THERE IS ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW OUT OF AFRICA
- Pliny the Elder
DISCOVER 54 COUNTRIES WITH THE LONGEST RIVER, THE HOTTEST LOCATION, AND THE LARGEST LAND ANIMALS IN THE WORLD.
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Benin
I dream of a Benin that smiles and that's why I invite us to turn resolutely toward a clear future.
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Cameroon
Cameroon is stronger because it’s a country of conquerors, of winners.
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Egypt
Egypt is full of dreams, mysteries, memories.
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Ghana
Ghana is a Huge Grindstone, and depending on what you are made of, can Grind you down or Polish you up.
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Kenya
Kenya is an immense land with a capacity for healing.
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Morocco
In Morocco, it’s possible to see the Atlantic and the Mediterranean at the same time.
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Nigeria
Nigeria will shine again if we reason together as Nigerians
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Tanzania
In Tanzania, it was more than one hundred tribal units which lost their freedom; it was one nation that regained it.
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Uganda
Uganda is the most diverse country in the world.
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Tunisia
Tunisia is always ready to turn the page.
READ THE LATEST POSTS ABOUT Africa.
Stone Town
Called Mji Mkongwe in Swahili, Stone Town is a district of the larger Zanzibar City, Stone Town has been the capital of the spice trade and the East African slave trade up until the 20th Century.
Ngorongoro Crater
First listed as a preserve in 1921, 25,000 animals make it their home, including 62 (as of 2001) Lions who suffer inbreeding issues due to the crater’s isolation. Many campsites and hotels dot the rim of the crater, given spectacular views of the inside.
Serengeti National Park
Established in 1952, the Serengeti National Park is synonymous with Safari. Famed the world over, even those who are unaware it is in Tanzania know the name. It is home to the greatest wildlife spectacle on earth - the great migration of wildebeest and zebra and covers almost 15,000 square kilometres.
Lake Manayara
Offering incredible views over the rift valley escarpment and with two thirds of its area covered by water, the Lake Manyara National Park is something amazing.
Mto Wa Mbu
Directly translated, Mto Wa Mbu means ‘The River of Mosquitos’. This town is often used as a base for Safari tours. Staying overnight in a campsite, it then gives easy access to various nearby National Parks.
Arusha
Despite its population of half a million, tourists would be forgiven to thinking Arusha is more of a staging ground for tours than a thriving city in its own right. Our time there was brief but we made the effort to at least leave the walled compound of our hotel and find a local sports bar.
Mt Kilimanjaro
Turning 42 on the slopes of Kilimanjaro, I hiked the Machame route from Machame Gate to Uhuru Peak, and down to Mweke Gate.
Casablanca
On Wednesday when we got to the hotel, it was fairly late, but we'd not eaten so we went up to the hotel restaurant for dinner and we got a bit of a show from a belly dancer who was working that evening.
Jinja
Jinja camp overlooks the Nile and is focused on an adventure; offering rafting, quad biking, horseback riding, paragliding and more. It was a shame that we only had one full day at Jinja, as it meant we could only do one activity and I’d have loved to take the quad bikes out on the back roads of Uganda.
Lake Mburo
We had another early morning and had to remember how to take down our tents, as it had been a few days. It was a few hour’s drive to Lake Mburo, but on arrival, we were welcomed by a monkey at the gate watching us whilst lounging on a tree limb.
Bwindi Impenetrable Forest
We only had a one and a half hour hike to reach the Gorilla family, but it was steep and very muddy and very humid. All my carefully prepared gear came off, and even the shirt I was wearing became unbuttoned and dripped with sweat.
Lake Bunyoni
After setup, we all went down to the dock for a swim. Lake Bunyoni is one of the deepest lakes in Africa, 6000 feet deep, which is a sizeable, though upside-down, mountain.
Kasese
Another 6am departure to start the day, we collected up the other sixteen people who were joining our group and had a sausage based breakfast before I curled up on the truck, using my beanbag tripod for a pillow for an extra couple of hours sleep to get over the Safari induced hangover from the night before….
Kampala
We set off at 6am, having gotten up at 5, glad that the beer intake had been limited. As the clothes hadn’t dried fully the evening before, some of us strung up our clothes inside the van using a long spool of string and they were still drying in the morning, leaving the van to look something like a launderette.