Browsing Category

Travel

Pharaohs after dark

December 22, 2010

Getting to Abu Simbel takes effort.

The small Nubian town is situated  in the southern portion of Egypt, where the country really starts to feel like Africa. As one of the driest inhabited places on earth, most Nubians don’t even bother to put a roof over their clay homes.

Unfortunately, it’s difficult for tourists to get there. Due to security concerns, all foreigners are encouraged to travel from Aswan to Abu Simbel by police convoy. There is at least one convoy per day going into and out of the town.

The unfortunate part of taking the convoy is that it leaves too early (3 a.m.), it is expensive, and everybody is shepherded through the same Abu Simbel temples during a two-hour window.

Public transportation is available, but it is not reliable. Also, only four foreigners are allowed to ride each bus, in an effort to make the vehicles less of a target for terrorists.

My husband and I decided to combine the two options. We took the police convoy to Abu Simbel, stayed the night at a Nubian lodge, then returned to Aswan by public transportation the following day.

I think we were right on the money.

Seeing the Great Temple of Ramses II for the first time was exactly as we expected — astounding, breathtaking, but also very loud, busy and crowded.

So we waited. We strolled back to our Nubian lodge, sipped hibiscus tea, took cool showers. After the convoys rolled out of town, we returned to the temples for a second round.

This time, it was quiet. Mysterious. Magical.

Walking into each temple felt like traveling through time.

At the Temple of Hathor and Nefertari, I felt as if I had been summoned to the site by the pharoah himself. I could only hear my own footsteps, my heartbeat and the wind sliding over the stone crevices.

No crowds also meant I could take an illegal photo of the carvings inside the temple. (It was so beautiful in there, I just couldn’t help myself!)

As the sun made way for a swollen moon, a small crowd trickled in to watch the nightly sound and light show.

It was a great show. We’ve heard that the other sites put on cheesy presentations — like in Giza, where the Sphinx narrates a story while disco lights bounce off the pyramids — but this was tasteful and restrained.

Then again, the “sound” part of the “sound and light show” was in Japanese, so it could have been cheesy as hell. (I really wish somebody would have told us that translator headphones were available.)

Still, the sight of Abu Simbel at night — stately, regal, overwhelming — made everything worthwhile.

At closing time, a guard ushered us toward the path.

“Shhh.” he said as he tiptoed away. “Ramses is sleeping.”

 

Scene on a bus

December 16, 2010

I’m on the bus from Kigali, Rwanda, to Kampala, Uganda.

The trip takes between 9 to 19 hours, depending on the bus company and road conditions, curling around terraced hills, banana trees and fields of feathery papyrus.

“Careless Whisper” is playing on the radio. It crackles every time George Michael hits a high note.

A man across the aisle has his shoes off, legs extended. His socks are long and have individual toes, striped with various shades of purple.

I’ve been in that hazy place somewhere between sleep and consciousness. I smile at my new friend, Santo, sitting in the seat beside me. He helped me navigate through border offices and made sure I wasn’t cheated at a currency exchange bureau. We’ve been taking turns watching each others luggage during bathroom stops.

As we’ve rolled through the countryside, Santo has pointed out things I wouldn’t have noticed otherwise: Fish drying on the hood of a car, drums made from stretched cow hide, metallic grasshopper traps used to collect the insects for food, the dirt road that leads to his father’s village.

“How long –” I begin.

He answers my question before I even get a chance to ask it.

“Eighty kilometers.”

Mudflaps thwack against the truck in front of us. They say, “Different colors. One people. One love.”

 

The host

December 15, 2010

Travel is hard.

And nothing drives that point home more than a case of parasites.

NOTE: If you are at all squeamish, you should probably stop reading now. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

First problem: Red spots peppering my belly. As much as I like polka dots, these little buggers were starting to worry me. See, I’ve never had chicken pox, and they look kinda chicken poxy. Plus a guy who recently stayed at my hostel had shingles, and well … it all makes sense. I’m going to die.

Problem 2: Yucky, unsettled stomach. Enough said.

Were the two problems somehow related? There was only one way to find out — a trip to King Faisel Hospital in Kigali!

I checked into the ER.

“We’re busy. Come back later,” a guy said.

Um, really? This is a hospital. But the request caught me off guard, so I obeyed. An hour later I returned.

When I asked to see a doctor, there was a lot of whispering, some muttering in Kinyarwanda, then a couple phone calls.

“We’re trying to find a doctor who will see you,” one of the clerks told me.

Again, this caught me off guard. Are you not hospital? Do you not see patients?

Eventually, they led me to a room and I waited. When the door opened, a female American doctor was ready to see me. I explained my problems, and she examined my skin.

As soon as I said I recently went rafting the Nile, the stomach problems were easy to explain. The doctor said I have schistosomiasis, a very complicated word that basically means I have organ-eating parasites. Left untreated, it could be devastating to my health, but with the proper medication, it is quick and easy to flush out of my system. Excellent.

Next up — polka dots.

The doctor said these are bites from a fly that lays eggs in laundry. When a piece of clothing is air drying, the fly burrows into the most moist part of the clothing, usually the waist band. Then the eggs hatch and the insects start burrowing into human skin where they lay more eggs. Eventually they die, and they don’t cause any major health issues.

“I know it sounds gross in theory …” the doctor started to say.

I interrupted, “No. It’s just gross.”

“Yeah. Pretty gross,” she agreed. “But also pretty common in East Africa.”

To prevent this kind of nastiness in the future, she said I should iron all my clothes, especially the waistbands, which will kill the eggs before they hatch.

The good news: I was now armed with a prescription for anti-itch cream and some pills to kill my parasites.

The bad news: Even when you have a prescription, the pharmacy doesn’t necessarily have what you need.

Twelve pharmacies later, I am still on the hunt for my medication. Keep your fingers crossed, because I’m getting tired of hosting this parasite party.

 

Heavenly creatures

December 13, 2010

When the tourism office in Rwanda asked what day I’d prefer for my gorilla trek, I purposely chose a Sunday.

Better than any church or cathedral, Parc National des Volcans is my kind of spiritual place. Sandwiched near the border of Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the majestic landscape is carpeted with flowers and lush greenery. The horizon is dominated by ancient volcanoes. The hum of birds and insects acts as a choir.

Many of the last remaining mountain gorillas call this place home. Because of that, this is also where famed gorilla researcher Dian Fossey lived and died.

Permits to see the gorillas are expensive, only eight people can see each gorilla family each day, and transportation can be brutal — which makes planning difficult and complicated. I hesitated to even do this at all, because it sounded like far more trouble than necessary. Besides, I’ve seen gorillas in the zoo.

But, my husband talked me into going. He said I would regret it if I came to Rwanda and didn’t see the gorillas, and I decided he was right.

On the day of my trek, several groups of people were sorted and matched up with guides, then we all took off in search of our different families. The families are tracked each day, so every guide has a good indication of where to go.

See this mountain? That’s where my group had to trek in order to find our gorillas.

We slogged through knee-high mud and thick tangles of stinging nettles that had to be sliced with machetes. The slopes were steep and slippery enough that many of us climbed on all fours — gorilla-style — occasionally clinging to bamboo stalks to keep from tumbling back down again. My boots felt like they were caked with molasses.

Because the terrain can be dangerous, my group was also accompanied by armed guards.

Here’s my bad-ass crew. Fo shizzle.

Then, magic.

My first glimpse of a gorilla in the wild.

The mud, the fatigue, the expense … all worth it for this.

Just a few arm lengths away from each other, this gorilla and I were sharing the same air. I could hear him breathe, and I could smell the musky scent of his fur.

I’m moved to tears just thinking about it again.

It didn’t take much longer before we located the silverback, Charlie.

And his baby.

And a mama, who was quickly joined by two more babies.

There were gorillas everywhere, all around me, eating, playing, climbing, even charging past me and grabbing my shoulder.

For the first time, I felt like I truly understood the meaning of the word “awesome.” The entire experience was inspiring, overwhelming, dizzying. It must be what some people feel when they are moved to speak in tongues.

Every part of this was holy.

This is my idea of heaven and the kind of perfection that exists within it.

Thank you, gorillas, for letting me inside your home.

And thank you, world, for never-ending adventure.

 

Cocktail hour at Hotel Rwanda

December 11, 2010

Definition of surreal: A poolside margarita at Hotel des Mille Collines.

You might know it better as Hotel Rwanda, thanks to the 2004 film that details the story of what happened there.

This is where hotelier Paul Rusesabagina hid 1,268 refugees during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. While violence raged throughout the country, Rusesabagina bribed soldiers to stay away from his “guests” and maintained the appearance of a posh hotel. All the while, refugees were hiding in each and every room, drinking pool water to survive.

I had a margarita by that pool while a DJ played Stevie Wonder and Abba.

The hotel is back to being a high-class joint, serving overpriced paninis and offering a long menu of spa treatments.

I wouldn’t expect the Mille Collines to become a memorial for the genocide — there are already many beautiful, reverent places for that — but still.

It is so weird to be there, knowing what happened, and seeing absolutely no sign of it at all.