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.
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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.

Beaching the Beagle

Beaching the Beagle

crab art smallBack in Nairobi we reunite with the Beagle at JJ’s (Jungle Junction).  Nestled in the suburb of Karen/Hardy, JJ’s is both a very pleasant place to camp and a working auto garage for any kind of vehicle repair you might imagine. The four dogs are just a bonus.  Overlanders tend to gather here – Mike and Sue from Canada, Eiji and Chizu from US/Japan, the Germans driving the monster unamog named Simba (we met them back in Tanzania) and an English woman riding her motorcycle alone across Africa. South African expat Reggie, a musician living on a beach south of Mombasa, had many suggestions for places to camp along the Kenyan/Tanzanian coast. JJ’s prbeached truckoprietor Chris cooked a braii for everyone on a Friday night, we shared stories and email addresses and we hope to meet these friends again.

The plan is to hug the coastline of the Indian Ocean from mid-Dec to the middle of January. Gee, what a trial to be camping on a beach enjoying sun, warm water, and a sea breeze cart smallin December (apologies to our snow-bound friends back home). Camping on the sand means sand in pretty much everything and tiny ants in everything else, not to complain of course. At Barefoot Beach north of Malinda we are parked right in the sand, the water is warm and inviting and the sand itself an unusual combination of red with gold sparkles of pyrite. Fantastic. There is something to be said for the coarser-grained sanddollar smallsand. It does not tend to blow all over like the powered-sugar sand of Zanzibar but how amazingly soft that sand felt on your feet. And really, either kind of sand works for us.

Vasco de Gama in Malindi
Nearly a year ago, along the western coast of South Africa we came vasco smallupon a monument to Vasco de Gama, the sea-captain who led the first Portuguese fleet to India, sailing around the Cape of Good Hope in 1488 or so. Months later (on our trip, not de Gama’s, haha) we find ourselves in a small apartment in Malindi, Kenya, and steps down the beach is yet another Vasco de Gama monument. That guy did get around. Imagine his surprise when finally arriving on the eastern African coast of Indian Ocean and finding cities and large villages already established by the Arabs and natives. Part of de Gama’s mission was to pave the way for Christianity but the Muslims got ahead of him. Still he was alley smallan intrepid man, not a sea-captain at all when he started; his was on the job training of the monumental sort. Portugal went on to become one of the greatest Old World powers until the catastrophic 1755 earthquake, combined with a tsunami and firestorm, all but destroyed Lisbon. The country’s fortunes have never recovered. The Vasco de Gama museum is housed in this alley. Yes, an alley, it is an outdoor museum. Worth a visit, the interpretive panels are well-done.

cat smallThe apartment we stayed in is owned by Raj, a businessman we met in Eldoret. He said go ahead, make yourselves at home – how very African. In our wildest dreams we thought there might be hot water for a shower – it never hurts to dream, right? Well, there was water, a trickle, for the first three days, none of it hot. All of Malinda was without water. There were empty jugs around to fill when water did appear so it was comfortable enough. The beach was at our doorstep but too rough and brown to swim in – rivers were washing in silt from rains north of us. Malinda natives speak Italian, sand flower smallchildren call out a refreshing Ciao.  Because of the many Italian expats living here there is delicious pizza in town as well as fresh seafood and an seemingly endless supply of a round type of mango, an “apple” mango, selling for a quarter apiece. Huge mango trees are dripping with fruit – we didn’t put even a small dent in the supply despite eating four or five per day. There’s plenty left if anyone is headed to Malindi.

South of Mombasa
Lesser blk bak smallLeaving Malindi heading south we tried hard to avoid downtown Mombasa, Kenya’s second largest city. A bypass route that looked good on Garmin turned out to be one of Garmin’s little jokes – instead of a short city bypass, it routed us three hours back to a small village and then another two hours back to the far side of the Mombasa. Fortunately we caught on to the trickery before going too far and with the best of u-turns we made it to our destination, the ferry across the Kilindini Harbor.  Mid-day, hot, muggy, we sit withMalindi small the windows down and the engine off waiting our turn to board the ferry. Cold-drink sellers, as well as the far-from-fortunate, approach all the vehicles, not just us. Coins goes to the surprisingly many blind people. As with so many countries (including the US) there are disenfranchised adults just trying to get by everywhere we go. I cannot help but feel sorrowful for them; as adults they are aware of how difficult life is and will likely continue to be. Children have a bit of an advantage – family, orphanages, churches tend to them, at least until they are emancipated. Adults have fewcoral small options and that is a shame no matter what country is responsible.