Showing posts with label Namibia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Namibia. Show all posts

10 April 2011

Suzanne and Kelly: An Ephelant Adventure

One three-man tent with two occupants for seventy three days.  Who would you pick to share that tent with?


Suzanne and Kelly.  Kelly and Suzanne.

I've tried writing this entry so many times but never could get it quite right.  I wanted to tell you how us travelers brought all our own camping supplies, but the truck provided the tents.  I wanted to tell you how each tent was named for an African animal and after your first night, that animal was both your totem and your roof for the next 73 days.  I wanted to tell you Lisa was in Lion,  Tim & Rachel in Zebra, Sam & Andy in Buffalo, Laura & Stefan in Giraffe, Carly & Kaylin in Hippo and so on and so on.  But you don't know any of these people, though they now occupy the most special of places in my heart.

So we'll stick to this:  Suzanne and I got the Elephant tent.  Her favorite African animal and our home for the next three months.  For this post, anything unrelated to Elephant is Irrelephant.

I'll try and stay focused but....

I wanted to tell you how our tent names became our nicknames. How I could call out "Hyena" and if Frances or Sarah were within earshot they would answer.  How Ewan and Jack became Warthog and Hogwart respectively.  How Jacquie and Nicole were, collectively, the Cheetah girls.  I want to tell you how early in the trip someone misspoke and called our tent Ephelant and it stuck.  If somebody called out "Ephelant!" tomorrow as I cruise the aisles of the grocery store, I'd turn and answer to it.


I wanted to tell you how each time Suzanne or I approached our tent, we'd call out  "Ephelant!" to make sure it was the right tent, to see if the other one was at home, to make sure it was okay to enter.  Privacy is in short supply with tent living, we tried our hardest to give each other a bit whenever possible, though sometimes that just meant averting our eyes.

I wanted to tell you about the intense travel schedule:  Arrive at sunset, set up the tent.  Wake at dawn, take down the tent. Set the tent up, take the tent down.  Set it up, take it down.  Set up, take down. Staying in a place for more than one night seemed like a gift.  Three nights at a campground and it was like we were putting down roots in the community.  Four nights and we all felt as if we had lived there forever.


But I digress...anything unrelated to Ephelant is Irrephelant.

I wanted to tell you that being successful tent mates means compatibility of scheduling.  What time do we need to get up in order to get our "chores" done and still make it on the truck in time for a dawn departure? Suze and I could not be more in sync; each night we'd agree without debate what time the next day's itinerary meant waking up. True, we were often awake earlier than anyone else, often ready to leave before we needed to be and often teased for being early birds ("Hey Ephelant, it's midnight, you probably wanna start taking your tent down now.")  But Suze and I shared the same desire to be squared away, the same preference for being early rather than scrambling at the last second.  Harmonious lives have been built on less.


But synced schedules are not the only thing that makes a good tent buddy.  Suze and I took to calling each other Wifey for much of the trip. So much so that if someone was looking for Suzanne and came across me, they'd ask where my wife was and vice versa. We really and truly operated as a team most of the time. Except, of course, when we didn't want to.  Even spouses need a break now and then.

I had a blister, she provided the band aid.  She needed sunscreen, I rubbed it on her back.  She had a yogurt, I got half - we shared the spoon. She had a cut, I handed over the first aid cream.  I borrowed her makeup, she borrowed my deodorant.  I didn't take out my tic tacs without passing her the box, she didn't spritz on mosquito repellent without sending a spray of it my way.  If there was a toilet at a border crossing, I handed her the paper on the way in, she squirted hand sanitizer into my palms on the way out.

When she needed a spot of courage, I got my ear pierced first so she could watch. When I got panicky climbing a giant sand dune, she sat next to me and calmed me down. Such is the stuff that Ephelants are made of.

We shared bottles of wine, chocolate bars, bags of apples and malaria meds.  We pooled our resources for groceries.  We shopped, cooked and cleaned together.  We gave each other space, we read each other's books.  We were venting partners when group living became too stressful.  We tag-teamed the exhausting negotiations necessary for any purchase of African trinkets.  We guarded each other's privacy when there were no, erm, toilet facilities.

I was the big sister she never had, she was the little sister I lacked.  We talked about boys and about our periods, we lent each other money.  We helped each other clean up after being sick and wiped away tears when they needed to come out. I snapped at her a couple times, she gave me the cold shoulder once or twice. We cried like babies when we had to say goodbye.

When photo opportunities presented themselves....


....I'd wordlessly pass my camera to Suze, pose...


...then turn around to receive her camera and snap the same shot of her.  


Thankfully we occasionally remembered to ask someone else to take a photo of the both of us. 

I wanted to tell you about daily truck life.  How the seating worked itself out each day.  About the cook-group / truck clean rota.  How shopping for cook-group duty was the worst task, how all twenty two of us chipped in to clean up after dinner, how we had to flap-dry all the dishes because dish towels aren't really feasible on a 73 day camping trip. I wanted to tell you how efficient and strategic Suzanne and I strived to be when setting up camp when there were limited resources for what seemed like unlimited people.  Eleven tents but only one pan & brush.  Two shower stalls and thirteen girls.

I wanted to tell you about the big goofy grins we kept giving each other as our safari truck sped through the savannah, our heads out of the roof, covered in a film of African dust, hair getting blown every which way, mouths full of Serengeti grit.


I wanted to tell you about all the real elephants we met. I wanted to tell you the story behind each and every picture.  I wanted to tell so much in this blog post.  Too much?

How can I tell you about Suzanne without telling you the whole story of my trip?  There's not a single part of my adventure that my wife didn't figure into somehow.  How can anything be Irrephelant when the whole damn thing was Ephelant?

-k.

p.s. I love you Suze, and am so grateful we got to share this experience.  And anything else is irrephelant.

29 January 2011

Campsite Animals

On a 73 day trip we camped at roughly 32 campsites, a handful of which were bush camps. At the regular sites, amenities ranged from nice grass and hot showers to thick red mud and a cold trickle in a bug infested stall. We never knew what we would get next. But one feature every campsite shared was animals.

Nearly every place had at least one dog. Sometimes a friendly chap like this Namibian fella, sometimes a handful of chubby big guys, looking for a free handout.

Goats were fairly common.

But only Red Chili campsite in Uganda had a giant naughty pig who pulled clean shirts down from the washing line...

...but who turned into a big mush when at the receiving end of a nice rub.

Even bush camps had their share of animals. Our first one was at the Naboth family's cow farm in Uganda. Check out the horns on these bad larrys.

Yes, I am wearing a mustache, but that's a different blog post. The kitty didn't seem to mind, and it was a treat to find a creature worthy of a cuddle.

Not every campsite animal we came across was domesticated. Our first campsite in Kenya was on the shores of Lake Naivasha and was home to some hungry hungry hippos. We could see them in the water during the daylight hours and they came out onto the banks to feed at night. Have you ever fallen asleep to the bellowing of hippos?

There was no shortage of wild mixing with tame. Semi-wild? Semi-tame? Above are zebras mixing with the camp owner's horses at Bird park in Harare, Zimbabwe.

Speaking of Bird Park, they had a whole aviary dedicated to birds of every feather. Some rescued, some bred, some slotted for release back into the wild and others destined to stay due to injury. We met rescued eagle chicks, hunting hawks, one-eyed owls and an oddball ostrich. Bird Park wasn't the only campsite dedicated to the rescue, rehab and preservation of one species. There was Snake Park in Arusha, Tanzania. I think you can guess what they specialized in.

Let's not forget the ever present monkeys. Though they were nearly as common as dogs,
I never got tired of watching them play. Above is a colobus monkey that makes a burping sound. Below are the ubiquitous blue-testicled vervet monkeys. Both in Kenya.


At Antelope Park in Zimbabwe we were lucky enough to have tame elephants roaming the
campsite. As I type the word tame I am reminded of how I was able to meet one, feed it and sit atop its back and thinking at the time, tame or not, this thing is HUGE, powerful, super cool and a little scary.

Not quite as scary and not nearly tame, we had a family of warthogs that roamed another Zim campsite. This time at Vic Falls. Momma warthog forages amongst the tents...

...while her babies take a nap.

Look how cute! A sleeping baby warthog. Awwwww.


Of course there weren't always animals to marvel over, cuddle, entertain or run way from, but there were always bugs.

-k.

p.s. I'd be remiss not to mention in at least one of these Africa blog posts that I do occasionally borrow a photo from one of my fellow travelers' facebook albums when I don't have a good enough pic of my own. Anyone interested in individual photo credits should speak to the management.

p.p.s. Since we're doing the addendum thing here, I might as well mention that most of the Africa photos and videos look much better when viewed full screen. In future posts I may insist you click on certain photos to get the full picture, so to speak. Hope you don't mind being bossed around now and then.

13 January 2011

Pick a Cat, Any Cat

Even before I donned safari duds and the moniker Kelly Africanus I loved big cats. Actually I like the small ones too. Leopard, lion, lynx or house cat - I'll take 'em all. I like to think that somewhere in an alternate universe I may even be Cat Woman. Fighting crime in a bad-ass leather jumpsuit by night, snuggling with my feline friends by day.

While not being able to decide my most beloved cat amongst the many species hardly qualifies as a crisis of personality, I did hope that my travels might help crystallize my preference and that I'd return home with a favorite cat firmly planted in my psyche. A spirit guide that could lead me on some kind of post-trip vision quest.
Or maybe just a favorite figure for a groovy new t-shirt.

Far be it from me to create a false sense of suspense but I'll tell you now that I WON'T be finishing this blog post by naming my new-found, best-loved feline. I will, however, take the opportunity to muse over the cheetah.

Here's one standing bloody-mouthed over her fresh kill on the Serengeti.

With her cubs nearby! Ack! I nearly passed out with the desire to grab one and run. So fluffy! So cute!

Cheetahs...nature's fastest, sure, we all know that. But did you know they have a penchant for flip-flops? I learned that salient fact at Cheetah Park in Namibia just prior to being let in to the compound wearing flip-flops to pet their three cheetahs. That's right people, I said PET CHEETAHS!

notice the bare feet

Cheetah Park is a family farm that moved from raising cattle to cheetah conservation over the years. They have three tame cheetahs that live with them and behave just like house cats, including the occasional tussle with their Jack Russell (gotta love a small dog with a big dog attitude.)

He (the Jack Russell) even thinks he is the guard dog. Isn't that cute?

But let's get back to cheetahs. They are, in a word, amazing.

In addition to having the world's coolest pets, Cheetah Park also rescues wild cheetahs from being killed by other farmers when one of them (the cheetahs not the farmers) has been a very bad boy and killed some livestock. The two brothers who own and operate Cheetah Park trap the cat instead and bring it back to live a relatively-close-to-wild life on their acreage. As the population density of cheetahs on their land is higher than normal and building and maintaining a collection of prey animals is cost prohibitive, these fellas take their trucks out most evenings and feed the wild bunch whatever meaty morsels they have laying around.

If you are staying at their campgrounds, for a small fee you can stand in the bed of their pickup while they toss donkey steaks at the crowd of twenty or so cheetahs that come melting out of the dusk the minute the gates open. These guys (the cheetahs, not the farmers) prowl and stalk and flow and fade in and out of the bush...following the truck, eager for dinner. As a passenger, you feel a bit like dinner and hope they don't mistake you as such. It is as unnerving as it is awe inspiring.

After the guys figure we've all had enough photo opportunities they start tossing the meat out. As each piece is thrown, a little skirmish erupts among the cats while they figure out who gets it. The winner takes his loot and runs while the rest growl and yip waiting for the next hunk. And all this is happening mere feet from where you stand in an open truck bed, drink in hand.

Oh yeah, the campsite has a bar too, it's a damn cool place. So if you ever find yourself in Namibia...drop in and see if the cheetah is your favorite cat.