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You are here: Home : Community : Travel Writers : Hard Travel In The Heart Of Africa

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Travel Writers: Hard Travel in the Heart of Africa By Scot Milroy

 


Location: Malawi via Zimbabwe and Zambia

 

Initially, we didn't plan on going to Zimbabwe but, upon finishing an overland truck tour from the Cape, we were having such a good time with our guides, we decided to follow them over to Victoria Falls Town, Zimbabwe for a few days of relaxation. A bit stop on our epic trek from Cape Town in South Africa in the far south of Africa to Cairo in Egypt in the far north-east.

Sadly, Zimbabwe is but a shell of its former pride-of-the-British-Commonwealth self. The tourists have disappeared, their money is worthless, the store shelves practically bare and the few overland trucks that come through town twice a week or so are the only thing that keep the few lodges and hotels that remain, open. The economic situation is so bleak, and the economic policy so warped, that Zimbabwe's police force, were detaining tourists and forcing them into banks to exchange all of their foreign currency at the outrageous official government exchange rate of 65 Zim Dollars for 1 US dollar. The street rate was 6000 to 1. Victoria Falls town proper has become a tourist ghost town. The people are so desperate that it was hard to witness, as the Zimbabweans that we did meet were some of the most generous people that we've met. My wife Heather's 28th birthday is an excellent example.

On the big day, we decided to go over to the Zambian side of the falls to test the strength of our wills, on Zambezi Gorge Swing, a rope swing attached to a wire strung across the gorge, a free-fall of 60 meters. Ridiculous and exhilarating.

Upon return from our escapades, we learned that the manager of the lodge was to throw a birthday party in honour of Heather and Chad, our guide. What we received was way beyond what anyone could have reasonably expected. The manager, irregardless of the hard times that they were experiencing, brought in a chef from a local 5-star hotel to cook us an elaborate traditional Zimbabwean feast that included 10 different dishes. Following the dinner, a traditional a capella group arrived to sing and dance for us (their version of The Lion Sleeps Tonight is the best we've ever heard). After the festivities ended, the manager would not hear of us giving him any money and that what we had experienced was just the usual Zimbabwean hospitality. We were utterly blown away. What incredibly hospitable people! Afterwards, we danced the night away. This day was one of the many highlights of our trip.

We headed north to Zambia, a beautiful and wild country. It was the first time that we felt like we were actually in the "dark continent". The city of Livingstone was so lush that mango trees lining every streets would dump their fruits on top of your head. A delicious but painful experience.

We checked into the reknowned Jolly Boys Lodge, run by a good-ol' hockey-loving Canadian girl, Kim, and spent a week of relaxing in the lush surroundings. Accommodation for our stay was a 1970s era camper with an interior decorated in gloriously faded hues of orange and brown. It was a psychedelic trip back in time. Our time in Livingstone was incredibly serene and uneventful but it was also time for us to get back on the road.

We headed to Lusaka which looks like as though it's in an entirely different country than Livingstone; a town that hasn't experienced a war but still has that bombed-out feel to it. The only reason we were here was to arrange transportation to Malawi where we planned to become certified scuba divers. We arrived and learned that buses going to the border with Malawi were to leave at 4 am in the morning and we needed to arrive an hour prior for boarding. We did what we were told.

Heather and I, along with our Kiwi travel partners, Jarryd and Marina, arrived at the bus station to a scene of complete chaos. Every person we asked, who looked like they worked there, had no idea which bus was going to Chipata, the last Zambian town before Malawi. Finally, an important looking man with a clip-board came towards us and began to react frantically once we told him we were there to board the 4 am bus. He desperately told us to follow him and proceeded to throw our luggage into the trunk of a waiting taxi. We suddenly learned that the bus had left early and we were going to catch it in this dilapidated taxi. Any description of Zambian roads being bad would do injustice to reality. The taxi careened after the bus for one-and-a-half hours reaching speeds of 170 kilometers per hour. Heather and I both thought that this was the end. Our bodies left splayed on the tarmac, bones picked clean by the wildlife. Finally, after a white-knuckled eternity, we caught up with the bus and after several fruitless attempts were able to physically force it to the side of the road. The ticket collectors jumped out and I showed him our tickets to make sure that the bus was going to Chipata. He said it that it was. So, now that we were on the bus, we could relax.

I awoke to our Kiwi travel partner tapping me on the shoulder. If we are supposed to be going east then the sun should logically be right in front us but now, incredulously, it was behind us. We were on the wrong bus going the wrong way. In fact we were heading to Angola, the landmine capital of the world. So, our grand tour of Zambia became a 20-hour journey on an extremely dilapidated and sweatily over-crowded local bus from Lusaka to the dodgy Angola border town of Sete and back. We arrived back in Lusaka at 11:30pm and found a taxi back to Chachacha Backpacker's Lodge.

Wade, the friendly owner, said our travel story was the best he'd heard in a long time and let us stay the night for free and even, as the bar was closing for the night, had a staff member load up a cooler of beer for us to wait out the last few hours until our bus left and didn't charge us a thing. I guess the considerable laughs we had induced at our expense must have been payment enough. Luckily, the next day we were able to minimize the prevailing confusion at the Lusaka bus terminal, catch the correct bus and make it safely to the lovely, relaxing backwater of Africa, Malawi. Finally!

 

Text © Scot Milroy, all rights reserved.

     
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