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Thursday, July 12, 2012

literature and mr. david livingstone.

My family has always been big on reading. Even as a little kid, I could spend hours and hours reading in the library--and we would go at least once or twice a week, especially when we lived in downtown Holland. Even then, my mom had to put a limit of 10 books per library trip that I could borrow. Thankfully, my brother could also borrow 10 books, so between the two of us, we usually had between 15-20 books to last us until the next library trip.

Jon and I went through a couple of different phases. He read The Lord of the Rings trilogy when he was probably nine years old, and got me to read it when I was probably somewhere around 11. We went through a Boxcar Children phase, and I think that we both read every single Hardy Boys book our library had. He got into Star Wars--I started reading Jane Austen. The Scarlet Pimpernel, Harry Potter, Ragged Dick, The Atonement, The Count of Monte Cristo, King Solomon's Mines, The Last of the Mohicans. All of them make me think of being a kid

I wish I could say it was all because we both loved literature. Honestly though, I think that that just came with time and continued exposure. At the very beginning, we both loved reading... mostly because for the majority of my childhood, we didn't have a TV or a computer. When entertainment's limited, you do with what you got. When your options are weed the garden or read a book, the book starts looking pretty darn good. I remember that sometimes, if we were really into a book, we got out of drying the dishes too

Needless to say, we were pretty huge nerds at the time. At least now we're both really fast readers

Anyways, when I was around 8 or 9, I went through this phase where I just loved biographies. I read a ridiculous number of them. Almost all of the presidents, presidents' wives, inventors, astronauts, pioneers, activists, noble prize winners, missionaries, doctors--I was obsessed. It was a genre of literature that I had never read before. Fresh meat for the ravenous little girl sitting on the library floor in front of the bookshelf.

My family owned a David Livingstone biography at the time, and it didn't take me long to find it. I believe we still have it now. Of course I read it multiple times. It was one of my first exposures to Africa in a context other than the shape of the continent on the globe.

Between that David Livingstone biography and a set of travel books that my Dad owned (black covers, engraved fronts), Africa was a place of mystique, of adventure, of danger. It was a bizarre combination of long-necked women (picture in the travel book) and malaria and slave-drivers (David Livingstone biography). It was a place where Masai warriors drank cow blood (travel book) and a place where Europeans had once never stepped foot (D.L.  bio).

Africa was the location of Victoria Falls. David Livingstone discovered Victoria Falls. I remember reading that chapter in the book, no joke. He went to the edge and looked down, crazy fellow. I remember thinking that I wanted to go there and see what he described as a scene "gazed upon by angels in their flight."

When I realized that Victoria Falls was in Zambia, I really really wanted to go. It would bring my Africa adventure full circle. However, the fact that it was so far away from Kasama and that it would cost a significant sum of money made me decide to leave it up to fate. If we made it, I would be thrilled. If we didn't have the time to travel all the way there, it wasn't meant to be anyways

But our container was delayed. So we decided to go to Livingstone, Africa. T'was momentous.

Chilling with Livingstone, like a boss.
second weekend in Africa.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

bussing--en estilo africano.

Being stuck in Mbaya at 11:30 at night isn't the most ideal of situations. It was even worse because I hadn't even remotely prepared myself for something like that to happen.

I walked by a pair of backpackers--husband and wife--who were also kicked off the train. We politely made small talk--discussed the misfortune of the entire situation, made various hypotheses of what would happen next.

They took out their handy-dandy guidebook and sat down to make some plans.

I looked back at my luggage. Good Lord, I was supposed to be on a train for the next 48 hours. I'd never even heard of Mbaya until a half hour before. I didn't know if there was a hostel close by. I didn't know if the town was dangerous. I didn't know anything. I didn't have a phone, a guidebook, access to internet, nothing. I knew that we would have to take the bus--but there's not much one can do about that at 11:30 at night. 

I thought, Well, looks like we're sleeping in the station tonight. Guess we can take shifts. 

The backpackers left.

I continued to sit down. It was either sit outside or sit in the train station. We sat outside. Ashley (the peace corp worker) talked to a couple of the Africans close by. 

The backpackers meandered back.

"We got a partial refund from the ticket window," they said.

It was a relief. Partly because we would be getting some money back, partly because it gave us something to do other than just sit. 

As we were getting our refund back, Ashley saw Derrick, the owner of a lodge in that town. She had stayed at his lodge before. He agreed to give us a ride to his hostel, as well as very good rates for rooms that night. It was a sweet sweet three and a half hours of sleep we got that night. 

We got up at 5:00 the next morning to try to catch a bus headed to the Zambian border. We stood by the side of the road and waved our arms anytime a vehicle approached. Around 5:30, a large van stopped. We cramped ourselves in between Africans and bags of corn and miscellaneous other luggage. We made various stops, and Africans got on and off. We were the only white people on the bus.

After the Africans who were sitting next to us finally got off, Sam and I got
Sean to take a picture of us before more people got on. 
We reached the border in two hours. Nakonde.

Nakonde is CRAZY. Nakonde is where you've got to try to hold on to your luggage extra tight because people will try to grab it out of your hand and expect you to pay them for carrying it. Nakonde is where you'll have five different Africans yelling at you to exchange money with them and about three more yanking on your arm trying to get you to buy a SIM card. Nakonde is where "No" doesn't really mean anything unless you yell it. I gave up trying to be polite within the first two minutes of being in Nakonde. Nakonde just reeks of white people getting ripped off.

Being a girl and being white and being so obviously new to Africa are all serious disadvantages when it comes to getting through Nakonde. It was bad on the way back as well, but for some reason, my first time through was so much more bewildering. 

We finally made it through customs and walked through the gap in the fence that divided Tanzania from Zambia.

Ashley was such a huge lifesaver throughout this trip, and here was no exception.She knew what was fair to pay for a bus ticket from Nakonde to Kasama, not to mention the fact that she was so much better at the entire bargaining game. 

She found somebody who knew somebody who was driving to Kasama. She walked with us to the van, made sure that it was legit, and took a quick picture with us before going back to find her own bus. We never talked to or saw her again.

Sean, me, Ashley, and Sam inside the van that would eventually take us to Kasama.
While we waited for our bus's departure time, we went to get some lunch. A random African tagged along with us, and somehow we ended up paying for his lunch. At least the conversation was interesting, I suppose.

A little before ten, we got on the bus. For some reason, they had a Shania Twain tape playing very loudly over the speakers. At first, it was so amusing that I thought it was really great. After they had played it for the seventh time, I was pretty sure that I was never going to willingly listen to Shania Twain ever again. Occasionally, they would switch the music up with a some African gospel tuneage. That got old pretty fast too. Eventually I got to the point where I just tuned it all out.

About four hours into our journey, we turned onto a dirt road.

We stayed on that dirt road for the next four hours. Halfway through, we heard a loud pop and realized that we had blown a tire. Everybody piled out while they changed the tire--occasionally, vehicles would whiz past, blowing up huge clouds of dust. But by that point, we had given up on staying anything resembling clean, so it wasn't even a big deal, no worries.

It was dusk when we took a ferry across a river. A shy girl of fifteen told us that there were crocodiles in that river. The ferry didn't come all the way to shore, and I didn't want to get eaten by a crocodile (that, and I didn't want to get my tennis shoes wet), so Sean gave me a piggy-back ride onto the ferry. 

dry shoes ftw.
on the ferry.
me, sam, and the girl who told us about crocodiles.
We had no idea what we would do once we got to Kasama. It was already dark, and none of us had a cell phone. We figured that we would cross that bridge once we got there, but by some miracle, Tobias (a worker for Zambia's Scholarship Fund), knew a bus driver who told him that he had seen a small van with some white people in it. Tobias told him to catch up to that van. We were those white people.

While we were on the ferry, a man we had never seen before tapped Sean on the shoulder, gave him his cell phone, and said, "It's for you."

It was Tobias on the phone. When Sean told us about it on the other side of the river, we couldn't believe it. What were the chances?

Previously on the van, Sean had the window seat, I sat in the middle, and Sam sat on the other side of me. Sam and I switched places after the river.

She told me it was bad, but I didn't realize that it was actually quite bad until after I had been sitting for nearly an hour with some strange African dude's crotch in my face. Plus, another African had his arm around the headrest, so the only thing you could do was lean forward. Sam said not to lean back or he would slap the back of your head. I didn't lean back.

We finally got to Kasama a couple hours after the ferry. Tobias picked us up from the bus stop. He told us that he hadn't told Jeff and Nick that he had come to pick us up. We would surprise them.

We got to the lodge where we would be staying. We walked up to Jeff and Nick's room, and Tobias yelled out that they had to leave to pick us up from the station. They walked out, and saw us, and surprise, and all that jazz.

We got some food (fried chicken, how did you know?), and it was great.

But more importantly,

we got to shower.

And we went to sleep in an honest to goodness non-moving bed. Glory be.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Train Travel

We boarded the train in Tanzania somewhere around 9:30pm, after which we just sat in our compartment and sweated. I thought, Well, 36 hours of this in a confined space with no showering should be just dandy. 

home sweet home for the next little while.
However, we propped the window open, and once we actually began to move around 11:00pm, we got a breeze going on that made the heat pretty bearable. We went straight to sleep.

The next day we began to experience good ol' train life at its best. 

We used the toilet (such a good experience--especially as the train is jolting from side to side, water is sloshing all over the floor, and you're trying not to touch anything). 

We played cards. 
Just passing the time yo.
We ate lots of rice, served with chicken breasts that once belonged to very skinny chickens. 

We also did lots of looking out the window.

I don't know what I was expecting to see--but I had what I knew to be a very cliche picture of Africa in my head--and I was expecting to see not that. Well, I saw just that.  

Grass huts, barefoot children, women carrying enormous bundles on their head, banana trees, breathtaking sunsets, and tall, tall grass. 

train ride in a nutshell.
Beautiful scenery. We settled in for the night and I honestly thought, "This is not nearly as bad as I thought it was going to be."

At one of the train stops, people jumped on the train and barged into compartments, trying to exchange money and sell things. It startled the crap out of me. Apparently, the lock was broken on our door. I went from sleeping to having some stranger open the door to our compartment, close it behind him, and try to barter. Ashley exchanged some money, but yelled at him to be quiet.

The second time it happened, she sat up in bed, pointed a finger, and said very sharply, "You! Out! Now!

He got out

We started to settle back down as the train began to move away from that particular station. A while later, somebody knocked at our compartment door. We were stopped again

"I am very sorry, but this is the last stop."

"What?"

The train worker informed us that the train could take us no further, due to the worker strikes in Zambia. We were at the last stop in Tanzania- Mbaya.

The train was returning to Dar es Salaam that night

It was a little after 11:00pm, almost exactly 24 hours after our journey had begun

We got off and didn't know where to go. Some of the Africans were refusing to get off the train until they got a refund. Others went inside to find the ticketmaster

We walked inside the train station. It was full of people sleeping. Everywhere. On the chairs, on their luggage, on the floor.

We walked back outside, put our luggage on the ground, and sat down. Time to figure out Plan B

Getting Outta Dar.

Arafat dropped me off at his house after he picked me up from Safari Inn. He went to pick up Sam from the airport, and dropped her off at his house too. 

It was incredibly nice to have someone to speak English to who was just as hot and sweaty as I was. Sam and I waited together some more--while Arafat's grandmother, an elderly Indian lady, fussed around and made sure that we always had water and fruit punch to drink. 

And then finally, Arafat went to pick up Sean.

Sam, Arafat's grandmother, myself, Sean, and Arafat.
All at his house.
Once we were all reunited, we spent some time going around Dar with Arafat. He took us out to eat at Steers--a hamburger place. Lesson #2 learned in Africa: Never order a hamburger if you can help it. Chicken is almost always a pretty safe bet, although Tanzanian chickens tend to be extraordinarily skinny.

The traffic in Dar is absolutely ridiculous. It takes forever to get anywhere and traffic jams are very much a constant nuisance. Bicycles and motor scooters weave in and out of traffic nonstop. The last person to hit their brakes wins--and thus actually gets somewhere. So sometimes you just grit your teeth as the taxicab driver floors it

Our train was supposed to begin boarding at two. But thanks to all of the traffic, we finally arrived at the station as the clock inched closer to three. We were already late for boarding, and all we saw as we walked into the train station was lots of Africans sitting, just waiting. No train. We began to feel slightly panicked.

We went down to the ticket office and asked where we needed to go to board

"The train will not be arriving until 9:00."

And that was that. The worker behind the glass had no interest in talking to us any further

We found an empty spot against the wall and put our bags down. And we sat. Sean and Sam tried to sleep for a while. I watched the bags. That, and slowly lose feeling in the entire lower half of my body

There was a group of kids playing around right in front of us. They were the cutest--chasing each other, wrestling, doing cartwheels, flopping around on the floor, flashing shy smiles


Rumors started floating around that the train would not be coming at all because of a worker strike in Zambia. By then, it was dark outside. If the train didn't come, we decided we would spend the night in the train station and decide what to do the next morning. Workers then switched off all the lights so that people could sleep if they wanted to. It was almost pitch dark in the station. We made sure our headlamps were easily accessible.

Around 8:00, we discovered that there was actually a first-class lounge that we could wait in if we so desired. Real chairs. We were thrilled

We met a girl named Ashley--she was a peace corp volunteer, stationed in Zambia. She agreed to be the fourth person in our cabin. It was a relief to get that wild card taken care of

As the minute hand edged closer and closer to 9:00, everybody began to get a little edgier. Why hadn't the train arrived yet? Then we heard the horn, and everybody breathed easier

The train finally pulled away from the station at 11:00pm, eight hours after it was originally scheduled

Friday, June 22, 2012

landing.

As the plane prepared for landing in Dar, I looked out the window. For some reason, mostly on the merit that it was in possession of an airport, I was expecting to see something slightly resembling a regular city.  But I didn't. Just chaotically packed shacks with rusting metal roofs twisting along  dirt roads. I thought--This is it--and I got a little nervous.

We landed--and I filled out the landing form just like everybody else and I stood in the middle of a jostling crowd just like everybody else. We were all trying to get our Tanzanian visas, and there was no real rhyme or reason to the line. I asked the only other white girl there what we were supposed to do. She told me we would just have to wait.

So we waited. After a while, a uniformed worker came out and started shouting for passports and money. He said that it would expedite the process. I watched him take a couple other people's passports and cash. And when he got to me, I gave him my passport, 100USD, and crossed my fingers that everything would go smoothly.

I got my picture snapped, fingerprints taken, passport re-obtained, and I walked out of the airport to see an African holding up a sign saying EMILY DKAM

The African was actually a taxi driver, who didn't speak any English. But he took me to an Indian, who did indeed speak English. The Indian was Arafat, and as Arafat could speak both English and Swahili, he was a lifesaver every time we came to Dar

Arafat asked me if I wanted dinner. I didn't. So we went straight to Safari Inn. The traffic was horrible--and I clenched my jaw more than once thinking we were going to get in an accident. There were tall, rundown buildings, street stands selling cassava chips, people sitting on the street curbs. There was a lot of honking and a lot of poverty. It felt chaotic and it felt a little dangerous. I usually don't have a problem going out on my own, but Dar was one city that I would never go out around on my own to explore. 

Arafat dropped me off at where I would be staying. I was spending my first night in Africa alone, but I was so tired that I didn't care. I went straight to my room and collapsed on my bed.

My room was a lot nicer than I was expecting it to be.
view out of my window.
The next morning, I got up at 6:00, showered, and ate a breakfast consisting of toast, a plantain, and some juice. Jeff had sent me an email earlier telling me the fruit juice was the best fruit juice ever. And yeah, it was pretty good.

Arafat and I had agreed to meet each other at 7:00 the next morning, where he would drop me off at his place where I could wait until he picked up Sam. I waited in the lobby. He arrived a little before 9:00.

That was the first and last time I expected things to run on schedule in Africa

That is lesson #1 to learn if you want to have a good time in Africa.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

back.

Flying back is always interesting. It's just that it's so exquisitely different than flying there.


Flying back means I've reached the end of some chapter, of some sort of adventure in my life.  

And I kind of hate that. 

Mexico was my first adventure. I think that's where I learned how to really live life passionately, how to put some "azucar" in everyday exeriences.I learned I loved going out late at night, listening to street musicians, talking to the locals, dancing, playing with kids. I also learned about drug trafficking, poverty, and corruption. But more importantly, I figured out how to see past all that--to see the glory in a building covered with graffiti, to see the loveliness in a culture hidden behind stereotypes. My last day there I was about 98% convinced that that summer had been and would be the best summer of my life. 

Europe was the second adventure. At the end of the school year that year, I felt like my fuel tank was this close to being empty. But then I walked around Europe and it was just so full of beauty. I wish I could capture it in pictures or words, but nothing even comes close. I experienced everything in a way that just touched and filled my soul. Plenary lectures, old bookstores, looming cathedrals, intimate performances, formal halls, Les Mis, winding cobblestone streets, flowers, glorious art, food. I figured out a lot of things that summer. A lot of things about me and a lot of things about what I wanted. I can't even tell you how much I did not want that summer to end. 

I flew back from Africa three weeks ago. I've been putting off blogging about it. There's just so much to say. 

As we were rushing to get to the airport on my last day there, my mind flashed to that morning. It had been miserably humid. Because of course, there had been rain. 

We had walked from our hostel in Stone Town to the ferry that would take us back to Dar. We waded through tiny streets swirling with ankle-deep water and filth. We got on the ferry, and the next two hours we spent on that ferry were probably the two most miserable hours I spent in Africa. 

We got to Dar. I didn't like Dar es Salaam, never had. It just felt dirty, chaotic, dangerous. And the traffic is terrible. Always.

So I thought, you know, I think I'm ready to leave now. I think I'm excited to leave now. I miss clean bathrooms, not having to buy water, sleeping without a mosquito net, and air conditioning in vehicles. Plus, I would kill for a decent hamburger and something besides fried chicken.

But later, when I was actually looking out the plane window, and I saw Dar es Salaam get smaller and smaller, I realized that I wasn't excited to leave, and I especially wasn't excited to leave now. Hopefully, I'll get around to sharing some of the experiences that made it like that in the next couple of days. It's hard to explain. I was excited to go home, but I wasn't excited to leave. 

Driving to one of the schools in Zambia.
Homes in Zambia.
It's why I'm hoping to go back someday. Mount Kilimanjaro is calling my name.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

waka waka

I've just looked at the clock and it's 11:30pm. And I've just realized that I will be on a plane, headed to Africa, in less than 48 hours.

I love adventures.

Here's the plan thus far.

I leave SLC on Saturday. I have a layover in both New York City and Dubai (DUBAI!!!!). I'll land into Tanzania on my own. Sean arrives six hours later, and we'll spend the night in Dar es Salaam.

The next morning, we'll run a couple errands, and then we'll pick up Samantha from the airport. Then the three of us will board a train for Kasama, Zambia. The train ride is supposed to take 36 hours. However, Nick and Jeff are already over there, and it took 43 hours. The train broke down and it took 7 hours to fix. Crazy, huh. Apparently, this is quite the common occurrence. See what I mean about adventure? haha.

Anyhow, since Jeff and Nick are already over there and have posted a couple pictures, I thought I would post a few on here, just so you can see what I'll be up to in the next week or so.  I believe that Nick took all of these.

Dar es Salaam--rainy season.

I'm not sure where this is, actually...but either Dar, Kasama, or
somewhere in -between.

on the train ride from Dar to Kasama

28 hours into the train ride. 

Kasama, Zambia!
Just seeing these pictures made my heart skip a beat. I'm strangely not that nervous. 

I'm excited to get back to leading a busy, productive life. I've spent a large majority of the past two weeks doing nothing. I've watched countless tv shows and wasted more time than I'd like to admit. It was really great for the first week. Second week? Not so much. A whole summer of doing nothing would be awful. Good thing that my action packed

Summer 2012 is about to officially start!!! YES!