Rediscovering Tanganyika

December 2021 - January 2022
From here to there, simply strolling everywhere. Read more
  • 44footprints
  • 3countries
  • -days
  • 224photos
  • 5videos
  • 20.1kkilometers
  • 14.6kkilometers
  • Something is wrong here

    January 29, 2022 in the Netherlands ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

    I am missing the morning mosquitoes around my toes. And the people give bewildered looks when I thank them with "asante sana" 🤔.

  • Ups, time is over!

    January 28, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    Before switching Tanzania's hot moistness for German cold moistness I put my glorious plan of gifting my hiking shoes to Dr. Adam into action. Adam works at Haydom Hospital where I met him after my Hanang hike. He will wear my boots for his climb of Mt. Kilimanjaro!

    Shortly after having given the shoes into the hands of his friend I realise that walking around at the airport back in freezing Europe with just flip-flops might become just another adventurous undertaking ...

    Road summary
    Driven kilometres: 5638
    Police controls: plenty
    Fines paid: 0
    Bribes paid: 0
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  • Dirty cat

    January 26, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    It is still dark when we break camp to pick up our guide for this day. Woah, how wasted I am! Near the park’s headquarters we already cross ways with a lion. After collecting the guide, we choose a tricky path which nobody has driven yet this day and … wake up a leopard just next to the track. Wohooo! Without the guide we probably would not have noticed in time. We are so surprised that we forget all things around us. Camera? Binoculars? What are these? … Still, I manage to get a shot of this prettiest of all animals! In the southern part of the park another lion is dosing behind a bush without caring about us. And we wake a shy spotted hyena which quickly disappears. Obviously it didn’t like to be spotted. Sorry for all the disturbance, dear animals! We are just stupid tourists. But thank you very much for being here with us!Read more

  • Dirty Michi

    January 25, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

    We start early and rush through Dar es Salaam to Mikumi National Park. The traffic could have been worse and we are optimistic to arrive in time for a sunset game drive. It’s the perfect ride to listen to Jonas Jonasson’s audiobook “Der Massai, der in Schweden noch eine Rechnung offen hatte”. Bam! Something big hits the car’s windscreen on Sanda’s side. Arrrr! What the hell was that? No car passed us so it must have flown off from the truck in front of us. Shit. The first huge crack in my windscreen. What a nice start of our adventure 🤪

    We manage to enter the park late in the afternoon. Gathering around the huge map at the gate we get the recommendation of a route for our sunset drive from a friendly ranger. I ask about the road conditions and about potentially muddy sections but do not get a clear statement apart from a confirmation that the way back to the campsite should be drivable.

    Together with the hazy air, the low sun transforms the landscape into a mystic scenery with vaguely distinguishable hills in the distance. We drive around north-easterly with lowered windows and enjoy the fresh air. What a contrast to the coastal climate! And we made it here within one day! With approaching dusk, we turn back and take the first possible track to the campsite. It turns out to be a bad choice because of muddy stretches, getting deeper and longer the further we go in. We reverse and take the second option further south. Ups, the same situation and it starts to get dark. Not a good idea to continue. Hmm, so, those were meant to be the “drivable routes” which I asked for? Thank you for the advice! We return – nearly back to the gate – and go for the third option which is roughly the direct route to the camp. Bad road as well! I manage to cross the short section of an unfinished drainage channel (with just softly hitting the ground) but directly afterwards the car slides leftwards into deep tire holes from “someone’s previous attempt”. Bam! The car rests on a ridge with its full length from engine to rear axle and all 4 wheels are spinning freely. And it is dark. And we are in the national park. And there are all kinds of “things” around us. This must be living the overlander’s dream!

    What next? Sanda wants to mobile-call for the ranger but I want to get dirty first. Haha! Yes, digging with a shovel quickly reveals to become a project for the whole night. The infamous black cotton soil is greasy like soap where it is wet but hard like cement where it is dry. And it is rather dry everywhere around the muddy tire holes. And, when working with a headlamp in swampy surroundings, sufficient protein intake from flying biomass is guaranteed. I give in and we call for the ranger who appears in a Series 70 Land Cruiser with two scouts. Their first idea is to pull me out backwards with a chain. I protest but they seem to be very dedicated in pursuing their plan. To no success. This is definitely not material-friendly, they nearly ripped off my rear towing eye! I convince them to drive around and to retry in the front with my bungee rope instead. Bingo! After two attempts and without further damage they guide us through further deep mud and drop us at the campsite somewhere around midnight. It’s Sanda’s first time on an unfenced campsite in the middle of a national park, surrounded by all evil of her dreams, without any sight of life nor of light. Good night.
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  • Catch of the day

    January 23, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

    Here, today’s fishing villages blend nicely with former artefacts. Coral stones were the primary building material during the Arabic era and are also found on some facades of the current village houses. Sanda’s stomach rebels with the morning pancakes but she pushes for the longer eastward hiking route, yeah! The air is thick, hot and moist with strong onshore wind. The whole day we are in expectation of a thunderstorm but get burned by cloaked sun instead. We bounce around on paths full of biting ants while our guide leads us through farmland and villages where we visit several abandoned and intact deeeeep wells. It’s the first time I get to taste wild Marula fruits which are used to flavour the renowned Amarula Liqueur of South Africa. From the elevated ruins of the Palace of Husuni Kubwa we see our Dhow taxi approaching. It’s afternoon when we descend to the mangrove shore and get picked up by our sailing captain. Before departing on our relaxing ride he and our guide buy freshly caught fish from a nearby fishermen who is wading around in waist-deep water.Read more

  • Searching a gateway to Mecca

    January 23, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 29 °C

    We grab a wonderful guide, jump on an authentic Dhow sailing boat and find on Kilwa Kisiwani (Kilwa Island) what we are searching for. The first East African mosque was erected here on this very island, allegedly. Arabic ruins from different decades are intermixed with historic evidence from Portuguese colonisation activities. Most of the remnants are mosques and each ruin features at least one intact Mihrāb – a recess in the wall indicating the direction of prayer towards Mecca. The perfect playground!Read more

  • Low tides are the better tides

    January 23, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ 🌧 24 °C

    We got many recommendations for places to visit along the southern coast. The primarily used buzzword was “beach”. In fact, all ocean beaches are unique and fancy and great and wonderful and bla, but are totally different from sweet water beaches. You are very spoiled when coming from Lake Nyasa back to the coast. Probably due to the strong inshore winds during rainy season, the Tanzanian beaches along the Indian Ocean feel rough, dirty and wild whereas the lakeside beaches appear tender, soft, clean and calm. Heavy clouds, misty air, grey and diffuse sky, salty breeze and carpets of mangrove leaves. Welcome to the Indian Ocean in January, a special beauty!Read more

  • Redefinition of “home office”

    January 20, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

    We have to hurry in the morning to get from Mikindani to Lindi in time because Sanda has an important video call scheduled for 1100 and I suggested that she should be sitting at the beach with a flower in her hair for that. I think it’s the first time that we start a new day reasonably early and stick to a pre-developed plan. More or less. We arrive at 1055 at Makuti Bay Bar and Raymond the owner welcomes us warmly. Sanda sits down, opens the laptop and enjoys best internet connection via 4G while I make plans with Raymond for an enriching breakfast. Home-made bread he offers and – hold on – pan-fried, salty, smoky pork bacon! Probably the only place in Tanzania to find pork! He obtains it from a friend in Mbeya. In my opinion, Tanzania’s future prosperity lies in this trade connection. Everybody should have such a friend. Bacon for president!Read more

  • No diving with us

    January 19, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

    After two full days of driving through pouring rain we arrive at the calm south-eastern coast with less rain. Pretty good timing, huh? Still, the following wet morning Mikindani keeps us in its cosy quarters and we concentrate on our internal well-being by implementing an adequate veggie omelette processing station. This is where my previously acquired Mozzarella finally pays off. The good-looking French owner of our hostel-like accommodation runs a diving school and eagerly tries to lure us into starting a new hobby. We are strong and lazy and can withstand his charming mightiness.

    Around Mikindani town we find a restored old German boma from colonial times which is now converted into a vocational training centre, museum and luxurious guest house with beautiful botanical surroundings. It also features a pool. Sanda loves pools. I don’t see a purpose in pools. Especially not next to the ocean. And whenever I enter the pool naked, somebody screams or complains. Oceans in turn never complain.

    In the search of tasty chipsi mayai as afternoon snack we end up in Mtwara at a non-tasty chipsi beach bar with drunk locals, and ugly, loud, yodelled Tanzanian music. We survive. On the way back we stop at a traffic intersection where tons of people gather for the night food market. Hell yeah, let’s jump out of the car! It is dark and we squeeze into the masses. Flying termite swarms hatched after the recent rains and enrich our biomass conglomerate. We survive. Tiny stands offer freshly boiled octopus and squid in a rich broth flavoured with pili-pili and lime. Grilled mussels and smoked sea snails lead my way to paradise! Grilled corncobs are served with yellowish chilli salt which you scrub-in before you start nibbling. Your lips will appreciate! Colourful fruits, flamed chickens, fried somethings, sun-dried fish and stinky entrails ... we survive. In small tents some locals watch soccer and sip their evening coffee from tiny cups. Everybody is welcoming and grinning. This is Tanzania.
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