Tuesday, August 24, 2010

The End. The Beginning.

Blatantly ignoring Tim's advice to lean out away from the wall.






The Englishman's name was Tim.

He and Justin and I hiked for four days through the Naukluft Mountains in western Namibia. It was obvious that no one working at the desk at the national park had ever done this hike before, because if they had, they would've warned us. It was without doubt the hardest hike I've ever done.

The trail is almost completely dry, so there are three hand-crank water pumps located at each of three shelters in which hikers are supposed to spend their nights. The first day, though, we didn't make it. It got completely dark while we were ascending a trail cut into the side of a hill, and when we found that the top of the hill was flat and sandy, we thought it best to wait out the night there. We had enough water for dinner and for cooking our breakfast oats, and we figured we'd make it to the shelter soon after starting out in the morning.

But before 9am the next day we'd lost the trail, and by the time we'd found it again, it was blindingly hot out and our water was almost gone. We were also much farther from the shelter than we'd thought, and hiked on for the entire morning sipping nervously at our dwindling water supply and wondering how on earth we could possibly have fallen so far short of our intended first-night sleeping spot. Tim suggested breathing through our noses to conserve the moisture in our mouths. We hiked in anxious silence.

Just before noon, we spotted the tin-roofed structure, and Tim ran ahead to find the water pump. By the time Justin and I caught up to him, he was gleefully cranking around a wheel half his own height; a second later, he ran down to the far end of a twenty-foot length of horizontal pipe and stuck his head under the gush of cold water that came out. We filled our bottles and felt relieved.

We trekked across high, hot ground for the rest of the afternoon, and that evening we descended into a marvelous canyon with a giant, somewhat ominous cross painted on a rock at the entrance, which we took to mean we'd entered the place called Cathedral Fountain on our map. The sun had long gone down behind the canyon wall and our shadows were expanding into a more general dimness when we came to the first of the chains. This one, a ten-foot length of thick metal, was bolted horizontally into a near-vertical rock wall over a ledge two inches wide. The ground was only ten feet below, but I was extremely intimidated and tried to hug the wall all the way across, despite Justin and Tim's exhortations to lean out and use my weight to brace against the rock. I was rattled at the end of that one, not realizing that there were four more ahead, and that the first was the tamest by far.

Three of the next four chains were vertical, which I quickly discovered is way scarier than horizontal. These three chains were bolted into seventy-five degree rock faces, requiring us to rappel down backwards--with our backpacks--over seventy-foot drops. I felt dizzy. When the last twenty feet of the first descent turned out to be almost completely smooth (ie, no footholds) and Tim yelled to me that there was no other way to get my footing except by leaning all the way out, I whimpered involuntarily and tried to lean as little as possible, hoping that my hand sweat wasn't profuse enough to make me lose my grip.

But we all made it down safely, landing exhaustedly in the boulder-strewn riverbed just as the stars were coming out. We still had to hike on for several more kilometers, stopping at every trail marker to search with the flashlight for the next one, before we came to that night's shelter. One look at the overflowing toilets, bat-cluttered ceiling, and rusty Psycho shower, though, sent us right back out to set up our tents under the trees, where we slept like the rocks on which we slept.

The next day we had to go straight back up the chains, which was less scary than going down. We actually reached our shelter and water pump before dusk for a change, and even tried to build a campfire before deciding that the chances of us turning all of Naukluft into one giant campfire were too high and therefore letting it burn out.

Chains aside, though, I think the fourth day ended up being the hardest. Our map gave us distances for the first three days' hikes (each was between 12 and 16k), but neglected to give such information for the last day. We assumed our final stretch would fall somewhere within that same range.

The final day's hike turned out to be 25k over a ridiculous elevation change. We saw a group of six mountain zebras thundering down a slope, though, and a big herd of oryx. We also ended up following the (frighteningly large) prints of a leopard and her cubs for several miles, though not by choice--they were walking on our trail. We never saw them, but the prints were so fresh that they couldn't have been more than an hour or two ahead of us.

The hike was long and seemed superfluously difficult that last day, and we once again found ourselves far from the end at dusk. After dark we got completely lost, but actually found the trail again by following a giant kudu that appeared mysteriously off to our right in the moonlight. We then lost the trail again just a few hundred meters from the very end, but we saw a light on in the ranger's house, so we went over and started yelling through his window. He came out and looked at us with bewilderment, probably wondering what kind of incompetent hikers could possibly get lost within throwing distance of the end of the trail, and walked us over to exact point from which we'd set out four days before. Atos Prime was waiting, and he beeped with excitement when we unlocked him. It felt good to be back. We set up our tents and dreamed about everything we'd eat when we drove into the nearest town the next day.

The next day, after hitting up a bakery with such force that Tim, a diabetic, had to check his blood sugar twice within five minutes, we parted ways and Justin and I went on to Sossusvlei and the great sand dunes for which Namibia is often known, when it is known at all.

It was like driving onto a page from Arabian Nights. Mountains of orangish sand towered over sandy lowlands, their tops blown into ever-changing ridgelines that snaked away for miles. We hiked up the rather uncreatively-named Dune 45 to watch the sun rise, the oranges and reds of the sand below us so brilliant that the horizon might have been turned upside down.

Watching sunrise from that sandmass is apparently a popular activity, as there were plenty of other people on top of the Dune 45 too. It was really interesting to watch as everyone explored the physics of this alien landscape. The ridgeline was narrow--maybe only two feet across--and the dune was really quite high, with very steep sides. If it were made out of any normal mountain material, rocks or grass or something, it would have been a horrifyingly scary climb. But since it was soft, very deep sand, people, myself included, weren't quite sure how to navigate it. Can you step off the ridge onto the steep sand slope, or will you fall? And for that matter, what happens when you fall off a sand mountain? Do you bounce and plummet? Sink? Slide? As we all walked up the dune in a hesitant single file line, it was obvious that no one was yet bold enough to find out.

Shortly after sunrise, though, people started taking hesitant steps down onto the sides of the dune. I did too, and found that while the pull of gravity made it hard to stand, I wasn't going to fall to my death, either. After exploring the top for a while, I ran all the way down the side, maybe a third of a mile. Though I sank halfway up my calf with each step, the angle propelled me downwards with delightful speed. It was like running in a dream, effortlessly fast with no fear of falling.

Two days later we were back in Windhoek. We nervously returned the car, and were shocked when we were charged for no damages and only a very-deserved cleaning fee. Atos had been places he'd never been meant to go. We'd dented the door, scratched the side, damaged the rim and sanded all the finish off the hubcaps. I'm still waiting skeptically for some bill to arrive.

Justin flew back to the US from Windhoek, and I continued on through southwestern Namibia by train and minibus. I even found myself in a surrogate "family" for a weekend, sharing the family room at a guesthouse with a Spanish couple, a middle-aged Italian dude, and a French guy. Then we all rented a little car together for a day, three of us squished in the back. I would've started a round of Row, Row, Row your Boat if any of the others would've known it.

I had to head south to catch my own flight out of Johannesburg, so I reluctantly left Namibia behind, crossing back into the intimidating expanse of South Africa. A few days on and off buses took me through dry little towns with names like Springbok and Nababeep, and then I hopped on a 16-hour bus and was back, much to my own chagrin, in Johannesburg.

I stayed, though, with an incredibly nice family I'd met briefly in Botswana, and they lavished me with food and entertainment and purring housecats. A problem with my flight delayed me a day, and the family was busy with work, so I moved to a backpacker's in Soweto, the giant township south of Joburg. I couldn't believe how nice the people there were. People said hello and made conversation on the street. Not a single person asked me for money. There, in one of the most oppressed parts of the metropolis, I felt safer and more comfortable than I had almost anywhere else in southern Africa. As much as I'm still not excited about Johannesburg , I have to admit that it was full of surprises each time I found myself there.

And then I was on a plane, and then in Singapore, and then Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Bali, West Timor, and now Alor, a tiny island of far-eastern Indonesia. My cracked lips healed in a day. My towel molded instantly. And I found myself in a world as foreign to the place I'd just come from as it is to the home I left behind before that.

Friday, August 13, 2010

The Forgotten Country

Namibia was my favorite part of the trip. In fact, my longstanding fascination with it--with the fact that it's one of Africa's most sparsely populated countries, that much of it remains uninhabited and largely inaccessible, and that it has an extraordinarily forbidding climate and geography--provided the original impetus for the whole southern Africa trip.

The country did not disappoint. In Windhoek, Justin and I picked up our little rental car--a diminutive Hyundai hatchback with the delightfully superhero-esque model name of Atos Prime--and headed north to Etosha National Park. I was expecting the park to be somewhat like Kruger back in South Africa, and though they shared some characteristics, I actually liked Etosha more. The whole park is centered on the giant Etosha pan--a dry, highly salty lakebed that occasionally holds a little water but more often is just a vast plain of miles and miles of dry, cracked, salty mud. The pan's mineral content causes it to vary in color from shimmering white to light gray to sort of greenish (like the Statue of Liberty). And while the pan itself doesn't contain much life--it generally lacks both water and vegetation--the surrounding area is full of watering holes that support a prodigious variety of flora and (big, exciting, carnivorous) fauna.

We spent four days and nights in Etosha, camping at each of the park's three campgrounds (one night at the first two and two at the third) and driving slowly from east to west across the hundreds of miles contained within the park. As in Kruger, guests are strictly forbidden to step outside their cars anywhere besides inside the heavily gated campgounds, so we spent hours and hours driving each day. The pan itself was incredible: when it was in the distance, it reflected off the clouds above, giving them an eerily stormy look; when we came closer and looked out over it, it seemed like the ocean, stretching gray and flat out to the horizon at every point in front of us. The soil beside the pan was very sandy, furthering the coastal feel. At one spot, we were allowed to drive out onto the pan itself for about half a mile or so, until the land from which we came receded and the pan just swallowed us into a disorienting moonscape of sameness on all sides.

On our second and third mornings, we finally saw the lions that had somehow evaded us all throughout our South African national park trip. They weren't exceptionally close, but they weren't so far away that it wasn't noticeable how effortlessly they controlled the waterholes at which they lounged nonchalantly. We saw them in groups of two or three, and though they were always dozing, very catlike, after their nocturnal hunts, the dozens of other animals at the waterholes stood at complete attention, barely daring to drink and always keeping at least some members of their herd focused entirely on the lions. One lazy tail flick from the lions sent all others backing away. They were so impressive. They didn't even have to try.

Quite surprisingly, though, the highlight of Etosha was actually contained within each campground. All three campgrounds are contructed with a large (probably manmade) waterhole just to their west. A wall separates each waterhole from its respective campground, and the people-sides of the walls are raised up and lined with benches. From these spots, visitors can animal-watch all day and, as the areas are even dimly lit after dark, all night as well. On both the third and fourth nights, we witnessed one of the most amazing spectacles of the trip. A herd of 15 elephants, from enormous old bulls with broken tusks to babies so tiny they walked easily under the adults' bellies, came thundering out of the bush to drink. I could smell the dust they raised in their approach before I could see them, and when they came near, the dust was at first so thick as to be almost opaque. Then they all settled and stood around the watering hole, draining gallons from it with each plunge of their trunks. The males occasionally chased each other or charged an errant rhinocerous interloper, trumpeting and roaring--elephants roar!! SO loudly!!--with fantastic fearsomeness. The babies threw their adorable little trunks over each others' backs and nursed from their mothers. The giraffes observed them warily. The rhinos lumbered out of the way, looking grumpy. After half an hour or so of drinking, the herd would thunder away again, back the way it came, leaving a giant cloud of dust to slowly settle over the other animals that reappeared from the bushes, having backed away at the elephants' approach. We sat twenty yards away, close enough for the dust to sting our eyes too. Amazing.

From Etosha we went to the far northwest of the country, to a very sparsely inhabited region called the Kaokoveld. We drove for two straight days, and almost the only people we passed were Himba tribespeople living scattered villages of mud huts. The Himba are often photographed for (rather gratuitous) postcards due to their practice of wearing only loincloths (men and women). They paint their whole bodies with a deep reddish-brown paste as protection from the sun, and wear their hair in fantastic dreadlocks (also painted red) that they gather into spiky masses on top of their heads. They go barefoot and decorate their ankles with stacks of gold bangles. I tried not to stare, but I was admittedly fascinated by their appearance.

In the Kaokoveld, we bid farewell to paved roads and said hello to wild giraffes that grazed beside our car. (There were even "Caution: Elephants" signs by the more maintained parts of the road!) Justin drove the ill-equipped but spunky little Hyundai on roads that it was never intended to be forced over; we even crossed a narrow, rutted mountain pass so steep that we were both wide-eyed and silent for some minutes after we had safely come down the other side. I put my newfound stickshift-driving skills to the test on roads so full of boulders and furrows that they looked like riverbeds (and probably are, in the rainy season). Once I came upon a particularly imposing hill while Justin was napping. It went fine at first. I shifted into fourth, then third. But it wasn't enough, and the car began straining so hard it threatened to roll down backwards. And just when it seemed like it might, Justin sprang from his sleep with the words of the prophet on his lips:

"Downshift, DOWNSHIFT!!"

And I did, and the wheels spun, and gravel flew, and we lurched forward, up and over the top. And all was well for the moment.

A few minutes later, though, I hit a rock with the front wheel so hard that it dented the rim and stalled the car. By this point the accumulated nervousness from this and all the previous driving had made me so sweaty that dirty little rivulets were running off my palms and down the steering wheel, so I gladly forfeited the driver's seat. Thanks to Justin for shepherding Atos and me to safety.

The natural scenery was unbelievable. It varied from low brown hills with boulders and scrub bushes that reminded me of inland southern California to great red rock mountains reminiscent of Arizona and Nevada. We stopped once, in one of the only towns there was to stop in: a village called Sesfontein, comprising nothing but a few empty tin shacks and one large, fancy, overpriced German fort-hotel with disappointing food.

On the day we hit Sesfontein, we looked at our map over lunch and saw that there was nothing around for hundreds of kilometers. We began wondering if we'd be able to make it to any sort of town in which to spend the night.

We didn't. When the sun set we pulled off the road and set up our tent. As we ate tuna in the dark, a car passed and the driver told us he'd seen a leopard sitting on the side of the road about a mile back. We were both excited and a bit spooked, but never saw it, which may have been either a good or bad thing depending on the circumstances.

It was probably the most amazing night of the whole trip. I've never been somewhere so isolated. I felt like I'd fallen off the edge of the earth.

I was absolutely covered in dust. When I settled down in the tent I heard a maddening ringing in my ears from all the dust inside them. The dust was in my teeth and in our food. And when we finally rolled back into civilization the next night, we were like a spectre emerging from the desert, chalkly brown with cracked lips and knuckles and nostrils, a dented car, and a nearly speechless reverence for the place through which we'd come.

Two days later we'd go back. But this time, instead of Atos Prime, we took an Englishman.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Botswana to Namibia

I'm on the second hour of a 20-hour layover in Kuala Lumpur, and this airport has free internet kiosks (hooray!), so I think I can afford to kill some time...

NB: I think searching on Flickr for "wondergerbil at yahoo dot com" (the real address, that is) under the tab that says "People" might work.


Back to the delta in Botswana:

On one of our walks around Chief's Island, we tracked a lion by its footprints for a long way, which was both scary and awesome; I had a hard time deciding whether or not I actually wanted to find what we were looking for. We didn't end up seeing it, though, giving up after about half an hour. Sim told us afterwards that it must have been a male lion we were following; when we asked how he knew, he casually responded that a female lion would have turned around to fight us by then. Seems like he should develop a system for determining a lion's sex before beginning to track it, in that case...

Our two and a half days on the delta were overall very, very quiet. At night Sim would build us a fire around which we'd all cook and eat in somewhat awkward silence. He wasn't much of a talker, responding to most questions with a single word, and I felt rude talking to Justin in front of him, so we all remained largely mute. Sim's biggest contribution to conversation came on the first night when, after about an hour and a half of no one talking, he abruptly asked us if Jackie Chan was still alive and living in America. We confirmed that yes, as far as we know this is the case; Sim nodded thoughtfully and, thus satisfied, got up and went into his tent with hardly another word. The silence was sometimes quiet nice, though--nights on our little island were the darkest I've ever seen, and it was enough just to marvel at the billions of blazing stars.

On the third afternoon, Sim poled us back to the mokoro station, and we readied ourselves to head to Windhoek, Namibia's capital, the next day.

Windhoek, however, didn't happen the next day, or even the day after that. Turns out it's really hard to get from northern Botswana to Namibia. The day after returning from our delta trip, we caught a rickety old Chinese cast-off bus from Maun to the town of Ghanzi, about two hours east of the Namibian border. We'd been told that we'd be able to find our way into Namibia from there, and as the trip lasted only a few hours, we were hopeful we'd even be able to find a bus that same afternoon.

The fact that the Ghanzi "bus station" was a tree should have been our first clue that it wasn't going to happen. When we alighted from our bus and asked the few people loitering around the tree about getting to Namibia, they all mentioned a bus the next afternoon to some place called Charles Hill, which was still in Botswana but apparently closer to the border; they resolutely dismissed the notion that we might find our way there that same evening. We therefore pitched our little orange tent (which we'd fondly taken to calling "The Pumpkin") on the grounds of a hotel and passed a very pleasant evening with a friendly South African family who shared their dinner with us.

By 11am the next day we'd returned to the tree station to await our bus. We waited for several hours in the Botswana winter weather, unlike any I've felt outside southern Africa: blisteringly hot in the sun, but actually quite unpleasantly chilly in the shade. The air is so dry that the sun, as intense as it is, can't heat it.

The bus, a short, squarish contraption with more Chinese characters in the window, arrived around 1pm. As it neared the tree, I was surprised to see everyone waiting there jump up; as it slowed to a stop, people began running at it. I wasn't sure what was going on, but doing the same as those around me seemed like the best plan, so I started running too.

We might have made it if I hadn't gotten my head stuck to a tree branch. A branch from that same merciless acacia under which we'd been sitting for hours got completely, irreparably tangled in my hair. Yanking as hard as I could didn't even release it. By the time Justin had freed me, the bus had been mobbed by a crowd twice its capacity. People were shoving and jostling to get in the door; some hooligan young men were boosting each other through the back windows. Unwilling to be left out, I followed the example of the old lady in front of me and began stuffing my bag through the driver's window, but to my genuine amazement he stopped me, saying it was full. (Pretty much the only time anywhere in Africa I've ever heard a bus driver say that.) He also curtly told me that there was no other bus to Charles Hill that day, and then went back to wrangling the crush of people behind him.

We ended up hitchhiking across the border that night. An old man who was also unable to get on the bus showed us the designated hitchhiking spot; it was a remarkably organized system, no doubt due to the gaps in the public transportation system like the one we'd just witnessed. Most of the people at the hitching post were, in fact, other would-be bus riders from the tree station.

For the first couple hours we rode in the back of a pickup truck with five other people--seven total in the back, plus everyone's luggage. What a spectacle we must have been: four dozing African men, one older Herero lady in full traditional dress and headgear, and we two Americans. With my Western paranoia against touching or encroaching upon the space of any stranger, I struggled to find a comfortable position at first; the Herero lady, luckily having no such compunctions, solved the problem by shooting her hand out, grabbing my foot, and jamming it into an open spot just next to her own. And so we rode on, a motley band of hitchhikers, for most of the afternoon.

We turned at a road sign that read, simply, "Namibia", with an arrow pointing towards the empty westward expanse, and I watched as mirages turned the horizon behind our truck into pools of water that followed us across the desert. The drivers of the truck took us as far as they could, and at dusk we found ourselves again waiting for a lift with one other hitchhiker on a prodigiously lonely stretch of road. A few cars passed without stopping, and just as we were wondering what a night spent on the side of the Trans-Kalahari Highway might be like, a truck driver pulling a load of new cars stopped and picked up all three of us.

With the four of us in the cab of the truck, we drove on through the night, crossing the Namibian border and stopping about an hour later at a little eastern town called Gobabis. The ride was mostly quiet, the only excitement coming when I saw an anteater for the first time--excitement that was quickly quashed, along with the anteater itself, a second later as it ran in front of the truck and the helpless driver hit it.

The driver dropped Justin and me at a hostel down a narrow dirt road in Gobabis. We told him he didn't need to drive us all the way down the little road, but maybe we should've been more insistant, as after letting us out, he ran over the hostel's gate--completely over it, flattening it--while Justin and I sneaked away and made mental notes to hide if we saw him in town the next day.

But we didn't, and the next afternoon, on our third day of travel since leaving Maun, we found a shared taxi from Gobabis to Windhoek, and by that evening, we'd finally made it to the rather unimposing Namibian capital. From there we had only to plan our three-week trip around the country--a trip which turned out to be the biggest adventure we had in all our travels.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Flickr!

I made a Flickr page! I don't really know how to use it yet, and I've already met my monthly upload quota, but I imagine I can be found by going to http://www.flickr.com/ and searching for Wondergerbil. One day I'll add captions and change the photo names.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

One Month in Namibia

Well, and a little in Botswana, too. But that would've made the title too long.

It's been forever since I've posted! I've had good reason, though: never in my life have I been in such remote places as I've been for the last month. There's no way I'll get it all down here, but I'll try, starting with our five days in Botswana.

We ended up arranging the dugout canoe trip through the Okavango Delta in northwestern Botswana. My Lonely Planet (which is surprisingly useless in this part of the world) says that it's the world's only inland delta, which makes sense, as the idea of a great river just sort of petering out in the middle of a continent instead of veering off towards an ocean is indeed strange.

To arrange a delta trip, we had to travel from Gaborone to the northern town of Maun on the 6am bus. Our taxi driver, who we'd called the night before, was quite late picking us up, and by the time we arrived at the station our bus was already packed full. Luckily, though, there's rarely such a thing as an African bus that can't be persuaded to fit one more, and so Justin and I and our bags and twenty other people ended up standing in the aisle. Having no idea how far away Maun was, we hoped we wouldn't be standing long; perhaps we'd even arrive in Maun after only a hour or two. After maybe half an hour of standing, I asked a man what time we were expected to arrive; had we not been packed in so tightly I might have fallen over when he said four o'clock in the afternoon.

Luckily, people were getting on and off at various stops along the way, and Justin and I progressed down the line of standees in a surprisingly orderly fashion, finally claiming seats after about three hours. We ended up sitting apart, and my seatmate, fortuitously, just happened to be a tour guide. I got his number, and he turned out to be instrumental in helping us arrange our boat trip the next day.

We skirted the Kalahari all the way to Maun, and I watched out the window with fascination as the reddish dust of Gaborone turned to the grayish-white powder of the north. We saw herds of cows, goats, and donkeys out the windows, guided through the dry bush by cowboys on horseback. We saw little villages of rondavels--cylindrical mud huts with pointed thatched roofs--sitting together with their faces to the road and their backs to the great gray Kalahari. And we saw, on the bus and on the roadside, groups of women from the Herero tribe, dressed in their ground-length, ruffled, Victorian-style dresses and foot-long sideways hats designed to resemble the longhorned cattle that their people herd. (The tour guide, Issa, told me that they'd taken their style of dress from the colonial ladies--obviously a century or two ago. And Justin remarked, not unkindly, that they looked like they had stretched coat hangers over their heads.)

But mostly, I saw nothing out the window--the vast nothingness of the bush, beautiful in its emptiness, and the whole reason I'd dreamed of coming to southern Africa. And as dusk approached, our bus surrendered us to the little town of Maun.

Maun (pronounced with two syllables: Ma-oon) turned out to be a really pleasant, funny little place. Donkey carts carrying loads of goods and people trotted along the side of the road, pulling through sand as deep as you'd find on a beach. We camped at a fantastic little place about 20 minutes out of town by minibus, a gorgeous spot literally yards from the banks of the Okavango River. (They told us, at least, that a fence had been installed upriver to keep the crocodiles away, and we luckily saw no evidence to disprove this.) The sunsets from that campground, which faced west over the river, were some of the most vibrant I've ever seen, with pinks and golds so unbelievably bright that they looked painted onto the sky.

An afternoon's walk was more than enough time to see all of Maun, which consisted of a few chain supermarkets and gas stations, rows of tin shacks selling candy and haircuts and rechargable phone cards, and a dozen or so delta tour operators. We got the phone number of a mokoro poler from some other campers and called him directly, rather than going through a company. (A mokoro is a wooden dugout canoe, the traditional, and still most efficient, means of transport through the delta when it's flooded. The boatman--or poler--stands at the back of the canoe and propels it by means of a very long stick that he pushes against the riverbed, which is never more than nine or so feet below the boat.)

We called our potential poler, Sim, and arranged for him to meet us at our campground to negotiate a trip; when he arrived, we were surprised to see that the translator he'd brought along was none other than Issa, my seatmate on the bus from the previous day! And after a slightly awkward but relatively smooth bargaining session, we had booked ourselves on a 3-day, 2-night trip through the delta leaving the next morning.

Issa arrived in a giant 4-wheel drive safari vehicle the next morning to transport us to the "mokoro station," a twenty foot-long stretch of open riverbed down a long sand path at which a dozen or so canoes were stored. Justin and I were in the back of the open-sided, canvas-topped vehicle, and though Issa was by far the sanest driver I've seen in all of Africa, I still got clocked on the head by a tree branch when the road narrowed. After a few more close calls, I gave up and sat on the floor in the middle of the back, safe from the branches that continued to scrape threateningly against the canvas top and poke through the open sides.

When we finally got to the "station," Sim was waiting there for us. We all got into the boat with our bags--Justin in the pointed nose, leaning up against his backpack, me behind him, with my backpack behind me, and Sim standing at the pointed rear with his small bag at his feet.

Sim had outfitted his mokoro with a tall stick on the nose. At first, I thought it was some sort of personalizing marker--that perhaps we should hang a pirate flag from it or something--but as the open waters of the station changed into the closed-in, reed-choked delta, we saw the cleverness of his set-up. Away from the main channel, the delta is only seasonally flooded; in these places, the grass grows out of the water as thickly as it would grow on land. In many places the grass stretched far over our heads as we sat in the bottom of the boat, ourselves only inches off the water; all we could see was the mokoro's nose breaking through the thickets in front of us, as if we were canoeing across a prairie. Sim's ingenious stick arrangement caught some of the spiderwebs that we broke through, soon becoming so wrapped in silk that it looked silver in the harsh sunlight. It couldn't possibly catch them all, though, and we were soon absolutely covered in webs, water spiders, and gnats that flew up our noses and into our ears and eyes. It was disconcerting at first, but I finally just had to give up trying to get them off, only looking down once a minute or so to check for the truly big spiders that occasionally found themselves on our vessel.

The water was pristine, and in places where the grass wasn't so thick, I could see all the way to the bottom of the delta. The ground under the water looked like no riverbed I've ever seen. It looked just like dry land, except submerged; very terrestrial-looking grass and even flowers sat motionlessly underwater, sunken garderns calmly waiting for the annual dry-out. The water was so clear and the ground under it so resembled a grassland that the canoe seemed suspended in the air, floating silently over an eerily still prairie.

We traveled for about three hours that first day, landing at a muddy little island that Sim, who actually spoke quite decent English, said was called "Kudu Horn Island". He told us that there were elephants somewhere on our (very small) island and that we might hear them shaking the fruits out of trees at night, but that we shouldn't worry, as elephants don't like to crash tents. We never saw or heard much wildlife on our island, though, and never explored very much of it, either; aside from the twenty or so square yards where we put up our tents, the rest of the island appeared to be impassably thick with vegetation. We couldn't see more than a few yards over the bush, and never ventured out into it, nor did Sim mention any more about what was out there.

We put up our tents there and made lunch (as part of our bargain, Justin and I had agreed to provide Sim's food) while Sim built a campfire and boiled a pot of tea. After lunch, Sim encouraged us to take the mokoro out by ourselves, and we found how truly difficult it is to propel the boat through tall grass. We were only gone about 20 minutes, and were content to leave the poling to Sim after that.

Later that evening, Sim poled us over to a larger island called Chief's Island, a spot of land about 4 km square and housing lions, elephants, hippos, all sorts of antelope, and plenty of other creatures you'd never expect to find on an island. We landed the boat and walked around the island, which was mainly a dry grassland (in the midst of all that water!) and was crisscrossed by footpaths worn in by animals and mokoro tourists alike. We returned to Chief's Island and other nearby islands several times over our two and a half days in the delta, but never saw too much in the way of wildlife. We saw several elephants (luckily all from a distance, as they can be quite dangerous and Sim loped along shockingly unarmed), even watching a few of them crashing through the shallows. We also heard plenty of enormous shaking and crashing noises as they shook palm trees with their trunks, and saw dozens of broken trees as evidence of this practice. We also saw hippos from the safety of our boat (they're even more dangerous than elephants), and watched dozens of water antelopes running and leaping through the shallow water as well.

Internet time is almost up, and I have so much more to tell! More soon--heading to southern Namibia by train tonight!

Friday, July 2, 2010

Northward Bound

South Africa is now behind us.

As I stated briefly in my last post (in which everything I stated was brief), our final days in that country were spent in Johannesburg, great colossus of the South. While not even the capital of its home nation, the city could nevertheless in some ways be considered the capital of the entire continent. I read that something like 10% (or was it more?) of all the commercial activity of Africa--all of Africa--is conducted in Johannesburg. My first impression of the city was one of intimidation (fear, even); this was followed by frustration; and finally, I felt a small amount of appreciation and even a spark of interest. I can't say it's a place I'm terribly excited about returning to (even though I'll have to, as I'm flying out of there in August to head to Indonesia), but it has also garnered some of my respect.

We had to connect in Joburg to get from Nelspruit (in the far northeast of the country, where we had gone to see Kruger National Park) to Gaborone (capital of Botswana, just over its southeastern border with South Africa.) We were planning on waiting out our nine hour between-bus layover entirely in the Joburg bus station, and nearly made it all the way through without incident. As we were collecting our belongings and preparing to board our bus to Botswana, though, I saw that my passport (along with every single other valuable thing I had with me, with the exception of one credit card and a wad of American dollars I'd hidden among my toiletries) was gone. Good thing I noticed it before we got on the bus; I can't imagine what would have happened if I hadn't noticed that my passport was gone until we got to the Botswana border.

While I mourned the loss of my cameras and the thousand or so photos they contained--the entirety of our past month in pictures--Justin called for backup. He had (very, very luckily) been given the phone number of a friend of a friend who was working in Joburg for the summer. He called her up, explained the pickle we were in, and she couldn't possibly have been more helpful--she sent her driver straight to the bus station to get us, and then called the (fantastically fancy) hotel that was putting her company up for the summer, and simply said they had two more "employees" arriving and needed another room charged to the company account. And that was it.

We checked into the hotel, one which we never could have afforded on our own, and immediately drank all the free packets of coffee and hot chocolate in the room, swiped all the mini soaps and shampoos, and began salivating at the thought of continental breakfast (which, by the way, was AMAZING). While getting robbed sucks, at least she helped us do it in style. Many, many thanks to her, a truly generous friend--one of many we've met this trip.

While in some ways South Africa provided me with my most unfortunate travel experiences yet, in other ways, it granted me some of the most affirming ones. We met stranger after stranger who helped us with complete selflessness. Without all these passing kindnesses, we wouldn't have made it across the country nearly so easily, and for them I am abundantly grateful.

But like I said, South Africa is now behind us, and we are covered in the sand and dust of its less-imposing northerly neighbor. We arrived in Gaborone on Tuesday night, and I was expecting the sort of less-developed African city I've experienced elsewhere--crowded, loud, mobbed with people and goats and hawkers and overflowing with a sort of chaos that's both welcoming and unsettling. But in Gaborone, I found little of that. It was dusty, yes, but surprisingly peaceful and orderly, with taxi drivers that actually took no for an answer and street vendors that didn't pop out from behind their wares to follow me down the street or grab my arm. Justin even got surprisingly few shouts of "Konnichiwa!" and "Hey, Jackie Chan!".

We spent one day walking around Gaborone, visiting the eclectic and somewhat moth-eaten (but free!) museum and waiting in interminable lines at every bank in town trying to get my finances sorted out. We also ate some of the best street food we've had yet: a plate piled high with pap (the cornmeal paste), beef, and cabbage for under $2.

The next morning we took the 6am bus and headed to the far northwest of the country to see the legendary Okavango Delta, the vast and impassable floodplain of the Great Rift Valley, from where I am now writing this. We're trying to get a trip in a dugout canoe arranged, starting tomorrow--and perhaps, if we can make it far enough north by boat, we can try to get straight to Namibia from there. More updates soon!!

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Botswana at Last!

We've been moving quickly from city to city lately, so I haven't had much time for posting...and an unfortunate incident at the bus station in Johannesburg (I knew that city was trouble) has left me relying on Justin for all my funds for the moment, so paying for internet is a bit of a luxury until things get straightened out. A (very) quick update, though:

-We left Wilderness and ended up at an out-of-the way beach called Buffalo Bay, transported in a truck by a jovial rascist in pajama pants

-We squished into a two-door hatchback with all our backpacks and three French guys and visited a rainy Rastafarian community outside Knysna, South Africa, where we were lectured on Hash: The Plant of Today

-We froze on an all-night bus ride to a place called Grahamstown, found they had no coffee in the whole damn place, and so immediately left

-We took another all-night bus, then an all-day bus, to reach the mystical mountain range called The Drakensburg, aka Coldest Place on Earth

-We hiked one of southern Africa's highest peaks, located in the tiny nation of Lesotho

-We biked 40k to buy six eggs and some candied popcorn, though the latter turned out to be so gross that Justin forcibly gave it to a stranger on the street

-We spent 12 hours in Johannesburg, where we watched Cote d'Ivoire fall to Brazil and slept in a hovel that smelled of rot and dirty cat litter

-We rented a stick shift and then both learned how to drive it (Justin first, on the way out of the parking lot)

-We drove the rental car to Kruger National Park, where I took my turn at the wheel, stalling and lurching across hundreds of miles of pristine grassland in full view of buffalo, rhinos, cheetahs, and some surprisingly menacing elephants

-We went back to Joburg to catch a bus to Botswana, but ended up staying for two days as an enterprising thief handily dispossessed me of everything but my clothes at the bus station

-48 hours and one loooong visit to the American embassy later, WE'RE IN BOTSWANA!!

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Mexico's Mom

I'm now in the cold but beautiful town of Wilderness (its actual name), staying at a very random farm/hostel/perpetural techno party, and football fever has beset us all!

Justin and I spent most of Thursday on a fantastic bike ride. A guy who worked at our hostel in Oudtshoon drove us and two other Americans up to a frigid starting point called Swartberg Pass in the mountains outside of town. The drive was breathtaking but terrifying: our driver, like all others I've encountered in this country, drove way too fast, zipping around corners and flying past pedestrians, all in a 15-passenger cube van with a bicycle trailer on the back. This was bad enough on the regular streets outside of town, but when our road changed from cement to gravel and began switchbacking up the side of the mountain, I got downright nervous. The gravel changed to mud near the top, prompting our driver to weave back and forth across the narrow road in order to maintain traction. We passengers from the Nation of Civilized Driving sat in tense silence as the van's front wheels zigged toward the mountain and then zagged back toward the cliffside, so close that we could actually see over the edge before our driver aimed the van back the other way. When we finally rounded the last bend and came to a stop, the irony of the Afrikaans sign labeling the area as "Die Top" was not lost on us.

The driver set us loose on our bicycles, and the first few hours proved lovely but frigid as we descended the mountain and made it back to the relatively flat land of the desert area known as the Little Karoo. A few hours of riding brought us to the Cango Caves, an absolutely amazing network of underground caverns. Two tours were available - Standard and "Adventure" - with the latter involving crawls and squeezes through sections with such claustrophobia-inducing names as "the postal box". While the latter option sounded exciting, I've been known to feel mildly panicky in spaces as large as small cars, the window seat on airplanes, and in bed with the blanket over my head; in other words, though I was indeed tempted to try some super-spelunking just to see if I could do it, I also didn't want to hold up an entire caving group while having some sort of subterranean panic attack. We opted for the standard tour, therefore, and were not disappointed.

The roomy mouth of the cave opened up into one grand chamber after another; a million years of water droplets had hardened into petrified ballrooms with structures resembling massive organ pipes, chandeliers, and decorative columns. When the guide turned all the lights off, we got to see the complete blackness that greeted the cave's first (European) discoverer back in the 1700s.

Several more hours of bicycling and two roadside ostrich burgers later, we were back in Oudtshoorn. We rounded out out time in the town with a game of Scrabble, a load of laundry, and a few minutes of watching the World Cup opening concert on TV (was Desmond Tutu drunk?? His speech made about as much sense as Mariah Carey's famous ramble).

The next day, yesterday, we left for the town of Wilderness, chosen only because of its name. We're staying at a wacky farm that doubles as a hostel; our incredibly laid-back host, Theo, gave us a room for the price of a campsite and met us in town upon our arrival to usher us into a bar where we could all watch the opening World Cup match. Vuvuzelas (the incredibly loud long plastic horns) blared through the night as Bafana, the South African team, tied Mexico 1-1. Our host then drove us and a carload of his shnockered friends back to the farm in his truck while his brother followed in the farm's other vehicle, an open-topped bus spray-painted with orange and yellow soccer slogans. The dude in the front passenger seat of our truck was hilarious, pointing his vuvuzela out the car window and yelling to Theo to alert him whenever we were about to pass an expensive house. Theo obliged, even giving him a countdown: "Expensive house on the left in THREE...TWO...ONE!!" On cue, his friend would honk the vuvuzela out the window at top volume (just one of those instruments is about as loud as a full blast from a car horn), and then scream out an indecent phrase in semi-Spanish about what should happen to Mexico's mother. In this way, two carloads of horn-blowing, insult-hooting, rowdy South Africans, plus two American backpackers who couldn't stop laughing at the whole situation, disturbed an entire neighborhood before arriving back at the farm. Upon arrival, as Justin and I were settling into our chilly but comfortable room, our host and his guests turned on some loud techno music, a disco ball, and a strobe light (who wouldn't have such things at their farm?) and kept the party going for hours and hours more.

Today we took a long walk around the outskirts of Wilderness, ending up back in town to watch the USA/England game. The 1-1 tie, while not ideal, was a better outcome than most would have predicted, so we headed back to the farm contented.

Tomorrow we are probably heading out to some village about 20k from here...we got a very random invitation from one of the guys we met for about 5 minutes at the party last night to stay at his house while he's away in Joburg! He drew us a very incoherent map, gave no address, and said only that the key should be "under the pepper pot," whatever the crap a pepper pot is...so we'll see if we find it! Adventures galore!!

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Some Pictures!





I figured out how to upload pictures! Here are a few from our trip down to the Cape of Good Hope.

The first two are of me on the hike out to Cape Point. The third is of one of the bays that we passed on the way down the coast toward the Cape. Beautiful trip so far!!

To Mossel Bay and Beyond!

Hello from Oudtshoorn!

Mossel Bay came and went. Justin and I took an evening bus out of Cape Town on Monday after a rather drizzly, uneventful final day and a last Capetonian dinner at a fantastic Ethiopian restaurant with live music that we'd found a few days before. We said goodbye to Sifiso with honest hopes to see him again at some point in the future and left for Mossel Bay, a destination chosen pretty much at random.

We arrived in the town just after midnight, after a 5-hour bus ride that barely moved our location on the map of South Africa at all. It was disappointing to not be able to see anything out the bus windows - I have no idea what the landscape between the two cities looks like - but at least the lack of scenic distractions allowed us to focus our complete attention on the old Clint Eastwood movie that played twice in a row on the bus TVs (I missed the part that explained how he ended up in El Paso on the first viewing, so it's lucky I got to watch it again. Phew!)

We'd called ahead to arrange a lift from the bus station to our accommodations, and our bashful young hotelier arrived shortly after our bus let us off. We thought we'd booked a hostel - the price was pretty cheap - but when we arrived at the Little Brak Beach House (which was quite a ways outside Mossel Bay proper), it turned out to be more like a delightful bed and breakfast right on the water. It even had a resident cat! I was entirely pleased. It lacked only some sort of indoor heating system in order to make it perfectly complete.

We awoke on Tuesday to piercingly blue skies, sunshine, and our hotelier's mother calling us to breakfast in her almost-unintelligible Afrikaans-accented English. After bread and muffins, our ever-helpful host, Phillip, offered us a ride into town (I'm pretty sure we were the only two guests at the whole place). We loaded into his car, but had only gone about a block when he glanced over at the ocean, hooted, and pulled a U-turn at top speed. Justin and I were completely dumbfounded until Phillip pulled to a stop at the shoreline and pointed. Hundreds of seabirds were circling, floating, and diving in the water only a few dozen yards off the beach. "It's the baitball!!" Phillip exclaimed, grabbing his cell phone and excitedly dialing some friends. "We've been waiting all month!"

I was completely ignorant about this ocean phenomenon, but Phillip explained that, as the sardines make their annual mating pilgrimage towards Durban, they are followed by seabirds, dolphins, and sharks that slowly compress them into an ever-tighter ichthyological lump, and then just pick off their meals from the mass. Unfortunately, we didn't see any dolphins or sharks jump (how awesome would that have been??), nor did we see the ball itself - Phillip told us that, when the water is completely still, you can actually watch through the water as the teeming ball of fish travels past the beach. All we saw was the birds, but the fact that we happened to be in the right place at the right time for even that much is pretty incredible.

After the baitball excitement, we headed into Mossel Bay, and our host dropped us at a trailhead for a beautiful hike along the seacliffs. The waves below were astounding: they were giant, and the water was such a clear blue that I could see how the troughs were marbled with red and brown sand before they crested and exploded in a frothy frenzy. After hiking for a couple hours, we saw some fascinating-looking tidepools below and found a pretty easy trail that led to them by winding down the cliffs. The pools were beautiful: they were full of tiny starfish and red and green seaweed; with the blue and white ocean and the dusty brown rocks, it was a truly lovely spot.

The weather quickly turned gray, though, and sudden gusts of wind began blowing so hard that I actually started to worry about getting blown off the cliffs, so we hiked out apace, arriving back in town ahead of some menacing-looking clouds.

We spent the rest of the afternoon walking around the little town and waiting for the inevitable rain to arrive. Mossel Bay was interesting mainly for the different slice of South African culture that it displayed. Man, if I'd thought central Cape Town was gentrified, I hadn't seen anything yet...Mossel Bay was so manicured that it looked like a place you'd take your ailing great auntie for an afternoon of sunning. Sure, there were still a few kind of sketchy places, like the minibus depot, but even that seemed pretty sterile. The town was by far the most unapologetically Afrikaner place I've seen yet. The Afrikaners are the descendants of the first Dutch colonizers; though I can claim to know very little about South Africa and its people, I have heard from locals that the diehard Afrikaners comprise the conservative Caucasian faction. Much of the public written material in Cape Town (street signs, posters, etc.) was in both Afrikaans and English; I was surprised to find that in Mossel Bay, however, many signs were in Afrikaans only. When I asked Phillip if there are many people who speak Afrikaans who do not also speak English, he rolled his eyes and said that there are indeed many in Mossel Bay (or Mosselbaai, as they'd say). He described them as people who still resent the British takeover of the South African colony in the early 19th century and who wax nostalgic for the days of apartheid. While no generalizations are ever entirely true, of course, it was still really interesting to observe a town that seems to be holding onto its colonial past as tightly as modernity will allow.

This morning and afternoon were persistently rainy; we ate a leisurely breakfast and then spent a few hours in town at the Bartolomeu Dias museum (he was the first European to round the Cape of Good Hope, though neither he nor anyone else knew at the time that he'd done so; apparently Mossel Bay was the place where he first came ashore after rounding the bend and turning north again.) The museum itself was rather lackluster, with an odd collection of seashells, boat replicas, and posters about Nelson Mandela; the highlight was undoubtedly a GIANT, moss-covered prehistoric skull and spine that lay, with absolutely no explanation, in the middle of the garden. I have no idea what sort of creature it came from, and everyone else was just walking around it as if it were a completely normal piece of lawn furniture. Indeed...

We boarded a bus in the late afternoon for the town of Oudtshoorn, northeast of Mossel Bay in the (supposedly) drier grasslands (though it's freezing and rainy outside right now) known as the Little Karoo. We've already booked ourselves on a 56 kilometer bike ride (whee!) starting early tomorrow, so I'd better go get some sleep!

Monday, June 7, 2010

The Mother City

I've landed in the Mother City.

That's the name that residents give to Cape Town, South Africa with well-deserved affection and reverence. This place represents the most unusual intersection of cultures I've ever encountered: Zulu and Dutch, Xhosa and British, Indian and Zambian and Malaysian and German features are all stuffed together into one fractious confederation that is simultaneously genteel and angry, both polishing itself for the future while still fuming from the injustice of the past and present.

My travel partner, a friend and fellow UH linguist named Justin, and I arrived on Tuesday afternoon after the longest air travel period of my entire life. We had left Honolulu the previous Tuesday and flown through Tennessee for a 48-hour stopover. Afterward, we flew to New York for a few days with my college roommate Kim, and then left to catch our plane for Johannesburg just after dawn on Monday. It is truly amazing that one can fly directly from New York to South Africa - almost 8000 miles - so I certainly have nothing to complain about. I can say, however, that sitting on a plane for 15 consecutive hours (in the middle seat of the middle section, no less) will make parts of your anatomy ache that you never knew you had. Other than being long and crowded, however, the flight was remarkably uneventful; my only real regret is that South African Airways has apparently taken all its culinary cues from the British. (Rubber-based sausages and boiled potatoes for breakfast? Really?) Justin had apparently indicated some sort of special dietary constraint when booking his ticket, though he couldn't remember what; whatever it was, though (Halaal, perhaps?) he ended up with some special menu that was infinitely preferable to mine (spicy chickpea curry for breakfast? When the alternative is bangers and whatnot, then yes, please!!)

After a brief stopover in Johannesburg, we caught a final flight to the southwestern coastal city of Cape Town. I watched a tract of South Africa that spanned almost the whole width of the country pass by under the airplane, and found the majority of it remarkably unremarkable: flat, empty, a few scrub bushes, dirt varying among different hues of brown. The last part of the journey revealed some interesting mountains that looked in fact more like wrinkles in the earth, or ripples moving outward in a pool. Then a few trees, some buildings, and we touched down on ground closer to Antarctica than I'd ever been before.

Our South Africa guidebook, made only a few months ago, said that there would be no public transportation options from the airport into the city. We asked at the information desk, however, and were immediately directed to our (literally) brand-new city bus at a shiny new bus stop. Even though we were the only passengers, we were nevertheless accompanied by multiple designated "information assistants" in yellow jerseys who carried our bags, asked where we were going, dispensed advice about Cape Town, and showed us exactly where to get off the bus...and then didn't even want to be tipped afterward! This is truly a city that knows the world is watching.

We spent our first few hours in the city wandering around a lovely, immaculately manicured central garden, as our CouchSurfing host, Sifiso, was still at work. During that first afternoon, I was floored - absolutely stunned - by how incredibly differently this second Africa experience had begun than the first one had. If I hadn't known otherwise, I easily could have thought I'd landed in somewhere in western Europe. Central Cape Town, which is crisp and smells pleasantly like autumn this time of year, is full of museums, cafes, wide plazas with bronze statues of dead (mostly white) guys, cobblestone alleys and even a few nice stone churches for good measure. You can even drink the water right out of the tap (in fact, our host said that the first time he'd ever heard a warning against drinking tap water was during his trip to New York!!) Cape Town is an incredibly easy (re-)introduction to the continent. It feels like Munich with more-proximal penguins.

Unless you venture outside the city, that is. Cape Town feels like Europe because it was forcibly, brutally engineered that way. Under apartheid, which means up until 1994, blacks and "coloureds" (mixed racial people) who lived in areas that were proclaimed "white" were physically removed from these areas (literally, in trucks, while their houses were bulldozed) and left on the outskirts. This means that South African cities are ringed by miles and miles and miles of sprawling shantytowns called "townships," full of corrugated tin and plywood shacks, mud streets, mounds of trash, a raging meth problem...and former government-owned liquor stores, the proceeds from which were used to fund the removal of more blacks from other areas. Seriously.

Our host, himself a black guy originally from the Durban area, has been the most enlightening part of our stay. He's extremely intelligent and well-informed about both South African and world politics, and talking to him is like hearing the hope and anger of an entire nation. Last night he told us about the rampant corruption and ineffectiveness of South Africa's ruling party, the ANC. Mandela himself used to head this party, he told us, and many of its current leaders were prominent figures in the fight against apartheid. Now, though, these same former heroes of the people are government louts, misusing funds and enriching themselves while the living conditions for millions of South Africans haven't changed since the Dutch were in charge. His monologue grew more and more intense until he finally yelled to no one in particular, "Is this what we struggled for??" A moment later, in a quieter voice that was painfully sad, he added, "How the mighty have fallen."

I had no response. But I am infinitely grateful for the small bit of understanding these conversations have brought me.

In happier news, the highlight of the trip so far has been a bicycle trip to the Cape of Good Hope. We joined two other visitors with a guide for a day trip that began with a boat ride out to a large rock off the coast just south of the city. The rock is apparently a favorite hangout spot for seals, and we saw hundreds of them, as well as getting a magnificent view of the foggy, mountainous shoreline that actually reminded me of a drier Kaua'i with lower peaks. We then drove along a beautiful coastal cliff-road (again evoking connections with the scenery of the American Pacific coast and Hawai'i), stopping at a beach full of African penguins! We walked along a boardwalk and saw dozens of them, these little knee-high creatures toddling around, braying loudly at each other and flopping awkwardly on top of fuzzy gray chicks. It was utterly adorable.

We then drove on to the national park surrounding the Cape of Good Hope, where our guide set us off on bicycles and drove on ahead to the halfway point to prepare lunch. The bike ride was amazing: it was the only sunny day we've had yet, and it was absolutely beautiful, with the wide, flat plain lowering gently to rocky shorelines in some directions and rising to mountains and cliffs that dropped into the sea others. At the Cape of Good Hope itself, the dry grassland (complete with two wild OSTRICHES, passively munching not 20 feet from the road) gave way to boulders, then rocks, and then the smallest slice of ocean between any major landmass and Antarctica. We returned our bikes to the guide and then set off on a short hike up a cliff. The Cape is actually two north-south promontories, only maybe a mile apart and in a sort of horseshoe shape; the Cape of Good Hope stretches slightly farther south, but its sister strip of land, Cape Point, is just as stunning and contains a lighthouse. We hiked around the curve and up to the Point lighthouse, where we could marvel at the 360 degree view of water and mountains while being treated to shouted renditions of the soccer songs of South America, courtesy of a rowdy group of Argentines and Uruguayans hanging out at the top.

Another highlight was a trip with Sifiso last night to a braai (cookout) that occurs every Sunday in the township of Guguletu, just outside the city. Immediately upon entering Guguletu, we left Europe behind and entered the Africa that I had been expecting. The cobblestones and cafes and Caucasians were all gone, and we encountered a helter-skelter mass of cars and people and animals and buildings. The braai is held at a tiny butcher shop; hundreds and hundreds of people descend on the shop weekly and stand in line to buy a plastic washtub full of whatever raw meat they want (we chose lamb, beef, and sausage). Everyone then takes their tub to the back room, where there's a fire and a grill rack and a handful of guys running back and forth to cook and deliver a thousand pounds of meat. The crowd then congregates outside in the street to drink beer and dance during the interminable wait (ours was about three hours). House music was blasting from under a tarp, and the few grimy tables that were set up just got in the way of the crush of the cavorting carnivores. Dogs squeezed under people's legs to catch the scraps, cars with their horns blaring parted the crowd from time to time, and the sheer number of people, plus the grill inside the shop, almost helped me forget that night had fallen and it had gotten really, really cold. By the time we finally got our food, much of the crowd had dissipated; we sat at a table and tore up unidentifiable meat chunks with our hands, scooping along with it mounds of cornmeal paste (which I remember as ugali from Tanzania, but which is called "pap" here). By the end of our meal, our hands and faces were slick with an impermeable coat of grease that the cold water provided could do nothing to remove; we finally gave up and just rubbed it in. It turns out that unadulterated animal fat is a fantastic moisturizer; my hands and lips still feel softer than they have in years. The braai was definitely one of the most fun - and most real feeling - experiences we've had in South Africa so far...even for us two near-vegetarians!

We are leaving Cape Town this evening for a smaller town called Mossel Bay, which is east of here along the Indian Ocean coast. I don't know much of anything about the town, but am hoping to use it as a point from which to find transport to smaller towns. Figuring out how to get around by public transportation outside the major cities here is proving really challenging.

Much more has happened in the past week, but Justin has been waiting at a cafe for two hours now, so I should go...more later from Mossel Bay!