Intro

A year or so after writing the original intro to this blog I find myself in somewhat different circumstances. Having finished my studies in 2011, procrastination is no longer the driving factor behind my pieces. As it turns out, I have joined 3 friends from varsity, two of which left London last July, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, for a trip home of a slightly different kind. A trip that allows me the luxury of not giving a continental about the fuel price but more about the direction of the wind and the gradient of the road as we endeavour to cycle back home to the city we all met, Cape Town . When time, money and UN's most recently added human right, internet access, is available I will be spending my time turning random notes, scribbles and possibly illustrations fit only for display in the age 5-7 category at the Bathurst Show in my leather-bound journal into readable content of varying natures. I'll do this to satisfy my own need to write crap as well as to ensure that memories made are never forgotten, much like the memories never remembered every weekend in my undergrad stint at UCT. If it turns out people read this and enjoy it...epic! My fellow adventurers can be followed on TomAndMattCycle.com and Along4TheCycle.blogspot.com.



Wednesday, May 2, 2012

On The Road In Kenya: Hills And Flats


On the morning of our departure from the lodge at the foothills of Mount Kenya in which we had lazed away the last 8 days, we got up and ready to leave with the speed and enthusiasm of an eight year old child being forced to go to an evening communion service – one of those drawn out ones where you drink cheap grape juice and attempt to digest a circular wafer of polystyrene – that coincided with the Sunday night movie, Shrek 6.

It was 10:30 by the time we got going, stomachs full and bikes loaded. Despite a bunch of gravel roads heading west, our new general direction en-route to the Ugandan capital of Kampala, we headed directly south on the tarred highway toward Nairobi before an acute turn at a T-junction lead us back in almost the same direction we came. The reason for our detour and sharp turn was not because of our lack of geometry skills but rather an attempt to avoid the unknown quantities that were the gravel roads that most of the locals pointed us down when asked for directions as any momentum garnered by our heavy homes-on-wheels would be rendered all but null-and-void and only cause damage to our bikes who – they have feelings – will need all the respite we can afford them on our long way down. As it stands Chen's bike, Joseph, is squeaking along with broken but usable front and rear pannier racks while Nelson and Sebastian, Jim’s bike, are largely intact.

Hills and more hills were the order of the day – the next three days in fact -, probably an appropriate punishment for our prolonged period of doing nothing, something that we have perfected into an art form. Thanks to the recent onset of the long rains, the Kenyan countryside has been an experience in itself. Forests and farmlands have been nothing but green, surrounding quaint towns and an impressive amount of schools, almost all of which offer boarding facilities. The frequency of schools, both in and out of town, is apparently largely due to an American programme that made finance available to builders of schools, many of which have been left half-built or consist of little more than the roadside sign itself and the lenders out of sight and mind. As interesting as the schools were themselves, the names were arguably more so. Prime examples displaying a disastrous lack of imagination are: ‘Shining Stars Academy’ and ‘Bright Future High School’.

As we ventured off the highway where white-driven vehicles – all 4x4s of course – passed us regularly, we were met with friendly and excited shouts of, “How are you!?” that evolved into a rhythmical chorus of kids chanting the line repeatedly in unison, obviously not as accustomed to our fairer complexions as the people around the tourist-friendly Nanyuki. The general reception was impressively positive with amazement being directed more at our heavily-laden bicycles than the weirdly clothed mzungu riders with a strange variety of hairstyles and, at best, inconsistent facial hair.

The third and final day of our trek to Nakuru was without doubt my favourite of the trip thus far. Having made our way to over two thousand metres above sea level, we came out on top of a mountain that overlooked an immense valley, part of the Great Rift Valley that runs 9600km’s from Israel to Mozambique, or so read the signs outside little curios shops. We did begin to question the accuracy and authenticity of the tourism signs, which, if all were to be believed, would mean we crossed the equator at least seven times on the day, sometimes crossing from north to south and back in less than fifty metres. Having undoubtedly being dealt the better hand with the downhill into the valley being twice the size of the uphill out of it and followed by a lengthy, gradual decline, we passed through more immaculate, arable land on which tea and banana trees seemed to be thriving amongst pastures of cows, sheep and goats operated by small-scale farmers.

In an attempt to become slightly more politically aware and, more importantly, better at 30 Seconds, I am currently reading: ‘The State of Africa’, from which one can gather an understanding –in my case a vague one at best - about the varying effects that colonialism had on African countries. No doubt a standout positive from my point of view is the introduction of ‘TNT’ into the road building process. In un-colonised Ethiopia, apart from a disgraceful lack of cricket and rugby, the roads rolled up over the peaks of hills and down through the troughs of the valleys. Terrain which would have tormented our leg muscles has all of a sudden become far more navigable as roads have been blasted out of the side of mountains avoiding the necessity of ‘cresting’ the hills – when you spend five hours a day on a bicycle you’re allowed to make up your own jargon: fact – and starting climbs from the lowest point possible.

Going back to the first night of the trip to Nakuru, we set up camp for the first time since I joined Team TomAndMattAndJimAndBusterCycleWithTomActuallyOnAMotorbike.com. Having heard from a girl called Brenner, who we met in Addis and was cycling solo up Africa, that Catholic Church gardens were the poor man’s Hilton Hotel equivalent campsites – except a lot freer – we ventured out in search of one in a small town called Mweiga. After a Titanic-scale failure of an attempt to communicate with the Church cleaner in English we knocked on the ‘Office’ door which, in a very unscriptural-like fashion, was not opened unto us. Everyone is allowed one bad and one cynical joke a day. I realise I have just used up both.

We resorted to parroting words out of a Swahili dictionary and eventually were pointed around the back of the church to a double story house with a garage of a couple smart-looking Rav 4’s. Daniel, who I can only assume was the minister’s domestic, phoned up his boss to come suss out our trio of vagabond cyclists. As we waited for the blessing or what would be a terribly awkward and un-Jesus like refusal of shelter from Father John we were scrutinised in pure fascination by a bunch students from a girls prep school situated within the confines of the Church property. Thankfully, Father John, a man who didn’t look like he went hungry too often, happily granted us permission to spend the night on the church grounds and went as far as calling us a blessing. Imagine that.

As we set up camp and cooked up a vegetarian storm – so more of a gentle drizzle I guess – we were keenly crept out by two girls of about ten who asked us to come to the church service in which they were dancing the next day. Between meeting the catechist, Samuel - whose role in the church I knew nothing about but found out that he gets his own office, cool robes and has the task of holding the microphone up to the mouth of the minister during the sermon and who was at best asexual -,the repeated use of the line: “Come to my house if you need anything. Anything” from Daniel and a decent dose of generalisation, I figured that it was probably a good thing that the school next door only catered for little girls. 

Having been woken up by - and therefore missed - the early morning English service the next day, we attended the first twenty minutes of the Kikuyu service (Kikuyu being a large Kenyan tribe that were displaced from the greater Nairobi area by British colonisers) after we had packed up. Despite the fact that pretty much everyone went through a ritual of bending a knee to the ground and using water from Dumbledore’s pensieve to do the crucifix sign that all the Brazilians do when they score a goal, one man sporting an Aston Villa shirt skipping the ritual was enough for us to feel ok about entering the church without doing the jig. We chose a seat on a bench right at the back on what turned out to be the side of the church designated for females so that we could make a stealthy exit after the dancing. Once the little dance routine had been performed with the cohesion of a Tin Roof dance floor bobbing to a dub-step track and in between a few lines by the minister that we pretended to understand, we snuck out the back door as unnoticed as three white okes wearing spandex can possibly be.

Having clocked up 1000km’s on the second day of the journey, a day after Chen passed ten times that distance, Nelson decided he wasn’t getting enough attention and ran a slow puncture on what had become a torrid stretch of tarmac which the 15-seater taxis with a capacity of thirty-three were neglecting in favour of the gravel tracks bordering the road, often on the wrong side – Kenyan driving licenses are rumoured to be the third highest selling commodity behind Tusker beer and goat meat. Despite a series of stops to blow up the tube, the slow puncture got less slow and forced us to pull over 15 kilometres short of our destination in the afternoon rain having made cycling as difficult as running in mud while piggy-backing your grandmother.

My rear tyre was as impossibly difficult to remove from the wheel as the front one had been a few weeks before. With the help of - slash thanks to the sole effort of – Jim, the tyre was stripped off and the tube replaced with the tube that was the victim of my first flat and which I had repaired in Karichota. Both back at home and when I arrived I was questioned and ridiculed for my lack of preparation; rightly so it seems as my first ever attempt at repairing a tube turned out to be a miserable failure. To pile on the misery, we only realised my ineptitude once Jim had put the bastard wheel back on, forcing us – well, Jim – to repeat the entire exhausting and frustrating process while Chen filmed the agony and I put on my best face of concern. After eventually getting Nelson on the road, an effort that has left me insurmountably indebted to Jim, we reached a small town 6km short of our intended destination where we had to pull over in imminent darkness and find the only hotel available so as to avoid setting up camp and cooking in the dark and the rain.

After an extensive breakfast consisting of a glorious mixed fry-up of tomato, onion, banana and baked beans on chipati cooked in full view of the thundering Thompson Falls, we headed off on our final days ride into Nakuru where we were to be kindly hosted by Bella, a friend of mine from Kingswood - good school. After a short stint on a highway bypassing the busy centre of Nakuru, we pushed our bikes up the dirt road that ran along Bella’s boundary fence with all seven of their dogs barking wildly at us until we reached the gate with a sign reading: “Beware. Puppies loose”.

Writing this on the stoep – it feels good to use a South African word – of a guest cottage on Bella’s tranquil and picturesque estate just outside Nakuru, home to an assortment of geese, guinea fowls, chickens, cats and dogs, we once again find ourselves surrounded by the unconditional kindness that this trip has thrived on since Tom and Matt set off from England. On the topic of kindness, a dream I had on the second night of our Nakuru leg reminded me about something I had not yet mentioned in my seemingly endless pages of bullshit. In my rather absurd dream I somehow managed to meet Eminem – it goes without saying that I played it cool and called him Marshall. We got along famously – obviously - and in conversation I subtly slipped in the fact that there was a charity based in Cape Town which we hoped would benefit from any exposure our trip created – almost as discreetly as I have just mentioned it here. Marshall ever so kindly donated a million US Dollars to the cause.

Although I don’t want to discourage a donation of that magnitude, it is by no means expected. Even if you decide to pass on the unbelievable opportunity of donating money, a quick look at the cause on Tom and Matt’s website and maybe a mention to the folks will – might – go a long way to helping the cause. The donation page can be found on the aptly named ‘Sponsor our Saddle Sores’ page (http://tomandmattcycle.com/sponsor-our-saddle-sores/) with more information on the cause itself on http://tomandmattcycle.com/the-cause/ .


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