Serengeti |
I completed a 12 day safari with my driver, Lyimo. Starting and ending in Arusha, we covered Tarangire National Park, Lake Natron, north and central Serengeti, Ngorongoro Crater and Lake Manyara. No stomach upsets that a little loperamide didn't fix!
Lake Manyara Park |
Lake Manyara Park |
In the Ngorongoro Crater |
In the crater |
Sunrise on the Serengeti, still not my favorite time of day |
Serengeti |
I love gnu, except when they are gnu around my tent at night! |
This was plan A for getting to central Serengeti. We chose to go the long way |
Lake Natron |
Peaks of the rift valley, Lake Natron |
We did have one breakdown and Lyimo had an awful night trying to get our rear axle fixed. Luckily, he managed to fix the truck enough to get us (me) to our next camp, in a very remote area. He wound up hauling the axle on the back of a motorcycle taxi for 3 solid hours, on bumpy dirt roads, At night. Overnight in a village, no food, fixed axle, came back in a land cruiser taxi the next afternoon. Dirty, tired and hungry but still smiling. What a guy!
At Lake Natron I went for a 'hike' to see some waterfalls. The hike was more of a bouldering/ rock climbing event. I tried not to think of my insurance (which does not cover accidents relating to rock climbing), then decided not to worry, because for sure I would be dead if I fell, so hakuna mattata re: insurance.
The falls at Lake Natron, sans nekkid persons |
The hike |
More hiking |
Some falls on the way to 'the falls' |
Another crater. Lyimo said he almost drove into it one night ((not my safari) |
For two of our nights in the Serengeti, our tents were surrounded by a herd of gnu and fighting zebra stallions. Not much sleep to be had those nights. Lyimo still convinced me to do a pre-dawn drive. I managed not to be one of the 'danger animals' he was always warning me about.
Tarangire, baobab tree, partially gnawed by elephants |
Sausage tree, they're bigger in person… |
Tarangire |
Serengeti, Lyimo asked what the hell I was taking a picture of |
Rim of the Ngorongoro Crater, not 'no-go-ron-go' as per Lyimo |
Crazy flock of pelicans over Lake Manyara |
Ok, so Chris asked for more food descriptions, and in the conflict between an excessively long posting and the threat of Chris saying army sounding things at me, or at least squinching his pate in an aggressive manner, I have chosen appeasement.
Safari foods/ schedule
6:30 am - wake up (5:30 if planning early drive)
7 am - Breakfast: eggs, any style, usually cold or, just, odd, better with pilipili all over it, a sort of mild chili sauce. Wonderbread toast, butter, honey, odd PB. Ham bacon, beef bacon (retch), bacon bacon. Greasy sausage (nuh uh, not doing safari mystery meat). Instant coffee or tea (rarely have I had real coffee, but it is sooo good when I do get it, even with scalded milk). Fresh fruit, usually very good.
7:30 (or 6:30) am - hit the road
Morning snack: no snack
1 pm - Lunch box (for all day game drives, comes in a cardboard box, sitting at the same temperature as everything else in the truck, ie. sweaty to soupy): 1 roast chicken leg in tinfoil, complete with a few pin feathers, if one is inclined to notice such things. Butter or mayo sandwich on wonderbread. Juice box! Banana or orange. Potato something. Maybe vegetables cooked into some dough thing. Digestive cookies. 1 boiled egg. Salt. Mints. Small piece of mars bar! People who say that sugar is a drug are telling the truth, esp when one has not had any chocolate/ candy for over a month. Dopamine (endorphins?), whatever it was some good shit. Gave me a contact high right in my mouth.
For lunch, Lyimo would find a nice flat, barren patch of ground where we watched for lions from all sides and eat at the hood of the truck. Or, if at a picnic spot, we watched the monkeys rob the other tourists of their food. Or, we watched the pink & blue lizards do pushups on the rocks. Or, we were eaten alive by the most aggressive tse tse flies ever. My bum cheek/ ankles/ elbows are so itchy!
Afternoon snack: no snack, or cookies hoarded from lunch box, subsequently forgotten on dash.
5:30 pm - back at camp, hope for hot shower before dinner. Update journal, edit pictures, inspect latest rash/ bug bites. Like, right this minute, I'm pretty sure I have ant bites on two of my knuckles. How does that even happen?!
7:30 pm - Dinner: some kind of vegetable soup. I've had at least 5 versions of pumpkin soup. Some kind of fresh veg, usually a combo of avocado, cukes, tomatoes & onions with vinaigrette. Chicken or fish, chicken or fish. Occasionally pork (and what an occasion!) or cow beef (any red meat could be beef). Potatoes/ white rice/ real yams, the white kind (gag). Some kind of stewed veg. Given the absolute lack of whole grains, I ate all veg, no matter what it was. Raw onions are not veg, Dad.
Talk to Lyimo until we both crap out.
Dessert: what in God's name…? End up having tea.
Evening snack: no snack
9pm - bedtime, sleep like the dead
Books I Read Real Good!
Running Away To Home - Jennifer Wilson: pretty quick and interesting read about an American family going to live in a remote village in Croatia, very into her mom-ness. Not too many extraneous details.
Eating Animals - Jonathan Safran Foer: no, I am not going to become a vegan…or, am I?
Free Will - Sam Harris: not sure that I really 'got it'. Apparently we have no free will, but are still supposed to act morally? Short and impenetrable. Lots of long quotes from other scientist types/ papers. Maybe an aggregation of quotes in book format?
Wild - Cheryl Strayed: great, great book, regardless of the fact that it is also an Oprah book. Essentially, this woman had a melt down and went hiking by herself for 100 days. All her revelations therefrom. (plus, Oprah highlights and comments! Squee!).
Let's Pretend This Never Happened - Jenny Lawson: very funny non-fiction about this woman's crazy childhood. Snorted through the whole thing. Three words: squirrel carcass hand-puppet.
Forever War -Joe Haldeman: really good scifi, also an easy read. Not an epic.
Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad: seemed apropos, not as good as I remembered, also I think old Joe may never have been to Africa. It is never quiet in the jungle. Also, also, if the symbolism of a book is clear enough that I get it, it is too heavy handed.
Bright Sided - Barbara Ehrenreich: my favorite non-fiction author. Interesting analysis of the relentless optimism of Americans, and the consequences therefrom.
How To Be A Woman - Caitlin Moran: supposed to be 'new feminist' non-fiction. Mostly just funny and dirty things the author likes to say.
How To Live: A Life of Montaigne - Sarah Bakewell: I made it through finally! Montaigne is my kind of philosopher. This book has almost enticed me to read Montaigne's actual essays, almost…
Buddhism: The Essentials - David Tuffley: concise.