Categories
Morocco

14th June 2006

Arrived 28th May in Morocco after a rather choppy crossing, at least it is only one hour. Stayed overnight at Chefchouen, a typical Moroccan town painted a mellow blue. Lovely Medina and great weekly market. The only slight irritation here is the number of touts who think you are only there to buy hashish.

Followed a small white van on the road when there was a loud bang and it rolled onto its roof. Remarkably the 5 occupants walked away unscathed. Equally amazing they didn’t end up going over the edge into the deep valley.

Headed south and had a day of rain (it isn’t supposed to rain in Morocco at this time of year!). Heard there had been flooding further South. Spent a day in Fes with a (rather eccentric!) local guide. There are two huge Medina here so without a guide it would be easy to get very lost. The tanneries here are incredible especially the dyeing vats which make a great picture.

From here we headed to the middle and high Atlas where the scenery is absolutely stunning. With the recent rain the route was challenging in places!

Bush camped with a family in the mountains who offered tea when we stopped for a break from driving. The kids loved the car and climbed all over it! Managed to communicate with the elder brothers somehow!

In the next town we stopped for a tea and a ‘guide’ at the hotel wanted to take us to look at the town. Further down the road two other hustlers joined us saying that the other guide was a bad man. Hustler number two then decided he was going to thump hustler number one! We then ended up being shown around by hustler number three!!

On the road to Agdoul we got stuck in the mud. Trying to get the winch onto a nearby tree we could see that one side of the Land Rover was slowly sinking. A lorry pulled us out saying that we had taken the wrong line through the water (tell me something I didnt know!!).

I was violently ill during the night in Agdoul. Eleven and a half months in Africa and fall on the home straight!! C’est la vie!

Stayed at Le Source Bleu de Meski which has a wonderful pool originally built by the French Foreign Legion to cool off. Here I met Aziz who took me to see his house where I had Tagine and lots of wonderful refreshing berber tea. Swimming here was great as it was pretty hot. However at times the pool gets pretty crowded with local kids.

Headed south to Merzouga where there was devastation after the recent rains. Several people had been killed, 32 Auberge and 300 houses damaged or destroyed. Even some huge Dunes had been swept away. The dunes here are stunning though especially at sunset.

Categories
Tunisia

24th May 2006

Internet access is surprisingly poor in Tunisia (all government owned) but I have updated the site at last after Libya. It was problematic though because the government doesnt allow ftp (file transfer protocol) access so I had to find dial-up access. I asked in the internet cafe and Ilyess took me to many shops before finding one that could help me. Ilyess’ help was invaluable and over the next few days in Douz we became good friends.

Internet access is all the more bizarre in Tunisia as they use a different keyboard layout!! Several keys are swapped and numbers need the shift key and finding an @ sign is a nightmare!!

It was sad to leave the tranquility of daily life in Douz, it is a difficult element of overlanding, both deciding when to move on and leaving new found friends.

We visited the Roman Amphitheatre at El Jem and the Roman city at Dougga which has the most extraordinarily well preserved portico in the Forum. Also visited the tranquil town of Le Kef in the more agricultural north of Tunisia. The final day was spent in Bizertes, seeing the Medina, Old harbour and fish & vegetable markets. They were selling a huge barracuda for only GBP6!

Before leaving Tunisia we went to the beach to kill some time. Here I met Ben who spoke French and despite my terrible french language skills we managed a long conversation about world and Tunisian politics and many other things.

We are now on the Grandi Navi Veloci (part of Grimaldi group) ro-ro ferry to Genoa. We decided this was going to cheaper than Marseille. We will then drive down through Spain and meet up with our friends Mark & Blanca who we met in Kampala and travelled with through Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt. They are now going to live in Malaga. After that we plan to go to Morocco before returning to the UK, not sure by which ferry route yet!

Even though we still have 5 or 6 weeks left it does seem as if we are coming to the end of the adventure. The boat is a culture shock, thick fitted carpet (whats that?) and 4 Euro for 3 bits of cheese for breakfast and even the bread is extra!! In Africa we could have eaten (much better) for several days on this! Overlanding makes you thifty to the point of stingy.

Categories
Tunisia

12th May 2006

Tunisia seems a little disappointing so far, too many Tourists doing Touristy things (Going seriously pink on the beach and Camel rides in Lawrence of Arabia gear for example)!! However the Sahara was amazing at Kasr Ghilane with incredibly fine yellow sand where we managed to get stuck but after digging, sand ladders and letting the tyre pressures down we were fine!

Now arrived at Douz, an oasis in the desert with 500,000 palms, which seems more laid back and actually has local people rather than just Tourists in it!

Categories
Egypt

25th April 2006

Spent some days in Cairo visiting the Libyan Embassy trying to elicit our Visa. After much posturing, ‘threatening’, trying to see the Consul etc it became clear that it was pretty hopeless expecting a Visa. We phone Saama regularly only to be told the same thing, nothing!

After Cairo we spent time in Naama Bay and at Ras Mohammed National Park snorkelling. We tried to contact lots of Libyan travel agents to resolve travel there but they don’t respond.

We moved onto Dahab, a chilled-out ‘hippy’ resort on the Sinai Peninsula. Here we decided to eat in a very good fish restaurant in Dahab that we had tried before. We had ordered food and were just talking when we heard a loud bang not more than 2-300 metres away, at first it seemed like fireworks but it quickly became clear it was a bomb from the noise and debris thrown high into the air. It was quickly followed by two more bangs. The diners in the restaurant started to panic and the women in the large party of Russians next to us started screaming and they then got up and ran down the stairs out of the restaurant. We soon realised that we and some Israelis were the only people left in the Restaurant. In order to calm the situation I expressed the view that as there had been three explosions in quick succession that it was all over. The Israelis however were refusing to leave the Restaurant, the staff wanted to close and the shutters on all the local shops were hastily being closed mostly in panic. The Israelis then said that in their experience often there were later explosions designed to cause further injury.

Many emergency vehicles were having difficulty getting into the pedestrianised area where the bombs had gone off and many vehicles were also driving madly away from the scene. We decided that it was best to leave the Restaurant (the lights had been switched off by this stage) and made our way out of the building. We were advised by locals to head away from the scene which made perfect sense. I have never seen such mass shock on peoples faces, they were like walking zombies not believing that such a thing could have happened. Others were panicking and I found myself telling them, to no avail, that they should try to keep calm.

We headed back to the area of our hotel away from the scene and went to the Hotel Restaurant. It was eerily quiet and none of the staff or customers said a single word, the shock was felt so keenly by everyone.

When travelling I have been in many places where there has been recent terrorist activity, including bombings but it has never been so close, so immediate or so shocking.

We don’t yet know the full details but understand that the news are broadcasting 22 deaths and we know from our friends Mark & Blanca that there is frantic activity closing the Israeli border. We also know that today is Sinai Liberation Day celebrating the Israeli handover of Sinai although Al Qaeda is on everyone’s lips.

The devices were placed right in the centre of Dahab, one in a shop next to the supermarket behind the Police Station (we had been in the supermarket only 2 hours before the explosion). The shop is now a charred empty shell, the whole of the front blown out. The other devices were either side of the pedestrian bridge which goes across to the busiest restaurant area of Dahab. Many people would have been eating here and there was much flying glass, a hopelessly mangled Bicycle here together with lots of blood on the ground. Troops had been called in and had cordoned off the area.

We simply cannot understand what could motivate anyone to do something so heinous. Shock remains the following morning, I even saw a grown man on the Corniche weeping uncontrollably. We have just learned that they were suicide bombers too.

Categories
Egypt

11th April 2006

Decided to return to Adam’s Home near Aswan for some rest and relaxation. There had been some 28 camper vans at Rezieky camp and while they had not been noisy the British contingent of the German led convoy were not very happy, it was all far too regimented! They seemed desperate for some other Brits to talk to!

I spent several days in the fields helping with the crops and the irrigation. The rhythm of life by the Nile is so relaxed and can barely have changed since Pharonic times. They generously shared their lunch with me, generally salad. felafel, fuul (beans). Aamer became a good friend during the days we spent here and I was once again sad to move on. We stayed in Luxor at Rezeiky camp again and met up with Blanca & Mark for some excellent egyptian food, wine and Sheesha.

We stayed at some sulphurous hot springs near Farafra and went in for a swim under the stars, wonderfully warm with a great massage from the voluminous hot water coming up through the pipe from the ground.

We journeyed on into the White Desert with its strange-shaped limestone outcrops weathered by thousands of years of winds. It is so quiet out in the desert (until the tourists staying overnight arrive!). We saw a desert fox from the tent and the colours of the rocks at different times of day are so changeable. The police gave us an escort part of the way but then wanted us to go on our own. The Tourist convoys are inconsistent in Egypt even depending on which direction you go on the same road! On the way to Aswan they wanted to turn us back to Luxor to get the convoy but we just went a different way along the Nile to avoid the first checkpoint (or Chick points as all the signs here say!).

We are wondering about our Libyan Visa that we applied for 2 months ago. We phoned to chase the embassy but it hasn’t yet been granted. We asked them to chase Tripoli again. It looks like it could be the Sudanese Visa fiasco again. We can employ an agency to get it for us but it is all more expense. We may have to make a fuss when we get to Cairo! Others have even managed to get the Visa by claiming ill-health or pregnancy!

Categories
Egypt

30th March 2006

Stayed on the Nile outside Aswan for a few days at Adam’s place (a large Nubian house in an enclosure). Here I met Aamer who I helped in cutting the Bersim to feed his animals. The food here was excellent with lots of fresh fish from Lake Nasser. More problems with the Land Rover, I tightened a Jubilee clip where diesel was weeping and it snapped! Luckily I had some wire that sealed it while I got a taxi to Aswan to get a replacement (and some spares!). Also the oil seal on the differential started leaking too.

Diesel is ridiculously cheap here, only 6 pence a litre!!

Travelled along the Nile through small villages on the way to the Red Sea coast. Has some good snorkelling at Marsa Alam before moving on north up the cost to El Quesir where it was too windy for snorkelling, the visibility was bad and the current and waves too strong. On the way we stopped at a police checkpoint where the senior office stroked my back and took my hand and tried to lead me away! When I indignantly said “No Way”, he then asked for money! This behaviour is all too common with Egyptian men, I have now been propositioned 3 times!

We met a very helpful guide Mohammed near El Quesir who invited us to his house where we had endless tea and an excellent lunch. We also met the extended family who were all very friendly. We stayed outside his house for the night and ate in the local coffee shop. Unfortunately got another puncture here, it turned out that a previous repair in Malawi had given up.

Met up with Blanca & Mark and Tom & Janet in Luxor at Rezeiky camp where the food was excellent and we tried smoking the various Sheeshas (Honey, Apple and Mint!). Also tried the local whiskey called John Waler (in a bottle remarkably similar to Johnnie Walker!). Mark & I tried fixing the diff leak here but it proved too difficult and needs a specialist. Managed to get a black-eye in the process when the spanner slipped! I should stick to calculators they are less dangerous!

Visited Medinat Habu temple, the tombs of the nobles and Karnak temple.

Categories
Sudan

18th March 2006

Visited the Hamed al-Nil tomb in the northerm suburb of Omdurman to see the religious ceremony of the Sufi also colloqially known as the ‘whirling dervishes’. It was pure theatre with guys in pixie hats, rasta dreadlocks, green & red robes or even patchwork quilt clothes all chanting each Friday one hour before sunset. An amazing sight! One of them even had sergeants stripes on his arm but with an extra stripe! They chant ‘there is no god but Allah’ and sway to the chanting.

When we got back to Khartoum Mark & Blanca had arrived with their Land Rover 101 Grommit. We then travalled together through the desert seeing the pyramids, temples and tombs.

We visited the Meroitic temples at Naqa, a well preserved Kushite site with a temple to Amun, Lion temple and a rather oddly named but beautiful ‘Kiosk’! The reliefs here were in amazing condition and the reconstruction superbly done. We got stuck in powdery deep sand on the way to the next temple but Grommit pulled us out. Bush camped in the desert and were visited by locals even though we were this remote.

We visited the temple complex of Musawwarat next, the largest Meroitic remains in Sudan covering 55,000 square metres. We then went to see the pyramids at Meroe, there were about 100 pyramids above royal tombs here. Sadly an Italian treasure seeker blew the tops off most of them! We bush camped in the desert beside the pyramids.

We crossed the Nile on a small ferry the following day and had a heated argument about the price which was 6 times what it should have been. The man taking the money tried to shut George on the ferry so we reversed off before he could block our way. Blanca gave a spirited performance pushing the very large Sudanese guy out of Grommit! We settled in the end by paying slightly over the odds. The Sudanese guy complaining that this is not how we do things in Sudan, that said he shouldnt have tried to fleece us!

We then proceeded into the Bayuda desert where they were patchily building a new road (new bits didnt meet up!). In places it was very soft sand and in others very rocky. In parts there was no distinguishable track just a multi-lane freeway across the sand. There are marker poles so you know you are on the route but the tracks can wander a long way away from them.

Next we travelled further across the desert to the pyramids at Nuri but they were in a poor state so we headed for Jebel Barkal using another ferry across the Nile. Bush camped in the desert below the holy mountain which we climbed in the morning when it was cooler. A Sudanese boy called Hussein tried to teach me to count to ten in Arabic and with the help of a phrasebook we managed to communicate. He and a friend climbed the pyramids which looked decidedly perilous on the smooth sloping stone.

Our next stop was El Kurru, another Kushite Royal Cemetery where the tomb wall paintings were remarkably well preserved considering they were 2,500 years old.

We then travelled across the desert towards Dongola. We stopped in a village for lunch under the shade of a tree where two sisters insisted on us coming into their house for water, cheese and fruit. This is typical of the generous Sudanese hospitality we experienced. Just outside Dongola we got stuck in very fine sand and were rescued again by Grommit who has much wider balloon tyres with the help of digging out and sand ladders. That night we slept in a date palm grove and washed in water from a local irrigation pump. The owner came to see us the following morning saying that we could stay here for as long as we liked. Again typical of hospitality here.

The following day the visibilty descreased with a sandstorm so we couldn’t really see the River Nile at all. It made travelling very dusty and uncomfortable and everyone got very sore throats and wore bandanas to try not to ingest too much dust. Travel across the desert was amazing however. You are rarely ever this remote, hundreds of kilometres from the nearest village.

We continue on in the desert on roads with very bad and often unavoidable corrugations (caused by the wind on the sand). We went through small towns and villages beside the Nile where people were all very friendly, waving as we passed. We stopped in Abri a small market town to stock up with food. I stayed in the car and was greeted by many people who were very keen to have their photo taken. We later met an Aussie cyclist in the desert who had cycled from Mongolia in 8 months and who was annoyed that the map distances were so inaccurate (he had much further to go than he thought and little water). We stayed a day in the desert as there was no point in getting to Wadi Halfa early as there is only one ferry a week across Lake Nasser. Grommit ran out of fuel in the desert so we drove the hour and a half onto Wadi Halfa to get some Petrol and returned. We also met Mr Kumal who we had heard about as a person who could organise ferry crossings (although the reports had not been favourable). However we did find out that a boat would be leaving on Thursday and would cost us around £288 for the Land Rover, it could also accomodate the other three vehicles (including a MAN truck) that were on their way.

When all the vehicles arrived we camped by the Lake and then went to Wadi Halfa to try and arrange the ferry. We had decided to talk to Mazur about whom we had heard good reports. He could arrange tickets on the same boat as Kumal but for less money! We had to go to the Harbour to get all the vehicles measured and then paid for the tickets in local currency (925,000 Dinars). The following morning we were given more free fish by the local fishermen which I ‘despatched’ and gutted. We also got more fish (delicious Nile Perch) from the local fish factory in Wadi for supper.

We arrived at Mazur’s office at 8.30am to get the ferry and spent the morning waiting around for things to happen. His Uncle went to get get forms completed, we went to immigration to get the exit form and just this took the whole morning! Eventually we got to the port where we had to pay customs clearance (SD3000) (although Kumal was there and tried to charge us SD6,000 but we refused) and SD1,600 Customs Duty. I went with our 4 Carnets to get them stamped (it takes ages one person stamps it and another signs it and the latter was away from his desk praying!). The four receipts for the clearance all read different amounts and actually totalled more than we had paid!! We eventually got to the quay for mid afternoon to discover that we were not on a pontoon as promised but on a cargo boat (I had specifically asked Mazur this question and he had lied). I lost my temper with the agent pointing out that USD500 for this rust bucket was a rip off and that it was cheaper to stay at the Sheraton! His response was that we had not asked the right questions!! So we were on a cargo barge which had metal plates welded between the holds to take 4 vehicles. However the barge was a metre above the quay and they produced some very dodgy looking ramps for us to board. As the MAN truck was 8 tonnes we were understandably concerned as to whether they could support the weight. However we all loaded safely although it was all a bit hair raising to say the least getting the wheels on the ramps and the narrowness of the barge. We had to crawl under the front or back of the MAN truck to get to George, our Land Rover! All quite insane but hey this is Africa!

We were promised by Mazur that we would be on the barge for one night but it proves to be two. As we couldn’t open the roof tent we borrowed Mark and Blanca’s free-standing tent to camp in the cement-dust ridden cargo hold!

After all of the rediculous paperwork that took 2 days and taxis from the port to the town and back they tried to charge us for parking at the port in Aswan. We refused and they eventually gave in. In Egypt you even get new number plates and a smart driving permit card.

Categories
Sudan

24th February 2006

Fairly easy border crossing, in fact looks as if you could just drive straight through! Got the puncture mended (for 75 pence!). Headed straight for Khartoum as nothing of particular note on the way. Had a phone call from my twin sister Moira’s Sudanese friend Abda who is in Khartoum for a holiday so we will hopefully meet up.

Categories
Ethiopia

24th February 2006

Finally left Addis and made our way to the Blue Nile gorge where we bush camped with a great view. We had more than a dozen kids who came to see us, one boy spoke very good English and he explained one of the other children’s geography book to me. We had a very windy night here though but no damage to the tent but it did die down so we could get some sleep. It takes around 1 1/2 hours to go through the gorge as it is a descent and ascent of around 4,000 feet. On the other side of the gorge was lots of farmland with straw stacks as far as the eye could see. The agriculture here is medieval with oxon for ploughing and all the grain harvested with a scythe.

We then drove onto Bahir Dar by Lake Tana which was very pleasant and relaxing. We visited two monasteries on the lake by boat (Rachel wasn’t allowed into the second one which was men only!). This one had an impressive collection of crosses and ancient manuscripts. In the afternoon we visited the local market guided by Daniel who wanted to practice his English.

The following day we visited the Blue Nile falls which didn’t have much water over it (but as the hydro-electric plant was broken more than it might have!).

Drove onto Lalibela on a pretty bad road. Tried to bush camp but were warned by several lorry drivers that it wasn’t safe as there were thieves. There were about 20 locals from the village here (one armed) who were also concerned for us such that they were going to stay at our campsite and not go home! However in the end we decided to go to a hotel at 8pm after supper.

We met Mark & Blanca in their Land Rover 101 Grommit on the road who we had met in Kampala. We camped at the seven olives hotel and Mark & Blance joined us there. We visited the northwest cluster of 7 churches with our guide Daniel who was a church Deacon at St Marys Lalibela. They date from the 12th Century. The churches are incredible hewn from the rock and in many the priest show the crosses associated with that church. The following day Daniel showed us the Southeastern churches (5 of them). In the afternoon Daniel came with us to an 11th Century monastery Yemrehanna Kristos in a cave 42 km from Lalibela. The last few kilometres are very steep and you certainly need low ratio 4 wheel drive! The building is marble and olive wood and there are 11,000 pilgrims buried here. When we returned to Lalibela Daniel took us to his house to meet his father, also a priest. We had Injera (like a huge pancake made from a unique grain called Tef) and chick peas in a spicy sauce while his aunt performed the coffee ceremony.

The following day we visited the market in Lalibela where you can buy vegetables, salt, chilli, incense, coffee as well as livestock. We then left for Gonder but part way there we saw Grommit in a hotel compound so stopped to find Mark & Blanca who it transpired were at the local cultural games where teams from different parts of Ethiopia wrestle and play hockey. We met two Ethiopians here, Nigus an English teacher and Mulugeta, an agricultural student who both spoke excellent English and explained what was happening to us.

Continued onto Gonder on an awful road for 6 gruelling hours, tried to stay at a hotel in the book but it was full and didn’t do camping so we tried the Misrat Pension next door which looked a good bet with Medecins sans Frontiere vehicles outside. Visited the Royal enclosure the following day with its 6 castles and an interesting thatched church outside of town. Met a remarkable 19 year old local lad Bewketu at the Pension who intends studying Tourism at Addis University who was very good at English and I spent some time talking with him and he came to dinner with us.

The following day we went to the Simien mountains with Bewketu where there are magnificent views and Gelada Baboons. When back in Gonder we went to Bewketu’s house and met his family and neighbours and had delicious coffee. Sad to leave Gonder after having made friends with Bewketu but finally left for the border with Sudan. Got another puncture at the border post (this time a huge 6 inch piece of steel reinforcement rod straight into the tyre)! Also realised the fuel tank has split in the same place yet again, fourth time!

We very much enjoyed Ethiopia, charming generous, inquisitive people. The food is pretty crazy, injera and chilli with everything with Italian influences too! The people have no road sense they walk into the road and then surprise themselves when they remember to look! I think I will definitely return here though and would certainly recommend it.

Categories
Ethiopia

11th February 2006

Finally have a Sudanese Visa from Cairo. Our advice if you are in a similar situation (travelling South to North) is to apply in Dar Es Salaam so the authority from Kartoum is there when you get to Addis. We have not heard of anyone who has obtained a Visa in Addis without doing this. Otherwise go to Cairo straight away! In Cairo you need a letter of recomendation from your embassy. The British Embassy charges £20 for a rotten photocopy. ( available here as pdf ).