A New Year

A New Year

girls 2 bigDid you know it is a Kenyan tradition to go to the beach on January 1? Now that is a tradition worth keeping around – dress up and come to the beach for a day. Forget your troubles, walk the shore, swim. Have a picnic. Camp.  Carloads of people came to Twiga from nearby Mombasa to do all that. And now one can take the Nairobi-to-Mombasa train, that’s a popular service, and drive the short distance to Diani or Tiwi beaches.  At the end of the firkids smallst day of the new year, hundreds of Kenyans were walking up and down the shore dressed in fantastically colored robes and scarves and perfecting an already perfect scene.The color combinations were glorious – as bright and neon as the fish in the tide pools. It was a sight to behold. A full moon shone on us all on and now, today, nearly everyone is gone.
girls 3 small
It is day twenty-two of our anchorage on this shoreline. We drove in and parked and haven’t moved camp since. Along with our neighbors, Gustav and Nancy, we are the only campers taking advantage of the unobstructed view camping on the sand affords. Gustav regularly camps at Twiga – he and Nancy have children. Imagine being a seven-year old boy and spending days on end at the beach. Yes. Some campers and picnickers we visited with bao smallhave been coming to Twiga for years. One motorcycle group was ending a 37-year stint of basing at Twiga for the holidays; they drove away for the very last time a couple of days ago. Several big overland tours have come and gone. They park down the way from us, back in the trees and we wouldn’t even know they were there but for the visual. One of my favorite camp supporters is Abdul the fruit seller who comes by with his bicycle basket full of apple mangos, pineapple and whatnot. He has been doing this for 25+ years. Fish sellers sand dollar smalloffer the freshest catch and they will filet it for you right now. Coconuts carved into darling little monkeys are the curio rage – Gustav tells us the coconut animals change every year. If I could think of a place to hang it I would buy one. Or two. There are trees behind the beach that form a dark shady canopy for monkeys, birds and campers. There is a stupendous baobab tree smack in the middle of campshell small. Just down the shore is a little restaurant where if (when) you finally tire of lukewarm beer, you can get a cold one from the bar. The camp staff does a remarkable job keeping things clean considering there are people and monkeys to tidy up after.

Gustav and Nancy invited us to celebrate New Year’s Eve with dinner 1 smallthem and their friends; Gustav procured a huge white snapper fish plus a local chef to prepare it. Those delectable apple mangos made a salad, Pauline made her famous calamari, cardamon sweet potatoes in coconut milk rounded out the menu and for dessert Jim and I baked a chocolate cake and a vanilla cake. There were no leftovers. Of anything. Happy New Year.

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6 Comments
  • Catherine Wiggins says:

    Ohhhhhhh ………you can’t take empty shells!!?? I’d surely be arrested at some point. It’s my gentle madness. It would be near if not impossible for me to walk away from them all.

    Pauline’s meal sounded amazing! With dessert too !

    Funny , I have the same tradition of being on the beach NO MATTER WHERE I AM on the first day of each new year. Just seems right. What an ideal place for a long stay. What a great set up for your photos having all the locals in their most colorful finery…….the wind blowing the cloth and exposing the beautiful fabric designs. Reading your blog reminds me I can’t wait to hit the road for another adventure. That Miter shell is so vibrant. What artistry.

    Ok , I’m on to the next post as I’ve been away for too long. 🙋‍♀️

  • marlene says:

    That tiger cowrie so reminded me of Dad. (I think that is what it is called) Then I got to thinking about Dad, this is all his fault, he inspired us in so many ways…what I wouldn’t give for him to know all of this. Then I think of Carolyn. “you are out of your mind”. Some times memories can be a real treat.

    • Ann says:

      Yes I think about Dad while camping – he would have loved this in his younger days.

    • Ann says:

      Yes, that cowrie. . . I just gasped when I saw it, I was down low looking at something and my eye traveled a little bit and there it was. So shiny and slimy – it was breathtaking.

  • marlene says:

    Ann – you know I am drooling over the shells. Nice photos of them too. Tell me you are finding some of them empty. Love the tradition of Jan. 1 at the beach. There is nothing like a beach. I have never fallen out of love with the beach – Jalama, San Carlos and beaches south down the Mexican Rivera, the Gulf…good to know the whole world feels the same way. Can I get a coconut animal? That sounded so cool.
    I cannot get enough of the blog! Shells, dogs, the beach! All my favorite things.

    • Ann says:

      While I am finding empty shells, one isn’t allowed to keep them. So I take my camera out on the reef and pose my finds for photos.
      I will have to check with the purser of the Beagle to see if there is room for a monkey 🙂