“Walking each other home”summary of GAdventures tours

Since March 2020, it has been in the planning to once again try travel, when safe to do so.  Tours booked and cancelled, postponed and replanned … zooms to talk about ideas and possible dates, some common ground for friends and travel club members alike to set intentions and try to venture out in the big travel world again. 

Why do we have the urge to travel?  What compels us to experience the big wide world and its creatures and people, cultures and food … and experience the washroom facilities!  Why do we wish to meet others and travel together…. What about us wants to call the big global world ‘home’?  

For me, often my bigger vision, is to contribute to women holding hands around the world, to support one another, to talk about the state of global affairs for women everywhere, to support women serving agencies so they can prosper and help women to find more empowerment.  Walking each other home, even the unseen women … even those I know very well.  How can I best lend my support every day in each experience to contribute to a peaceful and successful outcome for women?

Over the past 6 months I have been travelling again, as you can see from this blog.  First Europe for a short trip to Rome, a 7 night Oceania cruise to Athens and few day stay in Greece and Italy, finishing up with a 7 night stay local living Sorrento on Amalfi Coast, GAdventures tour at the agritourismo.  I like to refer to it as the lemon farm.  The mom of this family is the chef at the agritourismo.  Luigi, her son, and Valentina, the daughter work with tourists to ensure the stay is memorable for all the right reasons.  

The tour started out with 16 of us guests (friends and women travel club gals) on the cruise ship, and then people went on their way to their various other travel destinations.  

GAdventures is a great Canadian small tour company to travel with.  We come together as guests, sometimes barely, or not at all, knowing other travellers … meeting up for adventure, sometimes uncomfortable pushes outside of our comfort zone.  Sometimes an easy day of rest or sitting all day in a safari vehicle or bus.  

Most recently I have done two tours in Africa. Both GAdventures. One as an agent, one as a guest.  As an agent, I travelled solo and met up with a fabulous agent colleague who resides in Quebec.  We have never met before but became fast close friends and roommates.  I would travel with Manon anywhere anytime.  A kindred and fun spirit.  The tour: Kruger in Depth.  We met in Johannesburg and from there travelled to Kruger National Park for several safari days and enjoyed many wildlife experiences up close and personal.  Many photos taken and exciting safari moments, my first ever of this variety.  Seeking and finding the big five and including countless other creatures like zebra, elephant, cheetah, giraffe, leopard, buffalo, hippo, rhinoceros, wild exotic birds, lion, vultures and more.  

As a guest, I travelled with some friends and travel club members on a safari adventure that was a lot more physically challenging.  The women from Victoria, BC Canada (5 of us in total) met in Tanzania for 4 nights pre-tour in Stone Town in Zanzibar to relax, recharge from various travel experiences and enjoy some beach time before we head out on land safari in Kenya and Uganda (16 days East Africa in Depth). I had received a recommendation from the previous GAdventures guide to contact a business woman named Eliza.  Happy to do business with a woman in tourism.  We walked around town, we ventured to Prison Island and saw the giant tortoises.  I loved the blue safari, where we spent the day on a dhow (small sailing vessel-boat) and swam and snorkelled.  And Eliza helped us get a transfer to the airport to fly to Nairobi on our last day.  Giving business to a woman in this country in this way, a good thing.  

The first 8 of the 16 day GAdventures tour was set in Kenya and we did safari at three different national parks.  We had excellent guiding and drivers.  One activity was at a women’s center given a chance to support women to make a sustainable living in tourism.  I loved the quilting and fabric crafts we saw.  I made a small purchase and loved walking around and touching the creations and finished products.  

The second part of the 16 day tour was in Uganda, with many activities including trekking chimps and gorillas in National Parks.  In Rwanda on the last day of the tour we had lunch in a woman’s personal home, having paid for the service and food through our GAdventures payment.  Also we attended the genocide memorial museum in Kigali, the capital city of Rwanda.  This was a powerful and unforgettable community activity.  We also stopped at a women’s centre and had time to do some shopping and make purchases to take back home, supporting women craftspeople and skilled artisans to make a sustainable living with tourism.

Last day, last tour, last two of us women travelling together in Kigali, Rwanda to the airport to begin our trek home to Victoria Canada.  Once again, walking each other home, making sure we arrive both safe and with some comfort at having a travel buddy to share time and stories with.  

It is what I love about the Women’s Travel Club and the GAdventures style of travel.  We share the experiences, we personally grow in ways not visible to the other, we support and try to help each other to not feel so alone in the world when on adventure.  

In each and every journey this year, from my individual meditation experiences to the last flight home from Africa and the stories of genocide and discrimination …. We offer tolerance, patience, kindness and care as we indeed walk each other back home.  Thanks for being here to witness my journey.

I will be back with more travel stories one day, for now, some rest and comfort back home as I ease back to routine.  As I relax into the privilege that is my life.  Time to process and to evaluate what next for me in my life.  Time with family and friends,  catching up with work …. And always walking forward as best I can.

For now, 

As always, 

Pamela signing off from travels …..  thanks for the support.

Road to Rwanda

Last evening I struggled to post on blog or photos. 

The days trek was epic in every way … pushing farther out of my comfort zone and with my travel buddies who did the same.  Somehow bonded more by the extreme exertion and then the close encounter with this magnificent gorilla family.  We had a big “base camp” of support, tracked, guides, porters and each other to cheer us and help us reach the goal and then an hour with the gorillas.  Then the trek out again and back to the camp.  Showered, exhausted, adrenaline returns to normal baseline.  I went to the reception area to try to post pics and this blog.

And then my right ankle quit working. I remember twisting it yesterday on the hike to gorillas. This was a delayed reaction, painful and I had to hobble using walking sticks and help. The hotel brought me hot water in a thermos and a cloth to ease my suffering before bed. Also they had a lovely hot water bottle in the bed which I kept on my ankle all night. Although tender, I am able to walk this morning. 

The last day in Uganda. The last day on tour. 

On the road and packed by 645 this morning. 

Driving through the beautiful terraced mountains on dirt roads for at least an hour. Snapping photos and waving to children. Then paved road, through small towns setting up for markets, people on bikes, motorcycles and by foot. Often carrying large items such as containers of water, loads of sticks and farm produce. 

We lost an hour for time zone. It’s now 945 am. Driving now on our North American side of the road. Slower speed limit. Cameras control giving speeding ticket. Country is wealthy, people are poor. Election every 7 years. 

Used to be three tribes then genocide – we will go to memorial today. Now no differentiation between tribes. Uganda not same problem because 56 tribes. Hard for one tribe to rise above others. 

Tea plantation we drive through. Bycicles as taxis. And some carrying large metal milk containers balanced on back. No rumble strips on road, more cameras and high fines for speeding. 

Gorillas can be found and visited in 3 countries Rwanda Uganda. Congo. Rwanda charges $1500, Uganda $700 and Congo $200.  

The vegetation and agriculture changes as we drive. More trees. Groves of bamboo. It’s beautiful. Growing rice in fields. 

1115 arrive Kigali city. Busses. Traffic. 3 languages. French. English. Rwanda. We are going to Genocide Memorial museum. 

7 April l994 over million Tutsi murdered under horrific circumstances in 3 months, killed.  Www.Kgm.rw    Although graphic and detailed in horrific stories and details, this is such a moving memorial and incredibly well done. Tears of grief are flowing.  I won’t ever forget.

We went for lunch at a local woman’s home in Kigali, Rwanda.  Fabulous food and she made me separate pots of food to ensure no cross contamination.  Thanks Paul for arranging this.

Then the Nyamirambo Women’s Center (celebrating 25 years of empowering women).  Beautiful shop and we wanted to help by making purchases.  Following this, we were dropped at our final destination on this tour, Kigali View Hotel.  They were not ready for us but we made it work. We said goodbye to some travel mates who are going on to other destinations.  

Later in the evening I had a cry again as a few of us talked about our experience at the memorial.

Today, packing up and heading to the airport for the long flights and onward to Canada!

Thanks for following 

Pamela signing off from Africa

Bwindi, the gorilla trek, Uganda

Greeted in morning by mist covering trees outside our warm comfortable lodge dwelling 

We gather our belongings for the day ahead, gorilla trek.  I have never done anything like this before …. What does one take on such an adventure?  Water, tuck in pant legs so ants do not crawl up your leg and bite …. Neutral colors, bug spray, a hat to keep bugs off head, pack sack, money for the guide, porter and trackers, lunch, good walking shoes or boots, long sleeve shirt.  Oh, and we are requested to wear masks to protect the gorillas and us … when we meet them later today.  Walking poles …

Drive in our vans …. up up on nearly completely washed out roads of red sand and mud.  Past very small villages, children, adults, walking to work?  Working in their yards … riding motorcycles to get to work.  Up up and more up.

We get to the briefing / Gathering area. As we are Waiting, we are greeted by local indigenous folks, mostly women, who dance and sing to entertain us all. Enthusiastically they dance. We applaud. Apparently they do this each morning. Visiting People offer tips. Since this place was made a protected area, they have started this activity for the tourists every single day (for tips). Very uplifting and energy building ! 

How many are we? Chairs are full. Guides, trackers, porters are gathered around doing official tasks for their day with us. A few young gals. Maybe 5 rows of 15 chairs per row. 8 tours today ….

Now we wait for further instructions. The park is approximately 321 sq Kms. Open since 1993. Over 300 bird species. Chimpanzees and gorilla live here.  

You can check out the App: “my gorilla family”. Is about Bwindi gorilla families that live here.  

This is the Mountain gorilla Conservation area. World unesco site. 1683 mtn gorilla in total. Half live here in bwindi. 

These gorillas share 98.4 %  dna with humans…our cousins. We agree we will take and wear mask. Our gorilla family name is Tinda tine. This name Means fearless. 

Back to the lodge, exhausted after about six hours of trekking and walking and climbing, and stretching, and falling, slipping, climbing more …. Using walking poles.  I hired a Porter to carry my pack and more importantly to help me walk on the slippery mountain slopes.  Lucky me, a woman walked up to me and offered to be hired by me to help her, a young mom, lovely, competent and strong.  Our guide was the head guide, a complicated name … he said we could call him expert. He was the expert!  There were three trackers that stay with gorilla family all day and help us when we have the sixty minute of time within the family.  

The scenery here is so beautiful…. The pictures barely do it justice but it is amazing.  More comments later…. 

Tomorrow Rwanda and then my trek home begins.  

Love to you all,  Pamela in Africa

Drive to Bwindi impenetrable NP (means the forest is too thick, eyes can’t see through).  Uganda 

Already, elephants and sunrise brighten my morning as I leave this place, Simba Safari Camp. Safari journeys of the last month are over…. Almost. 

As we drive along on the roadway through Queen Elizabeth park, we spy a few waterbuck.  Then LIONS!!  Mom with 4 very small cubs. We stop. Taking pictures. Looking through binoculars. And see a second female lioness. They are on the move. 7 of them are counted.  Closer to us. We move.  They move.  We sit.  They sit.  Buffalo walk through.  They watch. Two babies, 1 month old run out of bush.  There is a few older cubs, one with a limp.  The little tiny ones frolicking in the grass.  Very sweet moment captured together. Lions, some with collar so they can be tracked.  Community may poison them (reasons of revenge for killing the animals on their farms) so numbers do not increase naturally.  Lions migrate to Congo and back.  

Another herd of elephants in the tall grass eating from acacia… with a small young one with them. We drive on.

Mongoose on side of the road, we slow down. More elephants walking on straight line.  Toward the village … for their garden. 

Stop at Kyambura for a view picture down of the valley and national park. Nyunga crater lake from eruption 1000 years ago. 

Baboons alongside of road. People stopped to view chimpanzees. Tea plantations. 

Lunch stop :). 

Off road about 4 pm. Up. Up

Goats. Other domestic animals, the view, the sun, the trees, the reddish dirt road, beautiful greenery, local people, women carrying loads on their head dressed in color.  Motorcycles, kids in school uniform, goats on leashes, cows, eating alongside the road.  Chickens. Fences. Terraced mountainside. Sheep. Children.  Trees, rocks that have slid down the mountainside.  In spots there’s not much to drive on.  We keep going, through villages, by fallen trees, clusters of goats, tea planted in terraces on the mountain. Pigs. Cows. Goats. Young children tending them.

Twice a week it rains hard here. Evidence in the deep  ditches in the roads. 

Sweet young smiley faces and waving hands of children as we drive by.  The adults don’t seem to notice or care much.

There are people, mostly young women and school aged children that I see, breaking larger rocks into smaller 1 to 2 inch rock cubes and stacking them.  Apparently a truck will come by to gather the smaller broken rocks.  If their pile is selected, they will get paid.  At some point they will receive some money for the work. 

According to our guide, every day there are people coming here to see the gorillas. He adds that 95% of the people who come to Uganda do so to see the gorillas.

We arrive at Gorilla Valley Lodge is our next accommodation for two nights for the purpose of gorilla trekking. For some on our tour, the reason if this trip.

Kazinga river boat cruise

Channel joins lake Edward and lake George 

2 Male Elephants on shore. Yellow billed storks. 2 water buffalo laying in water. 

Tide kingfisher birds. 

African bush Elephant good swimmers. Can go 50kms. Travels horizontally to get to river, he is in front of steep slope. 3.5 to 4.5 meters high. Cools body with ears. Tusks large and grow up. Good sense of smell. Bigger than forest elephants. 

Yellow weaver birds – colourful are male

Hippos. 5000 in QE park. Along boat ride will see a lot of them. Aquatic during day, land at night. In water 16 of 24 hours to stay cool. Can go under 3-5 minutes. No sweat glands. Bigger is male. A school of hippos, pod or herd or bloat of hippos. Eat only grass. Cow, bull and calf. Same called elephant and buffalo.  Honking. Albino is pink color. Drink 25 litre water in day. Territorial in water. Solitary on land.  Don’t interact with other school. One dominant male. If he loses, he will be separated   If more than 100 in school, called district.  

Elephant eat 18 hours a day. 3 course meals. 300 km of grass per day.  Way more water in day.  

Nile Crocodile up to 2 meters. Live 70-100 years. Eats stone to keep it on bottom. Can go 2 years with no food. Typically eat fish. 

Nile Monitor Lizard on rock. Forked tongue. Live 30 years. Tail is 50 x length of body. 

Hadada ibis bird in tree. African fish eagle in tree. Palm nut Vulture also in acacia tree. 

Lion and hyenas becoming extinct. Being poisoned by communities 

Big 5 are most challenging animals to track down by foot. 

Rhino extinct in Uganda. 

Small bervis monkey and baby in a tree

Fish do well here feeding on poop of hippopotamus 

Purple heron. 

Fabulous optional activity offered in this area. Seeing wildlife from the river channel. Amazing. Pics to follow 

Last safari drive, Uganda

Elephants in the wee morning hours at dawn.  

We overnighted at Simba Safari Camp.  Beautiful accommodations.  Thank you GAdventures.  Nets over the beds, full glass windows and doors to the pool area, private bathroom, huge walk-in shower, electricity.

On morning safari drive by 630 am to start our day.  A few mosquitoes and a fantastic view of the sunrise.  

A herd of elephants as the sun rises. We are not even at the gate to the park yet, driving down the highway with park on both sides of us, glistening in the bright sun.  Munching on thorny acacia trees. Babes, moms, big herd leaders. Wow.  What a moment.  We take lots of time to enjoy them. 

It’s 8 am and we are now off road    Uganda kob in the tall golden grass.  Family of warthog.  Few family group Mangoon running group. They eat snake. 

Red neck Franklin bird. Have red legs and beaks. Run on road. They can fly but are ground birds. 

Beautiful grasses and trees, shrubs and cactus. Wow. Waterbuck females are Lions least favourite food. They produce toxins when stressed. Also thick hair as they go in water …. If lion can eat anything else they will.  

leopard can only kill what can lift up tree 

Eating popcorn in the van. Standing up in the pop up top. 

Bastardy bird and wrap wing. Black headed weaver birds. Hippopotamus waddling by. 

We stop at 10 am for a break, stretch, walk around tourist stuff (tshirts, hats, carvings of hippos and giraffe) and use facilities. Some sample the local food, egg omelet wrapped in chipati. Inside chopped raw onion and tomatoes. I can smell the ingredients in the heat. 

Safari Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda (first day). A leopard!

It is 4 pm. I hope to see my favourite Africa animals, elephants, giraffes and zebra. I also love the birds.  It is not the same as all other parks.  We will see some of my faves but not all.  

Heading out to the park for our first safari here.  But first a stop for water and explanation at the Uganda Equator.  Onward we go into the large park.  We have our safari clothes and bug spray on … a hat and other protection from the sun and mosquitoes here.  The park is on both sides of the highway … we start to see animals within the park… we pull over, then back in traffic. 

We first see waterbucks grazing. Uganda Kob are national animal (Antelope family).  Impala are a bit smaller than Kob. Female Lion with cubs in the grass. Elephant group way off in distance. Pumba, warthog. Crested eagle atop tree.

We stopped at the gate.  Then enter the park and begin to drove on reddish dirt road …. Where others are watching a leopard in the tree, tail hanging down.  My camera not good enough at this distance and Gail’s just quit.  We watch with the naked eye. Back leg moves, head moves. He gets up. Lays back down. Watching from his perch. One leg on one side of branch one on the other. Through binoculars he looks so close. Fantastic. Beautiful. My first sighting. We won’t see giraffes or zebra in this park. This is a highlight sighting for sure.  The big five complete for me on this trip.  

Red neck spurfowl is a ground bird crossed the road.

Another bird on road African Wattled Lapwing. 

Off road now. Big buffaloes. Warthog. Waterbuck. While racing to see a lion close to the road we zipped by the leopard and one of the fellow guests spied the leopard now on a rock mound, no longer up the tree.  Resting.  The sun is going down …. What a beautiful sight!  Others stop to see what we are seeing.  

Large Herd of water buffalo 

Out of the park at sunset. The uncommon bush buck. 

Herd of elephants by the road in dark just after dusk. Amazing finish to today’s safari 

Uganda, Simba Safari Lodge, Queen Elizabeth National Park

Hello and back on wifi while in restaurant but photos won’t upload. I think it is 12 Sep 2023. 

We left Kluges Guest Lodge this morning after two nights in nice tents with full beds but shared bathroom so walked to shower and toilets. Some ants were annoying. Beautiful gardens and flowers and trees on site. Did a guided nature walking tour on day of arrival. Overnight listening to the rain and sounds of the night. I will post photos on Facebook when I can.

I stayed on site yesterday and enjoyed the pool, enjoying the flowers, trees, birdsong and other noises. …and sat in lodge lounge listening to the rain and chatting with other guests and the owners. I enjoyed the relaxing downtime and sounds of the birds and wildlife. 

Ok. We arrived at Simba Safari Lodge around lunch time. I had a quick swim. Our shared room is lovely, spacious. Room is directly across from pool. 

I had a bowl of soup for lunch. Food is great so far. 

We are here for two nights and will be on Safari this evening. I think also all day tomorrow… we will eat at a different site. The Queen Elizabeth National Park is huge, second largest in Uganda. We will find some wildlife. Maybe elephant and ??  Not likely lion or other cats which are more camera shy. That’s ok with me. We will see what nature provides us. 

Paul is a very accomplished guide and knowledgeable person from Uganda. He used to be a teacher in public schools on Ugandan history. For past years has been guiding with GAdventures. The CEO guides working with G are exceptional and I highly recommend this Canadian company that give’s wonderful opportunities to local people in destination. Yay for GAdventures!!

Kluge’s Guest House, Uganda

It sounds small … I had no expectations of this place.  As we drove the last leg from Kampala, we travelled several kms on muddy washed out road that seemed like a vey long alley.  Past homes, animals, trees, people with young children waving so hard their whole bodies were waving ha ha.  It seems so friendly and they look delighted to see us.

A few signs along the drive indicate it must be a major place … then we arrive.  Long driveway with a secure gate.  We park, are greeted with a fruit beverage and our rooms have been arranged.  Tents in the campsite are spacious, I can stand easily, two beds in each, a night stand between, large zipper windows and doors, with a tin roof overhead.  A chair each and some woven mats on the floor.  The only inconvenience is the toilet and showers are shared but not too far away.  

The grounds are like walking through a garden …. the restaurant, the permanent buildings, cottages and guest houses are very well kept and painted a coral colour. There is a swimming pool that I look forward to trying out.  

We drop our packs in our room and head out for an hour and half hosted nature walk to see some plants, birds and monkeys that are unique to this area.  We saw it all. And got bit by a few ants …. Plentiful little fellas that apparently climb up your skin and pinch.  The guide pinched them off my skin and no longer term consequences noted …. Keep walking, ha ha, don’t stand still!  

Lots of photos, a beautiful place.  Seems I can receive some emails but no texts or Facebook or messenger and I can’t send anything.  Argh.  I upgraded my iPhone and iwatch but otherwise, I keep writing and hoping for wifi one day again so I can post.  

A meeting with our two CEO guides explaining the rules, outline the itinerary, each person introduces themselves.  Next …..Dinner, was prepared for me especially to be consistent and careful with my food needs.  

A peaceful night listening to sounds of the sky with rain showers and birds or insects or wildlife or all of  these?  all foreign sounds but interesting from my tent.   i decide to take the next day off and rest here.  That decision gives me some peace.  I am missing my home.  missing my comforts and contact with family.  i am ready to be done and heading back to my life and home.  a week to go.

going to have a swim and relax, maybe walk and read ?  I wonder what this day will bring? stay present and notice.

Wifi will only let me email. No Facebook. No messenger. No text. Argh. I will keep trying

Love Pamela in Africa

LATER. It’s tomorrow now and we are ready to leave this garden home. I talked to other guests, I swam for an hour, I wrote and read some regards to my life / work / family plans going forward. 

The owner from Germany bought the land 33 years ago, built all that we see, gardens, trees, buildings . With his wife who is from here. 

It is so welcoming and beautiful in lush greenery, trees and flowers. A nice place for a down day. 

I talked to owner for an hour or two. Also with a young man who has been motorcycling with small tent from the Netherlands for the past 1.5 years. He sold everything he owns. He has a dream to do guiding on motorcycles in Africa. Very interesting young man. 

I talked to a guy about my age traveling for many years with a Land Cruiser with tent on top for sleeping. It looks amazing rig and a free life. He is a grandfather and keeps in touch with Facebook. 

In high levels women are encouraged to participate but in local communities women remain seen as property. We talked about residential school legacy. 

Queen Elizabeth national park. 1968sqkm. 13 villages in and border the park. Lake George in it. Only in Uganda. 25% of country is covered with water. Hippos. Elephant. Buffalo use the lake. Second largest park in Uganda. Some surrounded by electric wire fencing to prevent animals from going on road. 

Uganda day 1, GAdventures, East Africa in Depth

Arthur and Paul are two ceo / drivers. Arthur is our driver today and we will switch it up as we go. Paul is the senior CEO with more than 15 years experience doing this Classic tour, the 18 to 30 something groups and the National Geographic Journeys.  He used to be a school teacher and left that for this choice in his work. Arthur has been doing the work for 5 years, also very experienced.  

I asked a few questions about Uganda as Arthur is from here in this area. 

In Uganda, there are 52 tribes who speak a total of

47 languages – most speak one common language   English. Swahili. Ugandan are common to most  

Built on kingdoms. Now one country 

745 am departure. Stopped first at ATM so people can get Uganda shillings for next two days. We will stop every two days to replenish. 

At first view, in the city of Kampala, the ground and area seems cleaner. Definitely still Africa and the use of speed bumps, rumble strips. This is very effective to prevent speeding in traffic area including school zones and pedestrians crossing 

Last night was a wedding in our hotel / forest lodge. The stay was one night, rooms were unique, clean and really enjoyable. Nice single beds with private washrooms and nets over the beds.  

The currency here is hard to figure out and changes from country to country.  $50 usd = 18500 shillings 

$1 = 3500 shillings approximately 

Uganda has very fluctuating weather. Been hot but getting cooler. The rainy season has started they say.  We have had a few big rains but not continuous.  

I notice the sign says 300 Kms to Fort Portal where we will stay.  The only place in Uganda with an English name.  

On our drive we spy Maribu stork. Fish or meat they eat. They are a very large bird, a bit looking like a vulture.  They can be seen on the ground or on tops of trees.

Black headed weaver birds are tiny creatures that build those nests we have seen hanging from branches in the trees.

In this country the big crops include coffee. Tea. Bananas. Corn. Sugar cane. (Some rice but not in this part of the country) Matoke green bananas are a staple, they are eaten mashed and cooked …. Used for cooking, everyday. Cassava root is also a staple, we see it sold along side of the road.  The locals eat fresh foods only. Every day they slaughter cows or goats and the meat is cut and sold.  There are larger butcher shops and then people come to purchase from them and sell in local small village shops.

This country is lush and we see all manner of exotic trees and plants along the way.  Bamboo. Eucalyptus trees. Plants and flowers are colourful and plentiful.  Mahogany trees. Mango. Papyrus along swamp. To make thatched type roofs and also used in weaving.

Coffee is personal so everyone grows it for own use. And also it is grown on larger plantations and exported. Tea also grown more for export. We pass many tea plantations.  I have learned a lot about tea production in East Africa.

We travel through Rural areas and see many cows and goats on rope leash   Grazing along roadway (where the grazing is free because that shoulder area along the roads cannot be purchased or built upon.  Sometimes it is a bit treacherous ensuring we don’t hit any who are not leashed and wander across the road.  The folks who tend the animals are pretty good about keeping them corralled together and out of harms way.

I spy a fellow driving a motorcycle. Strapped across so the full length of the bed frame is visible to oncoming traffic … he is transporting full size bed. Loaded on top arewhat looks like all of his belongings. Balanced. Oh vey!   Motorcycles are used as taxi and delivery here. 

Market stalls colourful in some small villages. It’s weekend Saturday. Busy busy with masses of people, colourful items for sale, animals, children, moms with babes strapped on their backs and baskets balanced on their heads.  Mostly we see the women dressed in what we might call evening wear, fancy velvets, modern styles, hair done in braid extensions with the younger adult women.  The older women with scarves circling their heads, usually from colourful fabrics.

Mounds of red mud we ask about …. Some large and some about half that size.  The smaller are usually Used for making charcoal and bigger ones are kilns. 

1962 Uganda gained independence   Land here was Founded on kingdoms. Land still divided up in kingdoms / regions. Many tribes within each kingdom. 

Kibale national park is the worlds largest park for being rich in primates – 13 kinds of monkey and baboons- is what makes it unique and only place in the world like it.  Tomorrow we are scheduled to be there for a walk to see the chimpanzee.  This park is the Home of 376 varieties of birds, types of antelope. Mostly primates are the interest for most for us. 

Thee are 10 national parks in Uganda. Murchisom falls national park is most famous and is 3000 sq km and River Nile starts here at lake Victoria and goes to Egypt. We are not going there. 

Stopped at Fort Portal for buffet lunch – I have adopted a cooked vegetarian diet while here. Yay. Tasty and safe. And easier to navigate my food needs.  The washrooms are more basic, and sometimes only the squat variety available at public stops like gas stations.

We have arrived at the peaceful Kluges guest farm. They have lodge and 10 tents are furnished and include in the tent a charging port. Shared bathroom and toilets. Opportunity to upgrade if wanted. They have a swimming pool and forest walk guided to see monkeys. I better go find the pool!  Then a nature walk, a meeting to get to know fellow guests. And dinner at 7 pm. 

Stay tuned. More later.