Thursday, 29 December 2011

Enduring the wildwest of Africa - 29 Dec 2011

So... it's been a long week or so since our last post from Arba Minch, with some of the toughest conditions we have faced so far in this remote, harsh but beautiful part of Africa!


When leaving Arba Minch in Ethiopia we also left behind relative civilisation - from here on to where we are now (about 900km) Internet is nonexistent, mobile phone reception is dodgy at the best of times and food is pretty limited. Some places even failed the Coca-Cola test, no Coke available, which is a sign you have entered the lost world!


After Arba Minch we made our way to a small town of Konso, which wasn't the most inspiring of places. Here we realised that as we were moving farther from civilisation, prices seemed to go up accordingly for everything, including hotel rooms. We also had a hard time finding a place to eat - since trying to avoid injera there is not much else available - so we settled on scrambled egg on bread. At least the meal was made memorable by a drunk guy who wouldn't leave us alone and eventually decided to help himself to my food while I was eating!


Fortunately leaving Konso also seemed to leave all that we disliked about Ethiopia behind, from here on it was so remote that the stone-throwing kids were a faint memory. In fact we hardly saw a soul for most of each day, apart from passing through the odd village. 

After a few climbs out of Konso we found ourselves looking down over an enormous valley, with the opposing mountains in the hazy distance and flat bottom extending to the North and South. This was the start of the Omo Valley region, which I think was the highlight of Ethiopia for us. Untainted African bushveld stretched as far as the eye could see without any sign humans apart from the road we were on, and when we did come across people, it was the traditional Omo tribes people with all the traditional dress - mud caked hairdos, bear chested women and men carrying their customary AK-47 to ward off predators (animals or other tribes people!).


As beautiful as this region is, it is also harsh. We both felt constantly dehydrated from the oppressive heat and lack of drinking water available - water is available from the odd water pump or village but we found ourselves starting to reduce our intake, not knowing where the next water could be found! Tips for other cycle tourists - if you carry about 4 litres with you at all times you should be OK. Also, they are currently in the process of building a tarmac road between Konso and Woito, but this does not stretch very far out of Konso at the time of writing, however the dirt road is in fairly good condition apart from some sandy river crossings.a

After leaving Konso we also spent our first night wild camping in Ethiopia as it was the first time we could safely find a spot to camp without being noticed. Unfortunately the spot we chose was in a wetland type area which meant there were so many mosquitos and bugs we could hardly turn our headlamps on without being bombarded by flying insects, so we retreated to our tent as soon as we were finished eating our usual meal of pasta, onions, tomatoes, garlic and chilly sauce.


The following day we made our way to Turmi, and cycled through some more incredible wilderness. Initially we made good progress as the hard-pack dirt road followed the valley bottom, with the rugged mountains rising up to our right, covered in rocky outcrops, deep kloofs (ravines) and Acacia trees - we frequently saw troops of baboons crossing the road ahead and did not see people or vehicles for hours at a time.


We then had a absolutely gruelling climb (600m) over a ridge, where the road deteriorated significantly. Fortunately on bicycles it was no problem (apart from the gradient), but some parts would have been a challenge in a 4x4! We later found out that the road had only opened 3 days before after heavy rains had made it impassable for vehicles. We were so hot from the climb that when we crossed a big river just before arriving at Turmi we could not resist the urge to submerge ourselves in the cool(ish) water!


In Turmi we had the opportunity to stay in the first official campsite for a long time, which meant we could do some relaxing in the shade of trees and slowly rehydrate ourselves.


Just when we thought things could not get more remote, when we left Turmi the next morning we were surprised again. We saw even fewer signs of humans, with 360 degree views of unspoilt wilderness, dotted with brown ant colonies towering into the air. This continued almost the entire way to Omorate, the last town before crossing to Kenya. The road between Turmi and Omorate was initially OK but eventually became quite badly corrugated.

Omorate was a bit of a disappointment after the pleasantness of Turmi, with some ramshackle shops and a main road that most 4x4's would find hard to drive along! It also had the usual slimy characters loitering around which you seem to find at any border town, trying to be the middle man for absolutely anything! Probably the most interesting thing about the place is the massive iron bridge which lies, collapsed, across the Omo river. Apparently it collapsed just before completion a few years back - I wonder what the head engineer is up to these days?!


The next morning started with negotiations to get us and our bikes across the great Omo river in dugout canoes. Since the bridge is not very useful, this is the only way across the river, which we were quite happy about as it was a great experience!


From there we headed off into the Lake Turkana delta region, a wetland type area with abundant bird life quite a lot of tribes people and villages dotted around. The road through this area was nothing but a dusty jeep track, which changes course every time the delta floods and dries up again - which may explain why the distances we logged on this leg were so different to those quoted by other cycle tourists!


We passed through two Ethiopian police checkpoints who simply checked for our exit stamp on our Ethiopian visa (which we had stamped the previous day in Omorate), before entering no man's land, which was yet another unique experience - not being in a country! There was not much in no man's land to be honest and we had to cycle around a flood plane in order to relocate the road toward Kenya. When we finally spotted some signs of life it was a Kenyan military camp, where we were asked by some very friendly English speaking soldiers to see our passports - what a refreshing change!


They directed us to the Kenyan Police checkpoint another 1km or so down the road where we almost ran into some trouble. Again, the very friendly and talkative (casually dressed) policemen wanted to see our passports. But when there was no Kenyan visa inside the frowns started appearing pretty quickly! They seemed to be completely unaware of the fact (as we had feared) that South Africans travelling in Kenya for 30 days or less do not require a visa. And without radio contact or cell phone reception, there was no way they could contact their superiors to find out.


Eventually we managed to convince them to let us go, after telling them over and over how we spoke to the Kenyan ambassador in Addis Ababa, who insisted we would not have a problem at the border because the officials there would know the rules! So we were finally instructed to get them stamped in Kitale (which turns out we can't do either).


From here on it was more desolation until Todenyang mission station, where we were able to get some much needed drinking water. Up to this point the road had been sandy in parts, but we had managed to get by without much effort or pushing. But from here on things deteriorated massively, with the road becoming extremely sandy in parts. We managed to keep on our bikes most of the time but it took a lot of effort to keep rolling without getting bogged down in the thick sand! And when the sand stopped, the corrugations would start! Fortunately the view of the massive lake Turkana to our left provided some distraction from the tortuous cycling.

Eventually we got to Lorengak, a small village just off the shore of the lake where we asked the local Catholic mission if we could camp the night on their grounds. Since it was Christmas Eve, there was a big celebration planned and so we were told we were more then welcome to pitch our tent in the nearby parish compound, which would be a bit quieter. But before setting up camp we needed a wash, so we headed to a set of 4 small local dams which serve as the bathing facilities for the village. It was so refreshing to jump in for a swim, albeit with a big crown of villagers watching the "Mizungos" having their bath! And for supper we finally could add some protein to our usual pasta dish, in the form of Nile Perch - a fish found abundantly in the lake.


And then it was Christmas... we had hoped we would be somewhere where we could sit back, relax and enjoy a nice meal or two. But it was not meant to be! In fact it turned out to be one of the hardest days of cycling of our lives! The road from Lorengak to Kateboi was atrocious, a sandy jeep track the entire 72km. The plan was to cycle all the way to Kalekol, which was a slightly larger town about 100km away, but when we got to Kateboi, after about 8 hours of riding, we just could not muster up any more energy for another 30km of sand! And so we were to spend Christmas (the evening anyway) in a remote little village on the shore of Lake Turkana. It turned out to be rather pleasant however, as we were escorted by the extremely friendly and excited villagers all the way down to the Lake where we all went for a refreshing swim - it was fantastic! We were a bit hesitant about swimming in a Lake which supposedly has the highest concentration of Nile Crocs, but we were assured that they do not come to the side we were on until late evening!


Unfortunately our Xmas meal was one of our least appetising meals yet as there was only one shop open which sold pretty much nothing apart from some beef flavouring and cooking fat, which we added to our pasta and onion dish! Many thanks to Pastor George (from Uganda) and Pastor Charles who were most helpful at making us feel at home and treating us so well.


The next day held the promise of tarmac road, which was enough to get us up before light and set off on the last stretch of dirt to Kalekol. Unfortunately our expectations of this tarmac road were a bit too high! Initially it was great, but very soon it deteriorated into a state worse then most dirt roads - the problem was that in places, the tar had almost completely disappeared, with the hundreds of massive potholes merging together to form huge ditches in the road, which were all but impossible to avoid even with two wheels!


In some places the tar road was so bad that vehicles had formed a parallel road through the bush, but this would inevitably be sandy! We couldn't decide if we would rather cycle on the sandy corrugated jeep track or the pothole ridden strip of tarmac, so ended up constantly switching between the two in an effort to find the best piece of road. This road was taking its toll on us and our bikes - we were feeling utterly exhausted from days of bad roads, extreme heat, dehydration, stomach issues and minimal food (we were surviving mostly on biscuits, dough balls and warm coke during the day), and then my handlebar and pannier bag started giving up -so we had to do some emergency repairs under the shade of a thorn tree!


After another gruelling day, we finally rolled into Lodwar, a town of relative civilisation, where we immediately stopped at a restaurant to have the first cold soft drink in about a week followed by a Tusker beer, it was heavenly! Lodwar is a dust bowl of a town but at least there were a few shops to buy some good food and we could also withdraw some Kenyan Shillings from the local ATM. 


The following day was pretty similar in terms of the road condition, poor all the way to Locichar. We had been told along the way by various people about the dangers of cycling between Locichar all the way to Kitale - there have recently been numerous attacks on travellers on this stretch of road by bandits from the local tribes. So once in Locichar we asked a few more people on the situation, including a few soldiers who were passing through - their advice was clear - don't cycle, there is a definite threat of being attacked! We had hoped to avoid taking alternative transport on this trip as far as possible, but with the prospect of all our stuff being taken from us and the trip coming to a premature end, we decided to bend our rules a bit!


Fortunately there were buses scheduled to leave to Kitale that evening, so we could sit back and relax for a few hours before catching the first bus at about 7pm. One thing we were concerned about however was the safety of our bikes on the trip - we knew how rough the roads where and our bikes would no doubt we strapped on the rood of the bus with a whole load of other things on top of them - a recipe for disaster!


Not sure what to do about it, we spotted a medium sized flatbed truck outside with a crowd of people standing around trying to negotiate a spot on the back. This was perfect - we could get on the back of the truck with our bikes no problem! So after James did some masterful negotiations with the truck driver we bargained him down from 5000 Shillings to 1500 Shillings to get us and our bikes to Kitale. We were told it would be around 5 hours for the 210km journey.


Well... this turned out to be a journey from hell! The 5 hours turned into 9 hours, arriving in Kitale at 4am, and we had been battered and bruised (not to mention our bikes) trying to hang on to this truck as the driver sped along the appalling road. Most sensible drivers of any vehicle would probably not have exceeded 15km/h on this road, this guy must have been doing about 60km/h! The bumping was so rough we were bouncing off our feet completely, and in the end I developed a technique of trying to relax my body as much as possible to try to absorb the shock of the bumps. We had to totally reconfigure the way our bikes were initially tied down when we realised how much we had underestimated the bumpiness of the ride!

The truck driver seemed to get a bit more sense and slow down after we passed a big Coca-Cola truck which had just overturned - free cokes for all the onlookers! Fortunately at the end of it all our bikes came off with relatively minor damage - some damaged handlebar components, a hole in a pannier and a buckled wheel - but no broken frames as may have been the case if they had been on a bus! As for us, a compressed spine and ribs as well as a few bruises, but at least we have a good tale to tell!


So now we are recovering from it all in Kitale, which is a nice place - a big supermarket where we can stock up on decent food for a change, Internet and a decent hotel room to get some good sleep! Hopefully by the time we set off for Mt. Elgon on the Ugandan border we will be feeling a bit stronger again.


As a last word, despite the pain and suffering of it all, the last week has been a great experience, taking us through some of the most incredible places we've been to and the most friendly people too.


We will try and upload some photos but Internet is a bit slow!


Mark







Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Kitale, Kenya - 28 Dec 2011

Just a very short post to say we have finally made it to relative civilisation again in Kitale, Kenya, and we are very glad to be here!

This is starting to become a cliche in our posts, but the last week or so has been so tough! In fact I would go as far to say the toughest days of cycling of my life! However, we are both fine and well and are looking forward to some serious R&R!

A full blog is on its way where all will be told, so please stay tuned. 

Mark

Monday, 19 December 2011

Lake Abaya - Arba Minch

Just a quick post! We need to go and make some supper....Goat meat
stew! We have arrived in the scruffy town (as per Lonely Planet) of
Arba Minch which is on a spit of land between Lake Abaya and Lake
Chamo. Really great setting with the forested mountains to the west.
Still you can't get down to the lake easily.... Crocodiles apparently!
We have clocked in 500 odd km getting down here. As per our Michelin
map it should all have been tar. Well it was not. We had one
particular section of rocky dirt road that was 128km long and did not
do our behinds any good. Elsewhere you would cycle for 5km on good
tar and then the next 5km would look like a series of tanks and driven
up and down it for fun. We are headed further south tomorrow. We hope
to be at the border in three days or so. Thank you for all the
messages! Sorry for writing loads but its hard to put a month or so
of travel into three paragraphs! Stuart, Isobel is indeed amazing! I
am a really lucky guy! If we can't get an internet connection, merry
Christmas to all and a Happy New Year! JLC

Thursday, 15 December 2011

The tail end of Sudan and the hills (!) of Ethiopia!

JLC: Finally I have dragged myself away from the macchiatos and fruit smoothies to write a long overdue blog! I should have brought a laptop with me, then I could sit in the coffee shop and type. But enough excuses. We have ridden just over 1500 km since Khartoum. Much like cycling from Pretoria to Cape Town just with alot more elevation and varied scenery. And it was tough! Crikey we have been cruising since Cairo but as soon as we left Khartoum we realised we were in for a hard ride.

It took forever to get out of Khartoum and the road was bad and packed with trucks and busses intent on going as fast as possible and as close to the verge as they could. This meant that we ended up dropping off onto the rough all the time, which was not good for cracked rims! Our first night after 140km was spent in some lovely rondavels that we came across next to the road. We asked the owner if we could sleep there and he gave us a rondavel all to ourselves. After that we hit the desert road that headed east and cut through the headwind. This made cycling very difficult. It was also roasting hot, which made for slow going. We pretty much survived on fuul (mashed fava beans), bread and coca cola or pepsi. After two long and painful days on this road we hit the “agricultural centre’ of Gederef and headed south for 10 km before camping in an old quarry. Compared to the desert up north the south was quite populated and we found it difficult to find camp sites out of view of people hence the quarry was a good choice although we did have a herd of cows tramping along the edge at 6am.

We were 150km from the Ethiopian border at this point so we left super early, plugged in our ipods, put our heads down and slogged it out. The going was tough due to a bad road and the heat. The vegetation was changing however. It was becoming more African. Desert had given way to bushveld and we were in good spirits. We got to the border at 4pm. If you could call it a border that is. It was a bit ramshackle and you had to have a fixer to show you to the different border offices: security, where they checked your travel permit and alien registration; immigration, where they stamped you out; and customs, where they checked our bags for dodgy things that threaten Sudan. Our names were written in three very worn books and a total of three pages were taken up in our passports before we were allowed to cross the bridge into Ethiopia. Our fixer merely walked across the bridge. The Ethiopian side was different. Immigration actually had computers. They also had web cams and fingerprint scanners. We were not too comfortable that the Ethiopian Government now has scans of our passports, our photos and our fingerprints! Once in Ethiopia we needed to exchange some Sudanese pounds. Again our fixer got involved and we got ripped off big time. There were no other options though so we just accepted it and hoped that one day the slimey character would slip and fall off a bridge or something.

After this we decided we were not staying in the border down and decided to head a further 35km up the road to Shehedi where we got to experience small town/village hotels and the national dish Injera. The hotels are not like the ones you get in Europe. They are a simple rooms usually hired out by the hour and come with a big box of condoms. Most owners are surprised when you want to rent the room for the night. Showers (or a bucket of water) and toilets (hole in the ground) are communal and generally in a very poor state. The bedding tends to vary as well. To try and distance ourselves from the bed bugs we would sleep on top of the bedding on our camping mats and in our sleeping bags. We still got bed bug bites! I suppose you can’t complain though as the rooms cost around GBP2! We would rather have camped but the country side is so populated you would struggle to find a place to set up camp unnoticed.

Now Injera…. It’s the national dish and basically a large pancake made with a local cereal called tiff that is mixed with water and allowed to rise in the sun. It’s spongy in texture and quite sour. It usually comes with a dollop of stew on top or if it’s a fasting day some vegetables. I have had it in London before and enjoyed it and we also enjoyed our first serving in Ethiopia but as we continued up to the highlands we were forced to eat Injera for all our meals and quickly got very sick of it! Now its not an option and we learnt that debbo means bread so we tend to ask for that!

From Shehedi the road goes up and up and up and up. You go from around 600m up to 2400m over 150km and spend much of this time in your easiest gears going at a very slow average speed. We struggled to hit 100km a day at this point although frequent coffee stops (Ethiopia is the home of coffee after all) kept us going.

One of the first major towns we hit was Gonder, which is described as formally being the Camelot of Ethiopia. It’s very far from this now and would be best described as a rundown town in a dust bowl. We stupidly decided to book into a pension (cheap hotel) near the Piazza area. Our hotel room was terrible and cost a fortune compared to other places we had stayed in but we put this down to being in the ‘major’town. There were two night clubs downstairs and prostitutes everywhere. We barricaded our door as they carious people came knocking and tried to get some sleep with the help of earplugs. Tip of the day: choose your hotel based on its proximity to a nightclub/bar.

It was also in Gonder that I noticed that my petrol stove’s fuel bottle and pump had been stolen out of my pannier bag by kids who hassled us on one of the uphills. I was furious. It meant that we could not cook for ourselves unless of course we resorted to a fire or we found a local alternative which was unlikely. And now for my rant…Which would be echoed by all cyclists who have cycled through Ethiopia. The kids in Ethiopia are in a different league. Nowhere else have we experienced this sort of irritation before. Ethiopia itself is a fantastic country blessed with stunning scenery and very friendly and welcoming people. Unfortunately this is tainted by those members of the population between the ages of 5 and 14 which if you consider the demographics makes up a hefty percentage of the population. As soon as these kids see you coming they sprint to the side of the road and then with their hand’s held out start shouting “Farangi Farangi Farangi, Money Money Money, YOU YOU YOU” and then they start chasing you. We try and placate them by saying hello and waving but as soon as they realise you are not going to give them anything, the shouting becomes more high pitched and more often than not they start throwing stones at you as you go past. To make matters worse the parents do nothing about this. If you stop the kids scatter and we have done this a few times but as soon as you get on your bike the stones come again. This happens everywhere. The most you can ride is a few kilometers before it happens again. It can be one child or a pack of them. It’s the same. We have debated the cause of this. Personally I don’t think its tourists because frankly there are not many and touring cyclists are even fewer. There is, however, a very large percentage of NGO’s in Ethiopia that are experts at the “handout”. US AID, World Vision, they are all here and so are there massive land cruisers. The only vehicles in Ethiopia it seems are buses, mini bus taxis and land cruisers most of which have an NGO or UN sticker on the side. Due to decades (OK I’m not sure of the exact figure) of aid, the kids in these villages now associated a white face with a handout and cyclists are an easy target although we have heard of overlands and motorcyclists having rocks thrown at them. What this means for the future of the country is worrying to say the least but it seems that once the kids become 16 or older it stops although we had some ladies shout at us who were definitely in their 20s! We just had to accept that this was part of Ethiopia and try and ignore not. Easy at times but when you are sweating up a hill, 10 kids shouting at you does very little to help your anger management.

In Gonder, I decided I wanted my stove back so the next day we headed back to the spot we thought we had been robbed with a hand drawn picture of the fuel bottle. We approached a group of teenagers with the picture and after much gesturing one of the guys clicked and with promise of a reward returned the bottle. I nearly wrung his neck but had keep in mind that it was not him that stole it. It was probably his younger brother.

With the fuel bottle safely inside the main pannier we headed to Bahir Dar. This took us two days of cycling during which we had a few major climbs and got a few glimpses of Lake Tana. Ethiopians refer to Bahir Dar as their French Riviera and we have to admit it was very nice. We had planned to stay here a few days to wait for our new rims to arrive from the UK so checked into a hotel and dived into pizzas, burgers and pasta and the local restaurants. Loads of the local beer, St George, was also consumed. We also took a bus along a really bad road to see the Blue Nile Falls which were fantastic.

Our rims, together with some bike spares and luxuries such as a chocolate, sweets, toilet paper and new phone for mark, arrived after much arguing over import tax (50%!) and we spent a good while rebuilding our new wheels. Luckily the spokes SJS Cycles in the UK sent were the perfect fit and after 3 or 4 hours we had super tough rear wheels. Not bad for first time wheelbuilders. We should have gone for these rims in the UK rather than Mavic French rims. It would have saved us GBP400! Lesson learnt! Tip to future touring cyclists. Do not buy Mavic rims. They cannot handle it. Go for Rigida.

Wheels built it was off to Addis Ababa which was 565 km away. We thought we could do it in four days but it ended up being four and half. The whole of each day was spent on the bike and involved crawling up hill after hill after hill. Maybe I should not be calling them hills because all of these climbs were far bigger than anything in the Surrey Hills. Mountains is better. Our longest day was 142km and we were finished after this. Every other day was just over 100km and getting off the bike at the end of the day was something we both enjoyed immensely. Bodies and legs were so tired and we went to bed wondering if we would be able to ride the next day. Inevitably our pace slowed as we got closer to Addis and none more so after the biggest obstacle of the trip so far, the Blue Nile Gorge. We had done 70km in the morning before we hit the town of Degen, which is on the lip of the Gorge. From there you descend 20km and 1200m on a really bad road, which may as well be dirt to a bridge over the Blue Nile. The heat at the bottom was a massive shock. Temperatures in the highlands rarely exceed 30 degrees but down here it was like a furnace. My watch registered 38 degree with no wind. From there it was a 22 km climb out of the Gorge with a height gain of 1300m. The road is tar luckily although there are some dirt sections and it winds its way up the gorge forever. We had read reports that it would take at least 4 hours. We are proud to say we did it in 2 hours 50 minutes but I have never felt so wrecked when we got to the top. We had both hit the wall big time and it would have been a lot worse if we had not come across a lady selling coke halfway and the Tesco marshmallows Jo and slipped into our new rim package. We found a hotel at the top of the hill and quickly hit a few shops (read shack) to buy some food. We could not afford eating at a “restaurant” as we had struggled to withdrawal money in Bahir Dar and thus had to survive on GBP30 between the two of us for 4.5 days. This was easy if you stayed in the cheapest brothels, sorry I mean hotels, and cooked for yourself. We were able to have an awesome pasta with tomatoes, onions, garlic, peppers and even some goat/sheep meat bought from a man with a carcass hanging in his shack for less than GBP1.

From this point it was 1.5 days of riding to Addis and it hurt. We stupidly expected it to be flat or at least downhill. It was not and each day had a series of massive climbs as well as an uncountable number of smaller ones to hurt us and play with our sense of humour. I always remember Hano Otto (Adventure Race organizer in SA) saying you must bring your sense of humour with you. We did not lose ours but we came close. On this section we hit our highest altitude, which was just over 3000m. It’s like cycling on the top of the Drakensberg.

Our last day was only 80km but it felt like 200. By 1pm we were in Addis. One final climb had us on a ridge overlooking the chaos. I don’t like cycling into African cities. They are generally chaotic but cycling into Addis was not too bad. Our target was the Piazza area and we got there quite quickly with the help of a rusty Lonely Planet map. We decided to stay at the famous Taitu Hotel, which is the oldest hotel in Addis (1896 or something). The main building is really impressive but we stayed in one of the other building which was really run down. The building is a mixture of wood and stone and I wondered whether the wood would hold our weight! It’s not quite the Hilton but the bathrooms are okay and its quite reasonable so we have enjoyed staying here. It also has wifi which has allowed calls to Isobella and Jo as wells as parents and a naughty brother in the UK. So good to be in contact with loved ones again. Magic!

We love Addis. We have gorged ourselves on pizzas, burgers, coffee, cakes and the most amazing fruit drinks you have ever seen. The fruit drink I love has banana, mango, avodcado, papaya and orange in it and you have to eat it with a spoon. Your 5 fruit a day in one glass for less than 50p. Makes you wonder how they can charge so much for an Innocent smoothie in the UK! We have spent two days here going to and chatting to the friendly guys at the Kenyan embassy, relaxing, eating and other than a few frustrating hours with Natwest to reverse some fraudulent transactions on my account we have enjoyed ourselves. We even took in some culture and went to the Ethnological Museum which we both agree is leagues ahead of the Egyptian Museum. We also spent hours walking the streets of Addis looking for supplies as well as Christmas cards…. We could not find any but an alternative is on the way!

With the legs rested we intend to head off tomorrow. Our route heads south towards the Omo Valley and Lake Turkana. Turkana is sometimes called the Jade Sea and the photos are truly amazing. Google it! It’s going to be hot though and the roads are dirt. There are also reports of warring tribes! Can’t wait! We are not sure where we are going to spending Christmas as yet. It depends on how hard the riding is but we hope it will be somewhere nice and not in a brothel. Some of the southern lakes come to mind.

We hope to find an internet café somewhere along our route but if worst comes to the worst you may hear from us in Kampala! Cell phone communication will improve once we leave Ethiopia. The Government is in charge of telecommunications here and it shows…. Until then, and as per the Italian influence, Ciao Ciao!

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

Ethiopia/Sudan photos

Photos have been uploaded for Ethiopia (so far - up to Addis Ababa) and some added to the Sudan album. Blog update coming soon!

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Addis Ababa, 6000km down! 13 Dec 2011

We have arrived in Addis Ababa after some insane cycling! The climbs have exhausted us. They never stop and once you think they can't be anymore for the day another beast looms in the distance. 
The biggest climb is out of the Blue Nile Gorge. Its 22 km, 1300m of climbing (as per my Polar) and it took us 2:50. I'm sure it's harder than Mt Ventoux but then we had fully loaded panniers and a bottle of energy drink was last seen in Rome. We could not feel our legs at the top and we were really dehydrated. Luckily we were able to buy a coke with 5km to go. 
We will post some more photos. Some have been added for Sudan. The internet connections are not great here. We are staying at the Taitu Hotel. Oldest hotel in the city and it shows. We will probably spend a day or two here to recover and sort out some admin. Full blog to follow once I can drag myself away from the delicious coffee!!
 James

Friday, 9 December 2011

2 Shiny new wheels ready to roll! 09 Dec 2011

I'm very happy to report that yesterday morning we finally received
our long awaited parcel from DHL, albeit after having to cough up an
extortionate (in our opinion) 50% in import duty!

But before diving into the wheel building, we decided to make a quick
trip out of town to see the Blue Nile Falls, which is about an hour
bus ride from Bahir Dar. Good thing we did as it was fantastic, the
falls have a close resemblance to the Victoria Falls, only on a much
smaller scale of course!

The bus ride back along the bumpy dirt road was interesting enough,
but it really got exciting when the window next to James suddenly
acquired a massive hole and we were covered in glass! It turns out
that Ethiopian children don't just throw stones at cyclists!

When we finally got back to our hotel we opened the parcel and it was
a bit like an early Christmas as Jo had packed in all sorts of extra
treats for us, which was a nice surprise (there was 3kg weight
allowance spare which needed to be used). So now we have some spare
toilet paper and an assortment of sweets and chocolate to keep the
energy levels up on the big climbs!

Then it was down to business and the wheelbuilding101 manual we had
printed out in Khartoum (thanks Malcolm) was fished out of our bags.
Fortunately the whole process went fairly smoothly and we now have
ourselves a new set of back wheels, hopefully a bit stronger then the
originals. The true test will be when we head out of Bahir Dar with
our fully loaded steeds in about 10 minutes - we will be listening for
any worrying noises!

So if everything goes to plan we should be in Addis Ababa in about 4
or 5 days. We have had a good few days rest in Bahir Dar, despite
being fairly busy sorting things out. But at least our legs should
feel a bit stronger again. A special mention to the Bahir Dar Hotel
which was a great sanctuary from the bustling activity outside - they
serve good food and beer and are well priced too!

Mark

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

Bahir Dar and the MSR stove is back in Action

We have arrived in Bahir Dar in Ethiopia! We have put in some serious miles and loads of climbing to get here. Climbs on par with anything in the Alps just there is not a nice shop selling those little French beers at the top! The bodies are tired! Ethiopia has been really scenic so far but tough. Tough in terms of the terrain but also in terms of the stone throwing kids! They even stole my stove out of my pannier when cycling up a hill! I got it back the next day though using some cash to entice the thief to give it back. We will be in Bahir Dar for a few days while we wait for our new wheel rims to arrive. DHL promised today but it seems they are still in customs in Addis. African time. I'm very surprised our current rims made it this far. We have cycled over 1000km since Khartoum on cracked rims (well since we noticed they were cracked) and they have not collapsed on us just yet. Photos and proper blog to follow soon.

Sunday, 4 December 2011

Blood, sweat and gears in the Ethiopian highlands! 04 Dec 2011

This is a very quick post just to let everyone know we have made it into Ethiopia and are presently in Gonder, not far from Lake Tana.

Since leaving Khartoum we have had some of the toughest days of riding on our trip so far, particularly since entering Ethiopia, some of the climbs are on par with the Alps, but with the African sun to spice things up! On top of that you have millions of kids shouting "YOU, YOU, YOU, YOU, MONEY" and sometimes throwing stones and grabbing your bike and bags. Usually this is no more then a bit tiring, but unfortunately today one of those cheeky kids got his greasy fingers on James' fuel bottle for the camping stove. So now we can't cook or, worse, make coffee, and the kid has an MSR fuel bottle which he probably doesn't know what to do with! Apart from that Ethiopia has been a welcome change from the dusty desert of Sudan, the scenery has steadily become more and more spectacular and it is nice to see and hear a bit of wildlife again.

As for our wheel dilemma, my lovely girlfriend Jo has been an incredible help and arranged for a new set of rims and some other spare parts to be sent by DHL to Bahir Dar, which is about 2 days cycling away. This is a big relief for us, so now we just have to get ourselves there and then build up the new wheels. So far our current rims don't seem to be deteriorating too much, so they should get us to Bahir Dar with a bit of luck.

We will hopefully have Internet in Bahir Dar and will post a more comprehensive blog about our travels since Khartoum... stay tuned!

Mark
PS we have not been able to send SMS's since entering Ethiopia (local or UK SIM), so please excuse the lack of communication.

Monday, 28 November 2011

Theme Song

A light hearted theme song for the Big Ride Africa... Work? What's that?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3Kgj6EiZtw

New photos uploaded!

We have uploaded a stack of new photos of Egypt and Sudan. Go to the
photos link. Also if you can't see the whole blog just click on the
bold Desert Rats title and it should take you to the blog site.
Thanks for all the comments. Frank glad to see you are still cycling
despite the fact that winter is on its way. Mal we have an expert
wheel builder (Simon) in our midst who is advising us on the best way
to do it... The trick is to get the rims to Addis and then get
ourselves there. We are stripping down our kit to reduce the weight
on the back wheel. Under pants have to go!

Cheers

JLC

Sunday, 27 November 2011

Desert Rats

James: As per Mark's blog we are in Khartoum getting fat on decent food but getting here across the Sahara desert was an experience that we will both remember for a long long time. We boarded the infamous Aswan to Wadi Halfa ferry on the 14th of November with a fresh visa in our passport and staked out a spot on deck. We thought we were going to miss the ferry as we only got our visas at 10 that morning and we still had to cycle the 20km to the port, but African time was on our side and once on board we still had to wait 5 hours before we set sail. The crossing of Lake Nasser was not half bad and our 2nd class ticket even came with a meal. We slept on deck with all the overlanders and few locals and whiled the hours away chatting, reading and napping.


After 24 hours we arrived at the dusty town of Wadi Halfa in Sudan. Wadi Halfa was relocated when the Aswan High Dam was built. The town does not have much going for it other than a few crusty hotels (read dirt floor with a bucket of water), some 'resturants' selling fuul (fava beans with cooking oil and lemon juice ground into a paste with a coke bottle) and flat breads and the 'Aliens Registration Office'. We being foreigners are termed Aliens and have to register and be issued with a travel permit. This is on top of the visa that is stamped in Egypt and in Wadi Halfa. The process was extremely bureacratic. We essentially went in cirlces and visited 4 different offices sometimes more than once. After an hour we had the final signature from the 'Captain', had paid another US$30 and were free to go. Not wanting to stay in Wadi Halfa, we headed out into the desert.
Simon, who we met in Aswan decided to cycle with us down to Khartoum. It was great having him with us. He has done some serious cycling touring and kept us enthralled with tons of stories and tips. We only cycled 20 km out of Wadi Halfa before we set up camp a kilometre or so off the road. Being in the middle of nowhere, with no one around, desert as far as the eye could see and a perfect starry sky was a welcome contrast to the chaos of Egypt. We were so glad to be in Sudan! From Wadi Halfa it was 400km of tar road (thanks to the Chinese) to a town called Dongola. It took us three and a bit days to get there largely thanks to the most amazing tail wind that blows in from the Med. We were flying along in excess of 30km/h most of the time. There are loads of Nubian villages along this section and we stopped in at a few to see what they were like. We even dipped our ankles in the Nile. Many of the villages had a shop and we refueled on pepsi, tea biscuits and cakes. That and fuul, flat breads and few other tinned foods was all you could get. Not exactly varied. On our first proper day of cycling we got to experience Sudanese hospitality. We stopped to buy a pepsi and were promptly invited to join some locals for lunch. It was quite an amusing lunch as our Arabic was basic at most and they could not speak English. There was loads of handwaving going on. One guy, who was a Kenyan migrant worker, did speak English and was suprised that there were white people in South Africa!


We arrived at Dongola quite late because we decided to have a bath... We came across a borehole pumping water into some fields and took the oppurtunity to scrub our smelly bodies. Till that point the only water we had come across, other than the Nile, was drinking water that the communities place in clay pots along the road for travellers to drink. Many people are wary of the water but we were drinking it untreated without a problem.

Dongola was not much. We were expecting this flashy town with shops, restuarants, fancy hotels, etc. This was not the case unfortunately. We did have a great meal here though. We met a Sudanese gentleman called Ali who had lived in Croatia for 25 years and had now returned to his home town. He insisted on buying us dinner at a local spot. The food was great and we were joined by an off duty army officer. Both were fascitinated by our trip.


Our plan from Dongola was to head across a barren section of desert to the town of Karima. Its 175 km and in a SE direction, ie across the trail wind. Not ideal. We got a head start that night and headed out to the desert. The next morning we wanted to do 100 km, camp and then do 75km to Karima. A great plan except that the lovely tailwind was now a cross wind and at times a headwind. Its was blowing a gale and sand routinely blew across the road. Trucks that drove past us were leaning to one side and so were we. Our speed went down to 6-8 km/h at times. It was awful. We had to tie our hats down and cover our faces with Buffs.


After 30 km and 4 hours we spotted a radio mast and some shade and decided to stop and rest up and hope that the wind eased later on. We were even prepared to cycle into the night if it meant less wind. We parked ourselves in the shade and had lunch and then snooze. In the afternoon two motorcyclists came past. Turned out they were South Africans (Tanya and Francois) who had ridden Chinese motor bikes up from Cape Town. They stopped to say hi and joined us for cuppa tea. A bunch of German motorcyclists we met on the ferry also stopped. They even had a dog with them who sat in a side car!


The wind did not die down. It got worse. We decided to cut our losses and spend the night at the radio tower and cycle back to Dongola and follow the nile south. Heading to Karima would take us ages and we did not have much water. Elsewhere this would have been fine as water is generally available in clay pots. On this section there is nothing but desert. And Wind! So we camped. At about 2 am I heard the sounds of someone being sick. It was Simon. Half an hour later I was doing the 100 m dash with some white gold in my hand. This continued to sunrise. We were definately heading back to Dongola now. Mark escaped the Nile Nasties this time. Lucky bugger. It was 50 km back to Dongola and it took us the whole morning. We were in a bad way and the wind was now a headwind. We arrived in Dongola weather beaten and sunburnt and in need of liquids. We hydrated on upteen cokes and decided we need to rest up for a day at least before continueing to Khartoum. We found a 'motel' of sorts were all the truckers stay for SDG30 (about GBP6) and prompty past out on some crusty, and very likely to be flee ridden, matresses.



Rest worked wonders and although our stomachs were still not right we headed south along the west bank of the nile with a large stack of tissues clipped to our panniers for emergency purposes. Headed south was great. We had the tailwind behind us we did not have to push that hard. But then the road headed SE again and the hated cross wind came back to drive us mad. It was a matter of plugging in your ipod, putting your head down and trying to avoid doing mental arithmetic on distance covered, time, distance to go. 320 km from Khartoum we left the nile and head south across the desert. This looks like a pretty barren stretch and it is. There are no villages but there are some truck stops were you can buy some limited cooldrinks and foodstuff. Also there are clay pots of water every 30-40km. This route would impossible without those pots. Just as we were looking for a camp site on this road we came across two German cyclists, Franz and Barbara. They had cycled up from Durban. We decided to camp together and the told us about their journey so far and also the cycle tours they have done. They cycled through Tibet without a permit, sneaking through check points at night. We said good bye the next day as they headed north into the headwind. We felt very sorry for them. They could only get a 14 day transit visa and did not have much time to get to Wadi Halfa. This and a headwind were not a good combination. We even suggested that if it gets really bad they can always jump on a bus. The busses on this road are this creatively decorated Chinese beast that fly down the road in excess of 120 km/h and attempt to blow you off the road with the amount of air they displaced.


The Germans had a head wind but we had a tailwind. We clocked in 178km/h that day before camping on a saddle between two koppies. One of the koppies looked like it had been a gun emplacement in years gone by. With such a big day we only had 125km to go to Khartoum. We thought it would be easy. It proved to be quite tough! The road headed SE again and along came the cross wind all the way to Khartoum. Ipods went on again and we tried to distract ourselves from the monotony of the ride and the heat. We limited our drink stops and did not eat much (we did not have much food and the stalls did not have much either) and eventually got to the 0km marker. Problem is the 0km marker is 25km outside Khartoum. Whoever's idea that was deserves a smack! The 0km mark was dusty spot next to a shanty town! We pushed on and started navigating through the 'burbs' Khartoum. There were no street signs and we relied on asking people which way to go in broken Arabic. The traffic was a bit crazy too and we had to weeve around tuk tuks, trucks, busses and the delight that is the NGO land cruiser swallowing petrol by the barrel. After an hour of this we crossed the Nile on the new bridge and got to see Khartoum. We were quite impressed. There were loads of skyscrapers including one that looked like the Gherkin in London. We were going to stay at Simon's friend Rosa's flat which is in central Khartoum. With a bit of help from the Lonely Planet we found the correct street and went off in search of food as Rosa was at an Arabic lesson. We found a cheerful spot and ate two double egg burgers each. It was heaven! So much better than fuul and flatbreads! Rosa's lesson finished and we went to her flat. It was such a relief to get there. A sanctuary out of the desert and the promise of a shower, a bed and good food. Thank you Rosa!



As Mark noted we have been in Khartoum a couple of days now which have included drinks at the UK Embassy and a party in a country where alcohol use results in 40 lashes. It was legal though as it was in diplomatic properties. Good times aside we have noticed cracks in our rear wheels under the rim tape. Not great. We are trying to order some new better rims to be sent to Addis Ababa. We just hope the current wheels will last that far. Gear failure has been a bit of a regular occurance on this trip. Gear that we bought that had great reviews and promises from manufacturers, which in reality are far from the truth has been an ongoing saga. Our pannier bags for one are falling apart and we are regulary repairing them with nuts and bolts we have to source in the local markets. I will never buy Carradice again. We should have gone for Ortliebs. Wheels are the other story. We went for super strong Mavics which have been used by other tourers and now we have had three rim failures between us. Lesson's learnt I suppose but expensive gear should be fit for purpose and not fail after 4500km of tar road riding.And today the screen of Mark's kindle broke!

On a happy note, today we got our Ethiopian visas. It was painless and took less than a day. Submit the application and pay in the morning and collect your handwritten visa in the afternoon. Now we just have to hope the wheels get us there. We intend to hit the road tomorrow or the next day depending on whether we can sort out a bike parts order. Anybody heading from London to Addis Ababa in the next 2 weeks??

Ma salama (adios!)

2 broken wheels! 27 Nov 11

James and I are currently in the famous Afra shopping mall in
Khartoum, which almost every overlander heading North has told us
about. I must say its quite strange being in a fairly modern mall
after almost 2 weeks of nothing but desert and the odd mud-brick
building! In fact the whole Khartoum experience so far has been
somewhat surreal. From Wadi Halfa all the way to Khartoum we found it
difficult to get anything other then Fuul (tinned fava beans heated up
with a (un)healthy dose of vegetable oil and some lemon juice) and
flatbread to eat. So once we got to the big city we couldn't believe
our eyes when we saw all the burger and pizza restaurants, smoothie
bars, ice-cream parlours etc. Our first pizza was so good...

We are lucky enough to be staying with Simon's (the English cyclist we
met in Aswan) friend Rosa, who is an English teacher here in Khartoum
and so we have been living a sortof ex-pat existance here the last few
days. Only a few hours after arriving on Thursday evening we were
whisked off to the British Embassy for a few beers (Smirnoff Ice
actually as they had run out of beer much to our dissapointment) where
we met a whole host of ex-pats (mostly English teachers) all lounging
around the pool area within this Fort Knox style compound.

Then it was off to a party organised by a U.S Marine in his spacious
flat in another high security villa in some leafy suburb of Khartoum,
where we met more ex-pats from various countries, as well as many
local Sudanese of the upper crust, all of whom couldn't believe we had
cycled from London.

Since then we have been keeping ourselves busy by going to a highly
entertaining Nubian wrestling match, watching a 1953 Spanish film
(with Arabic and English subtitles) at the European Film Festival, as
well as some relaxing at the flat and doing a few chores like washing
our filthy clothes.

Which brings me to the unfortunate point of our 2 broken wheels.
Yesterday James was doing a routine checkup on his bike when he
discovered cracks in his rear wheel rim on the outide (tyre) side
between the spokes. I subsequently checked mine to find I have the
same problem, although not quite as severe. So the question we both
had on our minds was, "Now what?!". The only bike shops in Khartoum
sell cheap chinese bikes with wheels that just would not fit the bill.
So we have decided our best bet to limit down time will be to order
some new rims and spokes from the UK and have them couriered to Addis
Ababa where we will have to build up the new wheels (it can't be that
had can it?) when we arrive there. The obvious problem is we have now
got about 1500km to ride on somewhat dodgy rims, so fingers crossed!

Right our 1 hour internet time is just about up, so I have to end
here. Hopefully tonight we will be able to upload some photographs and
give some details of our trip through in the desert...

Friday, 25 November 2011

Khartoum!

We are in Khartoum! Well we got here last night but were quickly
whisked off to a hush hush party that even had booze on offer...Booze
is illegal in Sudan. So today has been spent recovering! We arrived in
Sudan at Wadi Halfa last week on Tuesday after a 24 hour ferry from
Egypt. We lost no time and heading out into the desert. Camping in
the desert was amazing but 1000 or so km later we were a bit fed up
and were longing for decent food and no sand in Khartoum. Being really
sick for a few days did not help either, nor did a failed detour to a
place called Karima. But we are here now and its fantastic. Our
first important mission while we are here is to secure a Ethiopian
visa. It should not be too much of a problem but you never know. A
full blog and photos to follow soon.

Monday, 14 November 2011

On the ferry to Sudan! 14 Nov

Just a quick post to say we have made it onto the ferry! Our deck
class ticket has earned us a spot in the baking sun on the top deck
with a host of other overland travellers from Europe (mostly in 4x4s,
from switzerland, poland, germany and holland) and one other lone
cyclist Simon from the UK. There are of course all the local
passengers milling about too.

We have rigged up our tent groundsheet for about 2 square meters of
shade. You even get a meal included (luxury I say!) and it doesn,t
look too bad either, chciken, potato, flat bread, pasta and salad.
You'd struggle to find such variety in most towns in Egypt! Don,t ask
about the toilets though.

So hopefully in about 24hrs we will be sailing into Wadi Halfa, where
we will scout around town for a mud hut (aka hotel) to sleep in for
the night. Or we may just not be able to resist the urge to cycle out
into the desert and sleep under the stars!

Internet access will be pretty much non-existant for the next few days
but keep checking the blog anyway just in case!

Mark

Sunday, 13 November 2011

Aswan.... Finally!

James: We are now in Aswan after 900 odd km over seven days. The bodies are tired! We are even struggling to walk up the stairs of our minus 5 star hotel (3.5GBP per night)! The last few days have been interesting to say the least. A few days ago we spent the night in Sohag, which is on the west bank of the Nile. We found a cheap and cheerful hotel (or fondok) near the train station and managed to convince the manager that we sleep with our bikes and they should be kept in our rooms rather than outside. We also got to experience some fantastic Egyptian hospitality. This started when we stopped for supper and once we had finished our meal the owner refused to let us pay. Then a fruit seller gave us some free veg even after we tried to pay for it. After returning to the hotel we met a guy called Faizel and his brother Ahmed. They lived with their family next door to the hotel and it turned out that Faizel has a similar academic background to Mark (electronic engineering) and was interested in similar things. And he spoke fluent English. After chatting outside for a bit he invited us to his home where we met his father and enjoyed refreshments and fruit while Faizel gave us an overview of his family and his aspirations career wise. It was such a interesting evening and we were really bowled over by how welcoming Faizel and his family were. Particularly to guys with crusty beards on bicycles! We took a group photo at the end, which is in the photos section of the website.

From Sohag we planned to ride to Luxor in one day. This is about 220km and we got up super early to leave just as it got light. The first 100km were done by lunch time when we hit the town of Nag Hammadi. Normally you cross over to the east bank at this point and stick to main road but we wanted to avoid this road and the vehicle fumes (don't get me started on the toxic air in the Nile Valley!) that go with it and take the quieter west bank. This was working out well until we hit a police checkpoint. We have hit many of these before and generally we speed up and wave and even if the police do try and stop us it's usually a very lame attempt. This was different. The police rushed into the road to stop us cycling through. Once stopped the main police man, with ray bans of course, got on his phone and it was 10 minutes later when we were told to head back to Nag Hammadi and cross the river. Rather then risk an Egyptian prison we complied even though it involved a 15km detour. So now our distance for the day would be 235km. Easy on an unladen road bike. Horrific on heavily loaded tourer! Once across the river we hit another checkpoint and before we could argue we had a police escort following us. It was not so bad but they did not want us to stop for anything not even to drink. We got to a point when we were both about to "hit the wall" so we stopped to buy coke and the cop went mental at us, fingering his pistol and waving his hands about. So back on the bike it was all the way to Luxor. The road was actually quite nice. It was lined with loads of plants in flower and on another day I would have really appreciated it but in our state we only wanted to get to Luxor to eat and drink and lie down. We were counting down the km doing some hectic mental arithmetic of speed, time, average speed, etc, and worked out we were a kilometer away and the signs confirmed it. After that supposed final kilometer we hit another sign: Welcome to Luxor turn right, 4 km. We were not amused but luckily there was a bit of a downhill into down and we were able to limp in riding side saddle to give our backsides some relief. We were so glad when we finally got to Luxor. We had spent a total of 9.5 hours in the saddle and found our hotel, the Happy Land Hotel, just as it was getting dark. We both sat on the cold floor and downed a few cokes and devoured a few bags of crisps. We were knackered. Still we managed to head out that night for a beer (called Stella) and also to check out the Luxor temple. We also got hit with Starbucks like prices for the cup of instant cappuccino in the tourist area and vowed not to be wooed in by any Nescafe signs from now on!

There is alot to see in Luxor so we decided to spend the following morning doing the tourist thing. We got ourselves a taxi and headed to Valley of the Kings to explore some tombs and visit a few other sites in the area. Once all the tourists pass you by in the Valley of the Kings you really start to appreciate the place and you try to imagine what it must have been like discovering the tombs for the first time. Imagine being in Howard Carter's shoes when he discovered Tutankhamen's tomb?

With a few tombs, monuments and temples in the bag it was back on the bikes for a 110km ride to Edfou, where we stayed in the worst hotel so far, and then another 110 km to Aswan. On arrival in Aswan we headed straight to the Nile River Transport Co office to get our tickets for the ferry. Outside we met the first overlanders we had seen in Egypt. There was a crazy dutch guy with his wife crusing around in a white van, a swiss couple in a landcruiser, a guy in a massive truck and a few guys on motorcycles who had gone through Syria and been held by by guys with AK47s. We also met a cyclist from England, Simon, who was cycling from Cairo to Addis Adaba. Most had been stuck in Aswan for 10-14 days as the ferry was cancelled due to Eid. Some of their sudanese visas were also about to expire and people's patience was somewhat strained. We eventually got to speak to the main man who assured us that it won't be a problem for us to get on the ferry with our bikes we just need to sort out our own visas before we can buy a ticket. The Sudanese consulate only opened the following day (ie today 13 November, Sunday is the equivalent of Monday in Egypt) so we headed of to a hotel recommended by Simon. It was a steal at 3.5 GBP per night although you would not be putting your tour groups in there or forcing your girlfriend to stay the night there. Don't worry Isobel I won't make you stay in a place like that. Showered and fed we headed out with Simon to find some beer eventually being sold a few cans of Sakara by a shifty shop owner. We sneakily drank the drinks on a bench overlooking the Nile (you can't drink in public in Egypt) and talked about bikes, previous trips and how to do some serious stealth camping even in European cities.

Today we were at the Sudanese consulate at 8 am to be first in the queue. After a while the other overlanders arrived and we heard there had been a protest in Aswan the night before and they had wreck some shops and Nubian man had died. One of the overlanders had his windscreen smashed as he was parked nearby doing his own stealth camping. After some questions from the smartly dressed Sudanese consulate employees about why we did not apply for our visas in Cairo (it was closed!) and why we were going to Sudan, we were told to fill in the form and come back the next day (14 November) to collect the visa. And the price was only $50 rather than the $100 in Cairo, which means more beer after Sudan! If the visas are ready by 10 am as promised this will give us enough time to cycle the 17km to the Aswan High Dam port and get our tickets for the ferry and then board at lunch time. We are holding thumbs! We can't face staying in for seven days! Wish us luck. If all goes to plan we will be in Sudan on Tuesday afternoon.

Over and out until Khartoum....

,

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Day 32 - 03 Nov 11. Asyut, Egypt

As I write, James and I are chilling out in our hotel room in the
Amoun Hotel in Asyut listening to the cacophony of sounds erupting
from the city below our window. A few sounds that stand out are the
calls to prayer (I can make out at least 2 different ones at the same
time), the omni-present hooting of traffc and the horn of the train as
it rushes past on the great Nile railway line.

We were a bit apprehensive about getting here after what the locals
further North had told us ("there are bad people there" as they put
it) and what we had read on some forums (horrible city, hounded by
police etc.). But without a doubt this is the cleanest place we have
been to in Egypt so far (that doesn't mean its clean though!) and most
of the buildings are fully constructed and even painted in some cases
so it looks relatively nice. Our only gripe is that the prices for
hotels seem a bit high. The cheapest we found after doing some serious
haggling with about 4 hotel managers was E£120 (~£12/R140).

Which brings me to last nights stay in El-Minya at the Beach Hotel,
where we paid a sum total of E£60 which is more in line with our
budget. With scaffolding throughout the ground floor and reception to
hold up the roof (and all 4 stories above) it wasn't perfect but you
can't expect much for that price so we were more then happy!.

The riding since Beni Suef has been pretty tough, despite being flat
and having a tail wind! The main reason for this is me unfortunately
getting some sort of virus in Cairo(bit of fever and now a cough but
nothing serious) and then the "Nile Nasties" (no explanation
required). So needless to say I wasn't feeling my strongest. James
says I should man-up and I think he's right if I'm to make it all the
way to Cape Town.

Apart from that the scenery has been fairly constant and the people
extremely interested in us. We are both quite surprised by this as we
were expecting it further into "deepest darkest Africa" but not in
Egypt. Although we have realised that very few tourists travel through
any of the towns we have been through so far.

By far most of the interest is displayed with lots of smiling, hooting
and shouting one or more of the four English phrases most people know
i.e. "Hello", "What is your name?", "How are you?" and "Welcome!".
Unfortunately they do not understand a word when you reply to "how are
you?", but we can't complain as they still know more English then we
know Arabic. We are working on that though.

And then unfortunately there is the unwanted attention which usually
comes from children and teenagers probably bored. There is a reason
kids under 13 shouldn't drive. On two occasions we've had these guys
in their "tik-tiks" (3-wheel taxi) cruising alongside us for at least
10 mins hooting constantly with agressive shouting and hand signals.
And then when we tried ignoring them they started swerving into us and
forcing us off the road, scary stuff! We've also had a few stones
thrown our way and smacking us and our bags as we cycle past.
Apparently the Sudanese are really friendly so we are looking forward
to that!

Tomorrow is a relatively short ride to Sohag and then its a big push
to Luxor (220km).
Now we're off to find some food in town...