Sorry for the super long post, but it’s been a while…
“One of
An approximate map of our travels
These simple words from a Tanzanian guidebook, which we misquoted as “greatest journey” led us to the MV Songea, a small cargo and passenger ferry, which travels overnight down the Tanzanian side of
With nothing pre-arranged but our bus ticket, we began our travels last Saturday at 6 AM on a Scandinavian Express bus, a more reputable bus company with comfortable seats, snacks, and weird old movies playing on a screen in the front. In Mbeya, 13 hours later we found a cheap hostel (we paid about 7 dollars per room for 2 rooms between 5 people). The next day, we woke up early and reveled in the chill air of the mountain town after Dar’s humid heat. Although tour companies were closed on Sunday, we found a guide who may have ripped us off a little, but didn’t rob or injure us (although he is the first Tanzanian I’ve met to like President Bush better than Obama) and he led us up a strenuous hill to the breathtaking Ngozi Crater Lake.
The next day, we moved on to Tukuyu, an even colder town. We explored the market until a strange man followed us declaring his love for Mzungu (my white friends) and Mchina (me of course). That night, hanging out at the hotel bar, we used our new favorite defense against predatory Tanzanians—tell them us 4 women are the one man, Tony’s wives. People seem skeptical, but because some Tanzanian tribes allow polygamy, they generally ask if they can have one of us. I sometimes worry a little that he’ll actually sell me someday.
From Tukuyu, we used a legitimate tour company for a change and took a private van to
After Tukuyu, the trip transitioned to the second definition of great. To catch the ferry at
We were delighted to finally dock at
It took us two days to bus home and the last bus we took back was an appropriate end to our adventure. We got back to Dar within 13 hours, the time the journey was supposed to last (punctual buses are unbelievable in Tanzania), but we drove so fast and stopped so rarely (as we drove through towns, local vendors would run to bus trying to sell grilled corn, cookies, nuts, drinks, and fruit through the bus windows, but as they got close, we would speed on past), that I spent the journey wondering whether I was trapped in the movie, “Speed,” and fearing that we would either drive off the edge of a cliff or tip over before returning to Dar. But more or less, we made it safely back and were pleased with our adventures, but also pleased to shower and sleep in our own beds that night.
I’m glad we found the courage to take a real adventure. The farther south we went, the less nice hotels, less running water, white people, and English-speaking Tanzanians we met. It made me glad to be able to speak a little Swahili and want to learn more.
Back in Dar, school won’t start until the end of September. I keep myself pretty busy playing at the orphanage, teaching English to wood carvers at Mwenge Market, studying Kiswahili, exploring Dar…etc…but I still feel like school should be starting soon. I’m hoping that I’m learning to relax a little and live with unstructured time, and am glad I’ll have time to travel some more before classes start. We’ll probably be heading out again sometime next week to hike around the base of Mt Kilimanjaro and take a short safari.
Yeah D-Sam! Thanks for writing.
Sorry again for the extra long post.
1 comment:
Thanks Alot for the great post
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