Murder at Murchison?

In the morning, we manage to somehow get a taxi to the Red Chilli Hideaway hostel, where our tour to Murchison National Park will depart. We wait for ages for them to get us into the van, and when we do, T and I sit in the back row with a guy named Ben. Ben is English/South African, having grown up in SA but moved to England when he was a teenager. He works for the UN as an economic consultant and T and I like him immediately. Unfortunately, the same is not true of Vladimir (whose actual name is not Vladimir, but go with me here) who sits in the row in front of us. Vladimir is a Ukrainian with American citizenship (I feel it is important to qualify that he is not American by birth), who knows Everything. He joins in the conversation with T and Ben about economics about an hour outside of Kampala and for the rest of the ride he never. shuts. up. I give up on the conversation when he informs us that 95% of Americans have health insurance, at which point I told him that I must know the entire 5% who don’t. I am more grateful for my iPod than I have ever been.

We stop for lunch and meet the other members of the tour: Sammy, a Ugandan working in Sudan, her friend Marlene, a Dutch girl working for the same organization, and a couple of German women. I try to eat my lunch while averting my eyes from Vladimir, who is shoveling food into his mouth with a relish I have never seen of Jews eating pork. I can’t look at it or I will retch.

I spend the rest of the ride with my iPod on, trying to tune out Vladimir’s constant assertions about The Way Life Is and T and Ben’s economic durka. It works well, and we drive through colorful villages and children stand on the side of the road waving to us for most of the ride. I am listening to “Under African Skies” when the iPod dies, suddenly, just outside the entrance to the park. Fortunately, we are all distracted by the monkeys running around outside the van, and I wonder, were I to throw Vladimir out the window, would they eat him on the spot? I amuse myself with my twisted, bitter thoughts until we get to the camp.

The camp is a bunch of tents built around a large wooden hut, overlooking a stunning green valley and the Nile. We dump our bags in the tents and head down to the river, where we have been strictly forbidden to bother the hippos, or we will face a certain death by hippo. So we walk down, swatting at mosquitoes, and look for wildlife that won’t kill us. We don’t see much wildlife of any sort, except for hippos across the river, which are much too far away to chew our faces off. Or are they? I don’t test the theory.

In the morning, after a boozy dinner the night before, we get up to go on our safari. We take a boat across the river and immediately see all kinds of baboons running amok. We climb into the van and head into the wild (or a dirt path through some deep grasses). We see elephants and lions from a distance, and I am equally fascinated by them and annoyed that we can’t get closer (because we are on a low-budget safari, we don’t have a 4×4). We see water buffalo and giraffes and Uganda kobs and they are all beautiful. As usual, I am too short to be able to see out the top of the van, which lifts off, becoming a kind of sun shelter, so I spend most of the time looking out the window. I am in love with the sunbaked nature of things, which makes everything brighter. It reminds me of Australia.

After lunch, we go back down to the river for a boat tour of Murchison Falls. It’s starting to rain, but the boat is covered, so it’s okay. We cruise slowly up the river, past a bunch of fat, fighting hippos and I realize why my friend Cara is terrified and repulsed by them. They could and would chew my face off, if I let them. The falls are really beautiful, and everyone stops to take some photos. I mostly sit and watch out the side of the boat, still exhausted for no good reason. The rain kicks up and starts pouring into the boat and finally stops just in time for us to get out and go to dinner.

Dinner is wildly entertaining, because everyone is drinking too much, except for Sammy, who is on a special diet. Still, she wins for best story of the night, which goes like this: Sammy teaches English in Sudan. Her class is entirely Muslim boys, no girls. One day, she was teaching the alphabet and she got to the letter Z. Z is for zip, she told her class. She pointed to one of the boys. Show me your zip! He just stared at her. Show me your zip! she says again. The boy starts to cry and runs out of the room. Later, Sammy finds out that zip is the local word for penis. Oops.

In the morning, we wake up and have breakfast and drive over to the top of the falls with some local Peace Corps volunteers. The sun is sweltering and we hike to the top and look down. It is a long, long drop down to the bottom and the rocks are slippery. I wonder if anyone on these tours has ever plunged to their death, but decide not to ask the guide. After walking around the top of the falls, we get back in the car and start the long drive back to Kampala. My iPod is dead, so I try to sleep. Unfortunately, because the two Peace Corps girls are getting a free ride, everything is much more crowded, so instead I stare out the window like a zombie, as the world flies by.

The trip is good enough that on the way back, I am no longer contemplating the various ways to kill Vladimir, and I am even willing to spend another night in his company. But fortunately, I don’t have to. And this pleases me.

April 17, 2009. ...of love, uganda. Leave a comment.

The happiest people on earth

I spent most of the flight to Kampala in tears. I tried to hide it by staring out the window, but it didn’t help. I looked down at Sudan, with its endless red sand and the footpaths slicing across the horizon. I tried to watch movies. I watched Juno and laughed a little, but when it ended I wanted to cry again.

Eventually, the red earth turned to a stunning green. Instead of flying over the desert, we appeared to be flying over the world’s brightest forest of broccoli florets. And then we were there. We got off the plane and it was immediately hotter and more humid than Addis. We stood on the tarmac and T reminded me that Kampala airport is the same place where the Israeli hostages were taken. I looked around and said, “Yes! And look how GREEN it is!”

We went inside to go through immigration, and T suddenly noticed that he didn’t have enough money for our visas. Online, it had said the visas were $10 apiece less than he had. But we had no money, so we waited in line anyway.

I realized pretty early on that Ugandans are even nicer than Ethiopians. By that, I mean they are much friendlier. Ethiopians are very quietly friendly, raising their eyebrows as a greeting. Ugandans are all smiles and teeth. Thank God, because otherwise we might have been in trouble. Our immigration agent was completely unfazed by our situation, and smiled at T and told him to go through customs to the ATM and get some more money and bring it back. Hang on, WHAT? I’ve seen a lot of immigration agents, but none of them ever told me (or T) to go on through the airport to get some more money.

And so I waited. And waited. And waited. And T didn’t come back. Eventually, the immigration man turned to me and told me I should go through and find him. EH?! I didn’t stop to question whether he had lost his mind, but I did ask if he wanted my passport in exchange. No, he said, waving me through.

Thus, I liked Uganda immediately.

What I did not like about Uganda was our guidebook, the Bradt guide to Uganda. Suckity suck suck, man. It was wrong about everything. It told us about hotels that did not exist, or were in the wrong places, or were likely never even built. Virtually everything it said was wrong. Nonetheless, we managed to find a lovely Chinese hotel (I’m starting to wonder if the Chinese see Africa as one giant colony), with a Chinese restaurant and very firm beds.

Kampala is a very modern, clean, pretty city. It has all kinds of international restaurants and bars, and it seemed worlds away from Addis. We spent a day or two walking around, eating Indian food, and sleeping. There was a lot of sleeping.

The best explanation I have is that leaving Ethiopia sucked every last ounce of energy from our bodies, and we had to recover. For a number of days. While watching cable. And getting full body (and I mean full body) massages by large Ugandan ladies at the nearby club. And marveling at the cheerfulness of all the Ugandans, who didn’t seem to mind that we looked like we had been hit by trucks and were wan and kind of grumpy. They smiled anyway.

January 8, 2009. ...of love, thailand, uganda. Leave a comment.