Categories
Uganda

24th December 2005

Stayed at a campsite at the Amabere caves where our guide Wilson showed us the volcanic crater lakes and the locals catching grasshoppers which are in season after the November rains and are a highly-prized delicacy! There were grottos here.

Went on to the Kasenda volcanic crater lakes after crossing the equator just North of Queen Elizabeth National Park. There were black & white colobus monkeys and huge birds called the great blue Turaco. Met a Belgian couple, Marlene & Guy, who were overlanding in a South African bakkie (pick-up).

We noticed the fuel tank was leaking again, the third time from exactly the same place! We resolved to get it fixed again in Kampala.

Arranged Ethiopian visas in Kampala which was a fairly easy next-day service. We had hoped to get Sudanese visas in Kampala too but there is a 4 week delay!

Took George, the Landy to CMC in Kampala to have the fuel tank welded again. Eventually got it fixed after having to return because there was now a leak from the sender and the guage was malfunctioning (float stuck). They fixed the former but the latter is still a problem and they didn’t re-fit the tank properly despite two attempts. As seems to be usual in Africa lots of fuel spilt too!

Met Mark & Blanca at the Red Chilli Hideaway campsite, who are crossing Africa in a blue forward control Land Rover 101 called Grommet. They have been on the road for 14 months. We had seen the vehicle (somewhat unusual!) driving south to Livingstone from Lusaka and it turned out they were en-route to see John Finn of Livingstone 4×4 who we had previously met in Lusaka. Also met Tony again at Red Chilli.

The traffic in Kampala is crazy (Guy had warned us that it was a training ground for Cairo!). It took us over an hour to get out of the city.

We then headed to the Ssese Islands via the campsite at Musaka (where we met Patrick again who now claimed to be 12 years old and not 10!). We also met a Ugandan called John who lives in Royston and was visiting relatives for Christmas. We had an interesting and informative talk with him about Ugandan politics.

The Ssese Islands are reached via a free ferry which takes 50 minutes and seems to leave when it feels like it, early or late! It was an hours drive across the Island to the campsite run by Luke, a interesting ex-Pat Dutchman who had worked for many NGOs in Africa and had many tales to tell. The Island is lovely and is heavily wooded. The beach was fine white sand and there were lots of Pied Kingfishers hunting at the shore. We relaxed in hammocks in the shade near the beach.

Headed back to Red Chilli in Kampala for the night before heading off to Jinja and the source of the Nile. Here we stayed at the incredibly busy Nile River Explorers campsite and went white-water rafting on the river Nile. We have been rafting before in Peru and Nepal but nothing like this! We went through 4 grade 5 rapids and the boat overturned on 3 of them!! Even the safety boat over-turned twice, sadly injuring the guide who had two bad cuts to his face from the oars and was shaking badly in deep shock. This was a thought-provoking moment on the river for sure, as was the point when we stopped to walk around a grade 6 rapid (unsafe to run with the amount of water!) and a friendly local told me that someone had been drowned there the previous week (and said may god bless me when I returned to the boat to shoot the next rapid!). Lots of locals come to the River to watch the crazy Mzungus (white men) on the rapids. Being in the rapids after having been tipped out of the upturned raft could be quite scary when you went under and could see the daylight through the bubbles! We ceratinly swallowed a bit of the Nile between us! When you surface there are often a series of large waves to negotiate and you have to time your breathing between them. It is all done very safely though with many small manoevreable safety Kayaks to collect you if you are thrown away from the boat or can’t hold on to the raft in the current. It was great fun but I much prefer to stay in the Raft!! At times it does feel as if you are in a washing machine!! The grade 5 rapids were called wonderful names like Total Gunja, Big Brother, Overtime and Itanda (The Bad Place!). Overtime had a bad wave-trough named the G-spot which if you hit it, which of course we did, meant you were going to get a soaking for sure!

In the evening we watched a video taken of us during the day. This is when you really realise the size and power of the rapids you were riding earlier in the day! Sadly I didnt get any photos as I couldn’t take the camera. Good thing I didn’t too as the waterproof containers in the safety boat proved they weren’t really waterproof (lots of soggy cigarettes were smoked by our fellow rafters between rapids!).

Our guide said that the Ugandan government have given the go-ahead for a hydro-electric dam scheme which will probably destroy the rapids, seems amazing when it is the biggest tourist hot-spot in Uganda.

Categories
Uganda

12th December 2005

Moved on to Lake Bunyonyi where there is a lovely campsite called the Overland Camp with gardens overlooking the Lake. The staff here were very friendly and advised us to try the local freshwater crayfish. We visited the twice weekly market here where Charcoal, Sweet and Irish potato, fish and clothes are all for sale. Everything comes across the Lake by Mokoro (dugout canoe). We spent the whole morning in the market watching the world go by and chatting with the locals. English is very widely spoken here and to a high standard. There are many local languages so we are trying to learn the basics to get by.

Duncan, (people here have English and a local name!) who we met in the market offered to escort me up the hill to see the view of the Lake and all the islands. The view was well worth the climb. Later he bought us delicious fried sweet potato. We tried to help him with his maths homework but sadly it is too long since we studied maths!!

Uganda is so impressively green having so many lakes and reasonable rainfall.

Next onto Bwindi National Park to track Gorillas. We had secured a place to track the largest group (20+ individuals), this group is however the furthest away so we had 2 1/2 hours walking up and down and through the rain forest to find them. The forest was however an amazing experience, it isn’t called the impenetrable forest for nothing! We saw the two silverbacks in the group, a mother with her young in a family group with one of the silverbacks. In all we saw about 15 of the 21 in the group. Very difficult to get photos as it was so dark even in the clearing (needed ISO800 to get pictures). Also very dense vegetation obscuring the view. An amazing experience but not cheap at USD360 each!

We gave our guide Christopher a lift the following day into the local town.

We then moved on to Queen Elizabeth National Park, firstly to the Southern part at Ishasha. Here we saw tree-climbing Lions, the most amazing sight! There was a male Lion who was using a branch as a chin-rest while his dangling paws waved back and forth while he panted in the heat. The female was also in the same tree. We also saw two Lionesses in another fig tree, their favourite arboreal retreat. Also got stuck in the very black Ishasha mud, twice! Winch and sand ladders (now bent!) very useful!

We went on to Mweya on the North side of the park but the game veiewing here was disappointing. We heard lots of Lion roaring in the night but spotting them in the day is more problematic! There were also lots of elephants all around the Land Rover at night in the campsite some of them trumpeting loudly! A lovely camp site on a water channel. There are waterbuck, bushbuck and warthog in the camp now as I write.

Met Tony (three times on the road no less!), a Canadian travelling by Bicycle from Cape Town to Egypt. It has taken him 9 months compared to our 5, not bad going!

Tried to send a fax and update the website in Fort Portal. They had power and network problems so one email took virtually all morning and fax was impossible!

Categories
Uganda

30th November 2005

Great camp site for the first night, great view over the valley and it is wonderfully green here. Met the 10 year old son of the owner, Patrick who was a very bright lad indeed and he, Stephen (the neighbour) and I had a long and interesting discussion about the problems of Africa – poverty, HIV/AIDS, corruption, development, Aid etc.

Not so easy finding ATMs in Uganda but eventually found one in Mbarara where we got 1.8 million Ugandan shillings to keep us going!

Had food at the campsite the only menu item being Goat and Chips!