less for a nice hotel two nights previous than to sleep in our own tents there.

We were greeted with the sentence: “We like you rich white people because we like your money, rich people only camp because they get tired of staying in nice hotels”

Not particularly enamoured with the manager, we turned down the offer of firewood for $10 and waited till dark and stole it from behind reception instead. We lit our fire, and Matias cooked the parrilla while we drank wine and raided the wood pile for more timber as needed. The $3.50 beef turned out to be almost inedible, but on the up side the shower was hot, and we slept through the rainy night without getting too wet.

The plan from there was to go to a “cool, chilled out beach place” to hang out in the sun and work out our trip to Zanzibar. Matias gps said it was a 470km day to get there, but mine foound a route at 300km, the last 50km offroad.

“Matias, it’s only 50km of dirt, how bad could it be?”

We stopped for lunch with the last 50km to go, and it started to bucket with rain. Cue wet weather gear, a delay at the bus stop to let some of it pass, and we headed into the last bit of the day hoping for an easy path to the beach.

To be fair it didn’t start out so badly, the gravel road was in pretty good condition for Tanzania and we were making good time, I started to relax a little…

The the ‘roadwork’ started… kilometers of rubble piled onto the middle of the track, truck load after truck load, creating a roller coaster ride on what was now mostly clay. Wet Clay. Sally volunteered to get off the bike so many times;

“Let me off, let me off now, I’ll walk this bit!!”
“Babe, it’s really long, you can’t walk all of it… we’ll be here forever”

But it was so slippery that Sal almost fell over just walking through the rubble a few times. It just got worse and worse, with water pooling in between the truckloads of rubble, and the surface so slippery that it was all i could do to stay on 2 wheels.

The last part of my ‘shortcut’ was a long descent down a washed out river of mud, where we followed a local bike transport guy carrying a load of coal to the village nearby.

“But Dino, is this road really necessary, do we really need to do this road?” shouted Matias followed by a series of profanities referencing the “Puto Australiani di mierda”

There was a ferry crossing the river at the village (phew!), and I could already taste the cold beer at the beach place 30km away… but the dirt track continued… and when we saw the sign for “Beach Crab resort” pointing towards a waterlogged road alarm bells started ringing.

The last 20km to the “resort” were pretty tough. A lot of the road was underwater, and it was deep watercrossings followed by even deeper watercrossings, it just didn’t end. Situations like that demand confident riding, but after breaking my leg in water a few years ago, I must admit it was a shaky ride.

Sally walked a few bits of it, but in the worse parts she was almost going to need to swim, so we stuck together and tried to push through it. It was lucky we had Matias with us, because it gave me a little more confidence to know someone would be there to help if we drowned the bike, or worse, hurt ourselves.

In the last deep crossing I watched in horror as half of Matias’ bike disappeared underwater, and somehow came out the other side of a crossing about 50m long. The madman waved at me to come through, and figuring the other wheel track couldn’t be any worse I went to the left where he’d gone right…

Bad move.

Halfway across, the bike slid into an even deeper rut, water now at the headlight… I wanted to close the throttle, scared that we might go under completely, but some circuit in my brain took over and instead turned it the other way and we accelerated forwards, water spraying in all directions, with Sally screaming into the intercom we pushed forward now totally soaked, the bike going left and right as it started climbed out of the water, I smelled success and cheered Betsy along, “Come on!! Come on!!!” steam hissing from the hot exhaust and water running off our faces.

“Fucking hell! … Well done babe”
“It was mostly Betsy”
“I think other bikers do not do this road” said the crazy Argentinian…
“I cant believe we need to do all that again tomorrow”

Arriving at the “resort” I took off my gloves, hugged Sal and high fived Matias.

“Puta madre Australiani di merda!!”

The “resort” turned out to be a bit shit, no water or power, but we lit a fire on the beach, cooked some food, watched the stars and talked about our day, putting thoughts of redoing the water crossings out of our minds for the time being.

At one point in the evening 3 german guys arrived on the back of local motorbike taxis…

“Those guys aren’t even wet”
“how did they get here?”

As is always the case in Africa, once a road becomes impassable, they either take or create an alternative, and the next morning we did too. Only one vaguely deep crossing and we were back onto the ‘normal shit road’.

We rode express to Dar Es Sallam the next day, where Matias trailing water and mud from the road, immediately jumped into the pool at the hostel shouting more happy profanities mostly centered around “puta madre” 🙂

Which finally brings me to Zanzibar, where we’re sitting in a local bar filled with people watching Brazil play Mexico.

Hi to all back home, it’s pouring with rain here every day, which sucks but I guess better here than when we’re riding!

xxoo

Lake Malawi

After leaving Zomba we decided to meet up again with Matias, the crazy Argentinian. He was staying in a hostel in Senga so we rode there and spent the evening walking along the shore watching the locals go about their daily activities.
Life by the water appears a lot easier than life in the dusty villages and everyone seems a lot happier – especially the children. Here children get to play together in water instead of pumping water and carrying it to the village. They spend the day running and laughing and apparently love holding hands with ‘Zongas’ (white people).

Men spend their days making canoes out of tree trunks and the evenings out fishing in the lake.

We had over 12 children fighting over holding our hands, jumping on our backs 2 at a time and screaming at us with beautiful smiley faces in a language we couldn’t understand.

Yesterday the 3 of us left Senga in the morning and headed to Nkarta Bay aiming to arrive in time to see Australia play Denmark.
The scenery riding north has changed from dry and dusty to green and tropical which has been lovely.
We arrived at a cool hostel overlooking the beautiful Lake Malawi – another little bubble to loose ourselves in for a couple of days.

Due to an electricity outage they had to start the generator for the game which then stopped 5 minutes before kick off after they filled the tank with water instead of petrol.

Luckily with Matias’s fuel and Dean’s tools they managed to fix it and have it back on 20 minutes into the game. Not a great result but at least they played well 😁

Zomba Plateau

We said goodbye to Matthias today and headed out from the safety of the backpackers and into Malawi, headed to the Zomba Plateau.

It turns out that this is where the original capital of Malawi was, the Queen mother even visited years ago!

After putting up the tent we headed to the top of the plateau to see some of the view points, but it turned out that the sights along the way were more worthy of a photo.  The plateau at 1600m has now been turned into a pine plantation, and teams of men work unbelievably hard to cut down the trees and saw them into planks.

BY HAND.

It felt like being on the set of a film with the men organised into small teams, some singing, all sweating hard and pushing their saws back and forward, and trucks being (over) loaded (also by hand) for the crazy descent from the plateau on rough dirt roads that had Betsy working hard.

If you’ve ever pushed a handsaw for 5 minutes this will really hit home, and these guys are doing this all day, every day.

In our world of electricity, running water and instant everything, I cant really make sense of how it’s come to pass that people still saw planks of wood for a living.

Goodnight all xxoo

 

 

 

Malawi

So we’re in Malawi! Everyone we’ve met has raved about this country so we’ve been looking forward to getting here.

The border crossing was pretty painless despite costing over $200USD for the three of us 🤯

Malawi is considerably poorer than its surrounding countries and the poorest county I’ve ever visited.

We rode through villages towards the capital, Lilongwe watching young children and women pumping water and walking for miles with litres of water on their heads back to the village, everyone stopping and starting at us as we pass by. What was once interesting and intriguing is now becoming uncomfortable and almost embarrassing as it’s so evident how much we have and how little they have.

We arrive in Lilongwe for the night and spend about two hours riding around trying to find a place to stay. Everything was a lot more expensive than we’d expected and it got pretty tiring riding in circles trying to find a good price. We realised pretty soon that paying for things on our credit card was not going to be an option here so we then had to try to find an ATM that accepted MasterCard and didn’t charge a fee to withdraw money – this we didn’t find so we had to swallow the $5 fee to withdraw a max of $100.

The cheapest place we found to stay was $20 AUD – still more expensive than we’d hoped but our patience had worn thin.

The electricity had gone out by the time we checked in which gave the place a more dreary feel that it may have otherwise but it was a good indication of what was to come…

We were given a choice of two rooms, both very basic with concrete falling off the walls. We chose one, unloaded and got changed. The toilet seat was cracked which gave me an interesting pinching feeling on my thighs but at least it had a seat. It was when I heard the mosque start it’s call to prayer (I can’t believe I’m hearing this so soon into the trip…) that I realised we were missing a window. Usually this wouldn’t be a problem however malaria is pretty rife here and I apparently have really tasty blood.

So we decided to move into the other room that was offered to us. We move our gear – 2 helmets, 2 bags, 2 pairs of boots, 2 riding suits and my clothes bag…it takes two of us a couple of trips.

The guy working at ‘reception’ then tells us the toilet doesn’t work in this room so he wants us to go to another room however it wasn’t clean so he needed to call a cleaner (presumably a woman because it’s not a man’s job to clean here).

We wanted to go out for some food so asked if we could leave our gear in the room until we got back.

‘sure’

This is where we should have asked if the lock worked.

‘the lock is broken’

‘ohh…’ some fumbling with the lock….a but more fumbling…

‘its broken…you won’t make it work…’

‘ohh…’

‘is there somewhere else we can leave our stuff?’

‘yes, follow me’

So we move all our stuff again to another room that look exactly the same as the others.

‘great, why don’t we just stay in this room? It looks fine to us’

‘erm….the toilet doesn’t work’

Of course it doesn’t. We go to leave and lock the door. The lock worked however due to someone forcing the door open one to many times you could just push the door open.

‘excuse me, this door doesn’t lock either’

‘ohh….’ fumbles with the lock

‘the lock works, the door just doesn’t stay closed’

‘ohh….’

‘can we just put our stuff in the room you want to put us in and you clean around it?’ (as if the floors were going to get cleaned!)

‘erm…ok’

We decided to check the lock, door and window situation before moving all our gear into the room.

The door didn’t really close but if you forced it we made it lock. Success.

4 rooms in one ‘hotel’!

We found somewhere local to drink and eat and watch the world cup. We got befriended by a local policeman who was off duty and insisted on eating some bbq with us. We don’t think he actually paid for anything however he quickly accepted a beer from us. He gave us his business card which looked like it had been hand cut and sat with us and answered any questions we had about Malawi.

It had been a long day so we declined going out to drink somewhere else with our policeman friend and returned to our room.

We slept.

We got bitten by mosquitos.

There was no toilet seat.

And, despite being told there was, no hot water…no water in fact.

Yesterday we rode to Cape Maclear, a peninsula on the huge Lake Malawi and found a cool backpackers to relax, wash some clothes and watch the world cup for a couple of days 😁

South Luanga NP, a hard ride to get here

Tough going to get here on 200km of crappy African village tracks, some of it had me thinking I was back in the Congo (Paul will know what I mean!), but after turning back the other day we were pretty determined to push through this one.

The last 50km of the ride was literally through the South Luanga National Park, where we even met an armed anti poaching guard…

“hello, I am policeman, antipoaching”

“ah great, so are there animals in this area?”

“well… you are in open savannah, there are lions, leopards, elephants…”  it went on.

“so… is it dangerous?”

“ah yes, when you come across a lion, you rev the engine, the lion will scare away”

Very comforting.  It occurred to me that while I’ve been worried about being shot, kidnapped, frozen and dehydrated, I’ve not actually been concerned about being eaten by an animal before.

Tick that box then!

The road here did the usual transition from bad, to worse, to basically single track with bits of tree continuously hitting us in the face, sandy sections, rocky ascents and slippery descents into mostly dried up rivers.  There was even a water crossing that I heard a warning shout of “DEEP DEEP” from some women nearby – just a second too late!  Lucky Sal offered (demanded) to get off and walk that bit!

Fortunately the last bit though the park was much better going so we could keep moving fast enough to avoid a lion pride on the hunt… although we did see lots of other animals that a lion would usually eat… hmmm.

Arriving at the campground we were greeted with the most amazing view of the river with the sun setting on the horizon, hippos grunting a snorting in the water only metres away, and a group of elephants for company next to the tent!

We went into town and stocked up on some food for dinner and a few refreshing drinks 🙂

Sitting at our little campsite taking it all in, I got to thinking about all the people we’d passed during the day in tiny villages with mud houses, men pushing bicycles loaded with firewood, 5 year old kids hauling water from a river and women walking with baskets loaded with fruit or cassava on their heads.

We are just so lucky.

Thanks to everyone for the birthday wishes, we were in small towns for a few days with no wifi or phone service but I got all your messages today.

xxoo

 

 

 

Happy Birthday to Me!!

“Please boss, dont steal the bottle”

“I won’t steal it. I don’t even want it. I’ll bring it back in two minutes!”

I’m sitting up in bed in a small room, the floor is painted a dark red colour, the walls are pale yellow with lots of red stains that we originally thought were blood (quite concerning), but later realised were just bits of the red from the floor that the painter got on the walls.  It’s all falling apart.

There are bits of either mud or shit about the size of a tennis ball stuck to the warped ceiling in random places, there’s a cracked pale blue door that doesn’t shut properly, and a curtain in stained but bright green chiffon, strung from a piece of matching green electrical wire.  Our gear is spread out across the small bit of floor that the bed doesn’t take up.

Betsy is parked in a room without a door across the yard, she has a badly dented rear rim, more on that later.

There’s music pounding into the room from several ‘clubs’ across the unlit dusty street.  These clubs consist of a some old speakers, some neon coloured led lights, and a counter where alcohol is served.  Further down the road there are a few stalls selling the same hand woven baskets, a few stalls selling the same local food (goat or fish or chicken with cassava) and a few stalls selling the same collection of soap powder, salt, oil and rice.

This bit of road is only about 100m long, and for around another 200km in either direction there’s nothing but tiny african villages with mud houses and stick roofs, people, goats, bicycles and trucks… and potholes, really fucking big potholes.

So i guess you could say it’s quite remote.  Actually it is remote, it’s so remote that we didn’t think there would be anything here at all, and we were genuinely excited when we saw lights off in the distance because that means electricity, which is a prerequisite for cold beer, which at the end of a day like today is very important.

And yes it was dark when we arrived, which is breaking the no 1 Commandment in Africa “Thoust shall not ride at night time”

We’re here because it’s halfway to where we want to be tomorrow, and there was a waypoint marked on the gps called “Kent Guesthouse”, which seemed like something to aim for.

This morning started out with a 75km ride down a bad dirt road, that turned into a worse dirt track, that ended (for us) at a near vertical off camber ascent that i might have made it up one in ten attempts.

We really hate turning back.  In our last trip we turned back once in India due to a landslide, the trip before that I turned back once in Argentina after breaking a brake line trying to ride up a river bed, and the trip before that we turned around once in Mongolia after submerging Betsy, and once in Siberia on a remote mountain pass that was iced over.  Not that I’m counting or anything.

So we turned back, which turned a 250km day into a 550km day, and hence we arrived here in the dark, shortly after almost being swallowed by a pothole about a foot deep and 4 feet wide which left the afore mentioned dent in Betsy’s rear rim.  We hit it so hard that I thought something must have broken off the bike, but no, just a badly dented rear rim. Poor old girl.

Sally improved things by buying me a cupcake and singing me happy birthday which was very sweet :))  And anyway, the rim will get us home, we’re both alive, and there was a cold beer and food here, which makes it all ok at the end of the day.

Strangely, all the “clubs” here (all three), REALLY want their empty bottles back.  So much so that a guy followed us down that road and had a go at us while we were eating goat and rice in once of the road side stalls.  He seemed to think I was going to steal the bottle. We returned it a minute later and it was smiles all around.

I’ve just hit a wall so will wrap it up.  We’re in a town called Luangwa Bridge, it’s my birthday, I’m 44.  The music is still going, sounds like an african version of Enrique Eglasius.  I cant keep my eyes open. It’s only 9:30pm. Poor betsy.

Goodnight xxoo

 

Lake Kariba

After 6 consecutive nights of sleeping in a tent in lows of 4 degrees, fully clothed but still freezing I waited for dean to wake up and insisted that the next night I wanted to sleep in a building.

I didn’t really care where in a building, just as long as it was built of bricks.

My wish came true.

We left Livingstone that day after two hours on Skype to Telstra trying to find out why we don’t have any coverage in Africa – it left us with that familiar angry/frustrated/bemused feeling you always feel after dealing with them 😬 and no result yet, made more frustrating by them asking for a phone number to call us back on…’WE DONT HAVE PHONE SERVICE!!! Can you please email the information to us?’

‘sorry we can’t do that, the file is too big’

What the?! Are we really dealing with a first world huge Australian company?!

Anyway, following this we had a long boring uneventful day of riding to arrive in a dusty town for the night.

We did the usual rounds and decided to spend extra money on a room with hot water as opposed to the cheapest with cold only.

We’re clearly still a little rusty and need to remind ourselves of the questions we need to ask:

‘do you have hot water?’

(A very slight, under the breath) ‘yes’

‘really? Do you have hot water?’

Same response.

After we had paid and got to the room I went straight to the shower to check the water and realised the error of my ways. I should have asked:

‘do you have any water?’

The toilet was dripping more water from the cistern than the shower.

Dean said we’d get more hot water if we urinated on each other instead…

We should also remember not to pay before checking these things.

We’ve learnt that when we ask if they have wifi, we then need to then ask if it works.

Oh the joys!

At least the room was clean and warm and I had the best nights sleep in months.

Today we have come to Lake Kariba, a huge man made lake which was recommended to us by our friend Will from Neispruit. There isn’t loads here to do, but it’s a very nice place to stay and really relaxing.

We have a great spot to camp here so decided to cook some food ourselves and went into town to check out the local market. There was loads of fresh produce and we bought some beautiful red tomatoes and some eggs (fresh with chicken shit on them!).

We got back to camp and I went to wash some clothes. When I got back dean ashamedly told me he had accidentally cracked all of the eggs….they were still usable though, only small cracks….

He then stepped on one of the tomatoes…

I reminded him where the eggs were (on the ground in the shade), kind of joking….

5 mins later he stepped on two of the eggs.

🤯

Lucky it’s his birthday tomorrow and I slept in a building last night!

We’re in the tent again tonight (yay!), next to the lake with signs everywhere warning us of crocodiles and hippos – it could be an interesting night!

Hopefully it’s not too cold!

Chobe National Park

We just came back from a short safari in Chobe National Park in Botswana, what an awesome experience! This was organised for us by Raf and Cisca from African and Oriental travel company (orientafricatravel.com) who have been an incredible source of information for us and we highly recommend.

It started out a little ho hum after we were picked up at 6am and transferred to the Botswana side of the border for a boat trip down the Zambezi river. We’re not really people people so all the cameras and american tourists were a little irritating, we did however see a few pods of hippos, like about 100 of them all in one spot which was really cool, no G&T’s on this boat trip though 🙁

After lunch our trip into the park in a 4×4 began, where we were to stay for the next two nights. It was just us and another couple in the truck (with seating for 9), so much nicer!!

We saw so many animals, I’ll let the pics do the talking, but the highlight was finding a female leopard with two cubs, just after she’d killed an impala. The mum was keeping guard while the cubs tore into the impala in a thicket, and eventually emerged still licking the blood from their cute little faces!

mum keeps watch

while the little ones eat

Staying in the park made it all a bit more special as we were able to stay out until after dark when all the animals are more active, and also get up and hit the road super early (yes Sally, at 5:45am!) to see them before they settle down for the heat of the day.

Our camp was really simple, just a few tents in a clearing. There were some strict rules for going to the toilet at night to make sure we weren’t eaten by anything, like going in pairs so one can keep watch… which Sal forgot in her tired state, and then also forgot which direction our tent was in and started walking half asleep into the forest before realising she was lost… All’s well that ends well huh!

The food was simple but quite good, and we sat around the camp fire at night chatting about the amazing things we’d seen in the day before going to bed early and trying not to freeze overnight when the temp got down to around 5 deg just before dawn.

Aside from the Leopards we saw the usual animals, giraffes, elephants, hippos and buffalo, but they were in really big groups in Chobe, and in such an untouched setting it was pretty special.

We were also lucky enough to find 4 lion cubs playing in the grass 🙂

The sunset and sunrise were also phenomenal, especially with all the animals that were around at the time. I cant really do it justice, but the pics come close…

Being with a guide also meant that we learned lots about the park, the animals and their interactions, like how certain animal calls tell you that some predator is around the place. One of our favourite moments was seeing a group of Guinea fowl (a bit like a small chicken) chase a pride of lions out of their territory.

The lions didn’t seem too put out, but the we have new found respect for the Guinea fowl, they’re much braver than we are!

We’re back on the road tomorrow, headed towards South Luwanga National park, which we think might be the last park we visit.

Love to all at home xxoo