Saturday, November 28, 2009

The North

Day 126.

We arrived in Tamale at 3:30am after a 13-hour bus ride. It was dark out and surprisingly cold. Hoping to get a ticket for the 6am bus to Larabanga, we walked to the MMT station. The station was busy for such an early hour: women selling bread, pure water, knives; men riding motorbikes in Muslim smocks; toddlers sitting on the ground playing with rubbish. To find out if there were tickets, we had talk to the conductor. He wasn’t around so we sat. And waited. Brushed our teeth. Watched our bags. Hours passed. No conductor. Finally, we were told the tickets were finished. We bought tickets for the 1:30pm bus, found a place to sit, and slept. Hours passed…slowly. After a strange interaction with foreigners wanting to take us to their hotel, interrupted sleeping, buying a few pairs of Ghanaian sandals, and eating plantain chips with peanut butter it was time for the bus to arrive. A hot, long, bumpy four hours later, we arrived in Larabanga.

Larabanga: population 4,000, 100% Muslim. Mud houses, dirt roads, minimal electricity, so many children. We stayed at the Salia Brothers Guesthouse, a simple room and a simpler bathroom (a hole in the concrete with an intoxicating ammonia scent). The coolest part was we could sleep on the roof! Up a small branch ladder to the flat roof, we could not only see much of the village but we could see all of Mole National Park in the distance. It was freezing but we made it through the night, waking up to Muslim prayer on the loudspeaker at dawn …melodic and calming, nothing like the amplified Christian praise we wake up to in Legon. By 6am the town is awake and beginning the day’s work: rhythmic pounding of fufu, collecting of firewood, and the setting up of small food stands. For a long time I watched from above the life that the people of Larabanga live everyday. A life of hard work and simplicity. A life that I am envious of until I hear their stories: husband killed in a car accident just before her son was born, father shot and killed at Mole for hunting antelope, the only of four brothers who wasn’t able to go to school can hardly read or write, a classroom full of children with no teacher, kids drinking water out of a tank with bugs swimming in it.

That morning we rented bicycles. Old, single-speed, squeaky, rusty, drop-bar bicycles. Mole is 10km from Larabanga on a dirt road. The road was relatively flat with a few hills to climb and potholes to avoid. It felt great to be riding again. We arrived at the park and realized there were 5 hours until the start of the tour so we biked back to get out books to read while we waited. Hot and tired after the second 10km, we napped instead. 10km back during the hottest part of the day and we were ready for the safari. No toes allowed so we rented big rubber boots and headed into the bush following D.K., our armed guide. Walking safaris are rare in Africa because of the danger involved so we lucked out. 5 minutes into the safari we were 50 feet away from a 54-year old male savanna elephant. He was casually shaking a tree and eating the fruits that fell from it as we watched in amazement. Through the binoculars, I could see every wrinkle in his face. He walked around the tree, sneezed, and then started coming towards us. D.K. told us to back up slowly to avoid him charging, he wasn’t coming for us, we were just in his way. With mighty steps, he passed us, ignored the baboons all around, and went to dig a hole to reach a salt lick…his dessert. Now only 30 feet away, we stood in awe. It is amazing the difference I felt seeing an elephant in the wild where it belongs as compared to a zoo. Just like elephants, that moment I will never forget.

The rest of the safari was great: antelope running, baboons grooming each other, warthogs walking, birds chirping. The sun was setting over the watering holes, a giant orange African sun, and I was happy. This is Africa. We returned to our bikes at sunset and tried to peddle back as fast as we could to avoid darkness. Before we knew it, we couldn’t see the path in front of us. Passing a few pairs of cows and fireflies on the way, we made it back to Larabanga safely but hungry. This is when we met Satau.

At a small egg sandwich stand on the side of the road, a woman stood waiting for customers. We ordered two sandwiches and waited for them while we talked with the local children that came to say hello to us. The sandwiches were amazing and as we ate them, we talked to Satau. She told us that about her husband who died, her father who was shot, and her 16-month-old son, Mohammed, who was sick. She was only 24-years-old. She told us she wanted to make us banku in the morning and teach us to pound fufu, so we decided we would be back to meet her at 10am. Afterward, we followed a girl named Ama to her house where she was going to take dinner and then escort us back to our guesthouse. At her house we were met by at least 20 other children who were so excited to see us, and even more excited for us to take their pictures. The most striking thing about the scene was the 16-year-old girl who sat in the middle of all the children butchering the better part of a cow with a machete. This was completely normal. So many pictures later, we returned to the guesthouse to find that we had been slightly robbed. 30 cedi missing from my bag, 10 from Carmen’s. Was it one of the Salia brothers? Was it the small girl who came in when we were napping? One of the boys in town who was in and out of the guesthouse often? Who knows…I just hope they really needed it.

The missing money limited our activity the next day: no morning safari, no bikes, minimal food. Despite the run in our plans, I had an amazing day. Banku in the morning (fish in the pepe but I put on a smile and ate around it), pounding fufu with Satau, a tour of Larabanga, including the 600-year-old mosque, hanging out at local school, visiting with Satau at her grandfather’s house, egg sandwiches, and more playing and taking pictures with the children at night. We were the only Obrunis in the town and I felt at home.

4:30am the next morning we awoke to the bus approaching Larabanga. Lightening fast and laughing, we packed our things and ran to the stop, just in time. A hot, long, bumpy four hours later, we arrived in Tamale. Tamale lays in stark contrast to Accra: hotter, drier, Muslim, less crowded, more friendly, and the best part is everyone rides motorbikes or bicycles. The most impressive thing I saw was a motorcycle transporting (in this order, front to back) a toddler, a man, a goat, a woman, and a baby (on her back)…Now that’s efficiency. We spent the day exploring Tamale: the Center for National Culture, the central market, the side streets. After 5 days of dirt we finally took a bucket shower and went to bed satisfied with our journey to the North, alarms set to catch the 6:30am bus in the morning.

13-hours, the most unexplainably complicated traffic jam, and too many bananas later, we were home.

Traveling to Togo tomorrow.

More adventures to come.

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