Life is about the people you meet and the things you create with them

Live your dream and share your passion

When you eat, appreciate every last bite

Some opportunities only come only once-seize them

Laugh everyday

Believe in magic

Love with all your heart

Be true to who you are

Smile often and be grateful

…and finally make every moment count

Follow my new adventures: http://berniesafricanodyssey.blogspot.com

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

ONE DAY IN NAMIBIA

WEATHER: Hot Hot Hot 36C
HIGHTLIGHT OF THE DAY: New country to add to the ‘travelled’ list
BUMMER OF THE DAY: Can’t think of anything – this has to be good?
BUYS OF THE DAY: My Namibia sim card for 1AUD
WORD OF THE DAY:

CAMP SITE RANKING: Awesome, great bar, green carpet, flushing toilets, cold shower but that’s okay oh and did I mention the great bar? 6 out of 5 stars

We have 470km to travel and a border to cross today which means another early start. Wake up 5.45am, breakfast at 6.30am and on the road at 7am.  I guess we have had early starts than that but once again you don’t come and safari in Africa for sleep in’s and leisurely days, no siree. 

It only took 45 minutes to get to the Botswana border and less than that to finish the formalities to get us through no-man’s land to the Namibia border.  This also didn’t take long and we had all been processed and on the road again within 40 minutes at 8.25am.  There doesn’t seem to be much traffic passing through these border controls and is totally different from the crossings in Uganda and Rwanda where there are literally hundreds of trucks, sellers, bikes, people and animals all milling around.  Not here, we were the only vehicle in and when we left there was still no-one.  I’m not complaining in makes nice a change from the 2.5 hours we waited at the Mozambique border.

It really is just a travel day today to haul arse across Namibia as our final destination is tomorrow to get us to the Okavango Delta for 2 nights in Botswana.  We could drive all the way through Botswana, without having to go into Namibia, but it adds on an additional 6 hours and 500km, so it is worth what seems like a lot of fluffing around and 2 border crossings, especially when they are as quite as they are, to get to where we need to.  We stopped at a shopping Centre for an hour after arriving into Namibia, for Simon to restock the larder and fridge.  There wasn’t too much to get done here, as we had stopped a few days ago for supplies, but it gave me a chance to buy my Namibia sim card for 1AUD, and this number I will be keeping for at least the next 14 days which will be awesome after all the number changes I have had the last few weeks.  I know people are texting me and I’m not getting them.

Lunch was at 12 noon, stopped by the side of the road under a massive shady tree.  It is so hot today and there is a wind, but it is also a hot wind, so it isn’t doing too much to cool us down.  We were saying this has to be one of the hottest days we have had on tour, now that’s warm, cause we though Stone Town was hot the day we were there.  It has been awhile since we have done the lunch by the roadside, but after fresh ham and salad rolls, we had all eaten, washed, packed and on the road again at 1pm.  It is strange there isn’t much traffic on the roads here either; we only saw 2 cars in the hour we had stopped for lunch.  It’s like we are in a bit of a time warp sometimes when there is only us!!

So back on the road again.  When it is a travel day it really is a travel day.  So 4 more hours found us at our beautiful camp site for the night called Rainbow Camp.  It was located right on the Okavango River, like literally the embankment was 3m away from where we set up our tents.  It was great to get in at 4pm; it gives you some free time before dinner. So after such a hot day, Lisa went for a swim in the new pool that they had just built, it looked good, but a little too green for my liking, so I set up with a beer in their bar that extended over the river and was in prime position to see another magnificent sunset over the water.  The have recently added Wi-Fi, so it was 4AUD for 30 minutes, which seems expensive, but I had 3 blogs to load, so it was worth for me to pay it.  Well because they are new at the Wi-Fi game, the 30 minutes turned into a few hours, with the laptop getting passed around after I had finished with it for people to touch base back home.  So the 4 bucks was actually quite a deal at the end of the day.  It was great to get onto FB and see our new friends had sent messages already, I love getting FB messages.  We still miss you guys, the trip has changed without you all here, but we haven’t forgotten you and you all get a mention everyday on the truck for one thing or another.

So the beers started to flow and come dinner time at 6.45pm, Lisa, Dave and I were on our way to achieving a pissy night.  Dinner was Simon’s usual awesomeness and I told him I was going to blog about  probably the most delicious thing he cooks and it is his crunchy potatoes, they are cooked whole and are exactly like baked ones back home, but better, as he doesn’t have an oven he deep fries them (which is why they taste so good) and they are just a delicious taste of awesome.  He topped that off with pork chops, BBQ to an inch of their life and it was a shame that I had been drinking, as they tasted so good I probably didn’t give the whole meal its due, but on a drinking night potatoes were probably a good option for us to line the stomach.  So after chores were completed , we hooked into some vodka’s and sat around and chatted for a few  hours, before deciding we should let our tenters get some sleep, so a handful of us choofed off to the bar for one last drink before heading to bed.  At this point we really didn’t need another, but hell we are on holidays after all.  We lost Dave before the last order was made and then Lisa, Ben, Simon and I stayed up, chatted about love and life and we were all tucked up in bed by 11.30pm.  What a great night and I think a few things were sorted out tonight and I know I went to bed with a smile on my face! 

Sunday, August 28, 2011

NO SUCH THING AS TOO MANY ANIMALS-CHOBE STYLE

WEATHER: Hot and 30C
HIGHTLIGHT OF THE DAY: Having 5 hours free time to chillax by the pool
BUMMER OF THE DAY: Can’t think of anything
BUYS OF THE DAY: Beers on the channel cruise for 3USD
WORD OF THE DAY: Elephant schmelephant

ANIMALS SEEN TODAY: Impala, Helmut head guneie fowl, red billed francolin, sable, elephants, giraffes, yellow billed storks, hammer cock, tropical boo boo, kudu’s, African data, hippos, open billed storks, spoon billed storks, Egyptian geese, white fronted be eater, Nile crocodiles, fish eagle    

CAMP SITE RANKING:  Same as last night

It’s dark; it’s time to get up.  We have animals to see today.  That makes it worth getting up even before the sun.  We aren’t the first ones awake through, you can hear birds chirping, yes even this early and also all sorts of other critters moving around in the scrub.  5am wake-up, told you it was early, 5.20am light breakfast for a 5.40am departure to walk to the reception of the hotel to board out jeeps for the game drive.  I should actually work how many game drives we have been on to date and how many hours we have actually spent in the jeep.  I would have to say we have clocked up around 7-10 game drives, which in hours based on min 3 hour drives, excluding the Serengeti, would be around 35-40 hours and we still have 3 more game drives I think, so we will be close to getting to 50 hours in total.  That is a lot of animals if you base it on we see something every time.  The only place we didn’t see too much was Hwange on the morning drive and Matopo was a little on the skinny side, but other than that, that is a lot of animal photos and we are trying not to take the animals for granted now, you know, you’ve seen one elephant you’ve seen them all type of attitude and just wanting to see the cats now, or pass right on by the zebra’s as we have seen hundreds of them as well.  Well this hasn’t stopped me from taking a gazillion photos, especially of the elephants and giraffes, you can never have too many of these awesome animals and I will apologize in advance for them all on Facebook, as even though they may all look the same, the experience was different for us each time.

So we set off with our guide for the morning Poloko at 6am from the resort for the short 5 minute drive to the gates of Chobe National Park.  The weather is so much warmer than our last game drive in Hwange.  The jeep had blankets that we used on the highway as we were getting some speed up, but in the park we were able to discard the blankets quite early in the piece.  I love Botswana already just based on the weather temperature.  So we drove around the park for 3 hours and the highlight was getting within 2m of a herd of Impala, these guys are usually really flighty, so to get that close with them still munching on breakfast is pretty special, and the other highlight has to be a herd of elephants that were heading to the road, so we backed up to where they were going to cross and they came within 4m of the jeep before changing direction and crossing over just behind us.  Fort a split second it looked like one of the elephants was going to come right up to the jeep.  It was amazing!!!  They are AWESOME creatures, and to get that close in their natural environment is something that I will take away with me on my Chobe experience.  Worth a mention is we saw a Sable for the first time and also some Kudu’s close up also for the first time.  Man they have massive and cute at the same time ears.  We stopped at 7.30am for a tea break, which a little table came out of the jeeps bonnet, and a table clothe laid out and tea served in porcelain mugs, a bit hoity toity to what we are used to, but we lapped it up all the same.    There are lots of birds in Chobe, so if you are a ‘twitcher’ then this would be a paradise for you.  We had a great morning returning back to the camp at 9.15am for a brunch that had been prepared by Simon, Ben and George. 

So we now had some free time till 2.45pm when we had cruise on the Chobe River booked in.  We would be crazy to not make the most of the pool and lounge chairs that also had a view of the Chobe River.  So we togged up, books, diaries and laptop in hand we headed to the pool area.  The great thing getting there early we got our pick of lounge chairs and area, as the morning wore on there was a shit fight for the lounge chairs.  The morning was spent updating my previous day’s blog and plans on catching up on my diary entries, as I haven’t touched it for 24 days!  Now there is nothing like to trying to catch up on journal entries, but 24 days is a little out of control, so I have decided to rip out my notes from my little notebook and I am going to stick them in to the relevant days.  Consider my diary updated, well that was quicker than first expected.  I have a few blank days, but when I am keeping a blog, a diary and my note book, it is a bit hard to try and keep it all up to date as it really is like a triple record.  Well I do like to be thorough I spose!

The resort is quite busy, and there are a lot of people around.  There seems to be a lot of Germans in residence and Europeans as a matter of fact.  It’s a nice feeling that the resort is busy.  I feel sorry for hotels that aren’t busy, so it was a great to have people around.  The resort also has its own residence of monkeys, I am assuming not by choice, as they are cheeky devils.  If you have a piece of food, soft drink cans or anything that looks edible, they will swoop into the pool area and steals whatever they can.  If you try and put up a fight, as they are used to humans, they will either Fake a lurch at you, so you turn brave guy to scared guy in 2 seconds flat, or give you a ‘I’m going to get my friends’ look and run off with the goods anyway!  There were some dumb arse Germans that were eating bananas and apples and were hand feeding one of them.  Idiots, its people like you that makes them so cheeky in the first place.  All it would take would be an accidental scratch from the monkey and god knows what you would catch.  Dumb arses.  So it was funny for the rest of the afternoon watching these monkeys steal people’s food and cans from the tables and even more brash stealing food from the people eating lunch at the restaurant.  We didn’t have any food around us, so we were quite safe from any monkey hands coming near us.  We got a swim in the ice bucket aka pool, I think it may have been 3 degrees warmer than yesterday, but it was quite hot, so I managed to stay in for around 30 minutes talking to Sean poolside before my teeth started to chatter and it was a sign that I had to get out before I got hypothermia.  It was a great way to spend our free time and we are feeling quite rested.

Our 3pm cruise was on a boat that held around 100 people.  We got on first, so we had a pick of where we wanted to sit, son we decided on a table at the front of the boat.  The Chobe River has 2 channels that run into Botswana and Namibia, so we stayed in the Botswana channel for 3 hours cruising up and down.  We saw herds of elephants, a lot of Nile Crocs, 2 of which were MASSIVE, and then the usual baboons, impala, hippos etc…  It was a beautiful day, but we had seen a lot of the same same over the last 5 weeks, so we just enjoyed the scenery and getting some river shots from the river was also pretty cool.  Lisa and I decided to hit the beers, as they were so cold, so we had 4 in the 3 hours.  Man they were good.  It sounds like we were a bit blasé about the cruise, we weren’t, well maybe a little, but it was worth doing and a nice way to spend an afternoon in Botswana.  Man I can’t believe we are in Botswana.  How many people do you know have been here? 

Back to base camp, dinner, and a few vodka’s before people started talking about the English / US language / spelling and knowing I had absolutely nothing to contribute to the conversation took myself off to have a shower and then bed.  We leave Botswana tomorrow, into Namibia, but we will be back into the country again the next day for a few more days.  It sounds weird, but it is quicker to do it this way, than to drive around and enter Namibia from another crossing, time and money wise.  Makes sense to me and you just do what needs to be done George. 

So there is no such thing as too many animals and I look forward to boring you with my next gazillion photos I take on the next game drive we will have in a few days time.  This is Chobe National Park after all.






NEXT STOP BOTSWANA

WEATHER: Hot and 34C
HIGHTLIGHT OF THE DAY: Getting into a new country is always a highlight
BUMMER OF THE DAY: Border crossings are generally the pits
BUYS OF THE DAY: New sim card for 1.50AUD
WORD OF THE DAY: Dumela – hello in Botswanian

CAMP SITE RANKING: Awesome as the camp site is connected to the Chobe Safari Lodge which is a 5 star hotel and we can use all the facilities even though we are campers!  Suckers! 5 out of 5 stars!!!

Today we leave Zimbabwe and the fastest internet I have had in like 5 months.  It may not sound like a big deal, but there is nothing more frustrating than a slow internet connection, which 85% of it has been here in Africa.  Today was also the day I had to make my final decision on whether I was going to go home for a few weeks.  It was really weighing on my mind, and I had found an airfare yesterday for $1700.00, which was an awesome fare and very tempting to take.  I spoke to Dave about it yesterday and he suggested maybe I phone home and speak to the gals, which I did this morning and it was just what the doctor ordered.  It was AWESOME to hear Shelly and my GD’s voices, even if the connection wasn’t that great.  I phoned from my Zim sim and got 10 minutes for 3USD!  If the calls are always that cheap, there is no reason to not be phoning them at least once a week.  I’ve told the guys if it looks like a down day just say the 2 words ‘phone home’ and all will be right again in Bernieland.  I also need to accept that whether I am at home or travelling I am going to have these ‘whatever days’ and as I am travelling, things could be a hell of a lot worse in my world, so I just need to suck it all up and just deal with it.  Toughen up Princess is what they would say back home or harden up Marshmallow.  Yes yes I hear you and I am now back on track.

We had the morning free in Vic Falls, as our travel day was only 120km today.  So it gave us all time to get any last minute things done like getting more money out of the ATM, Schnacks shopping, post office and internet.  Breakfast was at 8am and then we were to have an early lunch at 11.30 before hitting the road at 12 noon.  I also went on a hunt to find some new earphones for my iPod, which was unsuccessful and to also pickup my skirts that were ready.  I only tried on one, but it looks okay, so I am glad I have some more bottoms.  My black shorts I had fixed yesterday ripped again last night, and no it isn’t because I have put on weight, the material has just worn that thin it keeps tearing, so I tossed them in the bin.  It killed me, as I love those shorts, but in the end it will be dead weight in my bag.  I also got on the internet for the last time and loaded another 2 albums of Africa.  I have almost completed loading my first section of the trip, and to see my Rwanda Gorilla pictures on a big screen was amazing and really made me appreciate the experience we had.  Sometimes it takes a few weeks for some things to kick in and make you realize how lucky we are to be doing what we are doing and what we have done.

I finally also got to update my blog through the campsite’s Wi-Fi, and I can’t explain how good it feels to be up to date.  I make notes now every day in a little pad, so I don’t forget to blog about things, but to be able to post it all up is a pretty cool achievement.  There has been days where there has either been too much to write about or I am too tired, but I pull out the laptop and I ‘git t dun’ (according to Davebob) and I do feel better that I haven’t missed a day yet.  I have only cheated twice, by combining 2 travel days together, but then not much happens on these days anyway, so I think it is pretty smart.

12 noon and we are back on the road for the first time in 3 days.  We have only 12 of us on this last section and after coming off the first tour of 22, then the second tour had 19, we are now down to 12.  The upside is that we now have 2 seats each to ourselves; the downside is that it is a lot quieter.  We have 2 ‘older’ couples, one from the UK and one from Canada and then a gentleman from the States has also joined the Georgan Family.  The original crew seemed to have lost our mojo, but after speaking to the family today, I am feeling a million bucks and Bernie is back in town.  I need to make the most of my time left with my buddies, as after this finishes I am pretty much a solo traveller for the next 26 days.  I am not sure if this is a good thing or a bad thing, as I am really going to miss my crew, yeah you know what it is a terrible thing L  We stopped to re-fuel before heading out of town and we put in 381.90L for a total cost of 527.02USD!  Now that is what I call a gas tank!!!

We arrived at the Zimbabwe border at 1.15pm, and were through there within 10 minutes.  I got them to stamp my Globetrotters book which was cool, but he had to go and check with a senior officer before he would do it.  The truck was taking a little longer in clearance, so George suggested we walk to the Botswana formalities.  They are a lot more strict and we had to take all of our shoes off with us and halfway through no-man’s land there was a big pit of disinfectant that the truck had to drive through and a smaller one on the side that we had to dip the soles of our shoes we were carrying and then to walk in with our shoes to also disinfect them.  Not sure what purpose this serves, as they don’t do this for the tents, or the tables or the chairs that have also touched the dirt as well so the point seems a little moot.  Once we got to the Botswana formalities, we were processed again quite fast, and once again I got my stamp for my Globetrotters book.  This lady needed a little more persuasion though, and I had to show that I had other immigration stamps in there, not just post office ones and she begrudgingly popped a stamp in there.  Thank-you.

At this point we are still waiting for the truck.  You are not permitted to bring in fresh food or meat into the country, so they check the eskies and all the outer lockers.  When the truck finally arrived, we then had to take off our main backpacks and they had to be individually searched.  I was first off the rank and the lady went through my bag with a fine tooth comb.  I had to take everything out of my bag, literally, unroll anything and when it was all done I had to shove it all back in so she could check the others.  Thank-god I didn’t have anything to hide, imagine pulling out like a sex toy, or if you were a bloke some ladies underwear or something!  Now that could have been embarrassing, not only for the checking lady, but all the others lined up behind me could also see everything.  There was a second person checking the guys, and he waved a few of them through without even checking anything of theirs.  Once again not sure what purpose this serves as we didn’t have to bring all our things off the truck, so if you were going to carry something illegal through wouldn’t you leave it on the truck?  I don’t know I’m just putting it out there.  So after 1 hour and 20 minutes of a potentially moot exercise we were on our way again to Kusane, which was a 20 minute drive, for Simon to stop and re-stock the larder and the fridge.  He got some of his vegetables taken off him and Manu lost her oranges.  The customs guys were going to have a nice meal tonight!

Kusane was a small town located not far from our camp site.  We got an hour here, and I was quite surprised on how western it was.  It even had a Kentucky Fried Chicken here, which is the first western take-away I have seen since arriving into Africa.  I happen to LOVE KFC, so I wasn’t about to let a chip run pass me by.  For the record they were delicious, they didn’t have the same seasoning salt but it was a chilli salt which was hot but a nice change.  I have also now purchased a Botswana sim card here.  It is a little annoying I have to keep swapping then for each country, but we have a total of 5 days in Bots, so for me it is worth it.  I guess the main problem would be that once I get a new sim, there could be messages being sent to the old numbers that I am no longer using or work.  Oh well as long as I am sending out the love, it doesn’t matter too much if I don’t get it back – liar!!!!

After leaving Kasane at 4.20pm we only had to drive 5 minutes to Chobe Safari Lodge.  Just to clarify, we aren’t staying at the 5 star section, we are camping at the back of the hotel, but we can use the facilities which is pretty cool.  There is no carpet at the camp, it is dry dust, but the toilets and showers are pretty awesome and we have some shade over the seating area, so I think we are going to enjoy our 2 night stay here.  After setting up camp, we went and had a look at the ‘camper’ bar that overlooks the channel and it was a pretty magic view, but we were so hot, the weather has really heated up, it was 34C today, we decided to make use of the hotel’s facilities and cool down in the pool.  So we tried over the hotel, de robed and dipped the toe, and OMG, the pool was FREEZING.  Not cold, not cold but FLIPPIN FREEZING, like ICE cold, not fridge cold. So you know what we did?  We jumped in any way!!!  It was like taking a sharp breath it was that cold.  We stayed in for about 10 minutes, felt our bodies get numb and decided to get out before our heart rate slowed and we died.  No exaggeration it was that cold.  Seriously, it was FREEZING.

A few drinks with and after dinner and then an early bed, as we have an early game drive tomorrow morning into Chobe National Park.  The night time temperature is quite mild to what we have been having in Zimbabwe, so we only have our sleeping bags in the tent tonight and our tent windows open. 

This is Botswana and we welcome you.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

THIS IS WHY TIA

My tentie is an English teacher.  I think she is the smartest person I know.  She is an awesome travel buddy and I could not think of a better person to be sharing my African adventure with.  Lisa penned something while we were travelling in the truck and I wanted to share it with you guys as it sums up the type of friendships that can be made on these trips.  I love ya Leese and thanks for letting me share this. 

“I think I have felt my heart expand in Africa.
It has to grow to fit in the great beauty and richness
Of the land and people here;
But also to accommodate the enormous affection, I’d even say love
I have for those I share this dusty marvelous adventure with”

Lisa Jones – New Zealand – 18 August 2011. 

A DAY OF DUTIES AND GOOD-BYES

WEATHER: Hot and 28C
HIGHTLIGHT OF THE DAY: Getting my clothes machine washed for the first since arriving in Africa
BUMMER OF THE DAY: Saying good-bye to the gang
BUYS OF THE DAY: Getting 2 skirts made for $25
WORD OF THE DAY: internet

CAMP SITE RANKING: Same as last night 5 out of 5 stars

Well a great night was had last night for our farewell dinner.  I was one of the lucky ones that didn’t have to get up early this morning.  There were a bunch of the guys going white water rafting and were getting collected at 7.30am.  Sucks to be them and what a blessing it was that the bar actually closed at midnight!  I was feeling okay actually, it was just the socks on the teeth and thirsty as hell, and the winning formula again was beer.  I tell you beer is like the angel drink and vodka is the devil drink.

I got up at 7.30am anyway.  Murphy’s Law, you have an opportunity to sleep in and your body clock just wakes up at the same time it has for the last 3 weeks.  So after a shower, feeling half human again, I went and had breakfast with the twins, Christina and Emily.  They were doing the gorge swing at 9am and then saying goodbye to us and heading to Livingstone for the night before flying out tomorrow.  I’m going to miss those girls and all their nursey work related stories.  But being Brissy gals, I know I will definitely be seeing them when I get home.

I had a few duties on my list today I wanted to do before my helicopter flight at 3pm.  One of those was to get some washing done.  Dave had also left his washing with me, so I trudged up to the laundry they have on site here and it was only 3USD a kilo to get it done.  I pretty much wasn’t going to let a machine wash pass me by, so bar the clothes I was wearing and a few shirts, everything went in for the wash.  I haven’t done too much of my own washing on the trip, as it is so cheap to get the camp sites to do it for me.  But being in the smaller communities it is all still hand washed and left outside on the grass and over shrubs for it to dry.  I don’t have a problem with this, but the last few times I have had it done, the weather hasn’t been the best and I get the clothes back with a little dampness and it is so hard to try and get them dry to try and avoid that ‘left in the machine too long’ smell.  I hate that smell.  Anyways, washing was dropped off and I could come back any time after 3pm for collection.  Woo Hoo

Next on the list was a visit to an ATM.  As the official currency is USD, the ATM’s disperse USD.  Which is great news as I will be able to get the kitty amount out for the next portion of the trip and top up my own USD stash, so I have some spare for the next leg and also for the Madagascar, Reunion, Seychelles and Ethiopia portions.  Very handy indeed not having to do a double conversion.  Woo Hoo.

From there I went to the post office to send my last 5 weeks of shopping home.  This also includes the raped items we bought at the Nairobi markets nearly 3 weeks ago.  Bastards, that still leaves a bad taste in our mouths.  I went to the window and showed her my bag of goodies and she asked if I had a box?  Um no, don’t you have one I can buy?  So she went out and came back with a so called box in her hand.  I would call it a broken piece of cardboard that ‘used’ to be a box.  I asked if she had tape to which the reply was no, and that I would have to go to the supermarket to get that and then bring the finished product back to her when I was done.  Not the best system.  So I walked out of the post office with my ‘box’ and the curio man selling wood products approached me and asked if I wanted some help with the packing, he does that for people as well.  Who was I to look a gift horse in the mouth, and though it would be worth every penny for him to do it all for me.  So he went and fetched a better box and then he had to run to the supermarket to buy tape (saves me having to do it) and then he was back.  I wanted to settle on a price before he started though, which he wasn’t keen on but after a bit of to and fro-ing we agreed on 10USD and I have to say it was worth it.  He packed, wrapped and padded the whole box and I have full confidence that nothing will break in this package back home.  It took around an hour from start to finish, which worked in his favor as I ended up buying to stone statues and a necklace in my wait, so he got a pretty good sale out of me all round.  The funny thing when I was waiting was I could hear inside the sorting room some-one with packing tape doing stuff.  I knew they would have some in there; they just didn’t want to share.  But after seeing how much tape Kevin actually used to seal my box, I can understand why.  There were 2 rolls wrapped around my 1mx.5m package, I just have this image of customs trying to get into the sucker and then having to re-seal it.  Yeah good luck with that boys!  So thanks Kevin you were awesome.  Now I retuned back to the window proud as punch with my wrapped package and in the end for 8kg it cost me 120USD to send this baby home.  I haven’t sent anything for 6 weeks, so I think 120USD is quite good and I was happy to pay it.  Another job done!  Woo Hoo.

I had to head back to camp, as George was getting his hair re-fro-ed and the hairdresser works next to a tailor.  My black shorts had a blow out in Jinja and I haven’t been able to wear them, as they need the tear to be sewn back up and then my skirt got a massive rip in it back at Mtopo, when we were setting up the tent, so the 50cm tear also needed to be re-sewn as well.  So Tess took them up and was back within the hour and they had both been fixed for the grand total of 5USD!!!  I couldn’t believe it and they had done an awesome job.  So then it dawned on me, maybe I should get some more of my ‘Morocco’ skirts made here.  So George checked the price and we ran the skirt up for them to have a look and they quoted 25USD for 2 skirts, but I would have to supply the material.  How cheap is that!  So Tess took me to the material shop and I chose 2 patterns (there wasn’t much choose) and then we went to the tailor for them to measure me and drop off the material.  They also had some African print stuff, so I decided to get a third done while I was at it!  So I go back tomorrow to try them on and pick them up and wallah I have some new clothes in the wardrobe!  Awesome and Woo Hoo!!!

So with all that out the way, it was time to finally get onto some internet and get back in touch with the world.  The girls visited what looked to be a new internet café on the main street.  It looks like something out of a Sci-fi movie, and the internet speed is, I would have to say maybe even faster than back home.  It was AMAZING.  So I spent an hour on Facebook and Hotmail just trying to get things under control all for the grand price of 2USD!! I have decided that I will go back in the afternoon after the helicopter flight and load some Africa photos, that’s how fast we are talking!!!  Woo Hoo.

Back to camp, picking up a pizza on the way, where over my meatlovers, I transferred my pictures onto my external hard drive, culled the crap ones and edited and turned them all so when I went back to the internet café they were just ready to go straight up.  Am I smart or what?

The white water rafting people were back at 2.30pm and Dave, Sadia and I were picked up at 3pm for our ride to the helicopter pad.  There seemed to be a lot of people milling around, but after paying for the National Park fee of 8USD, we only had to wait around 20 minutes, before getting weighted and then boarding the helicopter.  This must be a BIG business.  All you can hear all day is the helicopters overhead, all day.  In their defence there is a fuel shortage at the moment, so I guess they have the worry of getting fuel to keep their business running.  We paid for a 12 minute flight and it was 130USD which with the fuel shortage and what you get I think is pretty good value.  I did a helicopter in New York last year and that was 15 minutes and was 175USD, so I thought the price was quite reasonable.  The helicopter fit 6 people and there were only 5 windows.  We gleaned this information when we all got weighed and he said you can sit anywhere on the helicopter, so first in best dressed, so we waited at the gate like vultures at a kill and when given the nod we made pace to get to the heli first so we had a pick of seats.  Dave was lucky enough to get the front seat and Sadia and I got windows that faced each other and then a family of 3 also joined us that had a little boy of around 8, which sat next to me, so I was able to see over his tiny little head and got double views the whole time.  I have to say it was worth every penny.  To see the falls from the air was truly magical and the 12 minutes seemed to go longer, but Dave said he had a timer in the cockpit, so no chance of longer or shorter I spose, but if you are ever here make sure you do the heli – it was purely magic.  The bonus of doing it here is that there is only the falls to look at, so you get the full 10 minutes just circling them, where New York had so much to see in such a short time, you didn’t get much time at the sights.  So back on land, they shuffle you into a room to show you a video that was made as with us in and some photos, they had done a good job, but we said a no to that and we were then shuttled back to town 3km away.  I was dropped back at camp, Dave and Sadia we then off to bungee.  Good-luck guys……

So I had the afternoon free.  I went and picked up the washing and boy it smells like…. Well clean washing!  I will never get tired of telling you how great it is to have machine washed clothes.  AWESOME!!!  Since I had organized my Rwanda and Uganda photos, I went back to the internet and uploaded what I could in the 2 hours I paid for.  I ended up getting 4 albums up, which is great and I plan on coming back tomorrow.  The internet did go down at 6.15pm though so I couldn’t get back onto log myself out, I hope that it automatically does it for you?  The internet café closes at 7pm anyway, so I will just come back tomorrow and load some more.  Do I feel guilty that I am spending so much time on the computer?  No way.  This can count as some down time and I have been to Vic Falls before and done some of the activities, so I am just making use of civilization before we head bush again in a few day’s time.  Nothing wrong with that is there?

Today was officially the last day of tour.  We said our goodbye to the twins this morning, who also came over to the internet café to say goodbye and when I got back to my tent were also sweet enough to leave a hand written note for Lisa and I.  I am going to miss you gals.  Nancy also left but unfortunately I didn’t get to say goodbye to her and then my drinking partner in crime James left at 7pm for his trek home tomorrow.  I am going to miss you guys a stack and wish you all safe journey’s home.  So this means we pick up our new crew and they had their meeting at 6pm.  We didn’t have to be there, so we only saw them briefly and I personally haven’t met them officially yet, but my care factor on this is quite low at the moment and there will be plenty of time for that in the next 23 days.

Farewell to new friends made and in no particular order a MASSIVE hugs and kisses to you all:
Lisa – New Zealand – see you tomorrow for another 23 days
Dave - Ireland - see you tomorrow for another 23 days
Sean - see you tomorrow for another 23 days
Manu - see you tomorrow for another 23 days
Meyouki - see you tomorrow for another 23 days
Pam - see you tomorrow for another 23 days
James – Australia (we’re going to miss you buddy)
Twins aka Christina and Emily – BRISBANE, Australia
Bobby – Canada
Maxine – Canada
Margaret and Dennis – Brisbane, Australia
Sadia – UK
Simbob - UK
Sarah - UK
Nancy - Canada

So another farewell to a good group as the second leg of my Africa component comes to an end and the last part starts tomorrow.  I have 23 days left of my 60 day epic journey across the continent and then some R &R for approx. 3 weeks before heading on tour again to Ethiopia. 







VICTORIA FALLS AND THE SMOKE THAT THUNDERS

WEATHER: Ball freezing first thing and then hot as an oven arriving into Vic Falls 29C
HIGHTLIGHT OF THE DAY: The sun warming up the day
BUMMER OF THE DAY: Subzero temperatures on the morning game drive
BUYS OF THE DAY: Beers at the camp site = 2USD
WORD OF THE DAY: HOA – High on Africa

ANIMALS SEEN TODAY: Lilac breasted roller, alligators, giraffes, steinbocks, elephants, waterbucks    

CAMP SITE RANKING:  AWESOME – center of town, cheap Wi-Fi, hot hot showers, flushing toilets and the largest mozzies I have seen – but we can’t have it all can we - 6 out of 5 stars

Up at 5.45am for a 6.30am departure.  You can never see too many animals, especially when you are in Africa!  So we hit the safari game drive again for the third time in 24 hours.  No complaints as we are in animal territory.  So 6 hours after coming off our night drive, we piled back into the jeeps, all rugged up again, in our 10 layers plus plus plus to try and keep ourselves warm for the 3 hours we were going to be out in the park.  I had on all the warmest clothes I had, my sleeping bag, my woolen blanket and my Masai – go on wind chill, hit me with your best shot.  Well flip it was FREEZING the wind chill hit us big time, but we were warm enough, just.  It was the face and the hands that were getting the caning, but we survived.  I can’t say it was the most successful game drive, we didn’t see a hell of a lot of animals, but the highlight was seeing a family of 4 elephants, all different ages, and it made for some great photo shots.  We got back to camp at 10am for an already prepared brunch, which it looked like Simon had tried to use the last of the food, as there was quite a combination of plates to choose from. 

Back on the road at 11am for our 2.5 hour drive to Victoria Falls and the last stop for this component of the trip.  Once we arrived into Vic Falls we were taken directly to the Adventure place, to see what was on offer and to start making bookings for the next few days.  I am only going to do the helicopter ride this time round.  A lot of the group is doing the white water rafting, the bungee and the gorge swing.  So there will be a lot of busy people in the next few days.  I have some housekeeping duties to do, so I am happy to have a few chill days and get some stuff done.

After setting up camp, group of us got a lift down to the falls.  No trip to Zimbabwe is complete without a trip to the infamous falls.  Last time I was here, the falls were not as spectacular as this visit with not much water, but today was AMAZING.  We started at no.1 and then made our way through all the view points to the main view of the falls and then down to the end to have a rest on the rocks right on the edge of the falls before they turn and head back into a valley.  Around no.14-17, was where we got the wettest, with a fine mist, depending on which way the wind blew, which would cover you.  There was a rainbow that was there the whole time, so we were quite lucky the sun was in the sky and it was a beautiful day.  The falls are truly spectacular and I would have to rate them right up there with Niagara Falls.  I am looking forward to seeing them tomorrow from the sky.

So we walked back to the camp site, which was around 20 minutes, showered and made ourselves a little pretty for our final dinner as we have our last night together as a group.  We are eating at the camps restaurant tonight, so with laptop in hand, I bought some Wi-Fi from the bar, bought a cold Castle beer, and uploaded the past weeks blogs before dinner.  This is a pretty awesome camp site and I am looking forward to spending the next 3 days here.

Dinner was off the menu and the most popular choice seemed to be the warthog snitzel (which is what I got) and the ostrich burger.  The night wore on as well as the drinks and after watching some locals perform and sing, we headed to a backpackers that had a bar called Shoestring.  So we drank and danced some more till the place shut at midnight.  This was a blessing in disguise, as none of us were ready to stop, but more than half of the guys were white water rafting in the morning and getting picked up at 7.30am, so we headed back to camp, fluffed around with the last goodbyes and in the tent at 12.45am.  I am glad that I have no commitments in the morning as we were all pretty pissed.  Good-luck guys, I am going to have a sleep in and enjoy my day off.

Welcome to Vic Falls - Zimbabwe

HWANGE NATIONAL PARK – HOME TO THE ELLIES

WEATHER: Cool in the mornings but it heats up after 10am
HIGHTLIGHT OF THE DAY: Seeing 100 plus elephants at a waterhole - amazing
BUMMER OF THE DAY: Not getting to see any of the painted dogs at the conservation project
BUYS OF THE DAY: My 5USD bangle that I bought from the painted dogs made out of snag wire
WORD OF THE DAY: Elephant has to be the winner today – with a close giraffe call

ANIMALS SEEN TODAY: Wildebeest, giraffes, elephants, kudu’s, zebra’s, stein bocks, marshal eagle, batalier eagle, lilac breasted roller, impala, pumbas, baboons, red billed wood hoopoe, zazu’s     

CAMP SITE RANKING:  3 out of 5 stars – flushing toilets, no showers in our block and COLD

So we leave Mtopo and its boulder landscapes to head for Hwange (said Wangee) National Park today.  It is apparently the coldest place in Zimbabwe during their winter and Ian said it could get as low as minus 5 tonight!  So needless to say there is a lot of talk of people upgrading tonight, which we are still calling lovers and losers, which all of them except Dennis and Marg fall into as losers and there were some people getting a little upset that we kept ribbing them about them being losers.  They did like to remind Lisa and I that we had upgraded once, but we had Lisa’s birthday as a special occasion, so there.  The more upset people came the more I ribbed them – toughen up people, you’re on a camping trip after all right!  Thank goodness if Lisa and I decide to upgrade on the next portion, all those who I gave shit to have left, so we won’t cop it back!  Big of me right!

So with a 6.15am wake up, a 7am breakfast and a 7.30am departure we had 350km to travel today.  We got a chance to stop at a Painted Dog Conservation Project that has been built to try and protect and bring awareness to the extinction of these animals in the wild.  Unfortunately their demise is not due to people hunting them, but a byproduct of them getting caught in wire snares set for other animals, but they are not far from extinction.  The Conversation Project was an awesome center that has been built and was pretty amazing.  They had it set up in a massive story book, following the life of a Painted Dog in 7 sections, with interactive books, information on all aspects of the Painted Dogs.  Our guide MK took us through it all and then we got some free time to look more at the displays and the shop before heading out to working section of the sanctuary where they currently have 3 Painted Dogs they are re-habilitating them for release and in their final stages.  Unfortunately 12.30pm is their rest time, they are more active first thing in the morning and for 2 hours later in the afternoon, so we didn’t get to see them, which was a shame, but they try and limit human interaction, so their release is less stressful for them.  The program also promotes awareness to school children where they come and stay on site and they also try and promote awareness to the locals and instead of poaching for animals that also catch the Painted Dogs, to make things out of the snare wire and sell that for tourism to make money than kill.  It is a pretty special programm and more information can be found at www.painteddog.org/

From the Conservation place to Hwange was only a further 30 minutes getting us into camp at 1.30pm.  At the main gate is where the people wanting to upgrade for the night had to get off the truck.  Well didn’t we cop some attitude when we had a go at them when 9 of them hopped off the truck.  We then continued to the camp site for the night and set up our tents and then got lunch under way.  As there are only 11 of us ‘tenting’ we were able to double mattress, if not for warmth at least for comfort and we set up our tents pretty close on the chance it may have kept us a little warmer if the temperature was going to be as cold as expected.  Yeah as if that would help.  The upside camping was that we were right near the truck, the lodgers had to walk 8 minutes to and from the camp and there were honey badgers and baboons that they had to worry about on the walks back and forth from camp.  Suckers!

So after lunch we were re-united with Ian and an off sider, so we were broken back up into 2 groups again and off on a safari drive in Hwange National Park.  Hwange is re-knowned for its elephant herds that total up to currently around 40,000 in the park.  So I am guessing there would be a good chance we may see a few this afternoon.  As there are so many the park has to cull a certain amount each year to try and keep the numbers under control.  When a cull is done it takes 4 guys, and an elephant is killed every second of the cull process, sounds drastic.  But there are a lot of benefits as well as keeping the ellie numbers manageable, the meat from the culled ellies goes to the community, the skin is sold to make belts, shoes, seat covers and that money goes back to the national park and then there’s the ivory that is also sold.  The only part from a culled elephant that cannot be used is its lower jaw.

So we drove around for 3 hours and as 6you would expect, with Zimbabwe still trying to get itself back on the tourist map, there were not too many other vehicles on the road, so it was like we had the whole park to ourselves.  The 2 main highlights we had were getting to a watering hole and seeing 6 giraffes all having a drink at the water’s edge.  As you may or may not know, they have to spread their front legs to be able to reach the water, and as they have to have their heads down, they can’t stay drinking in that position for more than 28 seconds otherwise all the blood will run to their head and they will have a massive hemorrhage and die.  Drastic, but the implications of having such a long neck I guess!!
The second highlight was going back to the same watering hole 2 hours later and seeing over 100 elephants all having their drink and wash.  As we were driving we saw them all walking to the watering hole in their families and one family crossed right in front of us, which would have had over 50 of them in it, and we were only 20m away from them.  It was AMAZING!!! At the watering hole they were all part of different herds, so there was a little argy bargy between the dominate males, but otherwise it was AWESOME to see these massive creatures doing their thing.  We got about 30 minutes here at the viewing platform before we had to hightail it out of the park for a 6pm closure.  A shame we had to leave, but when the park closes you gotta be out, or there are all sorts of implications.  But what a great way to end an afternoon!!!

So we had some free time and dinner and then we were back in the jeeps for a night drive at 9pm.  We were told to rug up as it was going to be cold out and we did exactly as we were told.  Pretty much everyone had 3 layers on, their clothes (and thermals), their sleeping bag, and blankets.  Add onto that beanies, gloves and anything else we could think of, we were ready to tackle the animals at night and hopefully stay warm.  As the park isn’t open after 6pm, we travelled right next to the boundary of the park for a few hours to see what we could find.  We got to see elephants, and Ian switched off the spotlight, so we could just hear them eating and walking in the bush.  It was pretty amazing to have silence, pitch black and hearing these massive animals 5m from the jeep.  We also saw some bush babies and baboons until our spotlight blew a bulb and we had to rely on the other jeep for light for around 40 minutes before heading back to camp at 11pm.  I can’t say we saw a great deal, but it was good to do a night game drive.  Would I do another one, probably not but I did enjoy it, even if we still froze on the drive back.  It was freezing and that wind chill factor has a lot to answer for!!!    

So into our tents, to get snug as a bug in a rug and hope that we will be warm enough for the night at the losers slept indoors across camp.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

THE PLIGHT OF THE RHINO

WEATHER: Min 12C – Max 26C
HIGHTLIGHT OF THE DAY: Getting to within 8m of a white rhino
BUMMER OF THE DAY: Can’t think of a single thing – we had as great day
BUYS OF THE DAY: A piece of woodwork bought from a local village = 10USD
WORD OF THE DAY:

ANIMALS SEEN TODAY: White rhino, black eagles, snake eagle, red beaked ground hornbill, duika, waterbuck, giraffe, elephant shrew    

CAMP SITE RANKING:  Same as last night – we love 2 night stays

I am alive.  What the fuck happened last night?  That damn vodka is going to kill me I rekon.  I need to stay on the beers, but sometimes the vodka just hits the spot as beer can get a little stodgy, but I am alive, so I live for another day.  The first thing I thought when I woke was my last thoughts going to sleep.  Going home for 3 weeks.  I was so adamant that I was going to talk to George this morning and get the ball rolling.  Now with a new day upon us do things look different? Maybe, but the idea is still entertaining all the same.

We weren’t going on our game drive till 9am, but a group of us decided to get up for a sunrise, so at 6am, half of us got up and headed out to find somewhere to perch to watch the sun rise over another day.  Some were more energetic than others i.e. Sean and Lisa, who went to the top of the boulders to watch the sunset from there.  Me I think I was happy to just make it and watched it from the resort with Nancy.  I think it would be hard to get a bad sunrise or sunset for that matter and there is just something special watching at that time of the morning.  It is amazing how quick it actually rises and you could seriously miss it if you weren’t paying attention.

So back to camp and as breakfast wasn’t till 8am, I went and had a HOT shower and then back to bed for another hour to rest the eyelids.  I am surprisingly feeling really good, considering we drank a bottle of vodka between us.  Dave on the other hand is on Struggle Street!  Mention vodka to him and he gets a little green around the gills!  Hilarious, who would have thought I could drink an Irishman under the table and a young fella at that – well maybe there are a few people that would believe that.

We have a full day off the truck and exploring the surrounds of Matopo National Park.  We were divided into 2 jeeps.  A massive one that held 14 of us and a smaller one that held the rest.  We went into the larger jeep, and to give you an idea it had 3 peg holes to be able to get you up high enough to climb in.  It was a monster and it was super cool.  Our guide for the day was Ian, a born and bred Zimbabwean and he was AMAZING.  His family has been in the area since the late 1800’s, he grew up in the area and used to play as a boy in the national park.  So he knows the area and let me tell you he knows his stuff and he is quite the story teller and just keeps you enraptured would be the word I would have to use, he was an amazing man.  We were very lucky to have him in our jeep.

The jeep was open topped with a bar that went down the middle and bars at the side of each row of seats to accommodate a cover.  So after driving 20 minutes to the entrance of Matopo National Park we had to be on branch / tree look out, as there was a lot of overhang on the roads and if you weren’t paying attention you could get a serious injury, a branch whack on the face or hands, a poke with some serious thorny trees etc…  It was pretty cool though having to duck and weave, I just had to make sure I didn’t pull a muscle and short of 2 whacks on the hands I survived pretty much unscathed.  Our first stop was a cave.  We had to walk over boulders and up a bunch of stone steps to get us to the top, but it was certainly rewarding once we got to the cave.  It must have been 10m wide and 10 deep and around 20m high.  It was used by the local bushman that lived in the area and there are still paintings in there that are in an awesome condition, once again thanks to the urine and gall bladders, it has been etched onto the cave walls.  The oldest painting in there was of a giraffe and it was 36,000 years old!!!  Isn’t that mind boggling?  It is so hard to comprehend that something like a picture can stand the test of time for so long, that literally generations later, we are looking at something painted by a bushman.

Now I’m no Ian but we spent around an hour in the cave, all listening as he explained the of the bushman and it is an ugly history for them and white people are to blame and it goes to as recently as the 1980’s.  It is quite appalling, but in brief I will try and give a brief history.  The bushman are people that have been living off the land for centuries.  They are a kind race; there is no hierarchy, what they have they share and share alike.  When they hunt, they only kill what they will be able to eat in one sitting.  They don’t store or carry even berries, as there concern is if they store food in a cave and then something happens to them, the food would go bad, and someone or animal could have benefited from that food that was wasted.  This is also why they were nomadic, every few days they would move on to minimize the impact to the environment (even back then) and they would never waste anything, there was a purpose and use for everything and if they couldn’t use it they wouldn’t touch it.  Even to this day there are around 2000 bushman living on the perimeters of the desert in Botswana.  Unfortunately this is not by choice they have been forced out and this is pretty much the only place that no-one else wants, so they live here untouched by today’s society.  The bad side to their history, right up until the 1980’s people could buy permits to be able to go out and hunt these bushman and kill them as a sport.  In the flippin 1980’s!!!!  That is just inhuman and very hard to comprehend.  The numbers have not really recovered and eventually they will run out of a gene pool and the race will die out, which is so sad to hear.  Ian has lived with these guys and he said we have a lot to learn from them and they are probably the epitome of humanity.  To sum it up he said if a bushman was to see you in the desert, he would give you half his water and both of you try to survive to the next watering hole or he would be willing to die knowing he tried his best to save you.  Ian had many more stories, and besides my memory, it would take pages and pages to get all his stories down!

After a cool beverage at the trucks we left the park at 11am and headed to a local village to meet a chief and his family.  We have done this before, but there was just something a little different about this visit and I think it came down to it being real.  It wasn’t super touristy; it was them in their natural environment acting as they would whether we were there or not.  It didn’t seem faked if that makes sense.  Well we went into one of the thatched huts and met the chief of the village Npondo.  He was 74 and the happiest, most energized man I have met in a long time.  He always had a smile on his face, he was happy to see us and he just had a glint of a man that has lived a good life and was happy with the cards he had been dealt.  He had 10 children, to which 5 of them have died due to the AIDS virus and he now has 14 grandchildren he looks after in the village.  He was dressed in a leopard skin laplap, which he killed when he was a young man, and via Ian, he told us his story.  He wore a porcupine necklace and has what looked like an ostrich feather cap on his head.  He spoke to us for about 40 minutes, where after that he showed us a grain storage in a cave that has been used for over 200 years, and he is trying to pass on his knowledge to the younger people so they can keep the traditional alive after he passes on.  He is an amazing man.  When we came out of the cave, the children were performing a dance for us, and even the baby, who must have been just under 1, was bending his knees in a dance.  The kids ranged from 1-13 and they were all super friendly, inquisitive and they just loved to touch our hair and hold our hands. They were just beautiful.  They also had a small store where they sold goods that had been made by the village.  It wasn’t the cheapest, but knowing you are buying something directly from the artist and that your money is going directly to the source, I was more than happy to buy something from them.  It also discourages them from asking for money for nothing and getting the reward from their own hard work.  They also did have some of the old currency for sale, so I bought a 50 million dollar note and a 10 million dollar note.  To give you an idea, the equivalent on that would be 1USD and .10c respectively!  Unbelievable and no wonder something had to be done on that front.  The guy at the camp was telling us it would cost 10 million for a bus ride into town!

Ian and his crew supplied lunch, which was the best potato salad I have had since leaving home, with some coleslaw, green salad and some cold meats washed down with a glass of cold cordial.  It was delicious and just what we needed to then head back into the park and see if we could find us some rhino’s.

Back into a different section of the national park and to start we were on the search for one of the parks most famous residents, Gumboots, which is a white rhino.  This subject is also close to Ian’s heart, as poaching is a very BIG problem in the park, where people come into the park, on the chase to get the Rhino’s horn and sell it on the black market.  The sad bit of this, besides the rhinos losing their horns, is they are killed, for the poachers to cut it off.  The animal doesn’t have to die for the horn to be cut off, as it is like a human finger nail, it grows around 4-10cm a year.  They tried a programme where the parks and wildlife went and cut all the horns on the rhinos to try and stem the poaching but this didn’t work, as the poachers still killed them but were doing it for little return on the horn as they hadn’t fully grown back.  As Ian had grown up in the park, he got to know the rhinos and when they find one that had been butchered it is like losing a family member.  He has also tried to make it legal to sell the horns, so it can be monitored and possibly the demand would not be as high, but this was vetoed at a meeting that is held every year on endangered spices.  The numbers have dropped dramatically and from memory he was mentioning numbers like there are only 500 white rhino left in the world and that includes zoos and farms.  The way it is going within 5 years the animal will be extinct and too late to save. 

So with all that said, what we were about to do was pretty much an opportunity of a life time.  Ian found Gumboots, so we were about to leave the safety of the jeep, trek into the bush and view / witness this beautiful pre-historic animal.  There is always some rules, so besides signing our lives away before we entered the park, there were a few safety rules we had to adhere to.  We couldn’t wear bright colours of red, green or blue.  If Gumboots got ancy and charged us we were NOT TO RUN – STAND STILL.  This was key.  The rhino can run up to speeds of 55km and can reach that in 3 seconds, so don’t think you can out run it, it isn’t going to happen.  We were to walk single file and use no flash photography.  So with the safety talk done, we left the vehicles and only had to walk in about 10 minutes and there was Gumboots!  Ian got us to about 7m of him and it was amazing! Gumboots didn’t seem to perturb that we were there, so we got around 15 minutes with him before backing off and head back to the truck.  What an amazing experience to get within 7m of a wild animal in its own environment – AWESOME.

So we drove around the park for a few more hours, with several stops getting out of the jeeps and walking around, stopping at 2 water holes aka dams where we got to see some hippos and we also got to see 2 sets of rhino bones, one had died naturally and the second one had been shot in the head and his horn chopped off, and you could see the bullet hole and the scratch marks the knife had made on the skull.  Just terrible.  Ian was saying even the bones are worth big buck and a whole skeleton, like the one we were looking at could fetch 15 million on the black market.  There were even some rhino toe nails there and he said even they would go for around $3,000 on the black market.  Not that I condone any of the poachers, but the money is insane and you can see the motivation behind it.  Ian had stories of vets and high profile people getting into the ring.  Money has a lot to answer for sometimes, it causes a lot of trouble in the world that is for sure.  Greed = bad news.

We drove out of the park at 6.05pm, which was 5 minutes late, so Ian had to pay a packet of cigarettes for him not to receive a warning.  They take the park hours quite seriously and if you get 2 warnings then you are banned from the park for 1 whole year and no special favors for anyone, not even Ian. 
The sun has now gone, so in the open jeep it got a little frosty, but we only had to travel around 20 minutes back to camp and to a dinner that was already prepared and ready.  Today was a good day to have cooking duties, no lunch and no dinner prep for us today! 

Tonight didn’t seem as cold as last night, so I had a shower after dinner and then retired into my tent to rip out yesterday’s blog.  An early night is on the cards, as we have a massive 2 days coming up and we need to have our A Game ready to go. 

Matopo National Park was amazing.  It wasn’t like the usual parks with an abundance of wildlife, but it was spectacular in so many other ways and I really enjoyed my 2 days here.  It was also nice to not have many other vehicles on the roads making us feel like we were the only people in the park which was a surreal feeling in itself.