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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

SWAKOPMUND


Back to Namibia! The bus from Livingstone to Windhoek was another long journey, and the day we arrived Laura and Rhea caught their flights back home to Canada. They were great travel buddies, I was sad to see them go. I decided to head to the coast for a few days, to Swakopmund. Swakopmund is a quiet little coastal town surrounded by desert. One day I walked along the beach, crossed the highway, and entered the sand dunes just south of town, where the desert meets the sea. It was beautiful. My African journey is coming to an end, and what better than a lonesome hike through the desert to reflect on my travels...

MOSI-AO-TUNYA NATIONAL PARK


Exploring Victoria Falls from the Zambia side in Mosi-ao-Tunya National Park was incredible. We arrived mid afternoon and pretty much covered every square inch of the park. As the sun sank low in the sky we hiked back up to the Eastern Cataract, which provides an amazing view of the falls, and watched the sun go down. The park stayed open late that evening in the event of the full moon and the monthly appearance of the lunar rainbow. We stayed and watched as the moon came up and the metallic moonbow appeared over the falls, it was amazing. I tried to take a picture of it, but to no avail. The next day we packed our bags and left Victoria Falls...

BABOONS


The next day we decided to check out Victoria Falls from the Zambian side in Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park. Mosi-ao-Tunya means 'The Smoke That Thunders'! There were tons of baboons in the park. Here's a little video of a few encounters that we had...

RAINBOWS


Victoria Falls spits out rainbows left and right! All that mist from the water crashing into the gorge, and the hot African sun... it's really cool.

ZIMBABWE


Victoria Falls is huge, and since it's split between Zimbabwe and Zambia, we decided to head across the border into Zimbabwe for a day and check out Victoria Falls National Park. After a stroll along the Zambezi River we entered the park, it was awesome. The falls are amazing! Here's a little video of our adventure...

ZAMBEZI RIVER CRUISE


After some good times in Cape Town, I took off with Laura and Rhea for Victoria Falls. And after a long couple of days on the bus we arrived in Livingstone, Zambia. Victoria Falls is split between Zimbabwe and Zambia, so we decided to use Livingstone as our base and spend a few days exploring the area. On our second evening we took a sunset boat cruise on the Zambezi, just above the falls, where the river is wide and calm. It was a great evening, with a delicious BBQ and an open bar, hippos and crocodiles swimming in the river, and an amazing sunset. There were a couple of families on the boat, and a handful of kids running around, who almost provided as much entertainment with their commentary on the animals, as the animals themselves. After the boat cruise ended and we arrived back on land, we hung out at a riverside bar and danced late into the night with our new friends. Here's a little video of the boat cruise...

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

LION'S HEAD


It's rainy today here in Cape Town. But yesterday was the perfect day for a hike! Laura, Rhea, and Maria wanted to climb Table Mountain, but since I had already hiked it, I set out to conquer Lion's Head. And after Lion's Head I set out to meet them on Table Mountain...

Monday, August 16, 2010

CAPE PENINSULA


After a week of hanging out around Jeffreys Bay, I went back to Cape Town to meet up with Laura and Rhea. They had just recently finished their research in Tsumkwe, Namibia and came down to Cape Town with a couple of friends, Maria and Roshina. The day after we all met up we took a tour of the Cape Peninsula. Cape Town is amazing! I think it may be one of my favorite cities in the world, and this day trip totally reaffirmed that. We started our morning with a drive through wine country - wine and cheese and crackers for breakfast! After that we took off for the peninsula, stopping in Simon's Town for lunch and to see some penguins. Then we drove to the Cape of Good Hope, the most southwestern point on the African continent, where the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean meet. The picture on the left is of the Cape Point lighthouse, and the picture on the right is of the Cape of Good Hope. The ostrich in the picture next to us must have been the most southwestern ostrich on the African continent at the time...

JEFFREYS BAY


After a week in Cape Town I took off up the coast to meet some friends in Jeffreys Bay. It was a long ten hour bus ride, but man alive was it beautiful! The drive took us along the Garden Route, one of South Africa's most beautiful coast lines. Ten hours on a bus... I wish I could have spent ten days getting there! My friend Fungai, who I hung out with in Swaziland, has a house on the beach in Jeffreys Bay. His friends Luke and Refilwe were there, along with our friend Sheela. The five of us had a great time that weekend, zip-lining, horseback riding on the beach, and just hanging out. Everybody had jobs to go back to after the weekend ended, so they all left. I decided to stick around Jeffreys Bay for a few more days and ended up finding a nice little guesthouse perched up on a hill overlooking the beach at the end of town. Jeffreys Bay is a one of the biggest surf spots in Africa, if not the world! The pictures of the guys surfing were taken at Supertubes - Jeffreys Bay's world renowned surf spot!

ROBBEN ISLAND


I went to visit Robben Island one day - the Alcatraz of Cape Town, and the former prison that held South Africa's political prisoners during apartheid. I caught the ferry mid morning and the ride out gave way to great views of Cape Town and Table Mountain. After a short bus tour around the island, we entered the prison grounds and met our tour guide who was also an ex-political prisoner. One of the cell blocks was full of prison cells where former prisoners had come back and left a memento and a story about their experience on Robben Island. We had about ten minutes to explore this section of the prison before being quickly ushered over and past Nelson Mandela's old cell (middle picture on the top). The tour was a little too quick for my liking. I could have spent a lot more time exploring the grounds and reading about all of the prisoner's experiences. But it was worth it. Such a recent and tragic history, and how amazing to be told by someone who was there to experience it. Wow.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

TABLE MOUNTAIN


Cape Town has the amazing backdrop of Table Mountain. It's beautiful. I decided to climb to the top one day. Here's a little video.

THE CASTLE OF GOOD HOPE


The Castle of Good Hope is the oldest building in South Africa and was built by the Dutch East India Company around the mid 1600s. I decided to check it out one afternoon, it was pretty cool. Here are a few pictures I took while I was there.

SHARKS


After Swaziland, I spent a couple of days in Johannesburg, and then caught a train down to Cape Town where I met up with Sheela and her friend Klaus. The next day we went diving with great white sharks! Well, in a cage. My camera batteries died after a few minutes, but I was still able to capture a few clips from up on top of the boat. Being in the water with those things, man alive, I almost shit my wetsuit...

SWAZILAND


After Etosha National Park we left Namibia and took off for Johannesburg. And soon after that Phil and Jonah left to fly back home. Originally I had planned on heading straight to Cape Town when I got back to South Africa, but instead decided to join some friends on a weekend road trip to Swaziland. Sheela, Fungai, and Dan are all here from Harvard Business School working on summer internships, and the four of us left Joburg on a Friday evening and hit the road to Mbabane. We met our friend Jed when we got there, and his friend Paul put us up for the weekend. Friends of friends of friends! On Saturday Paul took us out to visit one of his friends, a chief, who is also the ambassador to Kuwait. Paul had just given a cow to the chief as a gift, and we were all invited out to partake in an afternoon celebration. The trip out to the chiefdom was beautiful; the two-hour drive on dirt roads took us up and over mountains, through valleys, and past small villages. It was a great tour of rural Swaziland. As soon as we arrived, the chief was quick to invite us into his home for some drinks. The picture on the bottom left is of Jed drinking homemade fermented sorghum liquor out of a big black gourd. It was tasty! And outside there was a group of young guys who were in charge of slaughtering a goat for the feast – they were excited to pose for a photo. We actually didn’t stay too long since Paul was having a barbeque back at his place, but it was a fun afternoon, and an overall great weekend in Swaziland.