Who is Monte? Where is his favorite place? Why’s it so special? To find out, at 6am we took off on our third guided game drive in the unique Gorongosa National Park. After stalling around Zimbabwe (yes, stalling around. . . hiking, birding, relaxing) it was time to give Gorongosa another shot. We hope for dry roads, maybe some good game sightings, some birds. . .
Gorongosa is different. You’ve probably read that animals were decimated by the long civil war, that restoration efforts are on-going and that fighting flares up from time to time, creating a tense atmosphere and yes, these things are true. What is not touted loudly enough is how exceptionally beautiful the park is; how the flora is pristine, the trees huge and the bottom land is untouched by farms or cattle ranches. This is a park suspended in time. We’ve seen nothing like this anywhere.
With nearly a clean slate, a couple of decades of research, and lots and lots of money, Gorongosa has begun the return to its prime. Many people are involved. Mozambican graduate students are here, doing surveys and learning from the cream of the crop of professors and teachers leading the education platform. Rangers and guides are training here. There is a state-of-the-art biological laboratory and plant library plus a molecular laboratory. The park is conducting anthropological digs; with its location at the lower end of the Great Rift, there are likely hominid fossil remains waiting to be discovered by some hardworking (lucky) person. Locally, the park spent 10 years determining the best way to involve the villagers and another 10 years implementing a coffee growing/tree planting scheme for them. It is paying off for everyone.
That said, the average tourist is most welcome. Self-driving is not allowed but seeing this park with a trained guide is the way to go and drives are very affordable. Test and Tongo escorted us the first morning and in a few hours taught us so much about the trees and plants I thought my head would explode. That’s not even counting the fascinating animal facts and game sightings including an oribi antelope and a mating pair of porcupine (yes, we all know the joke). On the evening drive, beneath the stunning sunset, a hippo gave new meaning to the saying “throwing his weight around” as he challenged us for our spot on the riverbank. Then in the morning Monte took over guiding. And he really iced the cake.
After weaving through the sun forest and stopping for several excellent sightings, we drove up to the edge of the floodplain and were rendered speechless. In front of us is the most beautiful place I’ve ever seen. Monte smiles shyly. “This is my favorite place” he says. It is mine too. Endless plains of grass, flowers, water – all of it teeming with birds. Birds, birds and more birds. There are flocks of egrets, ducks, geese, heron, storks of every kind, stilts, pelicans, ibis, songbirds, lapwings, raptors, darters . . . everywhere you look, in the sky or on the ground, there are birds. Waterbuck and cape buffalo graze in the distance. Mount Gorongosa is a hazy grey landmark rising over the plain. I never want to leave. Monte tells me that I’d hate it in the rainy season. Maybe. Meanwhile we are enjoying it now, thanks to the monumental effort to restore and preserve Gorongosa.
Did you know that, contrary to what you’ll read on the web, you cannot extend a 30-visa in Mozambique? Not at an immigration office, not at a border, not at all. Unlike every other African country we have visited, Moz immigration requires that a tourist leave the country then return and purchase a new visa. And not just leave for an afternoon, either. Two days at least. This is a stunning revelation. Go to Zimbabwe, they told us, it is only an hours drive to the border. As it was still fairly early in the day, to the Forbes/Manica border we went, only to be told the same thing. We would have to leave Moz. Now.
So why not just strike out for Vilankulos and the coast, you ask, spend a few days at the beach first? Yes, well, on another planet that might work. But even with over a week left on our current visa, there is nowhere in this mangled country we can drive to and still get back to the Forbes border within nine days. The roads, and I’m being kind, are barely paved. The potholes have potholes. Smaller holes they fill with sedans. Just getting back to Gorongosa National Park, where rain has effectively closed the game drives, is at least a two day drive, with no guarantee that we’d even see that park. We pull back to the last Mozambique campground before the Forbes border and take a breath – time to ready ourselves for Zimbabwe.
Casa Msika camp is so welcoming and friendly we stay for two days – lucky for us we have the time. Christopher, a young and dedicated Zimbabwean man, is the game warden of the small reserve and he leads us on a trek to find the resident giraffes, one of whom is about to give birth. She is very calm as we watch her but she isn’t about to birth her calf in front of us! There are zebra and wildebeest out and about; the reserve is hoping to boost their game animal numbers, perhaps even provide creatures to help replenish Gorongosa’s herds. Back at camp, a family from Zimbabwe arrive on their way home from the coast and we dine with them. Their enthusiasm is infectious, they love Zim’s Eastern Highlands and Vumba mountains. Off we go the next morning, to the bird-watching paradise and cloud forests of eastern Zimbabwe. We will be back to Moz soon enough. Gorongosa Park will be dry. The beaches will still be beautiful. It’s just a matter of time.
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