Let’s bring Sauna into Africa

dicembre 2019 - febbraio 2021
South Africa to Germany – at least a try. Leggi altro

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  • Uganda
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  • Botswana
  • Namibia
  • Sud Africa
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4x4, Campeggio, Amicizia, Natura, Fotografia, Scoperta di se stessi, Viaggio da solo, Vacanza, Natura selvaggia, Animali selvatici
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  • Cheesus!

    22 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Brown, heavy bread, jucy avocado, aromatic tomatoes, citronpeppar from Sweden, locally made rosmary gouda and passion fruit jam, accompanied with Tanzanian freshly ground coffee from fincas south of Kilimanjaro =)

    Apart from calling me "Jesus!" all the time, since yesterday the young generation sympathizes with the new nickname "Corona!" for all non-locals. From heaven to hell in one day! -_-
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  • Perfectly in time for a short rhyme

    22 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ 🌙 20 °C

    I arrive at 1,810 m just in time for the sunset! A dog approaches and whispers something with a ladyish voice in Polish to me. Wahhhhoo, whoat? Okay, behind the fur there is the lodge's owner hiding :D

    The village of Mambo killed my time schedule because its "roads" are so narrow and washed out that some locals had to bend a wooden fence in order for me to get through and at the end they even had to lift the protruding roof of a house because of my stuff on the rack. We all had fun =)

    Shortly after arrival I get an e-mail from the German embassy in Dar that the Foreign Office organised two retrieval flights for Tuesday afternoon. One from Mombasa and one from Zanzibar. If I wanted to get out of the country, I would have to decide until tomorrow morning. Mombasa is closer but the border impenetrable. And what would happen with the car? Cheese!
    Leggi altro

  • Going to hell. Not.

    23 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    The Zanzibar flight is restricted to 50 persons and primarily designated for island tourists. According to the embassy my chances to get a slot are small so I don't risk all the stress getting there in half the time I would need. The mainland airport in Dar-es-Salaam is still in regular operation even though the flights to Germany are sparse with obscure transits for prices I would not pay right now where "thinks are still normal here". There might be skylifts planned later for all the other volunteers and expats scattered around but Tanzania has low priority at this moment. The embassy is currently gathering info about all people left in the country. All land borders are closed so whatever I will be doing, it'll all be branded "Tanzanian experience 2.0" ;-)

    As for now, I keep enjoying my coffee and fix some pending issues around the car. Maybe I continue tomorrow. Maybe not. This spot is just too pretty!

    If necessary, from here I can be in Dar within one day and the chances are high that my new mechanics' friends could take care of my car at their well-guared lawn.
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  • Mambo

    24 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    Here at the lodge they constantly employ some 17 villagers (as long as there are tourists ...) and whenever renovation work has to be done they make use of their professionals' network and rotate additional employees weekly in order to give others the chance to also earn some money. Most supplies are acquired in Mambo, water comes from the forest and power brings the sun.Leggi altro

  • Home office?

    25 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ 🌧 22 °C

    Fight nature with nature: Toast à la Cheesus with onions, garlic, aromatic habanero and tomato for lunch (germ-free zone), polska szarlotka in the afternoons (Dagmara knows her business!), coffee all around the clock und nen guaden Grappa for sun set. Our night watchman patrols with a
    small brown sheep and the bush baby in the nearby tree always has an eye on me. Doesn't sound like the end of the world, does it?
    Leggi altro

  • Back in time 30 million years

    26 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ 🌧 23 °C

    Since March 22nd I’m relaxing here on the spot and preparing my mind for the dawning apocalypse. Today I break out for a hike into Shagayu Forest Reserve (part of Usambara mountains) with the local guides Joseph and David accompanied by five dogs from the camp, of which three are Dagmara’s imported stray dogs from Morocco (all Poles I know are crazy about dogs!). We accomplish more than 21 km within seven hours and again I feel the past three months of sitting behind the driving wheel. Back home I will have to order a replacement element for my left knee on eBay :-P

    The path leads us from Mambo through monotonous pine and eucalyptus forests which have been planted by Germans and/or Brits during colonial times, primarily to obtain fast-growing firewood and building material. Already back then the natives’ settlement pressure was intense in this fertile and smoothly-climatised region that the whites feared to loose more and more of the precious, pristine rain forest. This is why they erected a wall of eucalyptus trees to denominate a border between cultivated land and the Shagayu forest which has been declared a forest reserve during the nineteenhundrets. This tree wall persists until today and looks somewhat strange. The locals say that this system still works pretty well as they are allowed to gather firewood from the pine and eucalyptus plantations any time whereas from the primary forest they may only collect dead wood which indeed is strongly controlled by the current government. At least they seem to have realised that this old forest is the only source for fresh water during the dry season. It even sources water during droughts when it does not rain for two years in a row!

    This "firewood thing" is really a problem. Tanzania is poor and has a huge population which uses wood and charcoal for cooking and heating all year long. Getting a hot shower in rural areas involves firing an oven. But in Zambia it is even worse! There the water reservoirs are depleting which also leads to hydro power shortages and whole Zambia’s economy and life seems to be concentrated around “where do I get firewood and where do I get charcoal?”. Even in Lusaka we experienced power cut-offs from early morning till the evening and running water was not available from 9 am to 3 pm. In their fuckin’ capital they cook daily lunch on charcoal! Here in Usambara mountains 30 % of the ladies are carrying veggies on their head and 70 % are carrying ... firewood. By the way, I don’t see any guys working here. They are just hiding or sitting around on crappy Chinese motorbikes (they say that they fall apart after one year).

    So, back to Shagayu forest: it’s nice, you should go there. Don’t fear any leopards, they don’t come any more.
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  • Pa pa!

    29 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

    Didn't expect to having been talking and thinking a whole week in Polish during this trip. After seven nights camping deluxe I say "Pa pa!" to my new family at the heaven's gate and descend via Lushoto (stopping for cheese, local coffee and jam) in direction to Mkomazi National Park which is north "just around the corner". The whole day submerges into a melancholic atmosphere. Why did I leave? Will I return one day? Maybe even very soon ...Leggi altro

  • Mkomazi

    30 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 25 °C

    24 h permit with camping inside the Mkomazi National Park for me and my German-registered car: 118 USD. And that's one of the cheaper parks in Tanzania. The park is very natural, untouched, authentic with a nice hilly scenery. The wildlife is more on distance here! I expect to be saved from heavy rain and mud this time but that doesn’t work out. I cannot leave the north-western part further south-east because all possible paths turn into water and/or mud quickly. Wherever I see more or less fresh ranger tracks in the mud I follow with the simple thought “Hmm, if they did it, I will too!”. By that I increase my mud driving skills tremendously, especially after a short rain where the soil turns into soap and the car wiggles freely from 90° left to 90° right even tough the road is flat and straight. You can have as much 4x4 and as many differential locks as you like, it stays very funny and uncontrollable! But on all other roads I don’t want to risk getting stuck because there is nobody else around except for mongooses, duikers, an elegant secretary bird, impalas, ostriches, hartebeests, zebras, warthogs, masai giraffes (G. tippelskirchii), infinite numbers of giant ticks, turtles, tortoises, quail-like and chicken-like birds, falcons, pigeons, hornbills (love them!!), lizards, geckos, some tsetse flies, kudus, jackals, buffalos and a puff adder which decides to spit out its partly digested prey directly in front of me on the track. I have to wait, can’t continue before it finishes. In the beginning it just looks at me and then for 5-10 minutes it opens and closes its mouth several times until I see the big bulb inside moving to the front. Then it delivers its present in front of me! Thank you.Leggi altro

  • Jippie Jipe

    31 marzo 2020, Tanzania ⋅ 🌧 26 °C

    Not knowing where to go I head for lake Jipe near the border to Kenya. Yesterday and today I’m in bad mood because this overall situation of border lock downs and European news pisses me off. At the village of Jipe some boys tell me that I can sleep here and go down to the lake for a boat trip. But after I was inspected by the village’s chairman and had to prove where I stayed the last nights and after he phoned somebody he decides that I have to go back all the way to the main road to get a permission from the district office in Mwanga first. Sure ... as if this was the main tourist attraction in the whole world. I stay calm and friendly and decide to wild camp 800 m back the road between thorny bushes, awaiting the terminating thunderstorm which looses all its power before being able to cool me down.Leggi altro