Saturday, December 31, 2016

Rabbits, Chickens, and a Man in a Royal Blue Suit

 Soap operas are the same all over the world. I’m sitting in a darkened dining room, with no other customers, drinking some Masala chai and watching television with three young servers. Every time someone cries on the TV, I ask them “now, why is she crying?!” They just laugh and give me the basics of the plot, like “it’s her relationship.” “Of course it is, I say. It is always the relationship.”

Luis and I woke up early this morning, still a little groggy but adrenalin-powered to face our first full day. We had a buffet-style breakfast at the hotel: eggs, bacon, potatoes, breads, fruit, and cereal – all standard fare for a Western breakfast – but also baked beans in a tomato sauce, root vegetables (yams and something else) and a thin wheat crepe fried in oil or butter. It was tasty and the coffee was good. Thank god for good coffee.

Out of the window I noticed a white rabbit nibbling on some grass. In true Alice-style, I jumped up and ran after it. It turns out there is an entire rabbit colony living on the hotel grounds. They get fed collard greens by the staff and allow you to get fairly close. The tiny ones are kept inside a hutch – five baby rabbits – and I stood there for a while feeding them pieces of collard. So soft! What a wonderful surprise.

After breakfast we piled into a bus with a group of hotel guests for a shopping tour and ride around Arusha town with our driver from last night, Emanuel. This group is leaving for the mountain in the morning, and Luis was able to chat with them a bit about gear and strategy. Driving around in the light, we could see the streets full of people – women walking with bunches of bananas perched on their heads, men waiting at motorcycle taxis, and workers pushing large carts with construction materials. Driving on the left side of the road is a little disconcerting, especially when it’s common for trucks, motorcycles, pedestrians, goats…to cross right in front of you at any time. (Photo below: Emanuel, our driver, on the left)


Our first stop was the Cultural Heritage Center – a compound of shops heavy on the shopping and light on the heritage. But we didn’t mind at all, as we went into store after store of fantastic and colorful handcrafted items. My favorite was the Maasai Village shop, where a woman was demonstrating beadwork. My favorite purchase there was a pair of leather strap earrings, anchored by a large metal spiral. The strap is at least ¾” wide, and fits through a woman’s pierced ear, while the metal acts as a weight to stretch the lobe.

Our second stop was a second compound of shops and demonstration areas, called Shanga. This NGO provides employment for disabled adults in crafts: glass blowing, beading and making glass beads, recycling aluminum, weaving, and sewing. Each purchase comes in a bag made on site from newspapers. I ordered a cold, refreshing pressed ginger drink with lemon in the small posh café. Apparently, George Clooney – yes that one – visited last year with Amal. Ooh.

After a bumpy but short ride through downtown Arusha, we agreed that we all wanted local food for lunch. The van pulled into the MILESTONE RESTAURANT where we were only one of two tables of mzungus (non-Africans) in the place. Emanuel introduced us to the maître-d – a compact and very dapper man in a royal blue suit. He walked us past the kitchen to show us the barbecue first before seating us. We ate “family style” a meal of soup, chicken, plantains, goat, greens, French fries and ugali

Ugali is the basic starch here (in addition to potatoes which also seem very common). It’s like a dry mound of grits, but even finer – maybe the consistency is more like powdered mashed potatoes. The technique for eating ugali consists of picking some up with your right hand – always the right hand – rolling it around to make a circle, squishing the circle, and using it to scoop up whatever stewy goodness it is served with. Several times during the meal a man delivering 4-5 live chickens in each hand walked through the patio into the other open section of the restaurant. I guess you can call this truly “farm to table.” We stared wild-eyed and immediately pulled out our cameras. It goes without saying that none of the locals batted an eye. Our "2.5 hour tour" turned into a 5 hour tour, and we all enjoyed it.


I’m going out of my way to talk to everyone I can. I’ve learned the names of all the staff that have helped me today, the Tanzanian handshake, and a bunch of Swahili words. Emanuel says I’m “chummy” and that is “what he likes about me.” J How distracting to only talk about your cameras, and surfing in Hermosa Beach, and all your past hiking experiences when you have suddenly been immersed in a completely different way of life and there is so much to understand! I guess it’s my anthropologists’ compulsion – to find out everything I can about everything I can. Importantly, I want to connect with everyone I can in whatever way I can.

Friday, December 30, 2016

Airplanes, Flat Butts, and Building the Smell-o-scape

The human bottom was not designed to sit for 20 hours on a plane. My coccyx has crumbled, my glutes have been smushed up into my hips, and my ass is now the shape of a flat-screen TV. I have taken to sitting on my neck pillow for relief, because who can sleep when your buns are throbbing?

Several times during this last leg of our trip from Amsterdam to Arusha, I’ve joined the small horde of humans standing up near the restrooms to kickstart some semblance of blood flow. This has actually been the highlight of my trip – I’ve met Kili hikers, people from Portland, Albany, and Stockholm, and had a great chat with a young Tanzanian mom whose daughter lovingly climbed into the arms of a (Tanzanian) stranger and promptly feel asleep. If there had been enough room, we would have had a yoga class. Alternatively, if there had been beer, we would have stood there for hours in a makeshift bar. I’m going to suggest this to KLM Airlines and possibly make a million dollars.

Update 12/30 10:00 PM: We’ve finally landed in JRO (Kilimanjaro Airport) to a round of cheers by the passengers. Leaving the plane, I’ve never seen so many people stopping to take photos of themselves and their groups with the plane in the background! I felt a little like Neil Armstrong coming down off the presidential-like stairs from the plane: “one small step for man, one giant leap across the floating space ball we call Earth to the continent where humans first evolved.” We are in Africa.

Update 12/30 11:45 PM: After waiting an hour for the rest of our airport group to buy their Visas, we head out on a fairly stripped-down van with a big rack on the top. Riding with us is Scott, from Virginia, and Matt and Karen from Orange County. Matt is wearing a Stone Brewery t-shirt and I like him immediately. As we’re driving the hour to our hotel, we are starved for sights and squinting to see anything off the road – it’s dark and there are no street lamps.

Here and there, we see bars and restaurants decorated with colorful Christmas lights (even though this is primarily a Muslim country). It reminds Luis and me of Puerto Rico in a way – single-story concrete homes with decorative steel bars on the windows (“rejas”). It’s clear that there is little electricity, maybe none in certain areas. The road is smooth until we get into Arusha town, where the construction hasn’t quite been completed yet. Emanuel, our driver, calls it the “African Massage Road.” He has to say it twice because we don’t quite hear him the first time. When he says it again, we all burst into laughter.


The windows are open and smells appear and disappear -- exhaust, barbecue, a jasmine-floral scent, gasoline, cinnamon, fertilizer, and wet earth. It’s important to me to fully take in the smell-o-scape of a new place – something we often take for granted but makes such an impact on my experience. For instance, when I smell a certain type of truck exhaust, I feel a warm fondness for my travels in Mexico as a young adult. I’m looking forward to getting out in the city and filling out this sensory experience.

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Countdown to Africa


Luis and I are in the last panicky days of preparing for our long-awaited trip to Tanzania. Well truth be told, he's panicking, and I'm watching him walk in circles while I write this blog. 

It's been literally a year in the planning, since I met Krista, the anthropologist from Bakersfield, last January. She mentioned that she would be hiking Mt. Kilimanjaro in January 2017, and I became interested. 

I knew that Luis had talked casually about hiking this mountain -- as a pipe dream really -- after having conquered Mt. Fuji in Japan and Mt. Whitney, the highest peak in the contiguous U.S. There was a group of about 12 people based in Bakersfield coming together to hike the mountain with a seasoned leader and well-established tour company called Climb Kili. He could join this group as a member of the team. 

When I discovered that I would be close enough to visit Gombe Stream National Park, where chimpanzee researcher Jane Goodall has done her 40+ years of work, booking this trip was pretty much a done deal. Luis was ready to pack his bags last February. 

Even though I was excited at the prospect, it took a little more convincing for me. At first I had the same feelings as when I traveled to Mumbai, India in January 2013...can you just go to Africa? People just get on planes and go to Tanzania? What will the girls do while we're gone? Will they be safe? Will they eat their vegetables? Finally, with some planning, sitters and visitors arranged, and the entire community of Eastlake checking in on them, I was ready to say "Let's go."

Our basic itinerary looks like this:

Fly for a bazillion hours on four planes from SD > LA > Amsterdam > Dar es Salaam > and arrive in Arusha, Tanzania.
Explore Arusha and deal with jet lag.
Head to the Serengeti for three days of safari.
Return to Arusha, where Luis joins his climbing group for the first of 8 days to the summit and back.
Simultaneously, I fly to the Western border of TZ to Gombe, where I stay for five days to trek with chimpanzees.
Luis and I meet back in Arusha for a day before we leave for home.

I don't know what I've done to deserve these opportunities in my life, but I don't want to miss out on any of them!

Follow us here on the blog for our adventures.