Africa, Australia and Asia

September 1989 - May 1991
A 593-day adventure by Powell Read more
  • 108footprints
  • 14countries
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  • 62.8kkilometers
  • 36.7kkilometers
  • Day 11

    The Chefs gone to a party -End of Plan A

    October 1, 1989 in Morocco

    Don't know where to start, it's all gone horribly wrong. We caught the 5AM bus from Er Rachidia (The last thing that went right) to Bouarfa passing a 'Beware of the camels' sign and several real live camels. Arrived in Bouarfa without enough money for the onward ticket to Figuig. Banks all shut (A Saturday) and no one would change money. Reduced to selling a walkman to a local casette shop matey for 105 dirhams. (We asked for 250 - he offered 100) after much haggling, who then promptly invited us for mint tea and lunch of couscous at his house, along with his mate Ahmed. The couscous didn't turn up until 20 minutes before the bus was due, thank god, as it was a dry bowl of couscous (grated soap?) with a glass of sour milk to mix it with. Very kind but utterly disgusting. I struggled through some to be polite but was just about down and out when saved by the bus. Seb was very pleased with a joke he made - It never rains it pours - All will become clear.

    After sacrificing a walkman to get to Figuig we found a taxi to take us to the border, via the Moroccan police. Everyone seemed very helpful + cheerful, we get to the border + the taxi dropped us. The Moroccan guards kept smiling and let us through, meanwhile I am surreptitiously concealing money about my person to avoid exchange controls. The Algerian Policeman was very helpful, as was the man from the ministry but they wouldn't let us in. "Come back tomorrow- The chef is at a party (Le chef son departie)." So we walked back to the border and all the Moroccans are smiling as though at some private joke, and lo and behold the taxi driver was still there - what a stroke of luck. So we had our Moroccan exit stamps annulled by the police who informed us that due to some political problem the Algerians were not admitting any Brits. Thus all the smiling faces and the taxi driver so luckily waiting for us. To be fair he didn't charge us for the return ride to Figuig, and he did introduce us to all of his daughters.

    Found a grotty hotel run by the local wide boy - Mustafa - The Sahara, that we had read about somewhere, so decided to go for it. Turns out it was listed under 'Hotels to avoid'. Nothing to eat in Figuig, and no sheets or covers on the beds and a pisshole of a shower, and the loo was worse. Electerd to try for Algeria again in the morning so we didn't have to catch the 6am bus. But kept awake all night by a huge thunderstorm.
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  • Day 12

    Oujda

    October 2, 1989 in Morocco ⋅ 19 °C

    Moroccan police told us that it wasn't worth trying again, but we could cross at Oujda. We met a couple of bikers from Redhill and had a sweepstake on how long it would take them to be sent back - 40 minutes. I won. Caught the 14.00 bus after sheltering from the rain all morning in a cafe. We followed a serious thunderstorm through the flooded desert to Oujda. Not feeling too good by now + running, so went straight to be and missed dinner! Slept very well.Read more

  • Day 12

    Oujda

    October 2, 1989 in Morocco ⋅ 25 °C

    Can't believe the weather all the Algerians or anything else that anyone tells us anymore about going or not going to Algeria. Have a nasty feeling we're not going to be allowed in the Algerian consulate in Algeria and you have no problems this morning but lo and behold the UK embassy in Rabat says that it's true, no Brits are allowed into Algeria at all at the moment since last week. What good timing. The grand design is already in tatters after only one week. And I just wrote to David a three page letter telling him where to meet us in Algeria luckily I haven't posted it yet and probably never will now bloody annoying as it was almost the longest letter I'd ever written.
    Plan B
    get the next transport going to Rabat, a train tonight. Third class 12 hours, 65 dirhams! Sounds very uncomfy. Then fly from Rabat to West Africa, depending on the flights and visas. Probably Senegal or the Ivory Coast. Have flopped for five to six hours today, running this morning, but still had good lunch of steakwich and chips (holding firm at the moment! ).
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  • Day 13

    Morocco, Rabat, inkwell and hamam

    October 3, 1989 in Morocco ⋅ 24 °C

    Rabat. Arrived as planned about 6:00 AM found a good hotel brackets days Voyager closed brackets on the edge of the Medina with a nice rooftop room. Rabat is the most westernised place yet really quite civil, apart from a few hassler's. However more trials and tribulations, this time in an attempt to leave the country as soon as possible. In the last three days we've been to the GB embassy twice, the Mauritanian embassy twice, the Senegalese embassy four times and the Ivory Coast once, plus numerous travel agents etc. The trick is to find a flight going to somewhere we were allowed to go. Abidjan was expensive to fly to, Mauritania cheap, but we needed visas, and to obtain these we needed letter of recommendation from the UK embassy. We only found this out on our second visit to the Mauritanian embassy. Senegal was okay but no flights for a week in Jan needs a visa which may or may not come through in time. It hasn't at the time of writing. Despite various visits to the Senegalese ‘Chancelier’, added to this unavailability of flights and incompetence of travel agents, none of whom would give me a discount flight, and one or two refused jan and Seb too although we are all entitled. Hurrah, after strenuous efforts today, we are booked on the 00.50 Tuesday night flight to Dakar. Though still had trouble getting a ticket and then changing money to pay for it.
    In the mean time we've had a ride in almost every pretty taxi in Rbaat, failed to see the mausoleum, failed to find the Art Museum, view the archaeology museum in half an hour, failed to find the zoo, eat lots of horrible food, had a few beers, foe David twice, flopped a bit and siesta debit, and achieve very little.
    Much relieved at having our ticket though. The probable highlight so far is the Turkish bath, hamam,. Went alone yesterday but couldn't work out what the hell was going on. Three hot rooms, progressively hotter each with a cold water tap at one end and with a very hot tap at the other. The floors and walls are very hot, and everyone wonders around with a bucket of hot, cold and in between water. Was invited by one matey but didn't really follow, ended up with a bucket full of hot and one of cold, lying on the floor and tipping water over my self. Went back the next day with Seb and I had a good scrub each but still don't think we cracked it properly. Still for three dirhams I felt clean and relaxed afterwards
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  • Day 19

    Thank God for James Welch

    October 9, 1989 in Morocco ⋅ 24 °C

    Have spent the last three days flopping in a big way, lots of cards and various sorts of other silly games, sunbathing and listening to the radio, our routine has been go out for breakfast about 10-11, back to the hotel by about 12:30, spend about one hour on the roof and then crash till about 6. Spuddle around a bit and then out from 7 till nine in the evening, then flop around till fall asleep. What the hotel matey thinks we're up to God only knows. We've been here for one week but hardly left the room! Boss matey threw our tennis ball about five roofs away, he must have been fed up with the noise? Can't be as bad as milk bottles and stones on the bloody guitar day and night virtually non stop, or the bloody mouezzin five times a day on the loudspeakers.

    No Senegal visa for Jan yet but we are flying tomorrow, never mind, I'm sure it'll be alright. New passport photos today, frilly edges. Seb is now having his haircut so he'll look different anyway. The other highlight of the weekend apart from the Arc de Triumph, has been the phone calls, to the Senegalese embassy all unavailable, two to David, and one to Christie's.

    Thank you James Welch (see https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O340241/inkw…). Inkwell bought for £90 on day three of Ardingly Antiques fair (I turned down an offer 15 minutes later of £600 from Mark Hales) was sold at Christies today for about £12000. I can now afford to travel a bit - Though most of the money was owed to Pop who had leant me some ££ to start a business.

    Rabat not an easy place to celebrate, and i think we gorged on Beignet from the nearby bakery.

    What a place to be when your inkwell sells at Christies for 6 times the estimate.
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  • Day 24

    Dakar - Pickpockets and prostitutes

    October 14, 1989 in Senegal ⋅ 30 °C

    Jan's visa never did arrive in Rabat so we caught the train to Casablanca, after a two hour wait and a chat a the Kiwi who was cycling to New Zealand from Scotland via Morocco! Then a bus to the airport because Casablanca seemed such a hole. Killed time at the airport which is uncomfy and very expensive. Eventually flew via Teneriffe to Dakar. Bus to the town centre and was variously hassled by jokers. Having had a coke we went to the French embassy and applied for our Burkina Faso visas. We were shown to a nearby to a real brothel by a matey who seemed very helpful but was just as sharp as the rest and sucked us in the little. Having had a siesta and collected our Burkina Faso visas and avoided a couple of pickpockets, we crashed out fairly early and spent an uncomfy night. Three of us on one mattress on the floor, amidst cockroaches, but I still couldn't sleep till very late. (This place was a brothel - Literally. The girls were very friendly and there was no hassle. And there will always be a room free at some point, but you might have to wait 40 minutes).

    Rose early the next morning and went to the Mali embassy for our visas, 10 pounds each come back tonight at about 5:00 o'clock. Down to the ferry ramp in time to see the ferry pulling away. Decided to stay in collect the visas while the others went to Goree island to sort out a room excetera. Flopped around, walked miles, went to the British embassy, the museum, and various other places. Found one little matey with his hand in my pocket. They don't give up.

    Killed time until 3:30, and went to the Mali embassy. They don't work in the afternoons, and as it was Friday tomorrow come back on Monday. Caught the ferry and met Seb and Jan near the ferry ramp.
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  • Day 26

    Goree Island - Niiice

    October 16, 1989 in Senegal ⋅ 25 °C

    Where to start? Goree is a small island 20 minutes by ferry from Dakar. It apparently has a population of about 1000 almost entirely negros (??). It was one of the main slave trading posts of the 16, 17 & 18 centuries, and is infamous for this reason. Illustrated by the old slave house, open for visitors, a very macabre building where the slaves were held, priced, punished, shipped and died. It has been likened to Nazi concentration camp, and holds a symbolic place in many black activists minds (Kunta Kinte of roots fame came from just down the coast in Gambia).

    There is a limited amount of agriculture on the island, where apparently a wide variety of fruit and vegetables are grown, but we saw little evidence of this. There are a few goats and chickens but no other livestock, lots of cats though, and a few fishing boats called pirogues which are hardly a threat to fish stocks in West Africa. The ferry is very much a lifeline, daily delivering large amounts of bread, there doesn't appear to be a bakery on the island, rice, non perishables and drinks mostly coke and beer.

    What do they eat? Fish balls in the spicy tomato sauce usually in the sandwich, are very good but I had 10 in five days, which like everything else, can be eaten with rice as well. Fried fish with chips and onion and tomato spicy sauce which is very good and very common, spaghetti with before mentions source, and for our last lunch we had a really really good meal of chicken in the lemon onion and garlic sauce with rice. Beignets, Pronounced bini come in two forms, sweet or savoury. The latter are small deep fried pastries with a little bit of fishy paste, served with the usual OTS source, and the sweet ones are really just small lumps of donut coated in sugar. Roast peanuts were the other treat but I'm sure with a little more time and money some variety could have been added, what we did it was usually very good.

    To drink, apart from the obvious coke fanta and beer (gazelle or stork), they have a very elaborate tea ceremony which is the main event. It consists of however many people happened to wandering by at the right time, a fire, a small teapot stuffed full with some local tea, about 95 sugar cubes and plenty of time, there's always time for tea. The kettle is brewed up for about 15 minutes with occasionally some tea being poured into a glass, poured between that glass and a second glass to work up a froth, ideally pouring from a height, and then being poured back into the teapot. Eventually after variously adding large amounts of sugar, more water and tea the first cup is ready when it has been suitably frothed up by pouring from a height. Each helping is about the size of a liquer, with a good head on it. This process is repeated twice using the same tea leaves and varying amounts of sugar. The first cup is quite bitter the second very sweet and the third again is bitter. They say the first cup is like dying the second cup is like going to heaven and the third like coming back to earth (though I don't know why). The whole process is an excuse for a big social, and as no one seems to work for a living there's plenty of time for that.

    We stayed with a dude called Lelou I'm ( I'm open to discussion about the spelling it's pronounced lee loo). Who supposedly made drums for living, but we never saw any hint of any work, or a workshop or anything vaguely connected in our five day stay in his home. Then in December he flies to London on business apparently. 100 pounds returned from Banjul in Gambia. He also plays the drums, the guitar, usually long into the night, the rattling duo balls, and various others and says he wants to start a music school on the island. He also claims to be swimming 4-5 kilometres a day in training for the Gore to Dakar swimming race , though I never saw him in the water once.

    He either ate with us at our expense every night or at his mums, Mrs lilou, who had a cafe called Chez Tonton, with very good beigneits, 7 for 100 CFA, And he never had any money except what we gave him, there was always a plentiful supply of tobacco! The other tea party goers varied but perm any combination of; Mamadou Sanku, Who is a bomb man and a friend, and very good matey peeps, whose brother was beaten up and arrested on Friday night. His bar is Open All Hours, credit given, local rates and various friends and relations to stay with around Senegal.
    Pop Amadou, spoke very good English, usually only around at tea time and opening and closing time, no job he admitted to but tonight talk us some Wolof which is the main tribe and language of Senegal.
    Benna – One
    Nyer – Two
    Nyata – three
    Nyanta – 4
    Jouroub – 5.
    Jouroub-benna – 6
    Jouroub Nyer – 7
    Etc etc.
    Fucka – 10
    Nangadef – How are you?
    Mangiferak (???) – I’m OK
    Nice – How’s it going/Fine/I’m allright/how are you/ etc etc
    Cassoume/Cassoume Kep – A Cassomance version of How are you? OK…..

    Ahmed, who lives in a cell in the US Doctors Courtyard, and who smoked, drank + was merry.

    And one or two other Rastas and various girls too.

    And the tea lady - Mrs Mamadou maybe?

    Patrick. Born and bred on Goree, or French origin.

    And a brief appearance of Louise, a VSO type who has been working in Sierra Leone and is on her way to UK for the first time in 2 years. We swapped books and i scored a Mossie net, some marmite, nice girl from Stevenage.

    Basse. Alternative guy who hangs around, swims, drinks, goes to the flicks but no sign of any work.

    Pregnant lady with unsmiling husband who ran the shop/cafe that was our usual breakfast/lunch haunt.

    Didi, a sweet faced girl who it seems has been trained to smile at tourists and hold her hand out for a pressie, and it usually works.

    The nice matey who sold necklaces.

    Jacques, our adopted friend (or did he adopt us?), playmate, companion, pain in the arse.

    Toothless 5 year old street kid who followed us around and was generally well fed and watered for his troubles.

    The main past times, according to your age and inclination , are :
    Swimming out to m,eet and dive off the ferry;
    Ludo or cards;
    Boule;
    And a lot of football in the town swuare. The pitch has 2 x goals but there the resemblance ends. Trees, drainpipes, holes, buildings and a wall all features in various ways, and games are usually played between various bits of the island at different age groups, with a small side bet of milk (for the younger ones) to money. Although apparently completely unorganised, everyone seemed to know who was playing for which teams, when, what for and who against (The bush telegraph) with plenty of vociferous support.

    Friday evening someone tried to shopw some films on a screen on the beach, about 1/2 the island turned out to watch, the kids were loving it, all free as well. But the local copper stopped it bacause no one had a permit or something, and because he was a reali little Hitler, being the chief of all 5 policemen on the island.

    Other unusual residents of the island include a US doctor, a retired ambassador & Mark Gilby (of gin fame) who all have big pads on the island for various reasons, several hundred tourists on day trips from Dakar, a few overnight travellers and a few Lebanese trippers who come from Dakar at weekends - An intersting mix, along with the inhabitants and the BayFell community.

    The fauna of the island, apart from the mosquito population, consists mostly of cockroaches, spiders, ants, hundreds of lizards and some large birds locally known as Epervien (?) that look like bustards (Do I mean buzzards EDs note?), brown feathered hunters, and some small bright red birds and starlings, as well as Tuna, carp (mostly eaten) and a very odd fish about 4 feet long but only 3 inches thick.

    The island community of Bay-Fell (Barflies?) (see https://www.thecandytrail.com/baye-fall-musicia… for more information) are a sort of religious sect who wear patchwork quilts and carry ID tags + begging bowls. They seem to live a hippy like existence in the fort at one end of the island, mostly living in an old gun emplacement.

    Note from my original notes, but on one day we decided to swim from the jetty across a corner of the bay (not very far) to the beach, as Lilou was a magnificent swimmer. Unfortunatley my swimming style is more a waterlogged butterfly and i really struggled, mostly as there was a bit of chop. Definitely a land lubber.
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  • Day 29

    Ferry cabaret & pirogues

    October 19, 1989 in Senegal ⋅ 32 °C

    We caught the Tuesday night ferry from Dakar to Ziguinchor- complete with a live cabaret consisting os an electric organ and a sax, who were awful but quite fun. Spent an uncomfortable night on a plactic seat - very hot and sweaty. We disembarked at the Isle de Carabane near the mouth of the river (ed note - Why not stay on the ferry to Ziguinchor?). We took a Pirogue to the Island, and then another along the river in the company of some french service men and some fresh water dolphins. Tried and failed to catch some barracuda on the way to Elenkine on the mainland.

    At Elenkine we stayed in an auberge run by Mamadou (around 3/4 of men seem to be called Mamadou) for 3000 CFA including dinner and breakfast. Bed with mossy net and shower. All in an unusual cicrular building with a big hole in the middle of the roof, running into a central pool where the rainwater is collected, with rooms radiating out from the centre. Went for a walk along the beach and through some paddy fields to some mud flats, Thousands of small crabs with one huge claw and one small one, all scuttling down their little holes.

    And a great variety of birds, kingfishers (black and white, and blue and red) piwitts (?) night and white egrets,cranes, herons and others.

    Duck stew ofr dinner (excellent) and a sit under the stars on the tumbledown quay with a berr and some Belgians before bed.

    (Editors note - This ferry sank in 2002 with colossal loss of life - an estimated 1800 people died - see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MV_Le_Joola)
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  • Day 30

    ziguinchor

    October 20, 1989 in Senegal ⋅ 22 °C

    7 AM taxi bus to Ziguinchor the next morning, and then by a series of buses, refusals to pay 150 for a coke when marked at 105, and quite a Jan storm to Tambacounda. Dinner at Chez Francis and a place to stay with Madam Desire (not what it sounds like) 4500 CFA.Read more

  • Day 31

    The best bus ride ever

    October 21, 1989 in Senegal ⋅ 25 °C

    Bus to Kidira, which, despite leaving 'Toute suites' at 07.45 finally departed at 09.30. No room inside so i got a ride 'en haut' with 2 friendly mateys which was much comfier than inside, lying on various sacks and bags of vegetables etc, and with much better views. Slightly hairy at times as whenever we approached a gendarmes checkpoint we weren't meant to be on the roof so we had to climb down the ladder at the back and in through the door. Naturally the bus didn't stop or even slow down to facilitate this and the roads being what they were the bus would be bouncing over pot holes or swerving to avoid them as we went - It was a very rough dirt route.

    (Eds note. I have always remembered this journey as one of the best parts of my travels. The fun of riding on the roof, with the spice of illegality and gendarmes, and the climbing up and down while in motion, a fantastic trip. Afforded a few glimpses of wildlife, but also made me think about how people lived out here. This was dry arid bushland, not features and seemingly nothing to live on, but every 20 miles of so the bus would stop and a lady, often pregnant and carrying or escorting another small child, would get off and head off into the bush in the middle of nowehere - How did they eke out a living out there?).

    Saw a tribe of monkeys crossing the road (vervets?) and a couple of squirrels with black and white hooped tails, and a couple of very large slow lizards about 2.5 feet long.

    Argued with a small girl in a village over the price of water, she charged me 25, then the price changed to 50. I argued the point, then split the bag and spilt the water all down myself.

    Arrived in Kidira about 4pm, had a coke and our passports stamped. Walked over the bridge to Dibouli in Mali, completed formalities and were then told there was a goods train later that night to Kayes .
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