From Marsabit on, our only way forward seemed to be by 4x4
as the lorries were reluctant to carry tourists. Thinking we were in for a nice, quick and easy
version of the trip we proudly got in to our new Land Cruiser, an absolute
beast of a vehicle, and settled in to the nice new seats. As usual, in a short
space of time, it became grossly overcrowded and mine and Robbies leg room was
cut in half by a huge bag of sugar. To make matters worse Jordan was moved and
told that the bag of sugar was to be his new seat. Our already halved leg room
was to be shared with ‘daddy-long legs’ himself.
The journey as a whole is difficult to explain. To merely say
it was dusty and uncomfortable is a complete understatement. To put it in words
will in itself be a weak attempt to do it justice, but I shall try nonetheless.
The best way I can explain it is that it was like being on a painful,
overcrowded, uncushioned roller-coaster in a dust storm for eight hours. You
leave an experience like that feeling like you have reached a new level of mental strength and physical endurance. The corrugated gravel roads
shake your entire body relentlessly and your
inability to hold onto anything means every bump causes
your body to slam either against the person next to you or into the vehicle
itself. We got off in Moyale, Jordan and
I each with a cracked rib and Robbie
suffering from severe back spasms. To make matters worse rain and dust had combined
to create mud all over our bags and our hair had stiffened into one big
dread.
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Rob n Jords looking like dusty nomads at a midway stop during our 4x4 trip. |
I must add that this particular section of the journey is known amongst travellers as the ‘bone cruncher’ and is considered the most hectic stretch of the entire 'Cape to Cairo'. Having said this, reaching Moyale alive had a triumphant feeling to it and we felt all-conquering ‘knowing’ that, theoretically, it shouldn’t get any worse as far as journeys go.
Of course Africa was intent on teaching us a lesson and on arrival at the Ethiopian border we were told we had been misinformed about being able to attain a visa upon entry and had to go all the way back to Nairobi to get it. After arguing for thirty minutes to try find a way around, the very unhelpful border official loudly and rather rudely exclaimed “There is no option! You go Nairobi”. Moreover he proudly states that it is a common problem, as if the fact that it’s happened to many travellers should make us feel better about ourselves. Having lost all sense of humour by now I can only think that if its such a common problem, do something about it instead of just sitting there all smug-like and fat in your office with your stupid swivel chair (for me, being jobless, I detest swivel chairs as they symbolise office work and yet I admire them because we all know swiveling on chairs is cool, especially if you’re on an international call talking about stocks and shares in a nice shiny suit, wearing shoes that have laces and socks that aren't secret). Nevertheless, I keep quiet and we humbly return to Kenya, tails between our legs.
The thought of repeating the ‘bone cruncher’ was eating away at our morale. Typical us; no one would ever
dream of having to do this leg once, let alone twice and yet here we were about to do it three times,
just for kicks. In fact we were so desperate not to do it again that we looked
for alternative routes through Sudan and even Somalia; our logic being that we
had more chance of survival in these countries than going back and forth along the terrible roads. Even these, however, meant a substantial amount of backtracking and even returning to
Nairobi.
Just as all seemed lost. a life line was given when Chris, a
local border hustler, told us of two Americans who phoned their embassy in Addis
and managed to organise entry into Ethiopia without a visa. And so, we wasted
no time in buying a sim card and dedicatedly began phoning the eight or so different
numbers we found for the embassy. The response was typically South African and
for the first day the phone just rang and rang. On the second day more of the
same until about the one hundred and fiftieth call; an answer. Needless to say
despite the best efforts of the very helpful Busi, our embassy obviously didn’t
have the same sway as the Americans and we were sent packing, Africa had won
the battle; Nairobi, round two.
Ten minutes later we found ourselves booking the one way bus
ticket back to Nairobi. A “Twenty four hour” trip. Unfortunately all that was available
was the back row and after being warned against taking these seats we niavely,
or perhaps ignorantly, ignored the
advice, settling for seats fifty eight, fifty nine and sixty.
The trip back was worse than the trip before, the bus gave us
an absolute beating; sitting behind the rear wheel created a see-saw effect, throwing you up and then slamming you down, as if the person on the other
end just jumped off when you were at your highest. In fact, it was so bad that
Jordan and I found ourselves standing for two hours at one point just to get some
respite. Back spasms and cracked ribs flaring up again, we whimpered and whined
the entire thousand kilometres back to Kenya’s capital, dehydrated, sore,
needing to wee and unable to get a wink of sleep.
Not only had our budget taken a huge dent but our spirits had
too. An extra R500 on doing the worst part of the journey three times instead
of once was hard to swallow and we arrived in Nairobi battered and bruised, truly
a sight for sore eyes.
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