Let’s bring Sauna into Africa

dezembro 2019 - fevereiro 2021
South Africa to Germany – at least a try. Leia mais

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  • On the road again

    19 de dezembro de 2020, Tanzânia ⋅ ☁️ 28 °C

    Little traffic on my way to Tanga. One short break for 20 little bananas and a child-sized pineapple, another one for pilau (spicy rice) and Stoney Tangawizi (ginger beer). Get stopped twice for "overspeeding": 56 and 63, each at town entrance, "proof-pictured" directly at the respective 50's traffic sign. Both times I am pretty pissed because the whole part of the town I am driving 20-50 km/h and do not see the point of being fined. There are so many other asses driving like shit which is much more dangerous than not having the correct speed directly at point of town entrance. Arguing with the friendly police wins and I don't pay anything today \m/Leia mais

  • Paperwork done!

    20 de dezembro de 2020, Tanzânia ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    Successfully exchanged the old Carnet de Passage on it's last day of validity for the new one! Was not too easy and I again had to argue a lot but the Horohoro/Lunga Lunga border post was deserted, I was the only person, we had some power outages and the customs guy was nice and cooperative. The car looks way too pretty and clean. I'm gonna change that now!Leia mais

  • Fish Eagle Point

    23 de dezembro de 2020, Tanzânia ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

    Dear Felix P. Enner,
    you were supposed to having caught up with me here in Tanzania by now. Apparently this is not the case as all my Schnops bottles (colloquial new-huttisch slang for Schnaps) are still well-sealed. I will never be able to enter the Arabic hemisphere under such circumstances, you know? My neighbouring seat is still unoccupied. While I wade the wild waters of the western Indian Ocean, my hammock dangles emptily between the mangroves. It could have hosted you but it seems that now is not the time. And what about this Christmas we wanted to spend together in the mountains? Remember? I planned to show you all 24 bit shades of colour a chameleon can adopt. Oh my dear friend, I write this letter to you in order to animally go you on your nuts (förmlich-deutsch: jmdm. tierisch auf die Nüsse gehen) or, more scholzishly phrased: in order to well and truly bring you up the palm tree (jmdn. gehörig auf die Palme bringen/aufpalmieren).

    Here at Fish Eagle Point I discovered a remote, calm spot to lick my wounds and in addition to that I also found ... yet another crazy Norwegian who just finished 6000 km within three weeks across Tanzania in his Land Rover. For birdwatching. And he also got stuck like the other one we met together in Botswana. This place is run by Zimbabweans and I already feel integrated into their family. One night simply turned into three. Now, around mid December is supposed to be the worst season for a visit but - as I cannot tell the difference - for me this place truly is a hidden gem of Tanzania! The whole place consists of a labyrinth of narrow paths washed/built into ancient coral limestone. Fossils everywhere! Beware of the sharp edges! Some rocks are easily mistaken for volcanic tuff stone or similar. Obviously the sea level was much higher some many many years ago. So, let me tell you that you can safely stop worrying about climate change. Hidden in dense bush there are scattered guest houses - some of them coming with a private lagoon - and a separated campsite where I sneaked under a tree-bush-thingy with my car. At night you have to watch out for tiny little crabs on the path who live in recycled snail shells and think that they are way stronger than you. People say that in times of scarcity of shells these crabs build houses in plastic debris. So, we should keep on using plastic - especially bottles - and throw it into the ocean from time to time in order to save the crab population. I regularly get visited by super-huge rats with longer tails than yours. They are very clever and not afraid of me camping here. In Morogoro they are trained to scent out land mines and Tuberculosis. Crazy, isn't it? The bush babies make fun of shouting at me in a high-pitched scream while I stroll around at night. Once a small monkey was sitting on my roof rack. There are no mosquitos or nasty other parasites, not at night nor during the day. What a paradise! The bush neatly blends into mangroves. We have strong, warm winds from the sea which throw sea weed and mangrove leaves back on the beach. The tidal variations are immense! Within three hours the water retracts so far that it is barely to be seen. You just hear a faint swooshing of distant waves and can walk around on what has been the bottom of the reef minutes ago. No need for snorkeling, just sit down and say hello to Mr. starfish. You would have had to bring your own drinking water because the water from the well is slightly salty. Even though it's clean and pure the water from the big rain catchment tanks I only recommend for cooking/washing. In the night, when your gaze wanders over the ocean straight to the East, you wonder if it is distant land that you see because of the many lights far away. It's not Pemba Island, it's fishermen! Oh, fish! Did I already tell you about the food?! Holy banana! Yeah, I probably have so I won't go into details here.

    I hope that by now your heart hurts as much as mine =)
    Merry Christmas!
    Michi, der
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  • Serious sewing

    29 de dezembro de 2020, Tanzânia ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    I'm still hanging out in Mambo. Why? Don't know. Around Christmas we had wonderful guests here! In general it is quite difficult to leave because permanently nice people are leaving and new awesome ones are arriving. So, how to break free from this evil circle?

    The past two days I spent with two sewing projects. In Mambo downtown I found incredibly patterned Tanzanian cotton fabric, bought it and tried to turn it into new bed sheets. My initial Spannbettlaken torpedoed the whole concept of easily accessible stowage and fridge underneath the mattress which consists of single pieces designed for this very purpose. Thus I wanted to get rid of it and to use individual sheets instead which additionally fit tighter than the wishy-washy Spannbettlaken. The new pattern turns everyone’s brain into chutney for sure. Mission accomplished. After I built improved mosquito nets for my side windows in Dar already, the second sewing project on my list was a big net covering the whole rear door opening. Especially down in the hot and humid valleys and at the coast this will bring valuable, bug-free sleeping air into the car at night. Yippie-ya-yeah, Schweinemücken! The German Tüll was not enough but has been successfully fused with a piece of Janni-Banni’s white mosquito net from Ecuador. An elastic, circumferential rubber band helps applying the final construct by simply sliding if over the thick back door seal when the door is open. Thanks for the somewhat 10 old Singer and high quality Chinese sewing machines here at Mambo View Point I can also report this mission as completed.
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  • Route planning

    30 de dezembro de 2020, Tanzânia ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

    Nobody wants to join my trip and I am lazy arranging a new Covid test for Kenya. PCR stupidity at its best: Kenya likes to refuse Tanzanian test results because they don’t trust their labs. Wonderful. Let’s see how I manage this challenge without loosing too much valuable time. I am already very, very grumpy because today’s whole daylight is wasted for Kenya’s e-visa application procedure. What a cumbersome system, far from what our beloved bullshit buzzword “digitalisation” might have ever promised. Allegedly, starting from 1st January there are no on-arrival visas issued at the borders any more. It is going to be the end of the world if all visitors have now to solely use this immature online thing :pLeia mais

  • Pare mountains

    1 de janeiro de 2021, Tanzânia ⋅ 🌧 24 °C

    For so many months I have looked over to South Pare Mountains from the Usambars. They were part of every sundowner and now I finally manage to enter them while taking some back roads towards Kenya. My visa has already been issued on the same day of application (30th). That was fast!
    They are just around the corner but Pare feel very differently than Usambaras. I climb up to Bombo and drop William - a local hitch hiker - there. The view back on Usambaras is spectacular with a severe thunderstorm approaching from the West. The path upwards is extraordinarily fulfilling: steep, narrow, muddy, rocky with low range gears required. I am just about to think "Man, how tricky!" when I see a huge bus in front of me managing this same "heavy shit" with solely rear axle drive. The people up here look differntly and speak some other slang. That's very funny! Also fewer Islamic influence up here. I don't spot any single mosque but some Catholic parishes. Bombo seems to be some kind of boys' heaven having a damn lot of pretty women walking around. I don't know how many times I am about to say "hello" to the ditch ... :-D
    I take my time enjoying the view. There are no suitable camping spots discoverable and I ask in a church for a small lawn to park the car. They give me a ginger beer and send me further down the road to the church in Mpepera which would have even offered a great view into the western valley, was it not that I arrive just after sunset.
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