Wednesday, June 11, 2008

How Long Has It Been???


I've gotten in the habit of beginning these posts with excuses, and I see no reason to discontinue that trend now. So, since my last entry, I opted to take an organized tour (my first in over a year of travel) up through Namibia and northern Botswana to Victoria Falls. The problem with this was several-fold. For one, it was a camping safari, so it's not as if I was in the lap of luxury with any consistent internet access. Secondly, you're herded along like desperate speed-daters in such a way that consciously impedes on your sense of freedom. So on the off-occasion when I'd actually have time to access the internet, it consisted almost entirely of A) checking my bank balance, B) organizing another tenant in my apartment, and C) rejecting Facebook "pillow fight" invitations. Long story short, I (again) apologize for the extended silence.

Let's see. UPDATES!!! From Cape Town, I went overland for 20 days with a group comprised of a bunch of mid-twenties Dutch, two German couples, an older Spanish couple, and a bunch of American college girls. Basically, it only confirmed what I think I knew all along: I drink.

Let me explain. Each night after our day's activities, the first thing I'd do is crack a bottle (or box, as the case often was) of white wine, even before our cook began preparing our meal. By 11pm, I was usually a bottle deep, and catching awkward glances from our guides. The group, however, seemed to react surprisingly favorably to my er-- dependency. In fact, one Dutch psychologist on the tour told me one night "You drink too much. But at least you are funny and enjoy life." I think that's a pretty excellent theme.

Truth is, when I spend half my morning on a tour truck, I am ready to go absolutely bananas by the time I get off. Those who have traveled with me in the past will attest to the fact that I have a near boundless amount of energy, especially when traveling. This, when coupled with time, space, and free-thought restrictions is pretty much the perfect recipe to send me into a downward spiral, in this case abetted by chenin blanc by the box.

In any case, on this tour I did the following (bulleted for indexing and brevity):

- Held a poisonous scorpion in my hand
- Watched sunset at Fish River Canyon, the third largest canyon in the world
- Saw the Namib desert, which included climbing a 200m dune at sunrise. And let me just say that it was about 10,000 times more difficult (and amazing) than it sounds.
- Also in the Namib desert:
- Saw the Dead Flats in Sossusvlei, which looks like a real-life Salvador Dali painting. Words honestly can't describe.
- Barrel-rolled down a dune for pretty much no reason
- Sandboarded (for which I have video and pics, to be posted later) and reached 72kph and threw out my hip. I am now totally committed to learning to snowboard/ski, effective immediately.
- Slept in the bush, under the most intense and intoxicating night sky I've ever imagined. Also had to scare a wild cat off the rock me and three others were sleeping on.
- Ran into some random rock festival that used the rock formations of the desert as an acoustic backdrop. Met some wacky chick from San Francisco that I could swear told me she'd been on amphetamines for three straight days without sleep. She does AIDS research for the Center of Disease Control. Nice.
- Hung out with some Himba orphans and gave helicopter rides to about 30 of them before nearly slipping a disc.
- Had the best safari experience yet at Etosha NP in Namibia. In just over an hour, at a night watering hole, a pack of six hienas came down to drink, then a black rhino who then gave way to a leopard (respect!!!!) which are nearly impossible to spot in the wild. Then two black rhinos boned before getting chased off by a fleet of about 40 elephants. It was like a National Geographic Sunday night special.
- Ate a zebra steak. It's a lot like beef, only better because it's zebra.
- Spent two days in the Okavango Delta. Spent nearly an hour flying above it at 400 feet, watching herds of elephant and buffalo from above, which was seriously incredible. Then camped for two days in the delta, which took a two hour mokoro ride through tall grass and reeds to get to.
- During these two days, I tracked elephant, zebra, and giraffe, had nuts thrown at me from treetops by vervet monkeys, played capture the flag in a field of wooded thorns, swam naked in a natural (freezing cold) pool formed by the delta and sat in a mokoro on a lake full of hippos about 30m away. All this was almost definitely something I would have been unable to arrange on my own. So, maybe organized tours aren't ALL bad...
- Went to Chobe NP and did a sunset game cruise up the Chobe river, spotting tons of elephants (they roam wild, on the side of roads and in villages in Botswana), hippos, crocodiles, and eagles. This was my favorite game drive out of about 20+ to this point, not the least of which because I could consume as much wine as I could carry.
- Saw Victoria Falls. Which is absolutely gorgeous.

I also saw first hand what a cunt Robert Mugabe can do to a once prosperous economy. I saw Vic Falls from the Zimbabwe side. There is so much I can say about how sad it was but I'll try my best to condense it here. For one thing, the store shelves are all nearly bare, because by the time a store is able to sell anything (even perishables), inflation has rendered them unable to recover their cost, so they opt not to carry anything but cigarettes, rice, and bread.

An example of how fucked their fiscal policy is, the first day I was in Vic Falls, you would divide by 800 to get the amount in Botswana Pula. The next day, you divided by 430. The whole economy operates on Pula, Rand, and USD. Unless you want to buy something in the shops, in which case you may end up with a stack of $10,000,000 Zim notes about an inch thick as change from a dollar. Everyone, and I do mean everyone, goes across the border to Zambia to get their fuel and food. And the worst part of this is... this was VICTORIA FALLS!! This is perhaps the biggest tourist destination in Africa, save for maybe the pyramids. If this is what it was like in Vic Falls, I shudder to think what the state of things is like in the villages.

This is also made worse in that Mugabe COULD have left office eight years ago, and been remembered as a great man. He had built sub-Saharan Africa's most prosperous economy, their best education system (which is why many skilled Zimbabweans are able to find work easily in South Africa, kicking off the violent protests of locals around Jo'burg and Cape Town), and blah blah blah he's a fucking cunt.

Other than all that, I also got my first ever pedicure, and before you judge me let me just say this: try it. I lost about a kilo of dead skin off my feet, and I can honestly say that now my feet are beautiful and silky smooth. I wouldn't have it any other way. Judge away, you scaly-footed fucks.

Additionally, I played, and fed and held, lion cubs yesterday. It's a little sad to see them domesticated, but I was assured they will all be released as killers into the "wild" (game parks) once they reach three years of age. In the meantime, I got to hang out with a bunch under the age of eight months. Which, I'll admit, was cooler than I thought it would be.

Lastly, I am currently in Sun City, South Africa, once again traveling on my own. I can't put into words (well, I can, but interpret this as blatant laziness) how good that feels. Anyway, Sun City is supposed to be South Africa's answer to Vegas. Well, the answer is all wrong. I've been to Vegas what, maybe 6-7 times I think? I don't ever remember walking into any casino and not finding a nightclub that oozed decadence and downright sin. In Sun City, there are no nightclubs to speak of, no strip clubs whatsoever, and in general, it's a disappointing place to spend a birthday. I mean, I'm glad I'm here, but it's not what I expected. Oh yea, and ALL the game tables close down at 2am. What is that about?!?! How am I expected to make irrational decisions prior to the 4am hour??

From here I am heading up to Gabarone (back into Botswana) to get a feel for the people around there, since I think this is a really interesting time to see Botswana, and I can't say I learned much of anything about the actual country when I was flying through the Okavango and Chobe at warp speed. After that, I go to the Kalahari for one last ditch chance to see a cheetah run (or at least see something kill something) before going back to Johannesburg, spending a couple days at the museums and in Soweto, then getting to Cape Town and ending this thing once and for all. By then, 13 months of travel will be in the books. I think that's plenty. My wallet thinks so too.


Saturday, May 17, 2008

Cape Town's Got a Hold of Me!!!!


This is another update. I've been in Cape Town now for nearly three weeks, as I just haven't been able to leave. For the past three weeks, Niels (a guy Ed and I met in Port St. Johns who has been living in Cape Town since January) and I have been strong on the scene, logging late nights and some memorable (if sometimes unbelievable) stories. One or more are bound to find themselves on here once I can concentrate on actually writing stuff for you all.

But enough excuses. I paraglided today, but inasmuch as I didn't catch any thermals (oddly similar vernacular to that which surfers use), it more or less just felt like a parachute ride. Either way though, I did have to take off and land, so anyone who wants to call me a pussy from their desk chair can pretty much just suck my ovaries.

Wow. Even I didn't see that one coming.

I'm leaving tomorrow on a 21 day overland camping tour through Namibia and Botswana, finishing in Zambia at Victoria Falls. It's the first tour I've booked in nearly a year of travel, so I guess you could say I'm getting a bit lazy. Then again, if you could see for five minutes the unbridled fervor with which I attack vodka-sodas in this country, you'd be positively awestruck.

Once in Vic Falls, I'm considering a quick 3-4 day dash into Zimbabwe to do a game drive and/or visit a nearby township before flying back to Cape Town. The move from there is to either settle down in Cape Town (a gradually increasing scenario) or head home to New York. What I love about Cape Town has a lot to do with what I love about New York, so I'll just have to see where my head is at after three weeks of camping in the bush. Certainly, I'll have plenty of time to think while traveling an average of 350 km/day on some outdated tour truck farting along at about 80 km/hr.

Ok, I need to take a nap before taking Cape Town by storm one last time (in May anyway). I'll report back.


Monday, April 28, 2008

Yikes!!! From South Africa


Updates!!!!

I'm in Cape Town after traversing the Wild Coast and Garden Route in the Jazz. Highlights are many and require about a story per town, and I'm starting to realize that I'll be catching up on stories for a long time. My sincerest apologies for that, but I assure you what the catching up will most definitely occur.

Random thoughts and updates of note:

- I suck at surfing, but I'm amazing at swallowing ocean.
- Climbing Table Mountain in Cape Town = overrated.
- Bungee jumping off the Bloukrans Bridge (biggest bridge in Africa and longest bungee in the world including a 180m freefall, reaching speeds of up to 190 km/hr ) is the SICKEST thing ever.
- What IS scary is that I wasn't scared at all.
- Cliff jumping, on the other hand, is fucking terrifying. I have logged two separate 9m jumps and a 5m. One of the 9m jumps involved waiting for a wave to come in, dodging an outcrop on the way down, and avoiding a rock upon landing. That... was scary.
- Hiked (barefoot over rocks and boulders) and swam up the coldest river I can imagine to view a gorge around Knysna.
- Then got robbed a fourth time when a thief broke into our car and stole a used pair of sneakers, change from the cupholder, and our cds. It was easily the most useless heist ever.
- A LOOOOOONG story short: Ed and I rolled out to some boys camp (think Afrikaans Jonestown) because some idiot split his head open and needed medical attention. Cops would do nothing, nearest hospital is 2+ hours away, and they are the closest I've ever come to a cult. Details forthcoming in a proper entry...
- Ostrich is DELICIOUS.
- So is warthog, even though they are awesome little badasses when they're alive.
- Crocodile tastes like a cross between chicken and balsa wood. Pass on it if given the chance.
- After seeing 1.1 million penguins in Argentina 5 years ago, I was no less excited to see about 40 on Cape Point.
- Everyone (and I do mean everyone) in South Africa smokes weed. Oddly, the visitors here don't smoke quite as much.
- South Africa is hardly Africa.

That's all for now. I have a video and pictures from the bungee that you really just have to see to believe. Unfortunately I already mailed all that home before I put it on my computer. Bad move. You'll have to wait for those.

This entry is long on detail and short on laughs. Next time, expect the opposite. In the meantime, I'm staring at least a week or two in Cape Town in the face before heading up towards Victoria Falls through Namibia and Bostwana. Africa is incredible.


Tuesday, April 15, 2008

For the Love of God

First of all, to those who thought I may have somehow jumped up to Syria betwixt Tanzania and Mozambique, let me first assure you that you might be retarded. Secondly, I am much more retarded, if only because I have about nine countries to catch everyone up on with stories, so I completely understand any and all confusion. Unfortunately, finding the internet in places like Kruger National Park is more difficult than spotting a leopard, and let me just say that I'm 90% sure that those things are imaginary.

On the other hand, I am much better at conjuring up excuses for updating this blog so irregularly. The quick and dirty update is I'm in Durban, South Africa. Recent events include a raucous week in Maputo, one in which a story is sure to find its way onto this blog; spent 5 days on safari in Kruger trying (and mostly failing) to spot anything that doesn't eat grass (lets just say I didn't see anything this interesting); nearly died on a treacherous dirt mountain pass on the way to Swaziland in a hailstorm, driving a Honda "motherfuckin" Jazz (pictured); whitewater rafted down the Usutu River in Swaziland while braving category 3 and 4 rapids; and already logged one strong night in Durban since arriving here. Ed's friend Dave took off this afternoon and now it's just Ed and me on the way to Capetown. Should be something of note to include in the meantime, not the least of which will likely involve Ed beating me over the brain with a Nubian statuette.

As for all else, I'm scheduled for a dive with tiger and zambezi sharks on Thursday, going surfing tomorrow, and generally just still bragging to all that will listen about the good times I'm having. I'm sure I'm a real pain in the ass to be around, but no more than normal. I'm still on schedule for an early June homecoming, and lets just say that if you hear of a job opening up in the meantime, please forward. Bitches be broke deez dayz.



I'll be including my traveladvisor map from now on, to show a graphical progression of my last few months of the journey before heading home. It includes all places I've been, but if you concentrate on eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, then you'll see how far I've come. Anyway, it's fun for me, and that's all that matters.