Friday, 11 May 2007

The Sudan

Ever since i started thinking of this little trip, Sudan has been the great big question mark in my mind. No one i knew had been there really, and all i ever heard were news report about war and warnings from concerned parents. But as we started getting closer and speaking to people who had come down from there, we kept on hearing the same stories of amazing generosity and the most genuinely friendly people in the world.

So we got our visas, eventually and when we crossed the border at Gallabat and breathed in the crisp, clean (albeit hot) Sudanese air, we knew we were in for something special. We took a taxi to Gadaref and stayed the night, and in the morning went looking for a bus to Khartoum. Arriving at the station, note after three days of travelling and in the same clothes, we were greeted by a plethora of luxury coaches, and boarding one after a little price haggle, we actually felt too dirty to be on it. Air conditioned, big comfortable seats, all occupied by smart families off to Khartoum for some weekend shopping. We were used to the filth of Ethipopian busses where i had no problems throwing a bottle or paper on the floor, now we were tainting this small piece of heaven with our mere presence. But we were okay with it. They even gave out cooldrinks just as the heat reached its zenith at midday. And the music, oh the music!! It didnt sound like it was made by a drunk 11 year old with a Fischer Price My First Recording Studio (as in Ethiopia), but you could actually listen to it without your head exploding after 2 minutes. This bus really set the tone for Sudan, a place we came to love.

Our glorious pink bus!


Oh ja, that morning, back in Gedaref, we were walking to find the bus station along some small back road, and were passed by a convoy of three land cruiser bakkies with about 10 soldiers on the back of each, and a roof mounted gattling gun. It was sort of a wake up call for us. After that though we didnt see much of a military presence, except for passport checkpoints outside cities, the whole country just seems to be getting on with whatever they're doing.

So we were in Khartoum for about a bit less than a week, camping at the Blue Nile Sailing Club, along with about 6 other overland bikers and drivers on their way to Cape Town. Its a really nice spot, right on the Blue Nile (where we periodically soothed our scorched bodies after kilometers of walking). The walking was due to the fact that we couldnt work out the public transport system, and taxis were really expensive, along with most other things in the city. This meant we also drank litres of cooldrinks, which are in abundance, i think we tried about 7 flavours of Fanta, and theres hundreds of other makes too, Stim Apple deserves a mention here, im looking into an import license. We were overwhelmed, but made the best of it. It was also around this time we discovered frozen Fanta, an accidental drink was left in the deepfreeze at our local juice spot and we pounced on it. We lived off them after that, searching the city for the solid icy joy in those bottles. One drink, perhaps the only one absent in Sudan, is alcohol, not a drop. At first i thought this a ridiculous idea, not being able to suck down a cool draught in the heat of the afternoon, but after a bit of thinking i began to realize the method in this madness. To have a hangover, even just the slightest hint of one, in that heat (which was as high as 54 at midday and dropped to a cool 35 by nightfall!!) would be a fate worse than death, so by removing the temptation of alcohol all together, the government is actually doing the population a huge favour, and saving them from themselves... In a way.

On Saturday afternoon we decided that we had been useless tourists, only having wandered the streets for days (Pd and i did actually go to the Ethnological Museum once, but that was only because they had an especially cold looking water cooler), so decided to hop on a bus and head out to Meroe, where there are some 72 pyramids in the middle of the desert somewhere. We were supposed to get permits for this, but didnt have the time to wait, as we had tickets for the Monday train. After about three hours the bus ground to a halt, and the conductor motioned for us to get out. We werent even sure that this was the right place, its not really a big tourist attraction, nothing really is in Sudan. But we stepped out into the endless, steamy, vast expanse of sand, 10 litres of water, 9 oranges, 3 grapefruit and our tent, Vivica A Fox, in hand, and the bus drove away. It was a good feeling, just us 3 and some ancient pyramids. A friendly Nubian on a camel approached over the dune, and offered us a ride, so we took turns all the way from the road for about 100m, then we were just saying goodbye and thank you, he holds out his hand and asks for ten Sudanese pounds, sneaky bastard, it was fun though and worth it. It seems though as if even out there tourism is taking hold. After wandering around the first cluster of pyramids, which are much smaller and pointier than the egyptian ones, looking at the carvings inside the entrances and taking nice cliched pyramid pictures (to follow) we set up camp the required 100m away and went to sleep under the stars. It was spectacular. The next morning we hitched a ride back to Khartoum with a trucker.




We took the train on Monday to Wadi Halfa, a 36 hour, 3rd class nightmare through the Nubian Desert. The less said about this the better, really it hurts me to relive it. The first 5 hours were fine, the three of us and one other bloke on hard wooden benches, enjoying the view along the Nile, when suddenly at a stop our little section of third class was invaded by cute looking, wide eyed little girl, her baby sister, mother, 7 aunts and delusional blind grandmother. So now there were 15 people in the space set out for 8, and it was starting to get hot. When the little girl started hitting Pd, we realized that the frozen hibiscus tea ice lollies we'd just given her were a big mistake, we bacame her 'friends' and gave her energy she really didnt need. I managed to snatch a few interrupted hours of sleep, but upon waking at about 4, i saw a look of pure malice in Pd's red sleep-deprived eyes, thats when i decided to give up my window seat. The rest of the ride was, to put it nicely, crap. I would do everything in my power not to do it again, the best part was arriving in Wadi Halfa, a tiny dusty border town where we slept the night before boarding the ferry to Aswan, from where i am writing this.

The devil child (while we were still friends)




Jared fell asleep next to the window and woke up looking like this


The ferry was a much better experience overall, air conditioned during the day, and for the night we set up Vivica on the deck and slept in amongst most of the other male passengers on board. We also saw the four huge statues of Rameses II at Abu Simbel, now im not much of an Egyptologist but they impressed me, even from the boat through binoculars. That man really had something to prove, theyre massive.
Tomorrow we leave on a felucca for a few days down to a place called Kom Ombo (?), then to Luxor for a bit, followed by a short train to Cairo. Man it seems so close.

If you read this now, check back in a day or two because iv got some wicked pictures to add.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great to read the latest story, look forward to the pics too. Who will be writing about Lalibella etc in the blog - there is a gap in the tale?? And so to Cairo!!
Happy adventures.
Love,
Helen

Anonymous said...

Apologies, there is no gap - it seems so long since the last post that I thought it was just as far as Addis! Oh dear.
Love Helen

Shayne & Jeanine said...

i love you guys...

Anonymous said...

Hi guys

Awesome blog, I'm travelling from Cairo to Cape Town this summer and caught your blog looking for routes, that was over an hour ago...

The part I'm having most trouble with is getting from Khartoum to Kenya. I know you went through Ethiopia but how?

If this somehow reaches you email me at: d.j.mclaren@hotmail.co.uk

Cheers

Dan