5 Wandering Souls - rather closely related - go escapading in a big beastie of a car...

taking a year out, taking the kids, big decisions about the future to be made - where to live, where to settle, home-schooling to be done, patience to be found, many campfires to light, strange foods to persuade kids to eat, countries to explore, pale blue skins to bronze.......ahhhhhhh the list of our plans is endless.

Thursday 31 March 2011

Kenya to Cape Maclear, Malawi 12th – 31st March

We now have some serious miles under our belts since the last update. We spent a week in Nanyuki where we fixed up the trailer and restocked and recharged with Claire and Neil who were unbelievably kind and hospitable. In the middle of that week we took off for a couple of nights wild camping in a game conservancy (a privately owned game farm – of a mere 60,000 hectares or something!)




... the other nights we enjoyed sleeping in a house, meeting Neil and Claire’s friends, drinking cappuccinos and milkshakes in town and even going out for a curry lunch.

When we did finally hit the road it was with a mission to really cover some ground as by then we knew that Pieter’s sister Karen and her family were definitely coming to meet us in Malawi on 28th March. So from Nanyuki we drove south and drove straight through Nairobi and onto Athi River to camp for one night. We bushed camped at Acacia Lodge where we were once again overwhelmed with the white Kenyan hospitality and friendliness. On the next day to the border with Tanzania, over with little fuss and onto Arusha for the night. Arusha is a CRAZY place – bustling with tourists and Safari vehicles (odd extended length land rovers or land cruisers with tons seats in the back) as it’s the thoroughfare for the Serengeti, Ngorogoro Crater, Mnt Kilimanjaro, Dar es Salam etc. We stayed at Masaii Camp where we had stayed 8 years ago – hadn’t changed much, basic camping and hot showers. From that first night on we realised rainy season does mean just that in Tanzania. We had rain every single night and often much of the days too.

We had already decided we were driving the main road around the East of Tanzania, not stopping to do any national parks as a) it is rainy season, b) we have done them before and c) they all cost over $150 per day to drive into and there are better Parks coming in Zambia and Botswana. Instead we decided we would make beelines for the nicer campsites. So after Arusha we drove up into the Usambara Mountains for 2 nights at altitude (i.e. no malaria and less humidity) on a biodiversity farm. Sadly that didn’t go as planned and as we wound our way up the mountainside at 5pm the hub cap bolts flew off the trailer which meant the entire wheel flew off and the axle crashed to the ground and seared a gaping wound into the tarmac for 20 or 30metres till we screeched to a halt. We were then stranded again by the side of the road. Within seconds a small crowd of kids had arrived to watch with glee their evening’s entertainment.


Pieter drove off with three locals as they passed in their car and kindly offered to help and I was left at the side of the remote mountain road with the 3 kids. It was fine for about the first half hour as the local kids giggled at our kids and tried to peer in the windows and climb like monkeys all over the car. Then as the sun began to sink an older crowd appeared and proceeded to whip the kids with long pieces of bamboo which sent them screaming into the undergrowth. This group of 20 year olds seemed altogether a bit sinister and without wanting to alarm our kids I got them back into the car, locked the doors and unsheathed Pieter’s pocket knife. Don’t know quite thought I would manage to do armed with one pocket knife and no cell or satellite phone signal. Thankfully just as the sun went down an angel on a motorbike appeared called Ismail. He said he had driven past me on his way home up the mountain about 10mins before and as he drove onwards he felt he just couldn’t leave me stranded there and had turned around and driven back. Also a local guy but with good English and a working cell phone, he stayed by my side until Pieter returned and chased away any of the more dodgy characters who found our mishap so fascinating.

Pieter returned in the back of a truck and yet again we proceeded to load up the trailer onto the back of a lorry – typically without the aid of any mechanics, we simply had to use man power to lift the entire trailer up and in.


The trailer was unloaded (manually – I couldn’t watch as 13 or 14 guys lifted and nearly dropped our trailer off the back of the lorry) and locked up and we drove onto the campsite – with Ismail on his motorbike ahead of us to show us the way. We took a room that night as the rain fell and we only arrived at 9pm. We had a picnic on the reed mat on the floor of our room of old white bread and peanut butter – the royal life we lead!

Pieter spent the whole of the next day driving around local villages sourcing the required parts with a 1001 mechanics all wanting to help fix the trailer

and the kids and I yet again stayed “by the hearth” and did hand washing, home schooling, and all the other domestic chores.

With a clean car and working trailer we set off the next morning and did a big 10hour drive to reach the baobab valley south of Mikumi. We arrived at a deserted campsite at nightfall and set up camp with sweat trickling into our eyes and mouth and clothes sticking to our every move. The showers were beautiful however and we all stood at 9pm under cool spraying water before climbing into bed. Up and off the next day to Iringa, a town known for its big market and cooler climate. We went to a local cafe which is all part of a project for the local physically disabled and deaf people. So you have only deaf waiters serving you and the attached craft shop is all run by the artists who have made the products. The sight of these poor souls – one man had withered legs and flip flops on his hands as he used these to drag himself around; another woman had DIY crutches out of pieces of tied together wood. However what an amazing project. These people have had training and make great sellable goods, the cafe is buzzing and full all day long and every customer is encouraged to learn at least hello, thank you and goodbye in sign language.

From Iringa and after our lunch we drove to Kisolanza Farm, where we camped for 2 nights.

Nice camping, although lots of army ants (which bite) and we managed to get a dry morning to take the kids fishing at the dam about 40mins walk away. Caught absolutely nothing (except perhaps bilharzia) but kids don’t seem to mind things like that. Next day off to a coffee farm up in the mountains outside Mbeya. Rather expensive camping as ostensibly you pitch your tent on the heli pad; but stunning scenery and amazing coffee.

Next day was over the border and our limited foray into Tanzania was over and we were into Malawi. The rain seemed to abate slightly as the humidity increased. We stayed 2 nights at Chitimba Beach, on the north of the Lake.



Terribly humid and sticky but good camping with a lovely Afrikaans couple who have retired up there and are in the process of building up a campsite. From there we went inland and up into the forested mountains in the hope of finding cooler climes. We did.

We spent another 2 nights camping at Luwawa Forest Lodge

and made big friends with one of members of staff and his wife, Patrick and Sandra, a Malawian couple raising their kids and his sister’s kids who were orphaned due to aids. They pay school fees for 4 and support his parents, all on a combined salary of $60 per month (this in a country where enough flour, maize, cooking oil and sugar to last 4 weeks will use up 50% of the salary – so forget about bread, soap, clothes, rice etc).

From Luwawa to Lilongwe where we had the wonderful invitation to stay with the daughter of friends of Pieter’s parents. She was brave inviting us all to crash when she has a 5 year old, a 2 ½ year old and an 8 week old! What a laid back and hospitable couple though, we were made so welcome and just given the washing machine to use to our heart’s content and the kids loved seeing CBeebies for the first time since August and they got to eat cereal for the first time in 4 months. Mum and Dad had fillet steak on the braai for the first time since Christmas in SA.....mmmmm....Thanks Sally-Anne and Kallie!

On Saturday 26th we drove from Lilongwe to Cape Maclear, the southern tip of Lake Malawi and known for its good chill out spots. Our mission was to find a camp site of high enough standard to return to with Karen! We did. We camped there for one night and the kids loved being literally 1 m from the water’s edge and the toilets were beautiful...even Karen won’t need disinfectant here.

The next morning we were up and off south again – to Mangochi to visit Daniel who used to work for us at Buchan Estate. That was a really special visit – we visited the shop he has set up with the money he saved in SA, and we were taken to his home and given the royal treatment and a meal of ground maize and stewed beef (rather uncomfortable as he and his wife and kids insisted on sitting outside while we ate and we had the nagging suspicion we might be eating the family’s meat ration for the week). It was great to see him again and we were touched by his enthusiasm for our visit and he had tears in his eyes as we drove away. The photos are of Daniel outside his house with us, his shop, the kids who came to watch us as we sat outside his shop and the boys...



That night we were supposed to camp at the place we were going to meet with Karen and Henry the next day. Our plan was to arrive a night ahead so we could have our camp all set up and then we could help them we they arrived and have a hot meal waiting etc. But this is Africa so plans never work out. We got to the gate of Liwonde National Park, expecting to drive through and then another 2kms to a lodge with a nice campsite. “ Eh Madam, thee lodge ees closed, eet ees finish” says the guard at the gate. What???? We turned around and wound away towards another campsite just on the edge of the national park. However this being rainy season the road was terrible and we skidded straight off the road and into the ditch where mud was so deep it covered all of the two left hand tyres (about 60cms deep). I got out to help and promptly thumped onto my backside with mud up to my waist. How hysterical for the already gathered local crowd. Nothing as good as seeing a mazungu woman muddied and sweating. 2 hours later and 5 local women with their babies tied to their backs, 4 men and the obligatory army of children had pushed, pulled, and assisted us out of the mud in real high drama fashion. Not before Pieter drove over one man’s bike by accident - the equivalent to writing off someone’s Ferrari in the UK.




Finally made it to a pretty miserable campsite as it got dark. There were showers but no water so a kindly guy from the kitchen took one look at me (now the mud was all crusty from toes to belly button) and ran off to heat a bucket of water. The 5 of us set up camp in the dark – if we lit a single candle we were then swamped by not millions, but billions of tiny beasties. It was too late and too hot and humid to cook and we couldn’t put anything on our table as we couldn’t see it due to the complete covering of insects, so we stood in the dark next to the car and ate a bit of bread and then traipsed off through the undergrowth to all wash in the one bucket of water in a tiny concrete room with no ceiling and lit by one candle. Camping misery, camping hell.

Next morning we decided to get out of dodge and changed the meeting point with Karen and Henry to the Zomba Plateau as a camp such as the previous night was not the place for Mrs Malan ;-)
As we flew the 50kms south to meet them (imagine the excitement in the back row of the car – they have been counting down to this rendezvous for weeks!) it became an even more expensive 24hr period of torture. We had “tipped” everyone for their help in getting us out of the mud, paid the guy for his bike repairs, paid to camp in Hades and then had to pay a speeding fine.
We then drove up up up into the forests of Zomba and camp to the little Trout Farm campsite – and lo and behold there were the Malans waving and smiling! Hurrah! They had driven from Jo’Burg to Zomba in 48hrs and we now have 2 weeks travelling together.

We had 2 lovely nights up on the Zomba Plateau enjoying an idyllic climate and setting and easy walks within reach, see photos below of the waterfall ...





Then back north to the nice campsite on Lake Malawi, with another quick stop at Daniel’s on the way to support him again and stock up on a few things. Fat Monkeys campsite seems to be suitable for Karen, bathrooms even have mirrors, soap and mossie coils burning night and day. Bloody humid for this Scot’s lass though. Kids having a ball splashing in the lake and this morning we took them on a catamaran trip to the nearby islands for snorkelling and feeding the fish eagles.
So it’s not all sob stories from the van Aswegens!!






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Wednesday 9 March 2011

Ethiopia to Nanyuki, Kenya

First of all do scroll back to Ethiopia - all the other photos are now up and running!!!

Well, this was an eventful few days. Left Addis Ababa on our second attempt, first time we only got 20kms south of the city and the heavy traffic and the crappy roads sent a rock through our front windscreen and we had to turn around and go straight back. Four days later we were finally on our way again (the workshop didn;t work over the weekend grrrrr....) with one great bonus of being able to enjoy a Champagne Lunch at the Hilton on the Sunday with Jan and Brian. Great fun, really indulgent and a big treat!


The road south was ok but we were just trying to get the kms under our belt. We drove as far south as we possibly could and hit the crazy bustling wee town of Dilla at about 5.30pm. We spotted a white person in one “hotel” car park (no European style hotels round here, all local places which are hard to choose between as they all offer the same lottery scenario) and drove in there to see if we could camp in their compound. NO such luck, it was madly busy and the bar area faced the car park so we would have been the evening’s entertainment. We took a room and squished ourselves in around 2 twin beds and about 1m of floor space. Then i hung up all our laundry to dry at about chest height strung across the room and then the cramped conditions, humidity, irritating wet clothes and mosquito experience was complete. We went out to eat and had our last dose of njeri and Ethiopian fare.

Next morning we drove straight to the border at Moyale – a truly bizarre town which is half Ethiopian and half Kenyan. Bizarrely the Kenyan side is poor and dilapidated and lacking any form of infrastructure, while the Ethiopian side is not bad. Getting out of Ethiopia was all ok and entering Kenya was a pleasure – the men were brimming with smiles and greetings and efficiency. What a pleasure! Then we had to find a place to sleep as it was already after 5pm. We drove to the municipal campsite run by Kenyan Wildlife Services and nearly fell over backwards to discover they wanted $30 for one night’s camping with one long drop loo and some cold water and nothing else. We then drove to the one hotel in town but they wanted $60 to sleep in a room with a cockerel crowing outside the door. So back to the campsite to eat humble pie and set up camp. You can certainly tell the cheap countries are now behind us!

We didn’t get a very early start as Pieter had to find fuel before we could set off (the Ethiopian side of Moyale had run out and on the Kenyan side they discovered they had too!). Returning empty handed we used our Gerry cans and filled up the tank and finally got under way to head towards Marsabit. This road is totally notorious for being terrible and it is the bit we had been totally dreading as our trailer is such a weak point. What a way to spend your birthday – on the worst roads of the entire trip!! We started off and sure enough discovered it was pretty awful. The car was absolutely fine but the trailer was rattling away over the corrugated surface which wasn’t soft, but harsh black rock as it is an ancient lava field dessert. Every hour we stopped to check the trailer, first we found a locked cupboard had rattled open, then the next stop we found the stove had rattled loose and was bouncing around and broken. Next stop two drawers had collapsed and the road was getting worse and worse and i was feeling sick to the stomach with worry about it all.


Last stop to check was about 1pm and we both looked in the wing mirrors and saw disaster had struck. The trailer looked to be sitting entirely on its nose behind us. Pieter went to check and i couldn;t bear to look. When i finally did i broke down by the side of the road. The metal part of the trailer which attaches it to the car had broken and buckled and bolts had snapped. It was now well and truly buggered. So then we were stranded in a dessert in Northern Kenya on a stretch of road renowned for bandits and you are told not to be on after nightfall. We had only seen a car or truck about once every hour so the idea of quick help was unlikely.



Thankfully we had the number of a friend of friend who lives in Nanyuki, about 300kms south of where we were. We dug out the satellite phone and rang him and begged for help. The total star that he is within half an hour he told us about a man who could organise a truck to come and collect the trailer. The truck only arrived at 6pm which meant 5 hours sitting in the windy dessert by the side of the road. When it did arrive it was a mission to get the trailer onto it and they had not brought any ropes or straps to secure the trailer in place. Boer maak a plan and we begged and borrowed ropes from the odd passing vehicle.

So finally at 7.30pm, after sunset, we set off driving the last 80kms to Marsabit in the dark, behind the truck. We stopped frequently as the men paused to check the trailer was ok. I worried slightly about the bandits who were supposed to operate at night, Euan threw up 7 times all over the back seats and himself and everyone was exhausted and roads continued to be horrific. Finally at 11.45pm we reached the dusty town of Marsabit and took the trailer to the garage compound. Then the only option left for sleeping was the local revolting brothel. All 5 of us squeezed into one room with a hole in the concrete floor for a loo. Lovely. What a great great birthday ;-)

Next morning we arranged that the trailer would just continue on the truck as far as Nanyuki. There was little point in repairing it to only then have to go back on the bad roads. By Nanyuki the tarmac had begun so we thought best to get it to a bigger town, with tarmac and then get it fixed. We were able to slightly enjoy the scenery despite all the troubles and the people were so colourful and adorned with beads and vibrant cloth. The car managed the remained of the rocks and corrugations without hiccup, and the only other thing to go wrong was the Gerry can getting to badly rattled that it punctured on a bolt and diesel leaked all over the top of the car, the back window, the doors etc. Late afternoon we made it to Nanyuki and met up with Neil (the Scottish friend) and found our way to a local garage. Finally by 7pm the trailer was tucked away safely and ready to be fixed the next day and we were on our way to a real house with Neil and Claire.

Exhaustion does not quite explain the feeling. 4 days of solid driving, early starts and late nights and worries and emotional breakdowns. Then we arrived at the MOST beautiful house with sweeping views over Mount Kenya, a roaring log fire, hot water and our own bathroom with a real sit down loo and toilet paper and fresh towels. My god.

PS: photos to follow, internet is faster than Ethiopia but not highspeed!!


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