World tour gap year

1月 2025 - 1月 2026
  • Bridsons of the world
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We left in January 2025 for a world tour gap year. We are going to try to set foot on every continent (except Antartica, that will be another trip!). もっと詳しく
  • Bridsons of the world
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  • Victoria falls, Zimbabwe by Kev and Mel

    5月17日〜21日, ジンバブエ ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Hello from Zimbabwe,
    We arrived here on the 17th of May and will only stay here for 4 days. This is just a quick trip to see the other side of the Mosi-oa-Tunya fall (the smoke that thunder) and to do a few adrenaline activities for Andrew (and us too, but mainly Andrew!)
    We are in Victoria fall, which is a small town just on the other side of the border from Livingstone in Zambia. This town is very much designed for the tourists who came here to see Mosi-oa-Tunya. You mostly see shop which sell local craft and places where you can book tours and activities and expansive restaurants!
    One thing that make me angry is there is a lot of offers for cheetah or lion or elephant experiences. You get to walk a cheetah or take pictures next to a sleepy lion or feed and wash elephants… Really, don’t we know better. Is it how those animals are supposed to live? No! It is not!!!!
    I understand that the people from country like Zimbabwe need money to get a better life and will sell what tourists buy. It is our job as travellers to not give money to this kind of activities. Go do game drives, find the animals in the wild, where you get the excitation and pleasure to find them and admire them where they should be! Please think twice about where you spent your tourist money, it matters to the welfare of animals. Rant over!
    We arrived here in the afternoon, settled in the house we rented (with 4 people it is sometimes cheaper to get a house than a family room or a couple of rooms!). I got a migraine so rest for me, while Kev go to a shop to get some food, so we don’t spend too much money eating out as Zimbabwe seems pretty expansive. Kids and Kev watch a movie while I nurse my migraine in bed. It will be better by the morning.
    The next day, I was all better. We went to see Mosi-oa-Tunya, from the Zimbabwe side. It is beautiful no matter which side you see it. You can see more from that side. There is a pathway that took you all along the fall (on the opposite side obviously). We got ponchos this time! Did I mention that Zimbabwe is expansive?! The entrance to the falls is more expansive and we paid 15usd (around 22 Australian dollars) to rent 4 ponchos with holes in them! Anyway!
    We were still better protected than with nothing. We walked all the way, getting wet, admiring the fall: well, what you can see of it! Halfway, there was so much mist that we could not see the fall on the other side at all! This was, as on the Zambia side, a wonderful experience. The sound is still very present and make you realised the size of this beautiful landscape. This is no surprise that it is one of the wonders of the world.
    After that we bought some postcards, bought a little more groceries (coffee and beer for Kev mainly!) and went back to ‘home’ to do some blogging and schoolwork.
    The 19th was adrenaline day!
    Andrew love zipline and activities like that. There is bungee jumping here, but you have to be 16, so he was very disappointed. But no worries, I found more activities he can do, and us too while we are at it (well some of them!). We started the day with a canopy tour, which is basically 9 smallish ziplines between trees on the side of the gorge on the Zambezi river. It was Emma’s first time doing ziplines. Up until now, she was very scared to do them. We talked about it several times and she agreed to try to do one. And she did all nine of them! It was a good thing to start with that, to ease her into it!
    After that Kev and Andrew did a flying fox 120m high! You are on the horizontal, which make you feel like you are flying! It looks fun, but being scared of height, I didn’t try, neither did Emma.
    The next activity, was the one Andrew was the most excited and scared about. The giant swing! You start on a platform 120m high, then step of it and drop for 70m and swing for around 90m. It looked terrifying! They were supposed to do it on their own, but at the last second, Andrew asked to do it as a tandem with Kev, which is completely fair! They got strapped together and they were off! I screamed when they dropped because it is something to see your son and husband dropping down like that! They had a great big smile when they came back up. Andrew was a bit shaky, but he loved it!!
    The last activity was the zipline: 120m high, 425m long and going over 100km/h. Kev did it, then Andrew did it and then I was supposed to do it with Emma, but when she came on the platform and saw how high it was, she froze and there was no way, she was going to do it. I tried to talk to her, but the panic was in, and she couldn’t do it. And that was fine. Andrew was very happy to take her spot and do it one more time!!!
    I will admit that I wasn’t that proud myself. It was high and scary, but the feeling of the wind and speed was awesome. I’m very glad I did it. It was also a nice moment to share with Andrew. I hope one day, I will do one with Emma.
    After that, we got a couple of drinks to settle my jelly legs at the Lookout cafe, which is looking over this beautiful gorge on the Zambezi river.
    We went back home after that for a bit more schoolwork, as the kids haven’t done much lately.
    Tuesday the 20th, was a lazy day. We went in the town centre to post our postcards, went back to the Lookout café to pay for pictures from the day before. On the way, we saw elephants; normally when we see elephants, we are inside a car! More protected! It was a bit unnerving to be our small self on the other side of the road to a massive big elephant!! After that, we did a little bit more shopping (cheese, can’t live without, and yogurt) and went back to do blogging and a bit more work.

    Wednesday the 21st we are flying to Namibia. A new country, a new adventure!
    See you then!
    Mel

    18.5.2025. Today we're heading back to Victoria Falls, or as the locals call it Mosi-oa-Tunya, which means “the smoke that thunders”. I think that sounds way better than being named after a queen. They celebrate Dr Livingstone here, he apparently discovered the falls. Yeah, ok, “he” discovered it. All the locals who have lived here forever must have just been wandering past it with no clue as to what all that noise was. Some British missionary comes along and says “I found! It was me! I did that!” Probably got led there by the locals. Anyway, yay for Dr Livingstone. Ah that's right we visited the falls, this time from the Zimbabwe side. There's a lot more falls to look at on this side, though it was very misty and we didn't see that much in lots of places. The Zimbabwe side is also more expensive, costing $60usd more just to get in. Onto the falls. The Zimbabwe side apparently has 75% of the falls, so there was quite a lot to look at. We had hired ponchos again, way more expensive than the Zambia side, but we're glad to have them. We went out onto lots of viewing points, some we skipped, lots of mist so couldn't see much. We walked around to the bridge area and saw beautiful rainbows. We got another look at the boiling pot, from a different view point. We walked back past the entrance, to head up the river a bit. We found another viewing point, looking out towards “the devils cataract”. An area where you can see the falls and river, rainbows and water crashing. Mist, but not too much, rising up the walls of the gorge. It was in my opinion, the best spot to watch the falls, and we stayed there for quite awhile. We headed back to the entrance, bought some postcards, and exited. We walked back towards Victoria Falls (the town) and went into the supermarket. I needed coffee, badly. We bought some supplies and headed back to our stay. We then had a restful afternoon blogging. I had coffee now, so all were safe. I also bought some cans of Zambezi beer, made in Zimbabwe and pretty tasty. We then had a slow evening, and went to bed.
    19.5.2025. Today is about ziplines. A small fortune was spent the other day for today's fun, and fun it was. We got picked up at our stay and driven to The Lookout Cafe, where Wild Horizons operate all their zipline business. We checked in, got marker on our hands to say what activities we're doing, harnessed up and set off. We started with a canopy tour, a series of ziplines spanning one point of the gorge. Emma had so far not been able to do ziplines, she was booked in and had been adamant she was going to do it today. There was a little hesitation, but she stepped off and did her very first ever zipline. So proud of my girl. Em even copped a rope across the face, that didn't stop her. Took some bark off her left eyelid, we got pictures to prove it. According to Andrew there were 9 ziplines all up, I never counted. After that we walked back, Andrew and I had our harnesses turned around and we did the flying fox. We walked back to the other side of the restaurant to where the BIG stuff was. We had to wait a little as there was other people, but no long. They have a gorge swing, Andrew and I had opted in on that. You get strapped up, walk out on a platform 120m high and step off, freefall for 70meters before swinging out, just above the water. I was going first, I was getting close to jumping, when Andrew asked if he could do it with me. Absolutely mate. We were supposed to do it by ourselves, but he recognised his limits and thought maybe he couldn't do it by himself. We got strapped together, and to 4 ropes, walked slowly towards the edge while getting instructions, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. I can't explain the feeling properly, but it is something I have never experienced before. Thrilling, terrifying, exciting and unfortunately, over way too quick. Andrew was shaking just before we walked off, I felt bad about that and made sure to check on him as soon as I could. He was tucked in holding on tightly, but he was ok, talking to me straight after. I swore a fair bit, we caught a bit of that on camera. Would I do it again? Yes I would! Andrew tells me he would do it again to, not by himself tho. After the swing we had another zipline to do, this one a big one, 425m long and going over 100klm/hr. I went first, it was awesome and you got a fantastic view of the gorge. Andrew was next, he seemed a little worried, stumbled a little but was never not doing it. Mel and Emma were next, this is where it got too much for Em. Even with lots of encouragement from us and others, she couldn't do it. It was just too high and scary, she had found her new limit. Emma came back down, Andrew harnessed back up and went for a second ride with Mel, he was super upset about that. Mel was happy not to do it alone. I spoke with Emma, who was very upset with herself. I reminded her she had already pushed her limits today and done something she'd never done before, and that we were super proud of her. We watched Mel and Andrew do their zipline, Mel screamed the whole way just about. When we were all done, we headed back to the office and looked through all the photos and videos they had taken of us. We didn't know they did this, and had left most of our money and wallets back at the stay, the website said not to have anything in your pockets you're not willing to lose. We sorted out what we wanted and organised to get a pay link through WhatsApp. After that we headed to the restaurant, a couple beers and wines, drinks for the kids and a plate of chips and we were done. We got dropped back at our stay and had some down time. We had a late lunch I cooked, did some blogging and schoolwork, then later watched a movie and went to bed.

    20.5.2025. We've got postcards to send, after breakfast we went for a walk. We found the post office, had a mini heart attack when they said $43usd to send 7 bloody cards, have told you Africa isn't cheap for tourists. Anyway, got that done, now off to where we did all the ziplines yesterday again. They were going to send us a link to pay, but we thought eh, we're out anyway let's just walk. We were nearly there, just a short dirt road to walk now and we were there. Just one thing, not far from the road were 4-5 elephants. I don't know how close is too close to an elephant, but I wasn't ready to find out. We stood in a little market area and watched them. They moved a little further away and some other people started walking through, so off we went. Once at the office, we sorted out which photos/videos we wanted, payed and made our way back. Now blogging and schoolwork while I make lunch. Nothing else planned for the day, dinner later, that's about it.
    21.5.2025. Our last day in Zimbabwe. We packed our bags and got dropped at the airport.
    Kev
    もっと詳しく

  • Livingstone, Zambia (By the kids)

    5月14日〜18日, ザンビア ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

    On the 14th we were going to take a bus from Lusaka to Livingstone it was a long drive but the results were going to be great, Livingstone is where Victoria falls is. Victoria falls is actually the border to four countries, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Namibia and Botswana, there is a town called Victoria falls, that’s the place you go if you want to see it. In Livingstone you can only see %25 percent, but in Victoria falls you can see %75. The falls is the biggest fall in the world at 1,708 meters wide and 108 meters high, the local name for it is Mosi-oa-Tunya, it means the smoke that thunders. The reason for the name is because when the water hits the bottom it makes lots of mist that goes up very high, up to 400 meters, very high. I’ve explained the smoke bit but the thunders bit comes from the noise it makes, it is also a place where you can see a moonbow, it’s like a rainbow but it happens at night. The way it happens is that a full moon will reflect on the mist and cause it to happen, the special bit about it is that the colours are in reverse order. Victoria falls is one of the seven natural wonders of the world, these are the other, six Mount Everest, Harbour of Rio de Janeiro, Great Barrier Reef, Paricutin Volcano, Grand Canyon, Aurora Borealis. My plan is to try to see them all in my lifetime, it would be cool. There is so much spray from the falls that it creates its own rain forest, if you visit it without a rain coat you will get soaking wet (we made that mistake). The place is perfect for me because not only is it beautiful It also has rides like bungee jumping, flying foxes, canoeing, white-water rafting, zip-lining, and gorge swings over the Zambezi River. I’m doing zip-lining, the flying fox and the gorge swing. There are lots of animals around it like elephants, hippos and crocodiles (it’s a river). Okay, now all my facts are done (until I find more on the internet) so when we got to the bus station we hopped on our bus and started reading. When we were pretty close to Livingstone the bus just stopped, we were wondering what was happening. We just thought we were stopping for passengers but we waited there for a long time so we asked what was happening, bad news, we broke down. They tried to fix it but they couldn’t, it was getting late, then they told us that another bus was sent to help us. When that bus arrived it was 11pm, we were happy, and then we realised that they didn’t send another bus, there was already a bus going to Livingstone that we had to get in but it was a tight squeeze because there were already people on it. When we arrived there it was 12pm, we were all tired and wanted to go to sleep. Luckily, the hotel we are staying at sent a taxi over to take us there. When we got in the taxi it drove us there. we set up and went to sleep.
    On the 15th we are going to go to the falls, remember we are only seeing %25 of it, when we were driving there, we saw the river and then at a certain point it dropped away and there was mist rising. Our first view of the falls, we couldn’t see much at that moment but soon that was going to change, when we arrived we went straight to the ticket office and then into the place where it is. When we went to a platform where we could see the falls and it was beautiful, it was very noisy and there was mist going up everywhere, but that’s one of the things that make it interesting. We kept walking, and we walked past a place where you rent raincoats, the mist was falling down on us and sometimes it’s soft then sometimes it feels like you’re in a thunderstorm. We kept going but then the rain it got too much, so dad went back to get some raincoats while the rest of us stayed somewhere dry(-ish). When we put the coats on we watched the waterfall, mum said they could stay there all day watching it, I could to. After that we went to a trail called the boiling pot, when we got to the end of the trail we figured out why it was called the boiling pot. It was a turn in the river, but the water was so fast that it smashed together and looked like a boiling pot. From where we were we could see a bridge that you go across if you’re going to Zimbabwe, it’s also where you jump if you’re doing the gorge swing or the bungee jumping, when we were there we saw them bungee jumping. “How do they think that’s fun” said Emma, then I though “how dose Emma not think that’s fun?” maybe because Emma’s smart and knows here boundaries, properly right, why do I think that’s fun? Maybe because I’m smart and don’t know my boundaries, right again. When we finished looking at stuff we went back up the trail then went out of the place and back to the hotel to (watch some TV) sleep.
    On the 16th we went on a safari tour to see the white rhino, fact time: there are two species of rhino in Africa, guess what its name is, black rhino. The main difference between them is that the white rhino has flat and broad lips, they use it to help them eat the grass, the black rhinos on the other hand eat a diet of ticks and leaves have a pointed lip with a sharp hook. Another difference is that the black rhino is more territorial than the white one. There habitat is different too, the black rhino is found in thickets and dense brush while the white rhino is found in grasslands and fields. There was also a difference in their weight, White Rhinos weigh around 2300 Kg, and black ones weigh around 1700kg, white rhinos are the biggest ones in the world, and black rhinos are the third. Fact times over now. When we hopped in the vehicle we drove over to the national park and only about five minutes in we saw a whole herd of rhinos, fun fact: a group of rhinos is called a crash. We got a walking tour so (with a park ranger) we were allowed to walk over close to them but not to close because there still wild animals. The ranger asked if we want to have a picture taken (from a distance) and we said yes, we turned around to face the ranger (mum wasn’t that comfortable turning their back to the rhinos). When they took our picture we took our phone back and had a bit more of a look at them, then went back to the car and went off to look at other animals. When we kept going we saw a group of zebra, fun fact 2: a group of zebras are called a dazzle, the reason is because their stripes dazzle the predator. The guide told us that the way to tell a female to a male is the females have thick stripes on their butt then the males. After that we went to go to a place in the park near the river there was a bench where we could sit down. The guide brought some chips and soft drinks, mum and Emma don’t like soft drinks that just means more for me and dad. We ate all the chips and drank some of the soft drinks (not all though but I would have If I were allowed). When we finished we started driving back and then we saw a bunch of giraffe, fun fact: a herd standing of giraffes is called a tower and a group of running giraffes is called a journey . We had a look at them and then we went to the city centre because we wanted to go to the museum, it was called the Livingstone Museum, it was about the history of Livingstone (obvious). We had a look at it and then went to the hotel and slept.
    On the 17th we were going to go to Zimbabwe, we didn’t have to fly there, we just had to get a ten minute taxi to the border and then walk across the bridge then show our visa, then you’re in. We didn’t go to the border strait away we went to a festival that we heard about yesterday. It was a bunch of tribes coming together and showing off their type of dancing. When the dancing started it was really cool there were also instruments too, some of them I didn’t even know what they were, at one point one of the dancers got Emma up on stage and got Emma into the dance Emma said “I was pretty scared but it was cool” when Emma came back we watched a bit more then hopped in another taxi. The taxi took us to the border, and then we hopped of and went to the passport check, then went to the baggage check then we were in Zimbabwe. When we got a taxi we went to our hotel and slept.
    Andrew, the greatest thing in the milky way (the galaxy), Andrew, lover of milky ways (the bar), Andrew, best or worst bragger ever, Andrew… come on people, help me think, ok, ok, I’ll do it…
    The end
    Andrew (10 years old)

    On the 14th we took a bus from Lusaka to Livingstone. We were meant to take one bus, but that bus broke down, so we took two buses. We had to wait on the side of the road for four hours. We arrived at midnight, so we were very tired. The person who owned the flat that we booked picked us up at MIDNIGHT. It was very nice of them to do that.
    On the 15th we visited Victoria falls. We got drenched. It felt like the thunderstorm in Townsville. Sound: It sounded like a very big thunderstorm. The water droplets made very big sound waves. Feel: It felt freezing cold. We went through a bit, and then we got too cold that dad went back and got raincoats. See: the view was amazing. We could see the fall and the mist it was making. The water was making mist by slamming down so hard. After that we went down to the boiling pot. The boiling pot is where people go down and watch the water. From the boiling pot we saw people bungy jump off the bridge. “They are crazy!” I said, “I want to do that,” said Andrew. “How could you possibly want to do that” I said “because I’m crazy” said Andrew “that I can’t argue with” I said. Victoria falls is one of the 7 natural wonders of the world.
    On the 16th we went on a safari tour. WE SAW WHITE RHINOS. We have wanted to see a rhino and we did. We got close to them. There were five rhinos and one of them was a baby. Info: the white rhino has a square mouth, and the black rhino has a longer mouth. The reason the white rhinos have a square mouth is to eat grass, and the reason the black rhinos have a longer mouth is to get leaves off trees. We also saw giraffes, monkeys, buffalos and a big trail of ants. After that we went into town and saw an awesome dance show. We got me a new jumper and had lunch. We got Nshima. My favourite bit of the Nshima was a red sauce. It is a savory sauce that has onions in it. It was so good that I could live on that only. I loved it so much. Then we went to a museum, and the museum was about the history of Zambia. Then we went to a pub with live music.
    On the 17th we went to a cultural music and dance festival. We saw drums, a xylophone, a trumpet and a baritone. We saw lots of colours. There were people that had big masks and people with tails and makeup. There was some guy that was dressed up as a rhino. I got picked to dance with some of the dancers. I was scared, shocked and happy. I was scared that I would mess up. I was shocked that I got chosen out of all the other people and I was happy that I was chosen because you had to be very lucky to. (Plus, it was fun.) after that we crossed the bridge from Zambia to Zimbabwe. Then we settled in our new flat and did blog.
    Bye-bye people.
    Emma (8 and a half years old)
    もっと詳しく

  • Livingstone, Zambia (By Kev)

    5月14日〜18日, ザンビア ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

    14.5.2035. Bus trip today. We had a taxi booked for 8, and they turned up right on time. Good thing too, as traffic was a bit shit. Nevertheless, we were on time, that's why we leave early for everything. What a show! What the bloody hell is going on! Random people in regular clothes asking where we are going, which bus, trying to take our bags. Nunya mate and bugger off. They probably work for the bus company, how am I supposed to know that tho. Walked past butt loads of people and bags and packages and who knows what else, into the ticket booth. Checked in and got our seats numbers and different tickets. Our bags got loaded, along with half of Lusaka I think. We hopped on board, and waited. Bus left 20mins late, ah that's not so bad. We made a stop after a few hours for food. Grabbed these pastry things they called pies, flat one side, domed the other. Like they were made in a bowl. Meat and potatoes and some other stuff in them. Really nice, Andrew and Emma smashed 1 each. Mine didn't last real long either. We grabbed some other stuff and a bag of mixed fruit, and we're off again. We stopped at a railway crossing and stayed there. What’s happened? Everything was going too smoothly apparently. The bus had decided to shit itself. The guys working in the bus, we're now working on the bus. It was getting warm, so I hopped off the bus, much cooler outside. Some people were waving cars down and hopping in with them. An older lady came over to Mel and I and asked if we were going to Livingstone. I replied that yes we were, but there were 4 of us and we had quite a lot of bags. There was not enough room for all of us, so we thanked her and stayed with the bus. That was a nice gesture, this lady had noticed some foreign people having trouble, probably recognised a “we don't know what's happening” look on our faces and stopped to help us. I asked the driver a little later what was happening, he told me another bus was coming to get us and that it was about 40mins away. I thought he meant they had sent another bus to pick us up. Nope, it was another bus already packed with people that stopped to pick us up. Bags and people somehow managed to all get jammed into an already full bus. I sat beside the driver on a water container, with Andrew sitting in the aisle right behind me. It was a little after 8pm when we left this little town in the middle of nowhere, we had been there for 4hrs, we should already be at our stay in Livingstone. Finally we arrived in Livingstone just after 11pm, we'd been having trouble with our phones not working outside of Lusaka and if course they didn't work here. We couldn't call the owner of the apartment, who had offered to pick us up. Mel had been in contact with him during the day, letting him know we would be late. He had said he would pick us up at anytime, and had also went and gotten some eggs milk and bread for us for breakfast and left it in the stay, which was greatly appreciated. We had turned down a few taxi offers, then the bus driver came over and asked if we needed help. We do, our phones aren't working so we can't call the guy to pick us up. He asked if he is on WhatsApp, then gave us his phone to use. We made the call, thanked the driver and waited. By the time we were picked up, dropped off and shown around the house it was getting very close to 12:30. Kids in bed, I sat on the couch for a few minutes just to decompress a bit I think, then went to bed.
    15.5.2025. You would think we'd all have a sleep in after a day/night like yesterday wouldn't you. Nope, brain wouldn't let us. The kids were up early too, they had managed to sleep a fair bit, albeit a little uncomfortably, on the bus. Time for breakfast, we had a decent lunch yesterday, but no dinner. We had eggs on toast, and it was delicious. Throw in a coffee and I was good to go. We got a taxi over to Victoria Falls around 10, grabbed some tickets, ignored the people trying to sell us things and entered the park. We walked past a place where you can rent ponchos, nah we won't need that. Got our first good look at the falls, noisy, with mist rising up and blowing all over. We got to a bridge, hmmmm the mist looks a bit heavy on that. We walked across, by the time we got to the other side, we were soaked through. We hid a bit from the spray and I went back to get some ponchos, not for us really, to cover our phones and camera and backpack. I was wearing denim shorts, so I was wet all day after that. Ponchos now on, we braved the rest of it. The spray/mist whatever you wanna call it was something else. Pushed far into the air above the falls purely by the power of the water crashing over the rocks at the bottom. Sometimes it seemed to go 20-30metres above us, then land on-top of you like the heaviest rain you have ever witnessed. We were already wet, but at least under the ponchos we were starting to feel a little warmer. We walked a path down to the water a little away from the falls, called the boiling pot. What a place to see, the water is at different levels right in front of you as it can't get away quick enough, gets pushed up the rocks and swirls around creating whirlpools. No wonder they call it the boiling pot, that's what it looks like. We hiked back up, passing a few baboons. If you don't have food, they don't give a shit about you. We walked further around, checking out all the lookouts and seeing the boiling pot from a different point of view. We had lunch at a restaurant near the entrance, it was ordinary, wouldn't recommend it, and went back in. This time we went to the right, up river above the falls. This was also nice, dry too. It was time to go, our taxi turned up and on our way back to our stay, we stopped in to organise a safari for tomorrow morning. Back “home”, watched some tv and went to bed.
    16.5.2025. We got picked up at 7:20am and headed off for our safari. We don't really like safaris, they're expensive for what you get and you’re not in control. Why did we do this one? It's the only way to see white rhinoceros. We were in the park for 5 mins maybe, and there they were. We found a park officer, it's their job to watch and protect the rhinos. They're in camouflage and armed, it amazes me in this day and age there is still poaching. We drove back to the rhinos, and walked with him over to them. We were 15metres or so from 5 white rhinos, which in my opinion, is close enough. We were told there are only 9 in the park, and we got to see 5 of them, one of which was fairly young. After a short visit, we walked back to our vehicle, dropped the officer back at his then continued our tour. We didn't see much after that, got close to some giraffes and saw a few buffalo. Our guide told us buffalo are the most aggressive animal in Africa. I wouldn't like to mess with one. Not much else happened, we got a couple drinks and a packet of chips as a snack and got dropped back in the middle of Livingstone. It was awesome to see rhinos, that's the reason we took the safari, but the last 2 hours of it were a bit of a let down. Anyway, we had asked to be dropped in town because Emma needs a jumper, we never brought one for her. Not very far from where we got dropped off we came across some dancers and musicians. We had no idea what was going on, but we sat under a tree near a carpark and enjoyed the show. There were dancers in traditional outfits and people drumming and singing. We found out it was advertisement for a cultural festival happening tomorrow. Oh we'll be up for that. We sat there watching for ages. Afterwards we found a secondhand shop and found a jumper Emma liked on the cheap. The shops profits go towards helping children, so a good thing. We found some postcards, walked to the post office and sent them. We were starting to get hungry, we walked again along the main street looking for somewhere. It's all bloody touristy, burgers and chips and pizza, where's all the local food! I looked at GMaps, found a restaurant that was listed as “local food”, eh let's have a look. A little off the main road, good start. The “local food” was right, tho it wasn't one place, it was several places offering food. We ordered two plates of nshima with different foods on each, they had a lot of choice. It was cheap, it was local and it was delicious. This is where the people who work here, the locals, come to eat for lunch, soo good. Afterwards we discussed what we would do now, well there's a museum right there, let's do that. The museum had more artifacts and models from history. Village life from long ago and not so long ago. It had what I think were real stuffed animals, and lots of skulls with horns of various species. It also had a section on Dr David Livingstone, naturally. By the end of it we were all museumed out again. It was now just after 4pm, what now? Too far to walk back to our stay, hmmmm. How about a coffee? Or maybe a beer? Hey it's Friday, is there any live music tonight? We found a pub/bar/restaurant not far from us that advertised live music. We walked the wrong way for a little bit, backtracked and set off in the right direction. We got to a driveway and walked in, it opened up to a big bar area, a small cafe area and past that into a back area that hosted the live music. We sat and had a coffee first, this one was pretty good, we've had some not so good coffees in Zambia. After that we went into the bar area, but got told the kids weren't allowed. So we went out the back to place where the music will be. We had a couple beers, ordered food, which took forever to come out and listened to some music. It was a nice finish to a long day. We taxid back and went straight to bed.

    17.5.2025. We organised a taxi to pick us up and take us to the Livingstone International Cultural Arts Festival. The flyer we got yesterday said it started at 8am. At 9:30am, when we drove through town, all the floats in the carnival where still in the middle of town at the post office. We got dropped off and walked in. There was still some setting up going, but they had some live music going on and we had a look around. Just before midday the carnival arrived, heaps of kids from the town preceding it. All the performers filled the area and did a huge welcome dance. They then all filed out, at that point we decided to get some lunch. Nshima again, oh yeah! Emma and I shared a sausage nshima and Andrew got a goat meat nshima. Mel got some other stuff, a fantastic muffin/scone thing and some fried salted sweet potato. We tried a Zambian beer we hadn't previously seen, Eagle lager. It was good, but I had to pee in the bush after that. We watched performers from all over Zambia, wearing traditional costumes, all different and different instruments were played. One performance, the main dancer looked like he had a rhino horn on his head dress. He was carrying a wooden stool around in his teeth, he placed it down and danced. After a bit he started walking our way. He kept coming closer and closer, then reached out and took Emma's hand. She was so nervous, she couldn't even look at him. With a little encouragement, she went out with him into the middle and sat on the chair he danced a bit, then brought her back. What an opportunity, Emma may not realise it right now, but that was a once in a lifetime kinda thing. We talked and I found out she felt terrified, I'm so glad she did it, and Em feels pretty good about it now. I watched Mel have a moment with a young fella, he had asked about Mel's camera, they had then spent a few minutes talking and Mel letting him take a few photos. He looked to be around Andrew's age, and they both seemed to enjoy the exchange. Unfortunately, we had organised to be picked up at 2pm, to be taken to the border. It got to 2pm way too fast, Andrew wanted to stay forever, he really loves watching live performances. Anyway, we had to go. Into the taxi and off to the Zambia/Zimbabwe border. Through passport check, walk across the bridge, through another passport check, this time Zimbabwe. The lady who owns our next stay was there waiting for us. With her help we got some money and organised a day of fun(ziplines and stuff), then took us to our flat. We were thinking of maybe heading out for dinner, but Mel was feeling shit, a migraine, so I asked the owner to run me to a supermarket and I grabbed some food for a few dinners. When I got back, I put Mel to bed, annoyed the kids for a bit, made dinner (cheesy pasta), fed everyone and put Mel back to bed. The kids and I them watched some tv and went to bed.
    Kev
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  • Livingstone, Zambia (By Mel)

    5月14日〜18日, ザンビア ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

    Hello from Livingstone, the town of one of the seven natural wonders of the world.
    For our last blog we were in Lusaka, where we took a bus to get to Livingstone in the south of Zambia. The bus trip wasn’t bad until it was! The bus broke down around halfway through the 7 hours trip. They could not fix it. The trip, which was supposed to last 6 to 7 hours, ended up lasting around 15 hours! We had to wait on the side of the road, for the next bus coming this way to pill up with the people already in the bus. We arrived after midnight to Livingstone. We were lucky that the owner of the place we booked was nice enough to wait for us and come and drive us to the place. We got straight to bed as we were exhausted!
    Livingstone is a small town in the south of Zambia, on the Zambezi River. It is name after the Scottish Christian missionary, David Livingstone, who travelled through Africa to spread the word of God, and is known as the first white person who saw the Mosi-oa-Tunya ("the smoke that thunders") waterfall in 1855, despite the fact that there was Portuguese traders in Africa for a few centuries before that, but none officially saw it. He named the waterfalls Victoria falls in honour of the Queen Victoria. But the real name for me, is the name that the people from the region call it, Mosi-oa-Tunya, the smoke that thunders: this name represent the falls perfectly.
    This is obviously, the place we went to visit first. It is one of the seven natural wonders of the world, and it is magnificent. I knew that we would get wet, but I didn’t know how much!!! I was thinking, it is just water, we don’t need raincoat! Yeah right!!! We got soaked!!!! But that is ok as there is an old story from the tribe of this area saying that when you go to the Mosi-oa-Tunya, the water will wash all your troubles away; so we have no more troubles now!
    Lets start back to the entrance: there is a statue of David Livingstone of course. That rubbed me wrong for some reason. Why make such a big deal about a white guy, when this is not his country nor his continent and he wanted to travel in Africa to make African people change their religion. Anyway, not my business, but I did not care about the statue!
    We got our first view of the fall and it is breathtaking. The rainy season just finished, which means, the fall is in full strength. We learnt later that around 5 000 m3/sec of water fall down at that time of the year. It is deafening! That is why it is called the smoke that thunder! Because it sounds like it! The water falls down with so much strength that mist get pushed up so high and then fall back down feeling like rainstorm. Some place, it feels like mist, but some place it feels like a cold very strong storm! As I said before, we got drenched in seconds! We were really surprised by the sheer amount of water. Kev walked, very chivalrously, back to get us all raincoats (they rent some at the entrance of the fall) as the kids were shivering within minutes (Andrew had blue lips). We were still wet, but we didn’t get more wet and I could protect my camera! If you go to the fall, do not snob the raincoats, they are very much needed!
    Mosi-oa-Tunya is between Zambia and Zimbabwe. On the Zambia side, which is where we were, you can see around 25% of the fall. You can see less, but the part you can see is amazing: watching the water falling from 107 meters (at the highest point) and boiling at the bottom, projecting water up to hundreds of meters high, visible several kilometres from the fall, is a tremendous experience that we won’t forget.
    We followed the different trails that take you to different point of views of the fall: some with a great view, some all you can see is white cold mist and sometimes, when the wind clear a bit of the mist, a tiny piece of the fall appears, and it is magical. There are also a lot of rainbows: as there is a lot of water and sun, rainbows appear everywhere regularly, which add to the magic of the place.
    We got down at the boiling pot: this is an area at the bottom of the fall where you can see the water coming from the fall, rushing against the rock and splashing back, creating whirlpool and ‘boiling’. The path to get down was slippery and hard but going up was even harder and I am still very not fit! I struggled a fair bit on the way up. We also crossed path with a big group of baboons, which we still don’t like. We had no food though, so they were not interested in us.
    Going to Mosi-oa-Tunya was a big expectation for me and it did not disappoint. I’m so very glad we saw it for the first time as a family and it will stay one of the highlights of our trip. Luckily we are going on the Zimbabwe side in a few days!
    As it was school picture day at Andrew and Emma’s school in Australia, we took the opportunity to do our world school picture with Mosi-oa-Tunya in the background.
    After that we went back to our rental and enjoy a lovely evening watching movies with the kids.
    The next day, we had booked a game drive in the hope of seeing rhinoceros. Around 7.20am, our guide picked us up, and we went to the Mosi-oa-Tunya national park, which is one of the smallest one in Zambia. We got very lucky as in the first 30 minutes, we came across 5 white rhino, including a young one. We had to wait to find a ranger, to be able to walk near them ( you are not allowed to leave the tour vehicle without them, for our safety and the safety of the animals). We walked to about 15 meters from the rhinoceros. They are incredible animals: big, beautiful and impressive. The guide took a couple of pictures of us in front of the rhino, which mean we had to turn our back to trhem, which I was not super comfortable with! They run up to 40Klm/Hr, and I don’t run that fast! But all was good, we took some pictures, I could have stay there for hours just watching them, but we couldn’t stay too long to not annoy the rhino and get them stressed. Fair enough!
    We saw more giraffes, zebras, impalas, monkeys and a whole colony of ants on the move (that was cool!). We didn’t see as much as we hoped, but the rhinoceros part was amazing. Our guide was also full of knowledge of the animals: we learnt a fair bit. For example, females zebras have larger stripe on their bottoms and that is how you can make the difference between male and females, giraffe make sounds but not on a frequence we can hear, a bunch of standing giraffes is called a tower of giraffe, but a group of running giraffes is a journey, a group of zebra is called a dazzle because when they are threaten, they get together and they dazzle your eyes so you can’t isolate one target. We learnt more but not everything stayed in my memories unfortunately!
    When the game drive was over, we asked our guide to drop us in the centre of the town and it was a good idea to do that, as we saw groups of traditional musicians and dancers advertising a festival for the next day. We stayed there to watch them. Then we had to do some shopping as Emma was in desperate need for a jumper (she has been using mine). We found one she loved in a second-hand shop for 60 kwachas (AUD$3.50); great!
    We visited the local museum. There was an exhibition about human evolution, there was a room about David Livingstone obviously, as well as information about colonisation and what happen since the independence. It was interesting, similar to the museum in Lusaka, but as this history is very new to us, it is good to reread some of the information to understand them better.
    Then we found a pub with live music in the evening. It was still only afternoon but we had nowhere to be, so we went there, had a coffee and chat for a while. We got told that the music will start around 7pm. We moved into the area where the music was supposed to be around that time, but they seemed to be having a big team meeting and no music was being played. They only started playing after 8pm. We listen to the music for a bit (3 guitars, one keyboard and one drumkit), it wasn’t bad but not the best either. Around 9pm we got a taxi and went back to our apartment and bed time!
    Saturday the 17th of May was our last day in Zambia. As we saw the day before, there was the Livingstone International Cultural Arts Festival (LICAF) happening that day. It was supposed to start at 8am. We got there a bit after 9am but not much was happening yet. The floats of the carnival were still in town and only arrived at the main place of the festival around 11am I think. There was some music to entertain us but the festival properly started only then. I am so glad we got to see this. We have been looking for cultural dances and music in Zambia but haven’t seen any until then. This festival was all about promoting the arts to Zambian and tourists alike. We saw representation of all the region of Zambia; dancers and musicians in traditional clothes, singing and dancing traditional dances. It was a great last day in Zambia.
    Each region had different costumes, some more crazy than other, some had lots of colours, some all in white, some had animal masks on. We listen to a concert band doing the national anthem, then each group had instruments, singers and dancers: we saw different type of drums, singers, one group had a type of xylophone, and I am sure I forgot some! The diversity and creativity were truly amazing.
    I had a lovely moment with one boy, around Andrew’s age. He was standing next to me when I was taking pictures and we said hello to each other. He asked where I was from as usual, so I told him, asked him if he knew where Australia was. Then asked if he was from Livingstone, which he was. I then asked him if he like dancing and his answer was amazing. He said: “Yes, dancing is the best part of us.” I loved that answer. Then he asked: “Can I capture some?” It took me a second to understand that he wanted to take some pictures. I gave him my camera and show him how to use it and he took a few pictures. I think he was happy about it. I asked him if I could take a picture of him, which he agreed. I loved his pose. His name was Elijo (not sure how to spell it) I’ll remember him for a long time.
    Emma also had a great moment. She got picked by a scary looking warrior/dancer to go where he was dancing and he danced in front of her for a tiny bit. It was impressive to watch and Emma was very brave to go and also very lucky to be picked. I’m sure she’ll talk about it in her blog!
    Then we had to go as we had someone waiting for us to pick us up on the other side of the border in Zimbabwe.
    We got a taxi to the border, got our passport stamped by the Zambian stamps, walked on the bridge going above the Zambezi River, stamped our passport again this time with Zimbabwe stamps, meet with Sissy, the owner of our next stay. We wanted to book some activities for the adrenaline junkie of the family (Andrew), so she took us there (we spent a fortune), then to our little house we are going to stay for the next 4 days.
    That’s it for the moment,
    See you soon.
    Mel
    もっと詳しく

  • Pictures taken on roads in Zambia

    5月13日, ザンビア ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    This is just some pictures taken while driving on the roads of Zambia.

  • National parks in Zambia (by the kids)

    5月3日〜13日, ザンビア ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

    Hello ladies and gentlemen and kids and babies and children and teenagers and dogs and cats and kittens and puppies and birds and ants and snakes and nits. Welcome to another episode of Andrew’s blog, this one is going to be different then any others (to be honest none are really anywhere close to the same). Well be ready to be amazed, clap and cheer for me, I mean my blog, it is about to start.
    On the 3rd we woke up and went to try to get a taxi, the taxi was going to take us to a car rental place, we had a car already rented so now we just had to pick it up. When we arrived over there we were early so we went over to a shopping centre for breakfast, they had no food that was Zambian so we had to get something not Zambian. When we were done with our food we could go get the car, we went back to the place to get our car. When we got it, we signed some paper, not sure what it was for don’t really care, all I know is that after that we tried to go to our camp site. On google maps it said it was going to take 30 minutes to get there but when we were halfway we got to a roadblock. All the cars were moving very slowly and eventually we made it there, we were only staying there one night and then we were going to another camp closer to the national park. When we got there we went to find a place to set up, then we went to sleep. Night night.
    On the 4th we packed up our tents and began our drive to the camp site, the drive was supposed to take 9 hours but it ended up taking 10, there were lots of potholes, making us slow down every time. When we go to the camp site it was late at night so we set up the tent and cooked dinner, after that all we wanted to do sleep. So we did. Snore noise snore noise.
    On the 5th we packed up our car and took our first trip to the park, when we got into the park we saw the deer looking things called impala. We drove around a bit, there were lots of impala everywhere, we kept driving and then we saw a tour vehicle parked on the side. We pulled over to the side and we saw zebras, it was really cool. All the stripes on the zebras looked different, there was even a young one it was awesome. When we kept driving we saw a pond and in that pond we saw a, wait for it, a HIPPO. It was in the water just swimming around, it was ginormous, humongous, stupendously huge, they don’t move very fast when they don’t have to. When we kept driving we also saw elephants, monkeys, lions, crocodiles, mongooses, buffalo, wart hogs, turtles, squirrels and lots of different birds. It was a very successful day, Emma really wanted to see a giraffe, we didn’t. When we were near the start of the evening we went on a path that didn’t look like it gets used very much and we saw lots of elephants. There were elephants showing up here and there, we even saw a baby one, we know it was very young because it was still stumbling, it was adorable. At the end of that we went home and decided to make lunch, we got out the bread and started to make a sandwich. Shortly after something jumped up and then Emma yelled, MONKEY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! All of a sudden the monkey grabbed our bread and took off. Luckily we had already cut off some bread but not enough, also luckily we had another loaf of bread so we cut as much as we needed and... oh no. the monkey was coming back, dad got a stick and waved it around, the monkey didn’t care it just ran at us, teeth showing, it jumped up grabbed our last loaf, dad hit it several times, the monkey did not care at all. It stole our bread and left. After that we ate our sandwich, did stuff then had dinner, and went to sleep. Sleepy sleepy.
    On the 6th we packed up and went out to the park again, we drove for a bit and then we went on to the gps. and found a spot and decided to go there. The path there was very rough and lots of bog holes, it was very muddy and it wasn’t and pleasant ride, but when we got to the place where we were supposed to be going it was worth it. It was a big open plain that in a certain spot, there were lots of tour vehicles parked around so we went over there and we saw wild dogs, it was a whole pack of them. We looked at them for a bit and then I spotted a whole bunch of elephants over on the other side of the of the plains, so we started headed over there and then Emma saw something. THERE WAS A GIRAFE, it was huge, about 4 meters high, then further on I saw a whole herd of giraffe, so we went over there. We watched them for a while then we drove back through the park and made dinner then went to sleep.
    On the 7th this was our last day in the park, so we hopped it would be a good last day, it’s not our last day in the car, it’s the last day in this park, we’re going to another one tomorrow. So, we kept driving, for a bit it was pretty fun we saw impala and other stuff, then we went throw a bog hole, and guess what, we got bogged. We were stuck there for hours, we only got out when somebody came along and towed us out after that we went back to our camping ground and then cleaned the car down. After that we did our blog then went to sleep.
    On the 8th we drove back to pioneer park we were staying there one day and then we were going off to another park, the drive was the same 10 hour drive we made to get here. It was long and annoying, we stopped halfway there to make sandwiches, it was yum, (before we left we bought some more bread). After eating we kept on driving, when we arrived at the place it was nearly nighttime but instead of cooking we went to the restaurant there instead. At the restaurant they had nshima it was pretty yum, it was the smallest nshima we have had so far, it was still enough though, when we were done we went to bed.
    On the 9th we went to another camp that was close to a different national park it was a bit far away, but not 10 hours, it was only 6 hours. Whatever, when we arrived it was a pretty nice camp, the only thing annoying. I mean the only two things annoying, it is that it didn’t have an electricity plug, and the toilet didn’t have a roof so monkeys can come in which means there’s nowhere your bread can be safe, not even on the toilet. So after that we went to have a look at everything, then we had a talk to the owners, after our walk around we went to the car and made dinner then slept.
    On the 10th we went off to another trip to the park, it was a different park, the parks name was lower Zambezi national park, it was supposed to be wilder than the other park we went to. So we started driving there and about halfway there we saw a big impala looking thing, it was the size of a moose. After that we kept driving and guess what, we came across a whole herd of the animals, they were ginormous, then we kept driving. When we arrived there, there were lots of hippo skulls and other skulls that I didn’t recognise. We didn’t see much at first, mainly just impala, so we kept driving for a while, eventually we were just driving and then we stopped to look at a river hoping to see something, then another tour group asked us “have you seen the lions”. They told us the way there and when we were on the way there we saw another vehicle park and looking at something. When we got up to them we saw it, right on the side of the road, only 5 meters away were the lions. There were 3 female lions one of them in clear view (a great photo opportunity for mum) and the other two were behind a tree. When we left we went back to the camp and waited till night because we had booked a night safari. We were going to drive around looking for animals that normally come out at night (aka a leopard). When we left on the tour vehicle, we drove around for a while and eventually saw something really interesting, there was a huge herd of Zambian buffalos, they are really big. After that we kept driving and then at the top of a tree one of the guides saw a tail, we hoped it was a leopard, but it ended up being a genet. Genets are carnivores that appear catlike with a tail usually as long as the body, the common genet is found in Africa and Europe, there are other species of genet, though most of them are found in Africa. After that our time was nearly up, so we went back and slept.
    On the 11th we went to the park again but this time we saw lots of elephants, the count went over 40, there was this group that had 15, including a few really young babies and some very big ones. We found this place that had lot of big open space and we were trying to see if there were any lions but sadly there weren’t so we drove through some paths saw even more elephants we saw lots of different things. At the end of it we went back to the camp to pack up everything up because soon we were going to another camp further away from the park, don’t understand? I will explain. We were going to go away because they did some river activities, we are very close to a river called the Zambezi River, it is the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe. We were going to go over there to go on a boat and go fishing, we were also going on that boat to look at animals, like hippos and crocodiles. When we finished driving there we set up and went to sleep.
    On the 12th we were going to go on the boat and we were going to fish, (yay cheer woo yay clap). I have been wanting to go fishing and now it’s happening, I’m not getting my hopes up to high because lots of people have told me that it’s not the right time of year. When we left on the boat we had live bait and lures, we were trying to catch some type of fish called tiger fish, even though I watch lots of fishing shows with my grandad I’ve never heard about tiger fish. We were fishing for a while and then Emma said “dad I think I’ve got something” it didn’t look like anything at first but a few seconds later Emma’s rod was bending, like a lot. Emma got worried and past the rod to dad, and there was defiantly something on it, dad had to put up a good fight even to get it close to the boat and when it was close it did a jump. The fish was very big about 60cm long, it weigh about 4kg, the guide was at the side of the boat with a net ready to scoop it up. When dad got it in the boat he said it fought a bit like a barramundi, it was definitely the size of one, after that it was a long time until some thing else happened. All of a sudden I felt a tug on my rod and then something was pulling really hard, I yell out to the rest of my family, dad came over to me to help, I tried to tire it out but all it did was swim down into the snags and got me snagged. We coulden’t get it off so we had to break the line instead. We would have caught two fish if the fu**ing fish didn’t swim into the snags. It was a pretty successful day because apparently were lucky to have caught at least one fish, over all I was pretty happy with myself, so to end the day we went to the pool to play a bit and then to bed.
    On the 13th we packed up the tent and drove over to Lusaka again it was going to be a 4 hour drive, the 12th was our last day with the car, were giving our car back tomorrow and then the day after that we are going to go to Livingstone. So when we got to Lusaka we found our hotel and then we put our bags there then dropped our car back, then we went to find lunch. When we found a restaurant we ordered our food and then ate it, when we were done we went to the hotel to do our blog, and you know me I write a lot. So when I finished we watched a movie then went to sleep.
    Andrew (10 years old)

    On the 3rd we did shopping. We hired a car for ten (10) days. We got some pasta, some rice, some potato, some chips some popcorn and some meat. It was fun to go camping.
    On the 4th we drove to the south Luangwa Park. It took us 10 hours. 10 HOURS! There were lots of holes in the ground.
    On the 5th it was our first day in the park. We saw elephants, (we saw a baby elephant that was so young that it was stumbling. it was adorable.) hippos, crocs, Impalas and lions. We saw zebras, monkeys, warthogs, birds, buffalos, turtles, squirrels and mongoose. An Impala is an animal that lives in a group. The males fight. The males have horns that they fight with. The male that wins the fight is the leader of a group. There is one male and lots of female in one group. Awesome. the landscape is beautiful. It has flowers and grass and trees. There are some clouds but not too many. The park is so amazingly beautiful. We came back in the afternoon to make sandwiches and guess what, the fricking baboons stole our bread. The big male one ran up stood on its back legs and showed its big teeth to me. It scared the shit out of me.
    On the 6th it was our second day at the park. We saw all the animals I listed on the 5th and more. The new animals we saw were GIRAFFES (I wanted to see them the day we got there but we didn’t.) wild dogs and goannas. Pretty cool. One thing that I am very happy about is that the animals are free and not in a cage. The way the giraffes move is so elegant.
    On the 7th it was our third day in the park. We got bogged for a few hours. I got a bit worried when we couldn’t get out. I thought we might be stuck there for the whole day. Luckly a car came after a while. I was very thankful. We got home from the park and found MONKEYS. There was a new couple that moved in, and the monkeys raided them. Mum and dad got rocks and threw them at the monkeys.
    On the 8th we are leaving south Luwangwa park. We went to Pioneer Park near Lusaka. It took all day. To keep myself busy, I read and played games with Andrew.
    On the 9th we went from Pioneer Park all the way to Mvuu camp. (Mvuu means hippo.) it took six hours to get there. We spent the afternoon at the camp. The toilet and the shower had no roof, which meant the hideous monkeys could watch.
    On the 10th we had a full day in lower Zambezi Park. We saw three female lions under the tree. Then we did a night safari. We saw one male lion and some hippos. The male lion was sitting and then an elephant came crashing through the trees and scared the lion off. It was funny seeing the lion get chased by the elephant.
    On the 11th we spent the morning at the lower Zambezi Park. We saw loads of elephants. We saw a group of 15 elephants. There were some young ones and some old ones. After that we drove to Kiambi lodge which was 2 hours away.
    On the 12th we did a fishing trip. It lasted for 4 hours. In the first hour we caught a tiger fish. (I caught it, and dad got it in the boat) For you who don’t know what a tiger fish is, they are big, they have sharp teeth, and I’m sure their bites hurt. We only caught one fish, but they said it was rare to catch any. We were lucky. It felt so quick. In the afternoon we did blog, and we played in the pool.
    On the 13th we gave back the car because we were getting a flat. We got a vvvvveeeeerrrrrrryyyyyyy big room that had a shower a toilet a kitchen a room with a small bed, a room with a big bed and another room with a big bed. It also had a dining area. Tomorrow we are going to Livingstone by bus. I HATE BUSES!
    Emma (8 and a half)
    もっと詳しく

  • National parks in Zambia (by Kev)

    5月3日〜13日, ザンビア ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    3.5.2025. We got a taxi pretty quick, and set off to get our hire car. Mel grabbed the guys WhatsApp, cause we need a taxi when we get back. They're not ready for us, so we went to a mall close by and had breakfast. Went back, hopped into a car with a guy and all our bags and headed off to another spot for the car. Bit of a shit show, tight fit with all our bags and we had to pick out some pretty ordinary kitchen stuff to jam into drawers to take with us. We got a rundown on how lots of it works, paid the rest of the money and went shopping. Loaded the car up with food and drinks and set off for our first destination. Took ages to get to Pioneer Park, as the traffic came to a standstill, we don't know what happened but nothing was moving. We got off that road and found another, now it was GMaps turn to give us the runaround. We eventually got there and it was really nice. Set up in no time, plugged in and started making dinner. Kids played on a big tyre swing in a tree and we slept ok our first night in the tents.
    4.5.2025. We woke up kinda early, weren't in a huge hurry. Remembered we had a 9-10 hour drive ahead of us, we got in a hurry. Packed up and shot through. Ages later, in the dark, we drove into Track and Trails River Camp, right next to lower Luangwa national park. Checked in, found a spot, made dinner and went to bed. That's it, packed up, drove for a day, set up.
    5.5.2025. First trip to Luangwa. We got up pretty early, packed up the camp and had breakfast in the car. Paid our fees and entered. Had no idea what to expect, was worried about driving around a 9050 square kilometre park, getting bogged and getting eaten by something. Wow! We saw lots. We saw impala, zebra, hippos, crocodiles and elephants. There was a car off the track, we stopped to see what they were doing. They came over to us and told us there are lions in there, and that the ground is rough but ok to drive on. We went off the track, so far I had been reluctant to do so. Drove in close to tree and saw 6 lioness chilling out in the grass. One was chewing on what used to be an animal. We sat in the car about 20 metres away, for I don't how long before deciding to move on. It was a bit after lunchtime and we had a bit to do at camp so we decided to call it early today. I was making some sandwiches for lunch and had put the loaf of bread on top of the Jerry cans. Emma was helping me and suddenly screamed “monkey!” I caught out the side of my eye a hand grabbing the loaf and taking off. I gave a little chase, was a bloody big Baboon, so it was kinda half a chase. A local guy who works here, James, came over. Said to keep everything closed up while in camp during the afternoon, so I did, except for the side I was using. I got another loaf out of the fridge and cut off 4 slices to finish our sandwiches. I put the loaf up on a shelf and noticed a baboon walking back through the campground. He was walking away, then turned and started back towards us. The kids had sticks and I picked up a couple as well. He kept coming and got faster, straight towards us. The kids yelled and I slammed the sticks on the ground. It didn't matter, he came in, scared the crap out of the kids, ignored me, jumped up onto the side of the car where I was making the sandwiches and grabbed our other loaf of bread. I whacked it across the arse 2 or 3 times with a stick. It took off with our last loaf of bread. While it all happened, Mel had come back from the toilet and had grabbed Emma, it headed towards her as it went around the fireplace. Mel told the kids to get in the car. I felt completely useless and powerless, I also felt relieved I didn't piss it off by hitting it and it try to have a go at me. It was a big Baboon, big teeth, ugly as. I checked on the kids in the car, Emma was terrified, poor kid. They sat in the car for a while after that, we couldn't get them out. We had had a few plans for this arvo, one said plan was to check out the bar/restaurant area. We heard hippos near there the night before. We walked over, had a chat to the guy behind the bar and ordered two beers. Pretty expensive beers for Zambia, could have bought 10 for the same price in Lusaka. Still only about $6 AUD each. We looked at the hippos in the river, drank our beer and then played some card games. We returned to our camp and started making dinner. The place was clear of monkeys, and we all felt a bit better. Bed time
    6.5.2025. We got up a little later and made breakfast, eggs and beans. We all agreed the baked beans here are delicious. We set off for the park again. After entering, we headed a different direction to yesterday. We had been cruising around for a bit by ourselves, and noticed a few safari cars bunched together. We headed over there too. We got a good look at a pack of wild dogs, lying in the morning sun. They're bigger than you think. We headed off again, across a wide open area. We saw more elephants, then we saw what Emma was really looked forward to. Giraffes! Huge animals, massively tall with long legs. Look, look! There's a giraffe! No wait, there's 2, 3, 4, holy crap there's heaps. I think we counted 12 or 13 in a group. We drove around for ages, seeing more elephants and giraffes. You don't really get sick of seeing these animals, maybe we will at some point, but not yet. We're getting hungry, and they don't recommend you get out of the car and make lunch in the park, so we headed out. There's a small village just outside the park, where we headed to. We needed some supplies and we stopped at a place for lunch. They did sandwiches sooo big, the other three had leftovers for the next day. No leftovers for me, I smashed it. We headed back to the park after that. We drove around for ages again, not seeing a lot this time. We did see a dead impala, we think it died fighting with another impala, as one of its eyes had been punctured and it had other wounds that looked like from horns not teeth. Also, it wasn't eaten. Dead giveaway that. It was just after 5pm, we'd had a long day, so decided that's it, and headed for the gate. We got back to a main road and noticed 6 or 7 vehicles parked up on the road. What's all this then? Are they just handing over to the evening safari guides? Nope, there was a pride of at least 10 lionesses, not far from the road. Just lying there, flicking their tails and poking their heads up now and then. What a way to finish the day. We headed back, made dinner and went to sleep.
    7.5.2025. I had this idea, that if we headed back to where we were the first day, where there was lots of impala, we just might see a leopard sleeping in a tree. We drove around for a couple hours, saw all sorts of things but no leopard. We drove further than we had before, went to places we hadn't before. We had been through a few bog holes by now, and this one seemed like it wouldn't be a problem. I was wrong, very wrong. Rock hard in the middle and sides, and the wheel ruts were deep. In we went, about 2/3rds the way through, that's where we stayed. The rear diff and suspension sitting on the rock hard mud. Couple this with bloody Bridgestone dueller at tyres, and we were stuck. We got out, super excited about that. Andrew and Emma were on predator and other 4wd watch. There was a tree about twenty metres, directly in front of us. If only we had a winch. I will definitely be recommending the company install one. We got sticks and jammed them in, we dug out mud. I even managed to dig out all the mud from underneath the suspension and diff, in the hope that we would be able to back up. Nothing worked, the mud in the wheel ruts felt like slime in my hands, super slippery. All the wheels just spun. What now? We wait, of course. Hopefully another vehicle will come along and pull us out. One thing we did have was a long recovery strap. We saw a couple 4wds a long way away, but they didn't see us. The kids asked how long we'd have to wait, don't know, maybe until after dark. They take your rego number when you enter, and the park closes at 6pm. After that, I'm thinking they start looking for you, well hopefully anyway. We got bogged at 10, and gave up trying to get out around 11. We could have a long wait ahead of us. We had food and water, so it was just a waiting game. At 12, Mel said “there's a car!”, I said “where? Over the flat?” No, coming up right behind us. You bloody beauty! There was, I think a South African couple in one vehicle and some guides in another behind them. Happy is one way to describe myself at that moment, relieved is another. I said to the Zambian guide “mate your face is beautiful, I'm so happy to see it”. Which put a pretty big smile on it. They couldn't believe we'd been stuck there for 2 hours. We got pulled out by the guides, packed up the gear we had out, thanked them again, a lot, and started heading back to the main gate. We'd had enough park for that day. We were both covered in dry mud and the car was filthy, with me getting in and out heaps of times. On the way out we still saw some animals, elephants, giraffes among other things. When we got back to camp, one of the locals there noticed how much fun we'd had. James is his name, he offered to clean our car. I asked could we just have a hose and I'll clean it myself. He went off, returned later with a long hose and offered to help clean again. I said no again, I'll be right as I just want to clean the wheels and rims. We're heading off tomorrow and we don't need a big hunk of mud in any of the rims, would make it undriveable. Made use of a handy stick along with the hose and got rid of all the mud from the wheels, then cleaned the windows. We had baboons come through the campsite, which allowed me to vent some frustration. They started going through another camp, we chased them away. Worked out they don't like rocks being thrown at them, the caretakers chase them away with slingshots. When the other campers came back we told them what had happened and to not leave anything out. They “put” stuff away, and went back to the bar. A little later, we saw baboons going through their stuff again. This time I saw a big one pull over their small fridge onto the ground and make off with a bag of something. I grabbed the fridge, refitted the lid and took it to our camp, while Mel went to tell them what happened. They thanked us and “packed” better this time, then headed back to the bar again. No further incidents after that. Had dinner, went to bed.
    8.5.2025. Got up, packed up. Drove back to Pioneer Park near Lusaka. 9-9.5 hour drive, thrilling stuff. Kids played on the big swing they have for ages. Mel and I had a couple drinks. We decided to have dinner at the restaurant, some more nshima. It was bloody freezing that night. Almost wish I had a blanket to go with my sleeping bag.
    9.5.2025. Guess what? Driving again today. This time we're heading south, towards the lower Zambezi national park. We had to get through Lusaka first, took ages just to get through the traffic. Once on the open road, it was faster, but you have to get around lots of trucks. We got to our destination, Mvuu lodge, around 2 o'clock. We got settled in, lovely campgrounds, but no power. So it's gonna be dark at night. We walked up to the lodge to see if we could organise a night safari, we ran into the owners. Had a chat for a fair while, and settled on an evening safari tomorrow night. We may not have power, but they provide firewood, and even started the fire for us. We ate dinner while looking at the bush tv, the sound of hippos in the background. Was a nice night.
    10.5.2025. First day in lower zambezi national park. Once again, no idea what to expect, though we are a little more experienced now. We drove a fair bit into the park, then decided to head off on track headed towards some bush. Places seem a lot more overgrown than the last park. We crossed paths with a safari vehicle, they asked if we had seen the lions? We hadn't, he told us which way to go, so we went. We headed into the thicker bush, up a river, came out of the river and saw another car. We got closer to them and saw a lion, laying down near some low hanging trees. We stopped and turned off the car. We sat there, less than 5 metres from a lioness. Then we saw two more under the tree, none of them really cared that we were there. We drove back out and started looking around the park some more. Zebras and elephants, warthogs and impala, lots of them. Another long day and we'd had enough. We headed back so we could have a late lunch early dinner before our night safari. We hopped into a cut down LandCruiser with a heap of framework and seats. Recognised the driver, he was the guy in the car when we saw lions. He was driving someone else's car for them, a service they offer. Now he was going to drive our night safari, long day for him. His name was Jacob, really nice guy, though a little hard to understand at times. We got lots of information from him during. We had hoped to see a leopard, a very elusive animal. By the end of the night, we still hadn't seen one. Was not meant to be. We did see our first, big male lion. He was waiting to ambush some impala near the airstrip. We stopped, took some photos and just watched. He never got a chance at an impala while we were there. An elephant had smelt him. We heard it, trumpeting and crashing through the trees looking for it. Here we were sitting in the dark, a light flicking to the lion now and again, with an angry elephant smashing its way through everything in its path. Branches cracking, leaves rustling, elephant trumpeting. It. Was . Awesome! A little frightening, but bloody well worth it. Was the best part of the night. I'm just glad the elephant wasn't pissed at me. The lion ran off and hid, the elephant gave up and we moved on. Further up the airstrip we saw more elephants, some very young ones. My guess, this is what the other was protecting. We learnt this night that hippos come a long way out of the water at night to graze. Jacob told us that elephants would climb the mountains near us in the summer at night to sleep in the cooler air. It was a great night, even if we didn't see a leopard.
    11.5.2025. We packed up everything, as after we go to the park today, we head to another campground this evening. Jacob had told us about a spot in the park where he had seen a large pride of lions. Including lionesses, males and cubs. We made our way there as best as we could from his directions. We saw some amazing things again, but after 8 hours driving around the area, we never came across any lions today. LOTS of elephants, will never get sick of seeing elephants. The biggest group consisting of 15, ranging from massive to very young. We watched them walk across the plains and disappear into the forest. We had to give up, we had over an hour to drive back to the entrance, and almost two more hours to drive to the next campsite. The road is pretty rough and it's slow going, we finally made the next campgrounds just after 5. We set up, then wandered back up to the lodge. We organised a fishing trip for the next day, then grabbed a bottle of wine to share. South Africa make decent reds, we wished we could find something Zambian but have had no luck. During our wine, I realised I had completely forgotten about mother's day. The kids came up with a quick little improvised performance for Mel, I apologised and felt like shit. I will try to make it up to them.
    12.5.2025. We had a sleep in, I was actually not the first one out of bed. I made a big breakfast for everyone, then at 9 we headed up to the lodge for our fishing trip. Andrew is super excited, as we followed the guide down to the boat, Andrew was almost stepping on the back of his feet. We hopped into the boat, hoping for the best but not expecting too much, as we were told a couple times that the fishing is slow at the moment. Still, nothing could curb Andrew's enthusiasm. We got started. We only hired two rods, as Mel doesn't fish and Emma and I will share. Live baits got out on and cast out. We drifted with the current, hoping for a bite. After about 30-45mins, Emma felt a pull on her rod. She got a bit worried and handed it to me. I gave it a rip, set the hook and held on. After about 5mins and 4 or 5 jumps, we had a tiger fish in the landing net. We estimated it to be about 4 to 5 kilos. Lots of teeth, need a steel trace to get one in. It took a bit swimming it, but we managed to get a good release. After that, very little else. We saw lots of hippos and a few crocodiles, but no more fish. At the very end Andrew had something on, but got snagged and we had to break it off. Four hours seemed to fly by for Andrew and I, I reckon it dragged on for Mel, they don't like fishing. We came back, made lunch, did a lot of blogging, had a couple of beers, had dinner, marshmallows around the fire, then bed. Long sentence, right. Good night.
    13.5.2025. Today we're heading back to Lusaka again. So cups of coffee were made, the car was packed, we settled our bill with the lodge and set off. It took a few hours to get back. We found our stay for the night and dropped off our bags. Then we fuelled up the car and dropped it back to the hire company. Thankfully they dropped us back near our place, so we didn't need a taxi. Had some lunch, walked back to our stay and relaxed a bit. We're back on a bus tomorrow to head to Livingston. We'll see how that goes.
    もっと詳しく

  • National parks in Zambia (by Mel)

    5月3日〜13日, ザンビア ⋅ ☁️ 29 °C

    Hello readers,
    We had an amazing time in 2 of the national parks in Zambia: the south Luangwa National park and the Lower Zambezi National Park.
    Last time we blogged it was Friday the 2nd of May and it was our last full day in Lusaka. We went to watch a movie (the Minecraft movie that the kids loved!) When we got back to our room, it rained!!! I mention it because we hardly saw rain since the beginning of the trip!! It was nice to feel some rain!
    Anyway, the next day, we went to pick up the car that we are going to drive with for the next 11 days. It is not in perfect condition and not everything from the list that was send by email is in it, but hopefully it’ll be alright. It also has less space that we thought for our bags. We’ll work it out! After that, we did some shopping to try to get enough for the 11 days. It was hard to decide what to get: we don’t want to buy to much as we don’t want to waste, but we also need to have enough as we don’t know if we’ll find shops on the way or not.
    The shop we went is called Shoprite. It has a lot in it, pretty similar to a Woolworth in Australia, plus it has beer and wine! Great! We did our shopping and find almost everything we wanted.
    I found a business who sell board games, so off we go. We have several games, but we have played them a lot, so a few new ones will be good! We find the place and they have lots of games. We can’t buy them all and it is hard to control myself! We only bought 4! But they are good one: Uno show no mercy, Dragonwood, spot it minion version and Exploding minions. We tested them since, and they are pretty fun and entertaining.
    When everything is crammed in the car, we are on our way to our first camp. It is not far from Lusaka, but it took us ages to get there. On the road was either an accident or something broken down, we are not sure, but we got stucked in a pretty big traffic jam. At some point, we got directed to a side road and google map took us to who knows where! One the map were roads which didn’t exist in real life. We have an old gps that came with the car and the way seems longer but made more senses, so we used that and finally arrive at the first campsite, Pioneer lodge. It is a lovely campsite, we set up for the night, cook dinner (well Kev does), test some of the games we just bought and slept.
    Early start the next day as we have around 9 hours in the car to get to South Luangwa National Park which is located in the west of Zambia. On the way, there is amazing landscapes, not unlike some we can find in Queensland in Australia. Some landscape felt familiar. We also see a lot of people walking. All along the road (again 9-10 hours) there were people walking pretty much all the time. Even when it looked like there was no village around or even houses, there was someone walking to go somewhere. That is another thing that we need to be grateful for: transportation. Where we are from almost everyone has a car, or a bike or buses or train to go around. Here a lot of people rely on their feet to take them places. It makes going anywhere a lot longer.
    We pass villages with small houses made of bricks and huts, people carrying things on their head, women with little children on their back wrapped in very colourful fabrics, a lot of small shop selling fruits and vegetables. We will try some of those later and they are absolutely delicious!!! Tomatoes like we haven’t had for a very long time! Juicy, tasty, truly amazing.
    It took us around 10 hours to drive here and a big part of it was driving around pothole! A lot of them. The road quality is not the best here, but we got there.
    We arrived at Track and trails campsite around 7.30pm, tired and happy to get out of the car. Again, the kids amazed me. They did not complain once. They entertained themselves and took the 10 hours drive like champion.
    We arrived, set up, ate dinner and bed as we wanted to have an early start the next day.
    Monday the 5th of May which was the first day of our fifth month of traveling, was truly an amazing experience. We got up around 5.30am and got ready.
    The Luangwa national park is 9050 square kilometres. We drove in not knowing what to expect. During that first day, we saw so many animals: Zebras, elephants, impalas, warthogs, monkeys, crocodiles, buffalos, plenty of different birds... and I probably forgot some. It was amazing to see the animals in the wild and free. I’ll never go to a zoo again. Animals in the wild, is how it is supposed to be.
    It was magical to drive around and suddenly spot some zebras, or a big pack of impalas eating grass, their heads popping up to look at us, assess if we were dangerous, and go back to eating when they realised we weren’t, or move a bit away if we were too close.
    Elephants!!!! The first one we saw was on a small path, with bush on both side pretty close to the car, and suddenly we saw the bush moving and a trunk popping out, follow by the beautiful face of an elephant, just a few meters away from us. Incredible!
    Later, we saw a family of elephants with a brand new little one, which was still wobbly on its legs! That was one of the many highlights of that day.
    Warthogs running around (all I could think about was: “Pumba is here!!” Bloody Disney!)
    In the river, hippopotamus and crocodile floating peacefully, then disappearing under the water and you wonder if they spotted a prey around (hopefully not us!).
    The hippos are huge!!! I knew that, but seeing it is a different story! They are so huge. Some of them, have a head bigger than Emma! The fun thing is, apparently, they come into our camp at night time to eat some grass. Okay…
    After 6 hours in the park, we came back to our camp, which is not far from the entrance to have a snack.
    Kev was making sandwiches when a bunch of baboons came around and stole our bread. It was right next to Kev and a little baboon came a grab the bag. It was so quick that nothing could be done about it! Then Kev got our second bag of bread, put it even closer to himself and a big baboon run toward us and show his teeth to Emma. I grabbed her and pulled her behind me and told both kids to get into the car. Kev tried to scare it with a stick, but it didn’t work. It managed to get more bread and left. It was terrifying I have to admit. So now we are worried about baboons and hippos in our camp (Yeah for wildlife!!!)! The rest of the afternoon was more relaxed and we played some games, did some laundry (it was necessary!) and rest a bit. We also watch the hippos in the river in front of our camps. Andrew loved playing with the fire in the evening.
    Just before going to bed, one of the guy taking care of the lodge come and tell us “Look over there”: one massive hippo is right there, several meters from us, eating grass, no caring about us at all. They come out at night to eat. It is so impressive!!!
    The second day in the park was as amazing as the first. We got to add new animals to the list: giraffes, wild dogs and goanna.
    We arrived in a big plain area with some wild dogs laying around and having a snooze. Then we kept going and what did we see coming: a graceful giraffe, and another, and another, and more!!! We started counted them but there were too many! It was amazing and then we looked back and a whole family of elephants were there.
    The photographer in me didn’t know what to focus on! So many opportunities.
    Another thing that I loved was the trees, especially the baobab tree. Some were really big and you wonder how old they are, how many lives they saw and how much longer they will stay around.
    And the birds! Some very colourful, some pretty big, some tiny one. All amazing.
    What strikes me is how perfect nature is. All the animal we saw, from the small squirrel to the mighty lions, are incredibly beautiful and perfect.
    We went out of the park to have lunch at the small village near the lodge. We found a small café attached to a shop selling artisan creations from local people, called Project Luangwa. This is a non-profit organisation which was created by owners of lodge in the area to make sure some of the money from tourism come back into the community. They have lots of different projects which help with education, gender equality, living wages for the artisans… and more. If you want to support them, you can find information on www.projectluangwa.org.
    After lunch (amazing delicious sandwich with blue cheese on mine!!! Happy!) we got back into the park. We saw a group of around 10 lionesses laying around. Again, just amazing to watch.
    The third day in the park, was a little bit different.
    We started like the other two. We wanted to try to spot a leopard as this is on the only animal we have not seen. I save you the surprised, we didn’t see one!
    We got bogged for a couple of hours instead! We drove far into the park, looking up at trees to try to spot a leopard, as it is where they usually are during the day according to some documentaries we saw.
    At some point, we drove through a path with some mud on it. It didn’t look bad at all, not deep at all. And yet, we got bogged! The mud was very thick, clay like, and grabbed the diff under the car and nothing moved after that! We tried digging, putting sticks to drive on, going backward… nothing helped. You have to remember that we were in a national park, with wild lions and other wonderful animals around! As a self-drive, you are normally not allowed to get out of your car. But we obviously had to! We had Emma inside the car and Andrew on top of the car, on animal and other car watch. We got stuck for 2 hours!!! No car passed us for a while. When we were starting to worry a bit, 2 cars came our ways and got us out of the mud! Yeah. As Kev and I were covered in mud, we got back to camp to take a shower. We were done for the day after that!
    So we blogged a bit, wash the car which was covered in mud, Emma did some drawing of the animals we saw.
    We had to fight more baboons which were raiding another camp near ours! Baboons, we don’t like them too much!
    Then board games and dinner, then early bed as we have another early start tomorrow to go back toward Lusaka before going south.
    Thursday the 8th was another long day in the car. We drove back to Pioneer Lodge near Lusaka. Another 9 hours ish: lucky we like to read!!! We got to the Lodge, grab a drink and dinner, set up the camp and went to bed!
    This is one the annoying thing with the car we have, as the tents are on the top of the car, we constantly have to set them up and pack them up, which we did the next morning, to drive south to Mvuu Lodge near low Zambezi national park this time. It was a shorter drive, only 6 hours (I think as everything is blurring into one long week in the car!!!) We arrive to the lodge, set up, and rest the rest of the afternoon.
    Mvuu means hippopotamus in the language of the area and there are plenty!!
    The following day we went into the national park. It is a bit different than the South Luangwa park: it is a bit more wild. The vegetation is also a bit different. At the beginning of the day, we didn’t see much animals apart for the many impalas. We also saw some massive herbivore type of animal with huge twisted horns on their head: we saw one easily higher than our car, magnificent. We learnt the name of it but none of us can remember it now!!! That will have to be some research later on.
    After a fair bit of driving, we cross path with a tour vehicle, and they asked us if we saw the lions. No we didn’t! Where are they? The guide gave us a vague direction (they are never keen on giving information to self-drive people it seems), so we took off. And we find them; 3 lioness laying under some low trees. We could only see one very well as the other 2 were hiding more. We were only 4 or 5 meters away from her. She was laying there, moving around a bit, changing position, she even started snoozing, with us just a few meters away! Not a care in the world! That was so awesome to watch.
    Of course, we saw other animals; elephants, zebras, Pumbas.. sorry warthogs and more. No giraffe though as there is none in this park. We came back at the lodge around 3pm as we booked a night safari for that evening. At the entrance of the lodge was a hippo! In the middle of the day! They normally come out at night. But here it was. Massive and in the way, we were a bit worried; we waited for a bit, as it slowly made its way to the side of the road eating plants as it goes. We were really not comfortable driving next to it, but we had to, so we did. It looked at us passing while we looked at it… We pass with no issue, but it was intense!
    We ate a bit and when we were doing the dishes, we hear some noise and there it was again in the middle of a grass area near our campsite. The people working here had their eyes on it obviously. We talk to one of them and he explained to us that this hippo had a wound the fish in the river keep nibbling on, hence why it was out of the water right now. As it was hurt, it was more aggressive, so we had to be careful! Don’t worry, we will!!! Saying that, we are still more scared of baboons than hippo.
    We started our night safari by going up the hills to see the beautiful view from up there toward the Zambesi river (one of the main river in Zambia, which is also the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe). The view was amazing, the colours of the sunset stunning.
    After that we came back down the hills and started looking for animals: one of the guide is driving the car while the other one has a powerful lamp which he kept swiping from left to right and back to try to see the light reflecting in the eyes of animals and that is how they find them. We didn’t see much (apart from impalas of course as they are EVERYWHERE!) at the beginning. As the night got darker, we saw more and more hippo walking around eating plants. I know I said it already, but they are so big! They are formidable animals. We were starting to think we wouldn’t see any big cats, when we finally spotted one: a male lion stalking some prey. We were on a small plane strip made from the small planes which land here. It was a big open space and the lion was on the side of it, close to the tree line. The most exciting part was that a family of elephants was trying to cross the strip. The guide told us that elephants have a great sense of smell and they know there is a lion nearby. We could hear the family of elephant on one side and one single elephant on the other side ‘trumping’ at each other. Suddenly we heard the elephant crashing through the trees toward the lion. The sound was so loud! The lion very soon run back under the cover of trees where he stayed hidden. It was super exciting to see. That sound of the elephant crashing trees was very impressive.
    The next morning, we packed the car again and went back into the Lower Zambezi park as the guide from the night before, told us about a big pride of lions he saw and roughly where to find them. We drove around the area he told us (well we think) but didn’t see any lions, which was a bit disappointing. We still saw a lot of elephants; some group as big as 15 elephants (with several young ones which are Emma’s favourite).
    Around 1pm we left the park, as we had to drive back to another lodge further from the park, called Kiambi lodge. We got there around 5pm and set up camp.
    We booked a fishing trip for the next day as Andrew has been missing fishing a lot!
    Kev and I shared a bottle of red to celebrate Mother’s day, then dinner, a bit of time around the fire and bed.
    On the morning of the 12th of May we took a boat (with a guide) on a river infested by crocodiles and hippo! We have to be crazy! Well, you think if they sell this kind of experience to tourists it must be safe, right! I must admit I was a little bit worried at first, but all the animals seem to not want to eat us, so I relaxed after a while. Andrew was extremely happy to fish. We were told that the fishing was slow at the moment, so we didn’t expect too much. But in the first hour, Emma caught and Kev fought and got out, a tiger fish. This was around 3 to 4 Kg with big teeth! Kev put a good fight to get it out. We took a picture and release it, as tourists can’t keep the fish. I am not a big fan of fishing; I don’t understand why you would take so long to wait for a fish to hook, then fight to get it out and then release the poor fish with a hole in its mouth. It baffles me, but the other 3 in the family loves it (well especially Andrew and Kev) so I put up with it. And I spend 4 hours doing nothing, relaxing with Emma giving me the occasional massage (she says she is practicing in case she want to become a masseuse, and I am all for that!), so I am not complaining!
    Andrew almost caught something but the fish got snagged under something and the line broke. I know he was disappointed but he dealt with it very well and he said he had a good time no matter what.
    The afternoon was spent blogging and splashing in the pool of the lodge.
    Tuesday the 13th of May was our last day of this camping/ national park part of our trip in Zambia. It was a fun adventure, and we will have something similar soon in Namibia!
    We drove back to Lusaka, again, to give the car back. We have an apartment booked for one night (I thought after 11 days camping, a nice flat would be good!). When we found the place, the buildings looked a bit shabby but the flat is really nice and big!!! The kids were super excited, as if they have never lived in a big place!!!
    Tomorrow we are taking a bus for Livingstone, which is near Victoria Fall: I am very looking forward to that too!!!
    See you there.
    もっと詳しく

  • Lusaka, Zambia (by the kids)

    4月27日〜5月2日, ザンビア ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

    Hello again my fans, I’ m sure you’re missing me and my blog, well I’m here to share the wonders of traveling, so put your hands together for my blog!!! (clap, clap, cheer, cheer, yay!!!)
    On the 27th we were still in India, we were going to go on a train to Delhi, and at Delhi we were going to take a plane to Ethiopia, then take another flight to Zambia, not all in the same day though. So we started the day by going to a nice breakfast place then we went back to the hotel to rest and because we had a long night ahead of us. We stayed there for a while at the hotel and around 3pm we got a tuktuk to go to the train station. We waited there a bit then twenty minutes before it was supposed arrive they announced it was arriving at a different platform. So we got our bags and went over to that platform, we weren’t rushing because on the website it said I was 48 minutes late. No surprise, im not sure we’ve ever had a train that was on time, they’ve all been late. When the train did finally arrive we got on, put our bags down then started reading our kindle, we were going to stay on the train for 4 hours. When we were pretty close the train station the train stopped, it was stopped there for an hour, I still don’t know why, but it ended up being 5 hours. When the train started moving again it took about five minutes to get to the train station, when we got off we went to get a taxi to go to the airport, the plane was leaving at 9pm (mum edit: we left around 2am!), and it was 7pm. So first we went to baggage check, then when we finish that we went to security check, then after that we just had to wait. We waited for a while then when the plane arrived we went on, I wanted to stay up till take of but I was too tired so I went to sleep. Night night.
    On the 28th it was 1am (mum’s edit= 6am) and we were very close to landing, landing is my favourite bit on a plane after take-off, I’m happy that I was awake for this bit. When we landed we were in Ethiopia, we were only going to stay there for a few hours then catch a plane to Zambia. When we found our gate that we would board our plane on, we went and found a restaurant near it, we had a plate that had pastries muffins and croissants, it was yummy, when we finished it we went back to the gate a started waiting. When it arrived we went to find our seats then started watching the tv on the plane. When it started taking off I was very excited. The flight lasted a few hours, at the end of the flight we got off then went to get a taxi driving to drive us to our hotel. When we got there we figured out that someone else was using the room we had so we got a refund and got a smaller room. When it was dinner time went out and had some dinner then went home and slept.
    On the 29th we went to the museum, it name was the Lusak national museum, classic. Wait, I forgot bout breakfast, we had it at the hotel, they gave us bread and omelette. When we got to the museum we saw a big statue of someone out the front, we weren’t sure who it was, I did some research and figured out that it is 8 meters tall and weighs 2000 kg. But behind the statue there’s a meaning, the statue is made out of old hospice beds on which thousands of people have died of AIDS. When we went in the museum there was this exhibition on the first president of Zambia, he was in charge from 1964 to 1991, 26 years (or 27). When we went in we read a bit about him and that he was a sports person, musician and a vegetarian. He was the first president because the country just got out from British colonisation. Pretty much all of Africa was colonised at one point, the only two that weren’t colonised, were Ethiopia and Liberia. After that exhibition, the rest of the museum was about Africa in the past, like long back, not like parents old, cave people old. It was pretty cool, my favourite bit was where they had a model of an old rock furnace it looked like a big thick pillar but it worked. When we left the museum we went and looked at a statue called the statue of freedom it symbolises Zambia’s freedom. After that we went home and slept.
    On the 30th we started our day by going to a restaurant that had nshima, it’s pronounced shee-ma, it looks like it’s spelt wrong because it’s spelt the way the Zambians do. Whatever, the nshima came in two ways T-bone on the side or fish, I chose T-bone, mum chose fish, we had one of each, and the T-bone was good. I ate most of the T-bone, it was so good, absolutely delicious, I could have eaten 10 times more then what I had, it was that good. After that we went home did a bit of blog and schoolwork, at one point we wanted to go to a salsa class to pass time and have fun. But when we tried to get a taxi over there we coulden’t, so we didn’t do it but this is what we did do. We all sat on the bed and watched a movie then when it went flat we played card games then went to sleep. Night night.
    On the 1st we started our day by walking around looking for breakfast, well no, we just went back to the place that we went to yesterday, and the day before that and the day before that etc. etc. When we got there we got a nshima, then we went to a cinema, we decided to watch snow white (well I agreed because tomorrow were going to watch the Minecraft movie). When we went there to buy our tickets they were all empty no one had bought a ticket, we could sit anywhere. The movie was going to start soon so I went over to the popcorn place and decided to get large for both me and Emma to share together. We went over but they didn’t have a large they had medium and small, so I chose medium, and when it came out it was huge. Like if the cinema in Townsville had an extra-large, wait no, make it extra-extra-large, and it made me think, how big would the large be? When we went into the movie we watched the movie, it wasn’t my favourite, when we left we started walking home we saw a massage place. We went in had a nice long massage, it lasted one hour, the funny bit is that we all got a different massage. After that we went home and slept. Sleepy sleepy.
    On the 2nd this is the last day I’m writing about, today were going to the Minecraft movie, then when it’s done we’re going to go home and pack, and tomorrow were going to the safaris.
    Andrew David Bridson, leader of the Emma annoyers and TRALOA (the right and laws of Andrew), 42 time nobble peace prize holder, 95 times Olympics gold medal holder, most beloved human on earth.
    Make sure to like and subscribe to the Andrew you tube channel, Andrewbloghog.com.au, it’s still coming out in 6538, make sure to read the book How to write a blog. The book may come out when you’re alive or it may not. Well Andrews blog is over, good bye.
    The end
    Andrew (10 years old)

    Hello party people. Guess what. WE ARE IN AFRICA.
    On the 28th. We took a tuktuk from our hotel to the train station. then took a train to new Delhi. Then a tuktuk to the airport. Then took a plane to Ethiopia. Then we took another flight to Lusaka in Zambia.
    On the 29th we did a museum. It was called the Lusaka national museum. We saw big pictures, we saw skulls, we saw small fake villages, we read information about the first president in Zambia whose name is Kenneth Kaunda. He was president from 1964 to 1991. It’s cool.
    On the 30th. We had breakfast then went home did blog and schoolwork. For breakfast we had fish Nshima and T-bone Nshima. Nshima is spinach with a red sauce that has onion in it. it is bloody good. Next day.
    On the 1st. We went to a movie about Snow white. There was only two people there besides us. It was a good movie. We are going to go see another movie tomorrow. After that we had A MASSAGE. It was amazing. I got the hot cloth, and it lasted for an hour. I loved it so much that I wished it never ended. Then we went out for dinner.
    On the 2nd. We are going to another movie. Then we are going to pack and get ready for our car trip. We are getting a car for ten days and we are going to go to the safari. Hope we are going to like it.
    Emma (8 and a half years old)
    もっと詳しく

  • Lusaka, Zambia (By Mel and Kev)

    4月27日〜5月2日, ザンビア ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

    Hello from Zambia!!!
    We are in Africa, I think we can’t quite believe it yet!
    Last time we blogged, we were in Agra, India. On our last day there, we had breakfast in our favourite breakfast place, stay in our room for a while as they didn’t have a booking for it, so we could stay as long as we wanted, which was nice as we didn’t have to wait at the train station with our bags for several hours!
    Around 3pm, we took a tukuk to the train station, waited for our train which was late (no surprise there!). We arrived in Delhi. We wanted to take the express metro to the airport as I didn’t trust the traffic in Delhi, but when we got in the metro, just buying a ticket was complicated, finding the right ticket place to buy with cash was hard, there was a bag scanner as well and we had our bags with us obviously, so we didn’t even bother trying and went back out to grab a taxi. There was a bit of traffic but not too bad. We got to the airport on time and took our first plane to Ethiopia first then our second flight to Lusaka in Zambia.
    One of the things that surprised us first was, we were cold! We left India which has temperature around 40 degrees and arrived in Zambia with temperatures between 20 and 30 degrees! It was a shock! It is also a lot less crowded obviously. Lusaka, Zambia’s capital, has just over 2.73 million inhabitants, while Delhi, India’s capital has over 10 million. We got a taxi from the airport to the place we are staying. We heard no horn, and nobody try to overtake us from any side! The driving seems so relax here after 2 months in India.
    The place we are staying is a disappointment. Our room is smaller that what we booked, and the beds are small, which makes our night uncomfortable. But anyway, there is worth problem in the world!
    On the first day, we settled in our room as usual, then went out to explore. The roads here a wide. We walked around a bit but there is not a lot to do, so we went to a restaurant. We tried a local dish called Nshima. This can be with different type of meat (fish, chicken, Tbone) and has a little dish of vegetables and sauces to go with it, but the main thing is those big maize lump (like a very thick porridge). It was delicious but very filling. There was no way we could finish it!!!
    To eat it, you grab a piece of the maize, dip it in the sauce and grab some vegetable with it, put that in your mouth and grab a piece of meat as well (well if you eat meat!). This is really good.
    After that we went to bed super early, as we had a long night the one before.
    Tuesday, we went to visit the museum to have an idea of Zambia’s culture and history. It was an interesting museum with several exhibition. One was about Kenneth Kaunda, also known as KK, who served as the first president of Zambia from 1964 to 1991. He was at the forefront of the struggle for independence from British rule.
    Here is my short geography and history lesson: Zambia is located in South-Central Africa. Its official name is Republic of Zambia. Archaeological excavation found proof of human presence dated 36 000 years old. In more recent history, Khoisan peoples then Bantu people in the 13th century inhabited the area (we learnt that in the museum which had a whole part about human evolution and the history of the country). In the 18th century, the British colonised the region. We find a map of colonised Africa: do you know that only 2 countries, Ethiopia and Liberia, never got colonised. All the other countries were colonised by a country from western Europe: maybe people who complained about people coming into their country now, should think about that once in a while! In 1964, northern Rhodesia became Republic of Zambia with Kaunda as its president. In 1973, following tribal and inter-party violence, all political parties except UNIP (Kaundra’s party) were banned through an amendment of the constitution. It lasted until 1991, when riots forced Kaundra to authorised multi-party and that is when he lost the power. It was interesting to look at that exhibition, as for me, anything one party only is a bad idea. Nonetheless Kaundra seemed to have done some good thing and help solves issues in the area with other countries fighting for the independence. But still, 18 years as a single party only country, was a long time and should have been done well before that. Since then, Zambia has had several peaceful transitions of power (which is not the case in every country in Africa). Zambia is now a country with 73 ethnic groups, and as many languages, living in relative harmony: Zambia’s motto is “One Zambia, One nation”. Christianity is its main religion (protestant as a majority). English is listed as an official language as well as the 73 ethnic languages.
    I think it is enough about the lesson! We learnt a lot at the museum, but I had to do more research when writing this blog as I did remember everything!
    When we were done with the museum, we went to the central bus station to inquire about ticket to Livingstone where we will go in a few weeks. We feel like we were back in India for a bit. The place is crazy with buses everywhere, people trying to get you to buy ticket for their bus. We had a guy following us, mumbling we had no idea what. It was a bit overwhelming!
    After a while a guy speaking an English we could understand, asked what we were after, and we told him. He took us to one of the multiple places that sell ticket, and I could ask about price and buy our tickets. We still had the other guy following us and we understood why. When we were leaving, an argument started between the guy that was following us and the guy who talked to us on who brought us there. They probably get some cut of the money for bringing customer in. I told the guy who sold us the tickets who brought us in and left quickly and the argument was still going on.
    After the bus station, we walked around the city in search of food and ATM (our never-ending search). We ended up at a shopping centre with both food and ATM! Yeah!!! This was a decent shopping centre (unlike the one in India!). In the shopping center, there is a big cheese board, probably 4 by 4 meters. We came back to that shopping center several time during the week and there are always people playing. We watch a few games and there were some really good players. Chess is apparently a growing thing in Zambia and is promoted to help develop critical thinking. Andrew and Emma got interested and want to play!
    Then back to the room to do some schoolwork for the kids and some planning for us: we have to do a shopping list (we haven’t done that in a while) as we are going camping around the national park of Zambia in a few days!
    Another thing we need to be grateful for in Australia and all the rich countries, is electricity. In Zambia, there is electricity outage every day, several times a day. The place we are staying as some big batteries that kick in when the power drops off to keep the light on, fridges and basic things. We can’t charge computer or phones though. This is a privilege to have a reliable access to electricity, we should not forgot that.
    Wednesday was a not much to do day. We have been looking for things to do in Lusaka and there is not a lot to do for tourists around here. We looked for shows, cultural things and surprisingly, for a capital, there is none!
    We had breakfast at a local small restaurant on the side of the road: we order 2 Nshima and that was huge!!!! One with T-bone and one with fish. We could not finish it all!!!! But it was delicious!
    After that we went back to our room to do some blogging and schoolwork. I found a dance class for that evening, Salsa and Kzomba. We were excited to do something. When it was time to go, we tried to book a taxi through an app like Uber, but no taxi was available. We tried for a while but to no avail. We know there is some small bus/van type thing going around the city, but they don’t seem to have a fix stop point, so you just need to know their route and stop one, but as foreigner we have no clue about it, so we haven’t used one. We ended up back to our room watching a new Asterix series on Netflix (the kids love Asterix).
    Thursday, we went in hunt of breakfast and only found a petrol station who did very average food. We found out later that it was a public holiday (1st of May of course!), so a lot of shops were closed. We then went to see Snow White at the cinema (luckily it was open). We haven’t been to the cinema for a while and it was nice. The movie wasn’t bad. Not the best Disney, but not the worse either! On the way back to our room, we walked pass a massage place and as we had nothing to do, we went to have a massage! We didn’t manage to find massage when we were in India as the few places we contacted didn’t do massage for kids or didn’t answer… Well, we’ll get massage in Zambia! They were advertising a Zambian massage, but apparently it is a rough one for people after doing sport type thing. We asked for a Swedish massage instead and it was nice. We had better massage in the past but a massage is a massage, and I won’t complain!
    Then back to the room, Nshima for dinner and more Asterix before bed.
    Friday is our last full day in Lusaka. We are finishing our blog for here, going to see one more movie, “the Minecraft movie” and pack as tomorrow we are getting a car with rooftop tent and all set up for camping. We are going on a safari trip in 2 of the national parks in Zambia. We are very excited!!!!
    Mel

    28.4.2025. Yesterday was spent waiting and riding a train, not much happened. We got to the airport in Delhi without any real hiccups. We got on the plane at around 1:30am, Andrew wanted to stay up for take off, he loves it, but was sound asleep before that. Landed in Ethiopia around 6am, and waited a few hours. Hopped onto our next plane, bound for Lusaka, Zambia. We landed, went through all the immigration and customs stuff, walked out into Zambia, Africa for the first time. It's cold here! We're so used to it being 35° by 9am. It's 24° after 1pm, not what I was expecting of Africa. I'm not complaining, far from it, when I think Africa I think bloody hot. Well not at this time of year, fantastic weather. We found an ATM at the airport that worked, holy crap! Found out later it charged a lot more fees though. Hopped in a taxi and headed off towards our stay. First thing I noticed was a lot less traffic, bigger roads and wide open country. Green grass and trees. No horns!! Zambia has around 22 million people, and Lusaka, it's capital city, where we are has almost 3.5 million people. A Lot less people here, they're not in each other's pockets. India has over 2 billion people and Mumbai has more people than all of Zambia, it's a nice change. We didn't do much today, we checked in, had a little look around. Found somewhere to eat not far from our stay. Tried nshima for the first time, it's a thick “porridge” of several grains, maize, millet and a few others I can't remember. Comes with sides of chopped greens and some tomato stuff and a little bit of chilli. Also a couple chicken legs. Really nice, not disappointed with our first one. We went back to our room, brushed our teeth. Since we were all knackered from our flights, we went to bed, even though it was only 7:30.
    29.4.2025. I woke up after a reasonable sleep, not the best. They do breakfast here so I thought we could do that so we didn't have to search straight away. Pretty average, omelette and toast with some tea. No idea what that will cost us, we'll find out when we check out I guess. What to do now? We saw that there is a national museum here, let's do that. After working out a taxi app for Zambia, since uber doesn't work here, we booked one and we're off to the museum. Pretty fascinating, the bottom floor was mostly about Kenneth Kaunda. He was instrumental in Zambia's bid for independence from British rule, and became Zambia's first president in 1964. The top floor consisted of displays of human development and evolution. We saw skulls of early hominids. Lots of tools and weapons through the ages, and even saw a replica of an old iron ore smelter. A tall, hollow dirt pile with layers of iron ore, wood and charcoal. It had air holes at the bottom for it to breathe and once lit, it would get hot enough to smelt the iron ore, which would pool in the bottom. An exhibit further in, showed how they made bellows out of animal hide and wood. Allowing them to work the metal further. We saw an exhibit showing what they had found when excavating a cave. The deeper they dug, the older the artifacts they found got. Afterwards we went for a bit of a walk, and found a statue dedicated to their fight for independence. We found a fruit we had never tried before, the African horned cucumber, or Kiwano melon. Tangy! I see why they call it a cucumber, very much like one on the inside, the taste is different though. One of the guys said put some salt on it, that really changed the flavour, the tanginess was gone. Either way, it was not my favourite fruit but I'm glad I tried it. We went for more of a walk, towards the bus depot, we need a bus in about 15 days. This was just a reconnaissance mission, but we ended up with bus tickets anyway. We also needed more money again, so the search for an ATM was on. We ended up at a mall, where the second one we tried worked for us. We had a bit of a look around, found a cinema we will probably hit up. Had something to eat around 3pm, and watched some young siblings play chess on a huge board in the mall. We made our way back to our room, showered, relaxed and researched Zambia. Afterwards we watched a little netflix, we can watch avatar- the last Airbender here, and hit the fart sack.
    30.4.2025. We're hungry for breakfast, but not from our stay again. I found a place on GMaps, let's see if it's open. We walked out way over there, about 10min. The place I was looking for was not open, however there was another place that looked open. It was indeed, when we asked they said yes. There looked like there were lots of grills outside in the street, but this was the only place that had smoke rising. The guy asked us what we'd like, nshima please. Ok, we have fish and T-bone nshima, one of each please. Turns out that's too much nshima for us, especially when you get a whole grilled fish and a heap of pieces of T-bone. By the way, the T-bone was delicious and the fish may have been better. It was soo good. They butterflied it, and grilled it, worth a go for sure. The place was empty until 9:30, when some others turned up, starting to think they start a bit later here like in India. I watched the guys on the grill for a bit. The meat was cooked on one side, then passed through some mesh to another guy. He had chopped up a heap of tomato, onion and greens(like Bok Choy), then placed it on a big piece of paper stuff. Chopped up some of the meat and added it to the pile of veges. Folded up the paper around all the food, poured in some oil and salt. Tied the top of the paper at the top so it looked like a sack, and placed it on the grill. Saw the other people eat that, looked good, going to try that next time. Andrew was happy, he ate a ton of meat. Mel and Emma were happy with the fish, and I was happy because I ate everything. After we had no idea what to do, there doesn't seem to be a lot to do here. We went back to the room, we all blogged and the kids some school work. Mel was feeling a bit shit, so they had a nap. The kids did well with the school work so I let them play some games on their computers. The day had slipped away, but we are going to a salsa dance class tonight. Thought we had better eat before that, so dinner was sorted at a restaurant near by. Afterwards we tried to order a taxi, no luck. Mel tried a heap of times, even adding the max amount you can to the fare, but no one would take it. We were standing out the front of the restaurant for around 20mins trying for a taxi. Mel said, if it's this hard now, are we gonna be able to get a taxi back later? We decided to scratch the idea, we just went back to our room a bit disappointed. We watched a bit of Netflix until Mel's computer went flat, the power had been out for ages here. Has been out everyday here at some point, sometimes multiple times. So we played card games. Finished the night with Mel nodding off early and the kids getting some kindle time.
    1.5.2025. We wanted breakfast, so I found a cafe on GMaps. Turns out it's closed, even tho GMaps says it's open. There's another across the road, closed too. Alright then, let's head towards the mall and see what we can find. We saw another cafe sign, behind gates and security. Asked the guard there if it was open, no it's not. He said if we want food we can go to the servo nearby. Did that, never again. Was pretty crap and not cheap. We walked a bit further and came across a little cafe, we were still looking for a coffee, so we stopped in there. The guy told us they're open at 7:30 tomorrow morning, so maybe that's a spot for brekky tomorrow. We made it to the mall, our intentions? Get more money and watch a movie. More kwacha in our pocket and a massive box of popcorn for the kids, we watched Snow White. Afterwards we walked around the mall again, looked through a supermarket here to get an idea of what we can get in a couple days time. Bought some chocolate, because it's been ages since Mel had some, sat down and had another coffee. Not a fan of how they make coffee here so far, too big and weak, havta try and espresso next time. Anyway, time to get moving again. On the walk back to our room, we found a massage place. Why not? We've had a massage in every country except India so far. The traditional massage was very deep tissue and used for sporty people apparently, they recommended the Swedish massage, so that's what we got. Mel said theirs was a relaxing massage, mine was still pretty deep tissue. My calf muscle was hurting a bit after. We got back to the room, blogged a bit, showered and headed out for some dinner. Nshima is on the menu again. We got fish and chicken, and the two were enough for the four of us. Played some games then headed back for sleep.
    2.5.2025. Grandma's birthday today! We had a video call to wish her happy birthday and to have a chat. Heading out for some brekky, and later hitting the cinema again. This time we're gonna watch the Minecraft movie, we'll see how that goes. We need more money, so hitting the ATM again. Worked out roughly how much money we're gonna need to get around and it's a lot. Zambia may still be one of the poorest countries, but it ain't cheap, not for tourists wanting to see wildlife. Then the plan is to pack this arvo, as we need to get a taxi and pick up our hire car tomorrow morning. That's it, see ya.
    Kev.
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