Posts

Water water everywhere!

Again I'm on the worlds slowest and most expensive internet. Am having an AMAZING time in Africa. Our group is lots of fun, and we've seen some beautiful places. Spent 4 nights on Zanzibar Island (off the Tanzanian coast), and it was a beach paradise. SO freaking nice, with beautiful weather and lots of drinks (and, importantly, no tents!). Spent time in the water there, as well as in Lake Malawi... 2 days there! Am having a great time. Sorry for the short emails and no pics, but know that I'm having a great time and loving every minute of my last days of travel!

Cradle of Life.... just watch your sandwich!

Hi everyone! First time on the internet in nearly 2 weeks... sorry for the delay. Am going to preface this blog with the following: 1) The internet in Africa is slow everywhere and thus no photo uploads still; 2) I am in Stone Town in Zanzibar; 3) It is 35 degrees here and very humid 4) There are only two smells present here: Gross African BO and fish rotting in the sun; 5) I am spectacularly hungover right now. So, with that in mind, this blog will be short! We left Kenya en route to Tanzania, passing by the famous Kiberia slums in Nairobi. They are home to over 1 million people... it is quite a sight to drive past and think about the people living there. Also in Kenya, we saw happy donkeys grazing in fields, thus confirming our theory about the sad Egyptian donkeys! Sorry for the point form bits, but have to catch a ferry soon. This is how Tanzania went: Saw the Olduvai Gorge, known as the "cradle of life"... a human skull dating back 1.75 million years was found here, as w

Timon and Zazu.... where are you?

Am in Kenya. Literally in the middle of the Lion King movie. I swear, I was expecting the lions we drove RIGHT up to every day to have the voice of James Earl Jones. I cannot even come close to describing how amazing the last 2 days have been. We spent them in the Masi Mara reserve, just driving around looking for wildlife. We saw so much! I had to stop myself to realize that what I was seeing was real. In 2 days, we saw: Gazelles, zebra (about 2000!), ostrich, Lion (so many! multiple prides), elephant, giraffe, buffalo, maribou stork (a scavenger.. it eats babies!), vulture, waterbuck , impala, warthog (like Pumba !), baboon, eland, antelope, hyena, cheetah, wildabeast , heartabeast (I think tour guide made that up), black rhino (very rare), hippo, and a massive crocodile! We have seen 4 out of 5 of the "Big 5" African game, as well as all cast members of the Lion King except Timon ( meerkat ) and Zazu (some strange bird that is pretty rare). We've seen babies, matin

Alex the Great-ish.

Image
The last stop on our extensive travels through Egypt was the city of Alexandria... founded and named after Alexander the Great in 332BC. This is the city where the famous "Queen of the Nile" Cleopatra also reigned. The ancient city was considered to be the intellectual capital of the world at that time, due in large part to it's massive library. The modern city was again popular in the early 1900's when foreigners came in and built some beautiful buildings. Today, the city is a bit run down.. a sad version of it's former glory. However, the library, which burnt down in ancient wars, was just rebuilt. It was GORGEOUS. The largest modern library in the world. Aunt Gale - you would have died! We spent a while wandering around there marvelling at the architecture and lamenting about how depressing our university library was in comparison (if Weldon library looked like this, I may have actually gone to it! haha). "Alex" is also known for it's great seafo

Walk like an Egyptian... and a Gypsy.

Image
Leaving the city life behind us, we left on a 4 day safari into the Sahara Desert (the Western Desert, as the Egyptians call it). It was many, many hours of long drives through absolute nothingness. Just flat lands and sand as far as the eye could see. Sometimes we drove for 6 hours without seeing another car anywhere.... just us, our three 4 WD vehicles, and our crazy driver who sported massive D&G womens sunglasses (clearly, leftover from another tourist). Along the way, we stopped at some pretty unreal places. We saw the White Desert, which had crazy calcite formations... left over from millennia ago when this area was actually at the bottom of the ocean. It was pretty surreal to think about that, and if you looked at some of the calcite, you could see coral and shell fossils. We also stopped at the Black Desert, where the underwater volcanoes from millennia past made the landscape look burnt. Our first night of the safari we stopped at a really small town (supposedly an oas

Where there's smoke, there's hotpants...

Image
Traveling by bus again, we arrived at the famous city of Luxor . Our first stop upon arrival was a visit to Karnak Temple. This is MASSIVE site that each ancient Pharaoh built upon during his (or her) reign. The site was continually expanded/added to/defaced/rebuilt for a span of 1300 years. It is the largest religious complex in the world. Our awesome guide, a local girl named Shaima , explained the long history of the temple, and how certain elements were defaced or destroyed by both political and natural forces. Like most of the ancient sites here, it was awe-inspiring to walk through these ruins and imagine them in their glory at the height of the Egyptian civilization. We also had a pretty funny moment when we were walking through the temple and spotted a European girl (French, I think) wandering around in just a tank top and hot-pant style underwear. Everywhere here, foreign women are strongly encouraged to cover knees and shoulders... and here is this girl with her entire ass

"Act Documentary"....

Image
After getting our fill of the pyramids (if that's even possible!), we traveled by bus to the beautiful city of Aswan. However, before I get into that, I have to tell you about the Egyptian men. Literally unlike anything we've experienced so far. The Chinese men just stare at you with blank or confused looks on their face. The Indian men stare at you with mostly innocent and curious smiles. The Egyptian men shout at you, follow you, and make you feel seriously uncomfortable. I swear, the word le er was invented only to describe the men here. There is no other word for their stares, except that they are leering at you. The vast majority of them have the impression that foreign women are all easy and slutty, because we don't cover our heads/arms/etc, and because their only frame of reference for us is usually Hollywood movies. It's quite crazy. I guess since they are not inclined to treat their own women too well, the men here feel it is their right to stalk you on the s