Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Home again, home again

Eight months and many countries later and we've landed back in the T dot. Arrived yesterday afternoon to our smiling families waiting to greet us.

The last couple of weeks were fun-filled and relaxing. Never been big beach sitters but we quickly got into the swing of going from breakfast to our beach lounger and not moving much for the rest of the day. Beautiful white sandy beaches, warm turquoise water, it was an idyllic place to slow down and let our tired muscles heal.

And then a sloooooow 3 day journey with many stopovers en route to London. But we arrived at 1:30am and spent the next week drinking, eating, and visiting friends and family.

We're happy to be home. It has been an amazing 8 months. So amazing it's hard to sum up in a blog post. Especially as we sit here sorting through apartment listings and job postings :) But there's lots of time to go through all the photos and remember all the stories. Somewhere around 5000 photos between the two of us but don't worry we'll edit them before inviting anyone around to our new place...wherever that might be.

Looking forward to catching up with everyone in the next few weeks...the journey might be over but stay tuned for a last cut of photos...hopefully in the next few days.

k and k

Saturday, September 10, 2005

Getting to the top of africa

With the whole lost luggage fiasco we ended up with no break between safari and climbing kili...i just know you'll all be very sympathetic...lol... we arrived at the lodge from the safari and the briefing for kili was starting in 5 minutes. We met the group and got all our instructions. The most pertinent for us was the information about how much each person was allowed on the mountain - 15 kilos. No idea how 15 kilos translates into gear but we were told the guy in the morning would have a scale.

Bit of a frenetic morning with last minute packing, bag weighing (both of us well under 15 kilos), loading vehicles, and finally we're off. It was a longish drive to the starting point with a couple of stops on the way to do paperwork and hire a few extra porters.

We start hiking about 1pm and our group sets off at a blistering pace. Having been on the road for so many months we haven't exactly trained for this as intended. (In the past 3 months I've (kathryn) skipped rope twice and run 3 times in my hiking boots and called it 'kili training'...lame i know...). The road is incredibly dusty and it's not quite the slow scenic start we expected but we're happy to be on the way. We meet up with our guides and porters and take a break for our box lunch.

The afternoon is much better as we're off the road although it's still very very dusty. We can see the snow capped peak of kili in the distance but 8 days from now seems such a long way off at this point. We've decided to hike the Shira route as it's longer than Machame and Marangu which means more days to acclimatize. Plus it's described as harder trekking and more scenic which appeals. The nice thing is how far off the beaten path it is - much more secluded, in fact for the first 5 days we don't see any other groups at all.

A word about our group - there's 12 of us total. A surprisingly large canadian contingent, a good number of brits, and the always present aussie. It's a fun group and nice for us to be back with our peeps after so much independant travel and broken english conversations.

41 guides and porters. Yep - 41 people to get 12 tourists to the summit. And each day the porters practically run by us with tents and bags balanced on their heads getting to camp ahead of us to set everything up. Not only do we not carry our gear we don't even have to set up our own tents or do any cooking. We figure this is about the swankiest trekking we've ever done.

But it gets better...each morning we're woken with 'hello, how you sleep? coffee, tea?' and a warm mug with beverage of choice is handed in to us. Then half an hour later 'hello, washy wash water is ready' and a hot basin of water is placed just outside our tent. Basically for the entire trip we don't really have to think about anything. We're told when to wash, when to eat, when to walk...you get the idea.

What seems at the beginning to be fairly easy soon becomes hard. As we go up higher the temperature drops drastically and we're soon winter camping. At one site the snow comes down so much the porters have to brush it off the tents. Thank goodness i rented that down jacket!!! i wrap it around my feet each night in the sleeping bag and it makes getting through the night a bit more bearable.

For most of the week we're above the cloud cover which makes for some spectacular sunsets and very cold washes. The basin of warm water is hard pressed to get all the dirt off and we're a pretty grimy mess. i can honestly say i've never been so dirty in my life. and i did discover that hair reaches a terminal point after 4 days. it didn't really get any worse between day 4-8 of not washing it. At least that's what i think but it's not like i saw a mirror in all this time!!

On the 6th night we hike to the summit. we leave camp at midnight all bundled up and start going up. we have to climb 1200 metres to get to the top. we're all walking 'poley poley' (slowy slowy) in a line with our headlights shining. it is very steep and at this altitude it's very hard to keep your breath but the plan is to get to the top at sunset. we have 5 guides with us and the deep gutteral sound of them talking swahili breaks the night darkness. and a few hours in they treat us to some singing which is amazingly motivational. very african type of music with call and answer and a lot of 'kiliminjaro, hakuna matata' (which for those that have seen the lion king you'll recall means 'no problem'). with their singing it took on a bit of a spiritual feel...the sounds in the darkness of the night and the physical struggle going on with my body.

we made it to the first summit about 5:30am and the new moon was just peaking over the horizon and the first hint of sun was coming up. it was really cold and the guides quickly gave us hot water and tea and then started us walking again. The quick start was strategic on their part as we were walking before even realizing we were on to the actual highest point. Another 45mins (i think, not really sure) and we reached Uhuru peak. the last hour was other worldy - there really is no other way to describe it. walking the rim of a volcano with a glacier on one side and the sun coming up. about as close as i think i'll ever come to feeling like i'm on another planet.

we made it to the top at about 6:30 am and were both a bit overcome with emotion. it was unexpected to feel it so strongly but it had been a tough struggle getting here. pictures all around and then they moved us out pretty quickly. the cloud was moving in and i think they were concerned about getting us down before getting too cold and breathing in the moist air.

getting down was very painful. it wasn't a trail but instead we had to sort of ski through the scree (the loose rock and gravel). there was no way i could do it very fast as it requires unbelievable balance so Last, one of the guides basically came down the mountain with me and we skied the scree together, him holding me firmly the whole way down. every time i turned around kirk was coming down like he'd been doing this his whole life. My personal escort kept saying, 'kirk is fine kirk is fine' every time i looked behind me.

Back at camp we had a couple hours to sleep and then lunch, and then a painful 2 hours walk further down to another camp. and finally on the last day we walked the rest of the way down. it was steep and unbelievably painful on the muscles.

finally we arrived back at the lodge and had a few hours to clean up. and 'clean up' meant a lot of scrubbing to get all the dirt out. and of course that night was a big dinner where we all drank too much and had a great time reliving the highlights and forgetting all about the sore muscles.

And now we're doing some major R&R on a beach in Zanzibar. It's heavenly here with white sand beaches, turquoise water, and sunny days. We're staying in a hut right on the beach and have spent a few days doing nothing but lounging and napping. It's a perfect end to the tanzania adventure!

And of course we're starting to near the end of our travels. We have another week or so here and then a week in england before the final flight to toronto. but that's another thought for another day...for now i must go and find a cerveza for the serious card playing that is going to happen tonight. for those following the ongoing rummy score...at just over 11,000 points it's neck and neck with kirk up by a handful of points!!

see ya'll soon...

k and k

Sunday, September 04, 2005

Tanzania....halfway through and it just keeps giving.

What we expected to enjoy we've really loved, and what I thought would be rather easy has turned out to be one of the hardest things I've ever done.

We arrived in Tanzania a little over two weeks ago after the longest and most fustrating flight from Cairo to Kilimanjaro airport. I'll save most of the details for the bar but in short. We arrived at the airport in Cairo only to find that we'd been dropped at the wrong terminal. Got to the right terminal and found out that our confirmed tickets that we'd worked hard to confirm were in fact not confirmed at all and they weren't going to let us on the flight unless we took a connecting flight out of Ethopia on Sunday. Our safari was to start Sunday morning. Fifteen minutes before the fight left we agreed to take the Sunday flight for two reasons. First we figured we'd have better luck sorting this out at the head office in Ethiopia and second our Egypt visa expired in 7 hours.

Get to Ethopia and they say there's nothing they can do for us. It's 10:30pm now. Before we can leave the airport, we're 'In transit' so our bags have been shipped on ahead on us, we have a hotel assigned by Ethopian Airlines along with everyone else in transit. Kathryn asks a fellow who has been helping people around us if there's anything he can do about getting us on the 2:30am flight we were orginally confirmed on and our tickets show as confirmed. He agrees it's the airlines fault and so will help us. at 3am he returns with tickets for the next day directly from Ethopia to Kilimanjaro airport. We were to flight through Dar in Tanzania but that's fine we'll go direct to Arushia (Kilimanjaro Airport).

The new flight doesn't leave till noon the next day so they put us up at the Hilton and after looking for our bags, which they said they'd take off the 2:30am flight, we give up and get driven to the hotel at 5am. Little room service and we get three hours sleep and a hot shower.

Back at the airport at 9am and look in vain for our bags. The head of Lost and Found tells us to go to Arusia and fill in a lost luggage claim. 'But we leave Arusia tomorrow on a week safari'. We decide there's nothing we're going to do here and lets just keep moving forward.

Get to Arusia on one of the most turbulent flights I've ever been on. This is one of two times I've actually thought the plane might go down. There's nothing the Ethopian Airlines in Arusia can do for us except put an email notice in the system that our luggage is lost. At 6pm, our flight arrive a 3pm, we take a $50US cab to the hotel.

We have one extra day between the end of the safari and the Kili climb so we push back the safari one day in the hopes that our bags will be found the next day.

In there morning there's no word on the bags so we figure we should head down to the second hard clothes market and get something to wear while we're on safari for a week and the clothes we've had on since we went to the airport in Cario are starting to get a little tired. We pick-up some really fun stuff. My personal favourite is a Team Canada Roots shirt for the 2002 Salt Lake City games. Kathryn has since stolen that for her own use and I'm never going to see it again. But that's OK because that evening when WE called the Ehtopian Airlines office ours bags had arrived in Arushia. We picked them up the next morning while leaving on the safari.

This has become a little longer than I intended so here's the highlights of the last two weeks and we'll post more later.

The safari went to Lake Manyara National Park first and driving around in a 4x4 where the roof pops open so you can stand-up and look at the wildlife.......I felt like I was in Jurasic Park. There we saw Blue Monkeys, baboons, elephants, zebra, warthogs, hippos, buffalo, wildebeest, Dik Dik's and Impalas. As well we saw what came to be one of our favourite sights - giraffes. Three feet from the truck they towered over the roof by six feet. Giant animals that look very awkward but are surpisingly one the of the most graceful creatures I've ever seen.

Well I'm going to have to cut this short as we need to go sit by the pool after living in a tent for two weeks and getting on a seven hour bus ride to Dar Es Salaam tomorrow morning.

Short note on Kilimanjaro climb..........we made it! As I said one tof the hardest things I've done. Living in a tent at 3700M+ ASL for eight nights wasn't easy and then to climb 1800M in the middle of the night. In the end it was really worth it but we're licking our wounds today.

Take care all and will finish these stories soon.

K&K