For those that have been watching I did a trip to Africa
between the 23rd August and the 1st October.
I've been uploading Africa Photos to a Frappr map
http://www.frappr.com/africansoutherncross/photos(Please don't edit anything on that link)
I'm also slowly uploading higher res pictures to my JRiver Gallery
http://yabb.jriver.com/cpg/displayimage.php?album=46&pos=4However theres so much to do and time gets spread so thinnly so easily!
(Hence the batch resize plugin which will speed things up if I get round to finishing it!)
If anyones considering doing a trip like this I highly recommend it!
I'll start in Zambia since thats where I started.
The Victoria Falls are an awesome force to be seen. Ideally I think you need
to see it from the Zim side, but at that point I was still feeling a bit ginger,
so I still need to return to see that again.
I done a days White water rafting down the Zambesi. That was awesome
Grade 5 down to 1 rafting. We came off at the first rapid!
I then found that despite being in the top 3 places for white water rafting,
Zambia probably isn't in the top 3 for saftey!
Despite giving you life jackets they don't actually have much bouyency.
As a result I made a fairly good attempt at finding the bottom of the Zambesi.
The first rapid was called the boiling pot, because it had a very large amount of water
pouring into a very small area....
I went down in this area and by the time I came back up again I was trying
to learn to breath like a fish.... (I'm a pretty strong swimmer too)....
Still it was an awesome day, even when the guide pointed out the crocodiles
at the side of the river!
We flipped over various times. The guides had this amazing nack of staying
on the boat, even when the boat ended up upside down!
They wouldn't let us do 1 rapid out of the 25 because it was grade 6 and called
"Commercial Suicide"!
After moving on from Zambia we moved to Botswana. We were travelling
aboard the orange truck you can see (stuck) in some of the pictures. ("Tango")
From this point on we were Truckers. (Note a Truck, not a bus as some people seemed to think, this made the driver mad!).
Our first night in Botswana consisted of a night next to the river,
with great big signs saying "Dont camp closer than 10 metre, Crocodiles in river!"
That night one of the guys on the tour got quite drunk (and it wouldn't be the last time)
and some how lost his flip-flop (thong for the Australians) into the river.
Most people might have called it a night there, but Dave went in and got it....
He did actually make it to the end of the trip though with all his limbs intact...
Lesson 1 Don't swim with Crocodiles...
The following day we done a safari tour around Chobe National park.
Unfortunatley that day I accidentily stuck a high ISO b&w film in my camera not even aware
that I'd taken one with me. Hence what would have been some really good
shots of a lion crossing the road right in front of us were some what ruined....
However to be fair that did mean I got the Zebra shot which may not have been
quite so good in colour...
Lesson 2 Take a Big Digital Camera with great big lens...
That evening we done a boat cruise which got real close up to elephants as
one of the shots show.
Litterally within 20 metres. Strange feeling being
near to something that big. We also saw crocs, eagles, hippos, and all sorts of other stuff.
As we came back in I got the sunset shot on water... Overall I can't admit to being
impressed by sunsets in Africa. The sun had a tendancy of looking like it was going to go
seriously red and then just disappearing! Still that wasn't a bad one as they went!
We then crossed into Namibia to an area called Ngepi.
For the entirety of the trip almost we were camping in these old fashioned A-Frame tents.
Everything cooked was on a fold out cooker from the truck, which had four hobs, and there
were 14 of us in total.
Overall the campsites all along the trail we took were probably some of the best campsites
I've ever used. Not what I was expecting in the heart of Africa!
Most had at least one bar, a place to light a fire, and hot (or at least tepid) showers.
Where the Ngepi campsite was special was the showers....
oh and the hippo cage. The worlds only hippo cage apparently. A bit like a shark cage,
only to stop hippos rather than sharks. It was at this point that I jumped in it with my passport...
yeh that wasn't a clever thing to do!
Back to the showers they were well cool! No Ceiling!
They consisted soley of bamboo surrounding a hot shower (coal powered).
The door consisted of a sign which said "No Entry" and could either be up in the hooked
position... or not hooked...
Why was this so good? Well theres not many places where you can stand under a hot shower
under the stars!
We were warned at Ngepi camp not to venture to close to the river side.
There are two dogs at Ngepi camp - 'Slim' and 'Shady'.
'Fatboy' had apparently succombed to the hippos...