Tanzania
Sunga

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
    • Day 154

      *meow*

      May 19, 2020 in Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      Oh this cat! Around a month ago she was brought here from the other manager's home in order to catch some mice around the administration building, although being advanced in pregnancy. But directly in the beginning she disappeared and gave birth to her cubs in some hidden place. Not surprising considering the two to seven dogs strolling permanently around our premises.
      A few days after she reappeared but nobody was able to tell where the kittens were hiding. For many days we even didn't know if she still was feeding them because in our understanding she spent way too much time around the main cottage begging for food and just sleeping on a pillow. And she seemed to keep her milk. Later she got quite annoying and scavenged for days and days around the main cottage, peeked in every corner, under every part of the straw roof, meowing desperately as if in search for her babies. She also got more attached to us, demanding love and cuddles.
      We suspected that she stopped producing milk as her teats appeared to be empty. She had a favourite place under the roof where she constantly went during her searches and where I managed to crawl once but I did not find any traces of offsprings. Finally, we decided that her little ones must have been looted or that she rejected them.
      She calmed down and somehow decided to hang out most of her time with me now. Wherever I walk around the lodge, she follows me like a dog and keeps dancing between my legs so that I have to take care not to step on her or to kick her around occasionally. She likes to fall back and then, full of energy, she speeds like a cheetah, rushes up a tree next to me just to jump down again and meow at me.
      For a few days now she follows me into my cottage in the evenings and, after cleaning her coat and also licking my fur, she curls up into a warm ball of cosiness on my pillow, just between my shoulder and my ear, having no problem to stay there for 12 hours.
      Once she brought me a tick as a present and I burned it satisfyingly until it released a delightful "pff". We like each other. Apart from souvenirs from the bush she is very clean and good-smelling! She chases off any single dog or other cat and tries to disturb my telephone conferences in every manner by purring into the mic. During her most affectionate greetings she looks straight into my eyes, puts her ears to the side, her paws around my neck and attacks me by chewing and ripping on my beard and gently biting into my chin. Or is she actually trying to kill me? What a wonderful, delicate, mysterious, tiny, little creature! But, our claw-free adventure might soon be interrupted by some interesting news from the embassy ...

      Meanwhile I read some pages in "Born Free" by Joy Adamson where she describes episodes of a lioness being released into Kenya's wilderness and producing cubs there. In Joy's detailed narrations the lioness behaves quite similarly to my cat at hand - also seeming not to produce any milk during the early weeks while spending a lot of time in camp - and I have the feeling that our kitty still might be hiding her little monsters somewhere and that she's just a professional in deceiving all of us.
      Read more

    • Day 151

      Bday

      May 16, 2020 in Tanzania ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

      Means breakfast day! I get surprised in the morning with my beloved avocado eggs having two candles on top, with bean upgrade and coriander, guava juice and coffee! Everything is well cat-proof due to homeopathic doses of chili powder. All morning staff and the dogs join the visit and I start the day with sun in my face, yay!

      Meanwhile my folks far at home gathered around video conferencing tools to sing nightly Geburtstagsständchen and a warm-hearted friend of the Scotch Schölling family even composed a bagpipe song for me. Awesomeness! =)

      For lunch Jutta and Gerd from Lushoto join us. They arrived with Uwe and two Italian cyclist who also travel around the world for 6 years already. We have pizza with cheese crust and some beers in the sun. Dinner preparation is defined by a huge pierogi manufacturing chain. Yum, what a tasty day! From Dagmara I get a nice wooden carving of my Land Cruiser :-D
      Read more

    • Day 128

      Caught in the mist

      April 23, 2020 in Tanzania ⋅ 🌧 18 °C

      A week ago I arrived back home in Mambo where I moved into a tiny cottage. Every day I wake up at 0630 to glimpse in the direction of Kili but Kili is hiding most of the time and I fall asleep again. The night guard fires up the water oven after 0700 and I can enjoy a hot shower some 30 mins later. Most of the time I am covered in clouds and it is quite fresh (below 20 Celsius) with full air humidity which makes all bed sheet and things moist. Rainy season at its high tide, there is no escaping. One sunny day I had where I planted a small pine tree next to the main building.

      On sunday I was put on the waiting list of a Dutch repatriation flight to Amsterdam which is leaving today. I obviously did not get a seat and also I was very disappointed with the communication flow because the notifications have been sent yesterday where I would not have been able to get back to Dar in time anyway. Told this to the embassies on Tuesday already ...

      Two times I was asked to pull Philipp out of the mud as he got stuck with the organisation's car. That was fun! My Toyota is a tank and simply does not care about clumsy terrain. Philipp is a German volunteer working for the local NGO JamiiSawa in establishing a water board for the whole Usambara mountain region because the current situation is pretty chaotic (fucked up I would name it). He is surveying data about water sources in the forest, pipelines and about reservoirs and pumps near the villages. As destiny calles for me, I help him to bring all the geodata together in QGIS and will make another GIS warrior out of him. He did not realise yet but he is very motivated in working on his new profession :-D He studied industrial engineering in Braunschweig (lol) and is subscribed to an online master's of environmental systems in Berlin now. I am slowly soaked into the activities of JamiiSawa as well.

      We made pierogi twice and today we are working on the third badge, this time with cabbage. For lunch there is barszcz ukrainski and the next days gołąbki will complete our menu. There is no way to stop Dagmara in her business. I just got freshly baked cinnamon rolls served =)
      Read more

    • Day 103

      Pa pa!

      March 29, 2020 in 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 ...Read more

    • Day 100

      Back in time 30 million years

      March 26, 2020 in 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.
      Read more

    • Day 99

      Home office?

      March 25, 2020 in 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?
      Read more

    • Day 7

      Machete Kills Konyagi

      September 25, 2022 in Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      Heute morgen hatten wir Glück mit unserer Aussicht und konnten sogar aus der Ferne den Kilimandscharo sehen und bis nach Kenia schauen.

      Das Frühstück war super und der Muskelkater hielt sich in Grenzen sodass wir frisch und munter inklusive Machete los gingen. Am Waldesrand trafen wir den Ranger und er übergab Matze die Machete. Darauf freut es sich bereits seit Beginn der Wanderung. Das er aber die Kinder als weißer Mann mit Schwert erschreckt, war Ihm erstmal nicht bewusst 😅

      Auf dem Weg konnten wir immer mal wieder den Kilimanjaro sehen und ebenso die Grenze zu Kenia. Der Wald ähnelte sehr unseren Wäldern aber die Stille und die Luft war herrlich. Dann ging es für uns in den Dschungel und die Machete kam nun endlich zum Einsatz. Der Weg war nicht wirklich offiziell und so ging es über Stock und Stein. Das war richtig cool!

      Einige kleine Äffchen konnten wir wieder im Baum umher springen sehen aber soo richtig erkennen konnten wir sie leider nicht. Nach einigen Kilometern durch dickes Geäst haben wir einen schönen Wasserfall erreicht und machten dort eine Pause. Die Atmosphäre war super!

      Nach der Pause ging es für uns weiter durch den Dschungel und wir über querten manchen Baumstamm der als Brücke diente. Mitten im Dschungel stand nun eine Heilstätte und Dennis erklärte uns einiges dazu. Es war sehr sehr interessant.

      Im Anschluss verließen wir den Wald und Jordan sammelte uns mit dem Auto auf und es ging erstmal zurück zum Hotel. Nach dem Mittagessen machten wir eine kurze Pause und gingen dann nochmal durchs Dorf um zu einem weiteren Viewpoint zu kommen. Auf dem Weg begrüßten uns wieder viele Kinder.
      Diesmal hatten wir aber auch keine Machete dabei. 🤣

      Der Viewpoint war wie gesagt ein herausragender Fels...Für mich war das gar nichts und ich bleib an "sicherer" Stelle sitzen und wartete auf die Jungs. Aber beeindruckend sieht das ganze schon aus.

      Im Anschluss ging es für uns wieder zurück zum Hotel und wir besorgten noch Wasser für die morgige Rückfahrt. Dennis wird uns noch bis nach Arusha begleiten. 🥳

      Der heutige Abend war sooo lustig. Die Jungs haben uns eine Flasche vom Konyagi und wir stoßten auf die schönen Tage an. Dabei haben wir denen so einige witzige Dinge beigebracht, wie sie uns.

      Während Dennis morgen seine Sachen packt fahren wir nochmal zur Irente Rainbow School und werden da nochmals die Kinder besuchen, die dort leben.

      Morgen ruf ich mal durch! 😘
      Read more

    • Day 98

      Mambo

      March 24, 2020 in 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.Read more

    • Day 182

      Cancelled but hey!

      June 16, 2020 in Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

      Thank you Turkish Airlines for your professional assholiness. "Now I have the salad" with refunds. As fast and frequent as your flights pop up on your website as quickly they disappear again. The same applies for alternative connections. If yesterday an Ethiopian flight was at 2000 $, today it might appear for 518 $ and when you finally want to book half a day later it's back at 1600 $ ... or not listed at all. This whole air business seems to be implemented by 13 yo school children who cannot decide between spaghetti and pizza even though there is just French fries listed on the menu.
      But hey, I made the first prototype of Usambaran whole wheat sour dough bread!!
      Read more

    • Day 97

      Going to hell. Not.

      March 23, 2020 in 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.
      Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Sunga

    Join us:

    FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android