Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Jinja

Heading out of Kampala, which seems to sprawl forever, I had just remarked to Duncan on the high number of traffic cops there seemed to be on the road when he saw fit to overtake an extremely slow truck on a road overbridge marked with no passing signs and double yellow lines. To be fair, it was clear and he was following the actions of the vehicle in front. Of course we were signalled to pull over by the traffic cop not 100 meters ahead. He explained that Duncan had broken the law and the fine was 135, 000 shillings that we would have to go back with him to Kampala to pay. Duncan pointed out that he was following the vehicle in front and an enormous truck followed him and the cop said he only saw Duncan. Duncan asked if there was any way we could just pay a spot fine as we were headed to Jinja and would not be returning to Kampala... The upshot was that Duncan handed him 20,000 shillings ( a little over USD $10.00) and the cop let him go saying 'you are a generous man'!

We stopped at Jinja Backpackers to book white water rafting with Nile River Explorers, then set off for their campsite at Bujagali Falls, which is more a series of rapids than a waterfall.

Monday, 9 November 2009

Kampala

After a slow Sunday where we wandered around the city aimlessly and stopped off for coffee, we went to the Ethiopian Embassy in Kampala today to be told tourist visas are no longer issued for land border entry. Apparantly this policy came into effect about three weeks ago... so we'll have to try our luck in Nairobi.

We then stopped by the local Land Rover dealer for the Landy to get some rattling sorted out. USD $350.00 and six hours later we're back at the same place we stayed last night, as there is too much traffic to make it the 70km to Jinja before dark. I'm starting to think this trip is all about getting work done on the Landy in as many countries as possible.

Kampala is a dusty chaotic little city, the streets crammed with battered minibuses randomly pulling out, pulling over, passing illegally and stopping with impunity. There are dozens of enormous Maribou Storks flying over the city and perching in the few trees on the side of the road.

Some of the AIDS awareness billboards are interesting - they're focused on encouraging abstinence and fidelity rather than the safe sex message you see elsewhere.

Saturday, 7 November 2009

Kampala, Uganda

The border crossing to Uganda was straightforward - buy visas for USD $50.00 each from the immigration office and pay a Ush38,500 road tax after changing money with the remarkably laid back moneychangers.

The road is terrible, bumpy mired and rutted red mud on the Uganda side. We stopped in the border town to get money and oddly, crossed an airfield on our way out of the town. A little later we passed a UNHCR refugee camp - looked like it was winding down but I'm unclear on who the refugees are. It seems a long time since Rwandan refugees sought safety in Uganda but I wasnt sure if they'd be refugees from DRC as they'd have had to come through the close jungle over the volcanos.

The road improved to graded red mud and we turned off at the tip of Lake Bunyonyi and followed a narrow road/track down its east side. Before long it was pelting with rain and the track turned to bright orange sludge...

We had a peaceful night at the lakeside before setting off for Lake Mburo National Park. En route we discussed whether or not we wanted to pay the considerable national park fee for camping in a dry acacia plain known for its zebra population.

We've seen many many zebras and decided to continue another 300km to Kampala. We passed the Equator, which is marked by two big white painted circles on either side of the road signed 'Uganda Equator' and a dozen craft shops targetting the tourist dollar. We finally reached Kampala safely not long before dark despite the repeated efforts of oncoming trucks to collide with us head on.

Thursday, 5 November 2009

Kinigi, Parc National des Volcans

Duncan was up early to find gorillas. I went for a walk from the lodge to the park visitors centre, which had some displays on the gorillas. The sun was out but the cloud was low, so I couldnt see any of the volcano peaks. Then it started raining so I returned to our room to alternately work through my swahili-for-beginners book and watch CNN news on TV. Ho hum.

Duncan returned about 5pm with scores of photos and some video of the gorillas. He went to see the Susa group, which is the largest group tourists are taken to see, and the furthest to walk. It seems there are fourteen groups of gorillas, under 24 hour surveillance, but only seven of them are human habituated for viewing.

Congrats to Duncan - he left the UK for Australia exactly one year ago today.

Wednesday, 4 November 2009

Gisenye

We woke to sunshine - yay! - and proceeded north along the ridge above the lake. High up a narrow, winding dirt road with extremely picturesque views of the lake, the surrounding hills and lush green crops. The first sunny day after lots of rain the streams of water flowing down the slopes had created ruts down and across the road. We passed several teams of local villagers carefully tending the road - filling in the holes and raking the mud even. This was an incredible drive, climbing and diving along the ridge, passing through banana and tea plantations and the many villages with children clamouring for water bottles or to practice their english.

We detoured to Gisenye, which is a bit of a resort town on the tip of the lake, for a late lunch and found ourselves at the DRC border. Whoops! There were some Unicef vehicles flying purple flags heading across and later we passed UNHCR vehicles with the same flags. I wonder what they signify.

Then we headed up to the Park National des Volcans, where Duncan will go gorilla trekking tomorrow.

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

Lake Kivu

Duncan finally got his gorilla permit on Tuesday morning, for Thursday (I drew the line at USD$500.00 for an hour of observing gorillas, although I'm told I'll regret it) and we set off for a night at Lake Kivu.

So far in Rwanda the roads have been very good condition tar which is good in all this rain, and mercifully free of judder bars, but narrow and winding. Duncan said it reminded him of New Zealand. You drive on the right which is nice for us as the left hand driver can actually see what they are doing for a change which gives the passenger a break from backset driving. It is very very green. The many hills in Rwanda are terraced and intensively cultivated with crops to feed the 8 million strong population.

It seems there is no longer anywhere to camp in Kibuye. We stayed at a lovely little lodge with views over the lake. This evening, through the mist, we caught sight of the beautiful glowing red peak of the Nyarigongo volcano in DR Congo towering over the north end of the lake.

Monday, 2 November 2009

Kigali, Rwanda

A marathon drive. We got off to an early start, but pootled around the town for a while trying to find somewhere that might have shock absorbers for the Landy. Duncan stopped to ask a bloke who had his head in the bonnet of his Land Rover and we were quickly directed to a spares shop. A few minutes later we were on our way with a box containing two new, bright yellow, shock absorbers. It is recommended to buy your parts when you find them, as they can be tricky to find. Eleven hours later we arrived in Kigali. The border crossing at Rusoso was very straightforward as neither of us required visas. Rwanda is the country of a thousand hills, green and misty and Kigali is on the top of one of those hills with views over the city stretching into the hills in the distance. The city is busy with traffic, but seems quite orderly compared to Dar es Salam. There are loads of shiny late model SUVs on the road all emblazoned with NGO and aid organisation logos. It seems a lot of (guilt) money has been invested in Rwanda since the genocide and now prices for food and accommodation are treble that of anywhere we saw in Tanzania.

We spent Sunday just mooching around, we had intended to visit the Genocide Memorial Museum and the tourist info office to get a gorilla permit but by the time we'd changed some money near the mosque, wandered around unsuccessfully looking for an ATM that worked with foreign cards, dropped in at DHL to find out the package had arrived in Kigali and would be ready for pickup in the morning and stopped for a very leisurely late lunch at the cafe attached to the supermarket it was too late. Monday was very productive - we got the carnet from DHL, sorted out a new tyre for the Landy and had the new shock absorbers fitted. The Rwandans we encountered were extremely helpful especially when Duncan was able to converse with them in French - as we walked up the road we stopped a Land Rover driver with the tyres we needed to ask him where to buy one from and as explaining where to go was complicated, he had us hop in and drove us there! We were recommended a mechanic by two ladies in a spare parts shop who were reading the bible aloud to eachother - they said he'd be sure to be honest!

We spent most of the early afternoon in a dusty car yard while the mountings the shock absorbers attach to were welded back together - it seems the shock absorber was mostly fine until it fell off its mount - and the new shocks fitted. A funny sort of mechanics set up - four people to do the work and about a dozen to observe! We then visited the Genocide Memorial which told the story of the Rwandan atrocities in 1994 and also had exhibits on other genocide in modern times. It was quite fascinating, although emotional, for me at least.

Then we returned to the tyre place and spent the late afternoon waiting to get the new tyre fitted although we happened upon an Ecobank ATM there on the international network (by the diesel tanks at the Engen, just past the gorilla roundabout) which was handy as we needed money to pay for the new tyre.
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