Category: Africa 2012
Waterfalls
Water
Morning in Shoestrings
Good morning. I’m at a place called Shoestrings lodge. It’s a backpacker hostel that turns into a bar and fills up with locals in the evening. I had some great talks yesterday.
Today I have decided that I will have an empty day, just walking around and see where I end up. After breakfast.
Oh, and there’s two horses living here. Haha
I don’t have internet at all times so don’t get upset when I don’t answer on Whatsapp, also – I’m taking a break. :)
Beijos!
Eudemonia
Harare to Vic Falls
Written at 8:20, on the bus to Vic Falls.
So I arrived to Harare yesterday and took a walk around the city centre. I got a great impression of the city. Safe, friendly and bustling with energy.
It was different from other places I’ve traveled in many ways. It was one if those places you instantly like without being sure about why. Harare was green and there was a calm in the chaos. Also, people who stopped me didn’t necessarily do so to sell something, they were genuinely friendly.
Even the classic taxi conversation ended different than normally:
“Where are you going my sister, you need a taxi?”
“No, thank you very much”
And instead of – “Miss, miss, miss, wait I can take you good price!!”
I got – “Ok no problem, have a good day!’
I walked to “Copacabana” where I took a kombi taxi, which is basically a bigger car that works as a bus and costs 5rand. I ran some errands and then went to Mount Pleasant where my friends live.
We had a nice talk, wine and food at their house, and I spent the night there.
This morning I went out and grabbed a minibus back downtown, had a walk around Harare and decided I would hop on the bus to Vic Falls. It basically means I will be spending another day in a bus, but I will get one day more in Victoria Falls and be close to the border to be able to cross it before my visa runs out. I would have loved to stay in Harare another day, it was a really great city.
The bus I’m taking now is with a company named Pathfinder. The office is situated on the crossing of Nelson Mandela Avenue and 5th Street and the bus to Bulawayo and Victoria Falls leaves every day at 7.30. I got to their office without a ticket and it was no problem, the ticket to Bulawayo is 30USD and all the way to Vic Falls is 55USD.
I got the front row seat again. Nice.
———-
15:15 Bulawayo to Harare.
Had a short stop over in Bulawayo where I got to prevent a disaster by charging my iPod and getting cookies before the second long busride of the day.
I’m now sitting next to awesome Hudson who has an android phone and shares his network with me! So nice. Expecting to be in Vic Falls by evening, see you then!
Visa applications, police controls & pizza
Written at 12:50, from the bus.
I was happy to see that I got a great seat in the Intercape bus that was going to take me to Harare. I am sitting in the front row on the top floor of the bus, next to Lloyd, Mercy and Prosper, all super friendly young people from Harare.
The ride started off with a collective prayer “Say amen like you mean it! One more time, say it like if it was the Champions League!” and “No number two in my loo!” by the very funny bus host.
We continued on great South African roads with less good movies and random R&B music. As we got to the border post by 4am, we had to stand in line for a long time and Prosper and I ended up being the last ones from our bus. After finally getting our stamps we saw that the bus had left to the other side. We started walking towards it and were picked up by the bus host who came rushing and said that we would have to take another bus to the other side, as the short stretch of “No mans land” bridge between the border posts of South Africa and Zimbabwe was a very dangerous area.
We hopped on a random bus to cross the bridge and arrived on the Zim side, reunited with our bags and travel buddies. The visa application procedure was a bit messy as they required me to leave the contacts of a host and a physical address in Harare, which I didn’t have. Found an address in my guidebook which worked fine once Prosper had written his name as being my “host”. Then I was asked how long I was planning to stay in Zim and told the truth. Got a 30$ visa for 5 days. Damn! Haha. I probably won’t stay longer, but I should have said two weeks anyway just in case. I just wanted to get out of there as it was all so messy.. but I wouldn’t get to do that yet.
Blue customs declaration forms. Everybody told me I wouldn’t need one as I had nothing to declare but I took one anyway and filled it out just in case. When I approached the visa window I was told that it was not necessary so I just folded it up and saved it in my pocket.
When I came back to the bus, the customs officers had taken all the bags out from the bus, looking them through with flashlights. I only have a medium sized backpack so it was of less interest than the huge boxes of food and TVs, fridges and other things that people had to declare. Still, the officers approached me and asked where my bag was, I pointed at my open backpack and said I had nothing to declare. I got a “We need the blue form.” and an angry look so I took out the piece of paper from my pocket, wrote “personal items” and got it stamped after they had flickered over my backpack with their flashlights.
Then we waited for at least another hour in the dark outside of the bus for a man from border control to come and check our passports for the last time before we would finally get to leave. The man came, the doors opened and then he barely even glanced at our passports. We drove off, after at least three hours at the border. I wasn’t keeping track of time, but I was very surprised and happy that there were no mosquitoes around.
I fell asleep and the next time I woke up I had a beautiful sunrise and amazing landscapes all around me. Zimbabwe is really beautiful. Oh, and that blue declaration form? We were stopped again, having to show it. And then we were stopped by the police at least another six times, then I stopped counting.
Lloyd bought a pizza for us four to share and right now i am 10km from a place called Featherstone and Harare is nowhere to be seen yet, but the bus is playing old R.Kelly, Brian McKnight and Boys II Men songs so we’re having fun guessing the artists and titles. And I could watch these landscapes for hours.
22:40 Lisa’s home
Got to Harare at about two thirty, after 19 hours, and took a stroll around the city before taking a minibus to some friends place. We’ve been talking and eating and I actually might continue straight to Vic Falls tomorrow. Harare is really great but I have a thing for water..
Oh, and I have been adviced to skip out on Lusaka. Mainly because it isn’t very exciting and because the Victoria Falls should be seen from the Zimbabwean side. I also figured that paying 50$ for a Zambian visa just to be there one day is difficult to justify. We’ll see.
Good night!
Live from Joburg
Travel plan
There is a good reason to why I usually don’t share my travel itineraries and it’s because I see them as “options” rather than frames, and because they almost always change along the way. However, after finding a lot of support for my plans in blogs and information sites, I feel that I should contribute by sharing. So here goes, very preliminary, the plan for my “going west for Easter” trip.
I never make strict plans and I usually fly home from a different city than where I started my trip, with flexible dates. So all I have to do is making sure I have enough time to get from A to B, but if I don’t its usually also ok.
This time I don’t have unlimited time the same way as I have to get back to work after my trip, so I need to be careful with losing time on waiting. But anyway, I’ll start from the beginning.
I am going by bus to Johannesburg, (9h, Intercape, 30€) as it is my closest and most convenient transport hub that I basically need to go to first before going anywhere else. (If I don’t want to pay 400€ for a flight)
So, I was considering flying from Joburg to Harare in Zimbabwe, but the flight ticket was almost 200€ and I was already halfway, with a busticket for only 35€ (18h, Intercape). Quite perfectly, the bus times clash so I just have a 3 hour wait in Joburg before embarking my next busride, so I don’t need to waste any time or money in Joburg. This way I hopefully arrive in Harare the next day by noon. After many hours on the road, but with enough money to actually eat and see something.
Once in Harare, things are not yet planned, I will meet friends and visit offices, and I will walk around and ´do what I usually do. I will probably stay at friends place the first night and maybe at a hostel the second one to see if I can meet people, I have really been missing travellers around here.
After Harare, the thought is to cross the border to Zambia and visit Lusaka before continuing to Victoria Falls. Botswana and the Okavango delta is somewhere in my itinerary after that. And if the rumour is true that public transport between Botswana and Namibia is complicated, I might have to hitchhike my way across the border. In Namibia I want to hang out a bit in Windhoek, visit the beautiful Namib desert that I have had a crush on since Gregory Colberts “Ashes and Snow”, and maybe see some more animals.
Then it’s time to get back again, and instead of bussing for 38 hours, I decided that a flight Windhoek – Joburg for 120€ was a fair deal. And then I have ten hours to do some shopping before I hop on the last bus of the trip. Joburg – Maputo, Intercape, 9 hours. Already booked. Hopefully I’m on it.
As you see, I’m flexible in my travelling, but I’ll let you know how things go. I might even share photos. haha
And right, I’m leaving early morning tomorrow! Ciao!
Get away.
Sorry for dissapearing yesterday without letting you know, Mami. But I was doing this:
Also, I drove on the way home from Bilene which undoubtedly was the most dangerous thing I have exposed myself to here in Mozambique. I felt that I needed to drive a longer distance in company that I trust, to obtain an understanding for the Mozambican driving culture, and be able to survive the roads once I would have to drive on my own. It was complicated, completely dark and a quite insane – but important. The roads are not only filled with holes and almost invisible people walking all over them, they are also filled with over-optimistic and drunk drivers, random animals and almost completely absent support from road signs. You need to stay very focused at all times while trying to understand where the road actually is, avoid being blinded by people who drive with their high beams turned on, and try to spot those with no lights on at all.
“Stay on the road!”
“What?”
“This is the sidewalk!”
“Here? But it makes no sense!”
“Of course it doesn’t, you’re driving in Africa!”
We survived, and I learnt something very difficult. And in Bilene I had the best sea food I’ve ever had, hands down. A really great day.