AFRICA and the MIDDLE EAST

One each, more to come I hope!

The downside of taking…

The downside of taking the flight was that we had to basically entertain ourselves for hours and hours at this place where there was not so much that was entertaining.

But they had a shower.

We were all so…

We were all so excited to be out for a walk. This is the head poler who served as a guide for the walk along with OT who had plenty to say too. OT is from the Delta so he had a special enthusiasm for this part of the trip.

It was informative and fun.

Stopping for lunch and…

Stopping for lunch and preparing to ford the river in the Land Rover pulling the trailer.

We made it!

(And we were the first of the at least three Bushways tours to get to the landing which seemed an advantage at the time.

From here and for all of Moremi and Chobe there were four Bushways tours on the same itinerary. Each group had their own entire set-up including campsite that was not really near the others but we did run into each other all the time, so often that we knew all the guides and most of the other guests.)

Then in a rush…

Then in a rush of activity we off-loaded all the gear from the trailer and truck that we would need for our two nights on a very small island in the Okavango Delta.

Everything. Tents, water, cooking pots and the rest of the kitchen, everything, got put into two of these boats. That’s OT and Allen…

…and here is my…

…and here is my group. We were also going in a boat that would take us to the mokoros from which we would complete the journey.

This is not a good picture. But then I didn’t take it. Everyone is here except Alaoa though so I’m using it. The ‘Official Language’ of the tour is English btw since that’s what the guide speaks.

Left to right, forward to back:

Angelika German-living in Germany-high school teacher(I think it was Biology and English Lit?)-with Pierre
Lynda French-living in Switzerland-accountant for a Spanish speaking company-with Alaoa
Santiago Spanish-living in Spain-teaches English-with Brigitta
Brigitta German-living in Spain-teaches German-with Santiago
Konrad German-living in Germany (lived in the US for 7 years)-tax accountant
Pierre French-living in Germany-retired engineer-with Angelika
Annelies long story of nationality-living in Zimbabwe-Bushways hired her to translate for the Dutch and Germans (who all spoke English perfectly well but did I think enjoy chatting with her in Dutch and German)
Ellie Dutch-living in The Netherlands-works with disabled adults
Tineke Dutch-living in The Netherlands-Bird Maven
Alaoa (missing for the photo) French/Algerian-living in Switzerland-sugar commodities trader-with Lynda

It looks like it…

It looks like it should be smooth but those guys, the polers, are standing on a little plank of fiberglass that is the mokoro and every shift of weight moves the mokoro side to side.

I was riding with OT and at first I kept making little squealing sounds each time I was sure we were going into the drink, but in the end we arrived safe and dry.

Setting up on the…

Setting up on the island. That’s my tent. That pile of what-not in front of my tent is elephant poo. Elephants are excellent swimmers and make their way around the islands of the Okavango with ease.

We didn’t see any elephants despite that there was evidence of them everywhere. One thing before we even arrived, we got the rap about how we were now trying to avoid animals as we would be either on foot or in the rickety mokoro. Hippos are an especially big danger to the mokoros.

We left the Kalahari…

Day 6 Maun Island Safari Lodge

We left the Kalahari and made the long drive back to Maun to spend the night at the Lodge where we were meant to find showers! and electricity! and the internet! and to add four people to our party.

Some routine activities: packing up the trailer, raising and lowering the tire pressure depending on the road we were driving, lunch.

In the mornings it…

Day 5 Kalahari campsite 3

In the mornings it was just plain FREEZING, really, below zero, and with the open truck and the wind chill, yikes, but then, when we would least expect it… a sighting…

…a cheetah! And…

…a cheetah! And we’d all be warm with the excitement of someone finding something (it was Annelies, who was the champion sighter) and the excitement of trying to get a shot off.

This guy was far far away waay over there on the ridge.

OT, the guide, taken…

OT, the guide, taken from my seat just behind him in the truck. We had a lot of fun the whole trip and every day I learned a new expression in Tswana, the language of Botswana. I’ll write the expressions at the end of this journal.

We had a lot of fun together, but for him this was a serious job with serious consequences and he was always on the alert, watching that everyone was together (guests wandering off seemed his biggest concern), keeping the truck running, keeping to the schedule, making sure the camp was all set up and safe – he was working from before everyone got up until after everyone went to bed, cheerfully and with a comforting maturity.

My favorite bird, the…

My favorite bird, the secretary bird also known as the walking eagle. He was big and he stood around a lot and he has a fabulously colored head.

I wasn’t going to…

I wasn’t going to put in any more oryx or any more springbok but something spooked these guys and they were on the run which was cool to see.

All these animals and especially in this environment make me think of cave paintings.

…and then we stopped…

…and then we stopped again for our every-day-or-two collection of firewood, OT the guide on the right and Allen the cook and aide-de-camp on the left.

They bring a big axe out there and chop away. You can see the firewood collection basket attached to the truck in the picture above.

It’s quite amazing to me how we manage to be entirely self-contained for days on end with just what you can fit in the trailer and the seats of the truck.

Deer in the headlights….

Deer in the headlights.

We see a lot of this, where the various antelopes (all the deer looking animals are types of antelopes here) stand for a split second to stare at us before they hightail it off into the bush.

Maybe a kind of…

Maybe a kind of mongoose, or a dormouse? sitting on a termite mound. The termite mounds were incredible – huge monolithic things that look like they were built in service to some ancient gods.

I fear I might not have a suitable picture among these 10s of 1000s of pictures.

Here we are from…

Day 4 Kalahari campsite 3

Here we are from the morning of the 4th day rolling to our third campsite in the Kalahari. This is probably a pee stop…

We saw two kinds…

We saw two kinds of jackals a few times, the Black-backed and the Side-striped. These look Black-backed And Side-striped but I don’t think they run together.

Would’ja just look at…

Would’ja just look at all those birds hanging out at the water hole. This is one tree of many decorated for Christmas with singing birds and scary thorns.

…Leopard! So near…

…Leopard! So near the truck OT missed the sighting and good thing it was that Angelika glanced down! We were holding our breath and clicking away like crazy people.

The leopard was so close and it appeared and disappeared so quickly that some people didn’t even have a chance to get their camera in position so I feel really lucky for this shot.

The Kalahari desert is…

The Kalahari desert is actually a ‘semi-desert’ according to Ms Wiki as it supports more animals and plants than a true desert but still there is no permanent standing water and more water evaporates than falls.

During the dry season the park service feeds water into only one or two of these artificial pans. The animals that are successful here get their water from the plants they eat.

Another view of the…

Another view of the Kalahari. We are traveling down that track with the thorn bushes attacking, and when another vehicle approaches someone pulls into the bush. The drivers all seemed to know the rules although it never became clear to me.

Our basic daily schedule:…

Our basic daily schedule:

6AM rise, shine, and pack up the tents when we have to move. Might I add it is COLD at 6AM, and dark, and my stubby little fingers are brittle and disobedient.

6:30AM coffee, campfire toast, peanut butter, and honey.

7-8AM off for the morning game drive which is also the movement to the next campsite. Might I add it is STILL COLD, the sides and top of the truck are open, and I am bundled in my three jackets, sleeping bag, and two blankets.

10:30AM stop for fruit and a pee break. By now the weather is perfect.

Noon: lunch on the road – cold cuts, cheese, and bread, and a side dish or two.

3PM the ever so civilized Tea Time. By now we are back at camp taking a rest before our late afternoon game drive.

4PM off again for the afternoon game drive and sunset.

7-ishPM a most yummy and welcome cold beer, some snacks, and then dinner. I’ll tell about dinner later. It’s quite the extravaganza of campfire dining.

For some reason during…

For some reason during the first two days I actually got some birds to be still long enough for me to get them in focus.

Tineke says: Southern Yellow-billed Hornbill female

There were many fabulously…

There were many fabulously colored birds. This is just a few of the ones we saw of course, just the ones that are not so blurry they give you a headache.

Tineke says: a Starling but I don’t know which one

We’re all packed up…

Day 2 Kalahari campsite 2

We’re all packed up and on the road at 7:30AM.

I have this picture here from the edge of our campsite to show you where we are not allowed to walk. We are not allowed basically to walk anywhere. The guides don’t carry guns and there are predators free throughout virtually all of Botswana.

You do however need to know how to ‘find a bush’ which means the guide has identified a safe place for the women to pee. The men just take two steps in some direction, turn their back and pee. This happens many times each day since we are out on the road for hours on end.

Another thing we do…

Another thing we do constantly is look at the tracks. I am writing this not as usual, the next day, but many days after the trip is finished. I didn’t realize at the beginning how often we would be chasing these tracks looking for cheetah, wild dogs, lions, and leopards, among others.

That’s Tineke from The…

That’s Tineke from The Netherlands, and Konrad, from Germany. Tineke was our resident bird maven. She was on a quest to enjoy new birds and Konrad took up the challenge and it was great fun to share their excitement.

On our first few…

On our first few days every sighting stirred cheers from the crowd and then as the days went by we laughed how we eventually didn’t even stop for the springbok…

Our guide OT, whose…

Our guide OT, whose real name is Otsile but everyone calls him OT even the other guides, telling us about the fruit in his hand that no we couldn’t eat since it was bitter and would make us sick.

OT was thrilled. …

OT was thrilled. It was fun to see how delighted he was to see these aardwolves. ‘I’ve never seen these guys here!’ he kept exclaiming.

The top is full frame full telephoto and then I enlarged a couple despite the blurriness.

In the top picture above the aardwolf is a bush and on that bush are some birds. OT could identify those birds. This is the level of spotting you need on a safari.

I arrived in Maun,…

Day 1 Kalahari campsite 1

I arrived in Maun, the largest town in the area, the day before Day 1 and spent the night at the Island Safari Lodge. It was a very nice place on the banks of the Thamalakane river.

Interestingly there was no electricity in Maun. The power was ‘out’. The tourist enterprises run with generators as this situation is common however the source of the internet was not on generator and that’s why you didn’t hear from me.

Our whole group for the first five nights of the safari was on hand at the Lodge and we met that morning for our 7AM departure.

The first thing we…

The first thing we did was stop for water as we would be in the desert with no access to supplies. The safari truck, a custom built Land Rover, and the trailer carried all the goods, everything we would need for five nights.

But wait, there was no water available because the electricity was still out and the pump didn’t work. We did find water somewhere else along the way so all was well.

Arriving at our first…

Arriving at our first destination in the Kalahari desert we got our lesson in putting up the tents. The tents were very heavy duty guys, and large enough so I could just stand – very spacious for one person.

I never once managed to put up the tent by myself and I think at one time or other everyone lent me a hand. Nevertheless my fingers are callused, my thumbs cracked, and every nail is broken. But it was worth it!

And here they are,…

And here they are, all set up and settled in.

The safari included as a feature a Bushman Walk which meant that into the camp came five bushmen to take us for a walk.

It was a total tourist-a thing and the bushmen are employees of a nearby Lodge but still we all had a great time.

We drove in the…

We drove in the Land Rover for 30 minutes to get to the place where the bushmen showed us how they gather plants for eating, washing, medicine, etc.

(I’ll tell more about the bushmen people when I get to Lusaka in a few days.)

…for a drive to…

…for a drive to a made-up pretend little village with two huts and some supplies for them to show us how they eat what we had collected (and I Of Course tried it all) and how they make fire the good old fashioned way by rubbing two sticks together.

It was actually fun to watch them do this as they were laughing and talking the whole time with the women kibitzing loudly in the background all in their clicking language which was hugely entertaining.

The Itinerary.5 nights Central…

Bushways Safari, Botswana, Southern Africa

The Itinerary.

5 nights Central Kalahari Game Reserve
1 night in Maun
2 nights Okavango Delta
1 night in Maun
3 nights Moremi Game Reserve
3 nights Chobe National Park
1 night at Victoria Fall

Morning from my bedroom…

Morning from my bedroom window. After a delicious farm fresh breakfast I left for what was to be a four and a half hour drive that ended up being six and a half hours to get to where I was going in Jo’burg.

I got it all road-wise – a good toll road, the two-laners jammed with trucks, a dozen stops for road work, pothole city, and for the first time, once in the city soooo many wrong turns. The gps never did come back to life, the streets are so not marked, it’s congested like crazy…

Soooo many wrong turns.

These two days were…

July 11-12

These two days were mostly driving so I’m going to talk about driving in South Africa now.

SA is a drive-on-the-left country which means the driver sits on the right side of the car which means you operate the stick shift with your left hand. Left handed shifting! But stick shift cars are half the price for twice the power and I don’t mind. So far so good. .I just have to get to the airport in the morning without incident and all will be well.

The main roads are basically ok – the toll roads especially. But I spent an enormous amount of time sitting in line-ups, waiting turns during road work when only one lane was available. SO so much road work.

And many of the roads not being worked on are badly torn up with potholes. Then there’s all the trucks, which on the two lane roads means constant passing into on-coming traffic. Between the road work, the potholes, and the trucks every journey took much longer than I at first thought it would.

Still, except for this afternoon in Jo’burg which was very tough, the driving has been just fine and really the only way to get around.

My plan to keep…

My plan to keep each day’s drive to four hours was a good one since what googlemaps said would take four hours actually took more like six.

Travelling from St Lucia back to Jo’burg I chose another farm stay to break up the drive. This is the big house.

hWhat you’re seeing here…

hWhat you’re seeing here is a small residential compound at the edge of the farm where I spent the night. There are similar groupings all along the road, and you can take this place and multiply it by hundreds to get an idea of some of the more extended (entirely black) communities.

It has been less than 20 years since the Apartheid system was law, not so long ago. I didn’t know it at the time, when I was working out this trip and choosing accommodation, and in retrospect I can see how it happened, but I didn’t expect that I would find myself basically surrounded by only white people as owners, guides, etc. (10% or so of the population) and only black people in service roles. Not to say that this is not entirely true of everywhere of course, just where I was.

But eventually I made…

But eventually I made it to the nighborhood where I was intending to stay at one of the several guesthouses, and after looking at a few found one, The Sleepy Gecko, that was just the ticket.

A big bright master suite in a stately old house with great internet in my room, a cat that insisted on joining me, a Laundry with a real washing machine and a real dryer, breakfast of course, and one block from where-it’s-at…

…on 7th Ave in…

…on 7th Ave in Melville.

I drove many many miles around Jo’burg in all my wrong turning and highway errors and truth be told it is mostly not a place to be out in after dark. Even Lonely Planet which is generally a go-for-it publication urges caution and has very few accommodation suggestions in the whole city but does recommend this little enclave as a good place to visit.

It is a very…

It is a very cool little four block community.

I have to get up and out early tomorrow to get to the airport to catch my flight to Maun.

Then I’ve got tomorrow night in a hotel meeting up with the safari people and then 14 of the next 16 nights sleeping in a tent. A tent that I myself will have erected. I’m thinking of it as a meditation, a retreat of sorts…

I’m doing a self-drive-tour…

I’m doing a self-drive-tour through the highways and byways of one section of the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, a UNESCO World Heritage site.

They’ve got everything at iSimangaliso but are especially rich in the variety and quantity of birds. I cannot ever Ever get a bird to be in focus so no photos, but it is true, they have got some serious bird action going on here.

The St Lucia estuary,…

The St Lucia estuary, and where I drove, is a bit of land with the Indian Ocean on one side and the largest salt water lake, St Lucia, on the other.

From Ms Wiki: “The reason for the huge diversity in fauna and flora is the great variety of different ecosystems on the park, ranging from coral reefs and sandy beaches to subtropical dune forests, savannas and wetlands.”

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