Making Friends at the Market

Bhekie in his shop.

A bowl vendor in his shop.

It’s 2:30 P.M. and we walk quickly back across the border without incident and take a taxi to the Victoria Falls craft market. The craft market is a sprawl of stalls encompassing several blocks. We begin methodically, trying to walk the grid of tiny shops, but each vendor demands that we stop and look at his wares; to support his craft and whines that he has not had any business that day.  The market is almost void of tourists and I feel for their plight, but am uncomfortable with such pressure. Some days ago, the Davidson Camp used lovely, geometrically painted wooden bowls to hold fruit and to pass out the heated towels. I see similar bowls at this market and choose two at one of the first stands. The price starts at $35 each and we settle at $20 for two.  Each shop offers slightly different designs and before long I have acquired 6 or 7 bowls. They are now nested and tightly bundled for transport and I have lost count.  We mill around the market, many eyes watching, and a few vendors shadowing us.  If I am momentarily absorbed in a possible purchase and John wanders off, when I look up, someone takes my arm and points to appraise me of John’s whereabouts. They all wish to be helpful: I surmise in the hopes of securing a bowl sale from me. John’s wish is to buy a carved chess set and he tortures the vendors with his discerning eye and eventually bargains for a board from one stall and chess pieces from another.  Although, I would not have made this purchase, I am pleased that he is taking time with his decision and spreading out the wealth between two vendors.

Making friends at the Crafts Market

I pop into a covered market arcade, leaving John to finalize his chess set purchase. My eyes adjust to the dim light and I realize that stalls in this arcade are operated by women only. They too pressure me to buy something to support them, but there is a different energy here.  I walk halfway into the arcade and turn around to exit when a group of women in the back implore me to come see their tiny stalls; ” Just look please.”  I walk to the back and am emotionally overwhelmed by the impossibility of it all.  One young woman reminds me of my daughter Alisha, full lips and wide set eyes, but with a milk chocolate complexion. She is 25 years old with two children, the same ages as my grand children.  I wish that I had made my purchases from these women and tell them so, tears welling up in my eyes. One of them holds out a set of 5 carved wooden spoons and quietly asks if I will buy these for $1 to help support them and to remember them.  I gather up the courage to ask if I may photograph them; hoping not to offend them, and explain that for me, it would be a better memory.  I feel very awkward and offer $5 to be shared between them if I may take photographs. They all speak quite good English and our photo “contract” relieves the tension. I take a few photos and they push close around me to view their images in the back of my camera and we talk and laugh for nearly 20 minutes.

 It is nearly 4:30 P.M. and time is running short if we wish to walk to the falls at sunset.  I urge John to finish his purchase and sit on a low dusty block wall to wait. We have spent nearly 2 hours here and the faces of the various vendors are now familiar.  Several gather around me and ask what I do for a living at home? They know that I have made my purchases and stop pressuring me to buy more. I tell them that I am a jeweler and pull out one of my folding cards. I am down to my last two of these cards and tell them that I cannot give it to them, but pull out a “Marty Magic Safari” post card to leave with them. One of the younger men pulls my web site up on his cell phone and I try to explain that I too sell at “markets,” but that each artist has a unique product so that the competition is not the same as here. The conversation is fun and easy and I take a few quick photos of them gathered together.  I wished that we could stay longer but leave with an e-mail address and promises to send the photos to them when I am back home.

It is nearly 4:30 P.M. and time is running short if we wish to walk to the falls at sunset.  I urge John to finish his purchase and sit on a low dusty block wall to wait. We have spent nearly 2 hours here and the faces of the various vendors are now familiar.  Several gather around me and ask what I do for a living at home? They know that I have made my purchases and stop pressuring me to buy more. I tell them that I am a jeweler and pull out one of my folding cards. I am down to my last two of these cards and tell them that I cannot give it to them, but pull out a “Marty Magic Safari” post card to leave with them. One of the younger men pulls my web site up on his cell phone and I try to explain that I too sell at “markets,” but that each artist has a unique product so that the competition is not the same as here. The conversation is fun and easy and I take a few quick photos of them gathered together.  I wished that we could stay longer but leave with an e-mail address and promises to send the photos to them when I am back home.

John and I hurry away, needing to offload our purchases at the hotel before walking to the falls.

P.S. After returning home, I followed up on my promise and e-mailed Bhekie and Magret, the woman dressed in pink. I sent one large box of good used clothes to them and am negotiating a purchase of bowls and fabric place mats that will be shipped to me soon.

Victoria Falls Bridge Bungee Jump – 4th of July

John’s “last” breakfast before the jump.
John with the Victoria Falls Bridge in the background.
I wake early and call Art via Skype.  It is 7:30 A.M. in Victoria Falls and 10:30 P.M. in California.  It’s wonderful to see Art’s face on Skype, if ever so briefly.  The connection is slow and we turn off the video feature and talk for 30 minutes.  All is well at home and we will return in one week.
I allow John to seep in and sit alone and drink coffee at the Jungle Junction Café within the Victoria Falls Hotel. At 9:00 A.M. I wake John and we enjoy a fine buffet breakfast together at this outdoor café, with views of the Victoria Falls Bridge.

Curious Monkeys
The long walk to the bridge

Bungee jumping is John’s top priority and we walk 10 minutes, up to the small strip of town. Street vendors approach us selling polished wooden hippos, elephants and copper wire bracelets. Their persistence was a novelty to us yesterday, but today it is simply annoying and uncomfortable.  We walk briskly, refusing to engage in conversation. An energetic woman of 40 approaches us with clip board in hand and asks us if we want to take an elephant ride or a sunset cruise? I decline and John interjects, telling her that he is planning to go bungee jumping with “Shearwater Adventure.” She tells us that she is a booking agent for these activities and takes us upstairs to her small office and sells John the $155 adrenaline package of three activities; bungee jumping, bridge swing and bridge slide.  John researched these options and the prices yesterday and negotiates a $10 discount but when I pull out a credit card, the price reverts to $155. She walks us to a bank around the corner where I intend to withdraw cash, but the A.T.M. is temporarily out of money, so John pays with his cash, a reserve of American dollars that I knew was there, should we not be able to exchange money easily.

John holds a voucher in exchange for his cash and she walks with us part way to the bridge explaining that we must pass through customs on the Zimbabwe side, but will receive a pass to access just the bridge, where all these adrenaline activities take place. We walk a kilometer along the asphalt road and pass dozens of 18 and 24 wheel, semi- trucks, waiting to cross the border.  Baboons cavort on their loads, swing under their chassis and pick industrial waste from the pavement.  It is an unappealing yet fascinating stretch of road with the stench of diesel permeating the air.  A line of local Zimbabweans spill out from a faded, single story cement building and I snap a photo of both the line of trucks and the line of people. A guard approaches me crossly, telling me there is a fine for taking photos of the flag, which was not my intent, and I apologize and refrain from any other photos until well on the other side of the checkpoint.  We show our passports, receive a square of paper with #2 scrawled on it, exit outside, cross over to a table beneath a shade tree and show the scrap of paper and passports once again.  We see the bridge ahead, a beautiful engineering feat built in 1905.  It elegantly spans the canyon, the Zambia River rushing powerfully below.

I ask John if he is crazy, contemplating jumping from this 350 foot high bridge? I offer to reimburse him the money if he will change his mind but he affirms his insanity with a nervous grin; admits that he is scared but that he wants to proceed. We are pestered by street vendors as we make our way along the pedestrian walkway to the far side of the bridge where John is checked in and weighed.  Happily this area is off limits to the vendors and we climb a short, hillside stairway to the visitor center and the Bridge Café. John signs the release forms, is weighed in, and we wait for the better part of an hour, watching video clips of veteran jumpers who have survived. John chats with some of the jumpers as they watch and critique their dive and John’s confidence builds. Suddenly, John’s number is called and we are escorted from the visitor center to the center of the bridge where the “Crew” awaits, under a covered platform.  Just as John is being harnessed, the card in my camera flashes “full.”  I have a new one, but struggle to open the tamper proof packaging and thrust the package at one of the crew, begging him to open it for me, so that I can reload before my son jumps. My camera is reloaded, John moves to the edge of the platform, spreads out his arms and dives. Having the responsibility of filming his death defying jump, somewhat takes my mind off the reality of what is actually happening as I struggle to keep his distant, bouncing figure in my view finder. I note that his arms are moving against gravity, which assures me that he is alive, but it is an anxious 10 minutes before he has been hauled back up to the catwalk beneath the bridge and traversed to the end of the bridge and back to me.
His second jump is a “Bridge Swing,” requiring yet another dive from the platform, but this version has a second guide line attachment that swings him in an arch, rather than the head long bounce of the bungee. Only the Bridge Slide is left; a zip line from one side of the canyon to the far end of the bridge. The platform for this is above the visitor center and we wait patiently for John to have his turn. John was hoping that the zip line would be his first event; building up to the bungee jump and the Bridge swing, and after the others, the zip line seems tame. He meets me at the visitors center, tells me he would like a beer and struts over to the café bar, returning with his beer, having conquered this bridge and his fears.  We wait another 30 minutes to view his jump on the video, but don’t purchase it. The video is $45, not very well choreographed and I have the essence video-taped on my camera.

Lost in Victoria Falls Park – Zimbabwe side

John and I hurry away, needing to offload our purchases at the hotel before walking to the falls.  We stop quickly at the A.T.M. hoping to refuel our cash supply, but the digital message on the screen flashes “closed.” Back at the hotel, we grab our jackets and are soon walking down the path-way leading from the bottom lawn of the Victoria Falls Hotel to the entrance of the park. It is 4:55 P.M. when reach the entrance and I present my credit card to pay the $60 entrance fee; $30 each for foreigners. It is cash only and for the second time today, I dip into John’s extra cash.  We print our names and entry time into the park ledger, don our semi water proof jackets and set off  towards the falls.  The park closes at 6:00 so we have just one hour to make the circuit. If there was a map available, we do not receive one and I assume that the trails will be clearly marked. The sun will set in 30 minutes and I want to take as many photos as possible in the slanted afternoon light. The Falls are indescribably glorious and powerful, with spray so intense that at times, we cannot see across the gorge, but only hear the thunderous roar of the cascading water. We walk quickly from one vantage point to another, aware that we must complete the circuit within the hour. We see only a few other visitors on the trails, and have the park almost to ourselves. The vista points are precariously close to the sheer cliffs and have only knee high chain barriers between the pathways and oblivion. The paths are slippery and mossy from the constant spray and we find ourselves walking through a mysterious rainforest, when just 20 minutes earlier, we were jacketless and trekking over dusty terrain.

The final rays of sunlight on the edge of the Victoria Falls

I take several movies, scanning the breath of the view from each look-out point.  We come to the end of the pathway, double back and take a fork in the trail leading along the edge of vertical cliff.  It is just 5:30 and the sun is a red ball dipping behind the trees, shrouded in mist. As I raise my camera to shoot this sunset photo, my battery goes dead and I rummage through John’s backpack for the camera case containing newly charged batteries. To my dismay, I visualize it on the bed back at our hotel.  I manage to squeeze two more shots from the depleted battery and accept that I will have to commit the rest of the trail to my memory.  There is another fork in the path and John leads, choosing the one following the perimeter of the cliff.  We are in another world, the spray pelting sideways, parts of the pathway submerged in water and all slick with slime and mud. I note a sign post at the fork, but most of the lettering is washed away from the spray and I wonder where the pathway leads? The micro-climate becomes even more intense and further along, John takes a few steps off the path, presumably to get a better view?  I scream for him to come back, but he cannot hear my cry over the thunder of the falls. He must sense my panic, and turns, following me away from the cliff along the pathway.  It winds inland and within a couple of minutes we are standing on dry ground, looking at the Victoria Falls Bridge, but from the opposite side.  I can see our hotel beyond, a pale white in the fading light.

I look at my watch, noting that we have just 15 minutes to get back to the entrance, but when we proceed the path suddenly dead ends.  We must retrace our steps back to the mystery fork in the road.  We have not eaten since breakfast, all of our muscles ache and our feet are soggy and tired, so we walk more briskly than ever and turn at the earlier fork in the path, hoping that it will lead to the exit.  The park closes in 5 minutes and the forest is growing dark.  John growls for effect, reminding me of the wild animals that may be lurking in the surrounding forest.  My heels rhythmically click the rocky path and at 6:15, I finally see the faint light of the park entrance, ahead. The park is closed but several attendants sit eating dinner within the confines of the gate. Raising their cups of tea or coffee in our direction, they jovially ask if we will join them for dinner?  I mutter that we took the wrong path, and we exit into a barren parking lot.  An hour ago, this area was bustling with vendors and taxis waiting in anticipation of a sale. There is no chance of a ride back to our hotel now, so John and I cross the dimly lit railroad tracks and hike even more quickly up the darkening pathway, through the bush, towards our hotel.  I mutter to John that this is exactly what I promised Papa, we would not do. 10 minutes later, we arrive at a closed gate at the lower lawn of the Victoria Falls Hotel.  I reach impulsively towards the fence and John hisses at me to stand back, telling me that the fence is electric.  Barbed wire curls along the top of the fence and John carefully maneuvers the various pins and locks at the bottom of the gate, managing to swing one side of the gate open.  We enter the safety of the hotel property and slip up the side stairway to our room, avoiding the watchful eyes of the diners on the patio beyond.  15 minutes later, we are seated at a candle-lit table for two, overlooking the edge of the veranda; John enjoying one of the best cheeseburgers of his life, (at $14) while I dine on a chicken and mango entrée, (at $16) John is of legal age here and we share a cheap bottle of South African wine and recount the days adventures.

Painting of Victoria Falls at the Victoria Falls Hotel

Victoria Falls Hotel – Back in Time

View of the Victoria Falls Bridge 

Victoria Falls Hotel Wart Hogs

We are met by a Wilderness Safari representative, taken to a waiting van and delivered to our hotel. We pass jungle lodges and flashy tourist hotels, but when we drive through the gates of the Victoria Falls Hotel, we know we have arrived. The historical hotel was built in 1905 and is straight out of a movie and we take time to wander the grounds and explore. The hotel’s veranda overlooks an expansive lawn with stunning views of the Victoria Falls Bridge, a haze of mist billowing from the gorge, the spray from the falls. Our room faces the inner garden, overlooking two large and formal lily ponds. It is not one of the more luxurious rooms in the hotel; but it suits our needs, with twin, four-poster, beds, a television that doesn’t work and a vintage bathroom with a tub. John’s priority is to swim in the pool and mine is to take my first bath in over two weeks.

Back Side of the Victoria Falls Hotel

Swimming Pool

30 minutes later, I walk down the elegant curved stairway, through the great room and out onto the veranda. Three wart hogs graze on the hotel’s lawn and I pull out my camera and take the best wart hog photos of to date.  Who needs to go on Safari, when they roam the hotel grounds at large?  When I arrive at the pool, John is just getting out and we share our delight in the wart hog experience watching the male rolling on his back while the female nuzzles his belly. They seem very tame and John wonders if he could pet one and I firmly caution him to stay back. A moment later a young woman, with similar thoughts, reaches towards them, over the low cement wall and jumps backwards as the warthogs snap and grunt their warning.

Spiral Stair Case
Regal Pose





Regal Drawing Room

Its 4:00 P.M. and time to explore the small town of Victoria Falls, just a 5 minute walk from our hotel. We pass along a park where baboons and velvet monkeys roam and rummage in trash cans on our way to the two block strip of tour outfitting offices. John wants to research the bungee jumping options available to him tomorrow and compares prices and options.

Dancing to the Beat 

We return to the hotel at dusk hungry and tired and make a quick turn around and walk back out to dinner. We pay one of the hotel guards $2 to escort us through the park to the recommended restaurant. We sit at an outdoor patio and watch a Zimbabwe Folk Dance. Neither the food or the dance is memorable.

Three Days on the Mana Canoe Trail

The Mana Canoe Trail – June 30 – July 3.
We will depart for our three night Mana trail canoe trip this afternoon, so John is taking a sleeping safari this morning. I too hoped to sleep in but I wake at dawn, walk down to the platform overlooking the river and sit alone by the small fire and write. The other guests straggle in between 7:30 -8:30 and Tom tells me he has received a reply message from Art on his phone. All is well at home, but I have left at a busy time. Art is working on a small consulting job and Barbara Streisand needs 12 more tree frogs.  I type my reply and for the first time on this trip, worry about business and my family back at home.  We vacate our tent at 10:00 A.M; enjoy a delicious lunch of coconut curried chicken skewers and write and read until after tea when we embark on the canoe trip.

At 2: 00 P.M. a land cruiser pulls into camp depositing Laura, Helen, Debbie and Jessica; three doctors and a lawyer, our traveling companions for the next three days on the Mana Canoe trail. After a safety briefing and signing indemnity wavers, we drive down to the inlet, sort out our gear and climb into the canoes. John and I are in one canoe, Debbie and Jessica in another and our guides, Henry and Matthew pair up with Laura and Helen, one taking the lead and the other bringing up the rear.  For the first time in days, John is impatient with me when I cause our canoe to spin backwards and navigate us against the bank. Although John may differ in his opinion, I soon learn the art of paddling and once out on the river the going is easy and we paddle with the current on the wide and gentle river. We glide past hundreds of hippos basking on the river banks and immense crocodiles slip shyly from the edge of the muddy banks into the river as we pass by. The hippos also take to the water and dozens of hippos taking a plunge together is an immense splash, sounding like a near-bye waterfall or impending rapids. Earlier today we learned that one must not come between a hippo and its deep water channel but we are far out in the middle of the river and in little danger of having our canoes capsized by a hippo and becoming a crocodile snack.

John Canoeing the Zambezi River
Hippos along the bank of the Zambezi River
Evening paddle on the Zambezi River
Arriving at our first tented camp
Several hours later, around a bend in the river, we see our first campsite pitched high on the embankment.  We beach our canoes and climb the bank to inspect our home for the night. Four two bedded tents are erected along the embankment, each with a riverside view. Each tent has a back door zipper that opens onto a triangular canvas enclosure, open at the top with a gravity fill shower suspended on poles. Within minutes, the camp crew pours hot water into our shower bag and John and I take turns washing off the day’s river grime. The floor to our shower annex is mesh so that the shower run off can seep into the ground and a small metal pot sits conspicuously in one corner.  I soon learn that this pot is for any nighttime necessities, although there is a more than adequate out house, complete with a real toilet seat, for our daylight needs. The outhouse is enclosed on three sides with a view of the river below.  A white tin cup sits on a peg at the entrance to the toilet.  When the cup is on the peg, the outhouse is vacant and the protocol is to remove the cup, step inside and take care of business, not forgetting to admire the view.  A pile of sand sits alongside the toilet and we are instructed to scoop up a cup of sand and scatter it down the hole to cover our waste; exit and replace the white cup on the peg for the next person. After years of using port-a-potties at the art festivals, this is 5 star camping.

Our Tent Camp
John inside our Tent
The Out House

It is past dusk when we have showered and dressed and walk to the fire circle. Carlie is our camp hostess and takes our drink orders.  I usually stick to wine, but two of the four doctors order gin and tonics and I recall an earlier conversation today when the doctors were advocating gin and quinine as the traditional drink for Africa.  Not wanting to ignore doctor’s orders, I too request a gin and tonic. Carlie is in her early 20’s and charmingly orchestrates the fireside conversation, passing hors d’oeuvers and refilling drink orders until dinner is formally announced by our camp chef, complete with white chef’s hat.  We dine under the stars at a candle lit table adorned with leaves. The pork chop, potato, peas and carrot dinner is remarkable and the wine flows freely, followed by a custard dessert.  At some point during dinner paper votive bags, weighted with sand, have been place around the camp and these votive sacks illuminate the pathway to our tents.  

The Camp Cook and Kitchen

Sundowners at Camp

Day Two-Mana Canoe Trail. We wake up at 6:00 A.M. to the sound of water being poured into a portable canvas basin outside of our tent.  John and I dress quickly and as I am washing my face in the warm water, I trip on a leg of the tripod to the basin and spill the water onto the ground.  No harm is done, but I feel badly, since an obvious effort was made to provide us with hot water for our morning wash.  We are on the river by 7:00 A.M; canoeing alongside the hippos and crocodiles on this beautiful  morning. At 9:30 we head to shore to stretch our legs and take a bush walk. We see impala, water buck, strangler figs and termite mounds. We learn that a certain moth lays its larva in the dead antlers of antelope and the larva feed on the keratin. We learn about the cambium layer of the trees that contains xylem and phloem that distributes nutrients to the tree. I wonder if there will be a test? 

Sunrise Dragonfly
Morning Eland
We Canoe for another hour and take a 2 1/2 hour lunch break on an island in the middle of the Zambezi. Lunch consists of quiche, couscous and bean salad and afterwards John and I explore the small island, hearing more than seeing  illusive  monitor lizards scurrying among the roots and rotting brush of the trees near the river.

A Pod of Hippos
Stork in Flight
Lunch Break
Aground on a Sandbar
Canoeing the Zambezi River

The Hippo Obstacle Course – Day Three -Mana Canoe Trail. We wake to the sound of our canvas washstands being filled with hot water and a gentle knock on the canvas of our tent. It is 6:00 A.M. and the sun has not yet risen.  I dress quickly, wake John and we move groggily from our tent to the warmth of the fire circle. Carlie is waiting and quickly rises, offering us coffee. We have finally resigned ourselves to being waited on and gratefully accept hot tin mugs of brewed coffee, fixed to our likings. We stand by the fire, drink the coffee and watch a sliver of sun pierce the horizon, rise and seemingly float, a glowing red ball, against the grey dawn. Breakfast is an array of hot and cold cereals, fruit salad, toast and muffins. At 7:03, bundled tightly against the cold, we have all climbed into the four tiered, safari vehicle for a morning game drive. We are lucky today and first off, come to a large bull elephant who gives us quite a show, standing on his hind feet with raised trunk to pull off acacia branches from a tree. A smaller male follows him, picking up left over branches that the bull leaves behind. The smaller male poops and pees for our entertainment and we are all very amazed by the length of his extended penis that reaches the ground. Our guides see a Cape buffalo herd in the distance; we drive closer, park the vehicle and approach in single file, flanked on either end by our two armed guides.  A lone bull buffalo, standing away from his herd, watches us warily.  Henry watches back, gathers us in a tight circle and after several minutes, instructs me to lead the retreat, single file back behind a large termite mound.  We continue our drive towards two of the four Mana Pools, several miles inland from the Zambezi River and fed by the river through underground springs. The first of the pools is blanketed with water hyacinths and a troupe of baboons sit at the shoreline, picking and gnawing the lush foliage. A second, much larger pool, further inland, is more arid and large crocodiles bask on the sandy bank and hippos muck about in the center. We see herds of Impala, families of shy wart hogs and countless birds.

Bull Elephant

Very Male Elephant
Cape Buffalo

Returning to our campsite, we find it gone and Carlie watching over our luggage and today’s picnic supplies. Left unattended, the baboons would make off with these things. Yesterday’s camp has already been dismantled and is moving in the truck by the support team of five and I expect that the new camp will be set up when we arrive later this afternoon. Carlie will drive the safari vehicle down to tonight’s campsite while we paddle the canoes downriver. I am expecting another relaxed and uneventful paddle, but Henry and Matthew are looking anxiously at the river. Apparently a dam has been closed and the river is much lower today which may present some navigational problems. We push off in our four canoes, following the lead canoe closely as Matthew seeks out channels deep enough for our canoes to navigate. The change of water level has disrupted the hippos since their familiar, deep water pools are now too shallow for them and they are moving to other parts of the river. We know that we must not come between a hippo and deep water or it will feel cornered and in an effort to reach the safety of deeper water, it may charge and injure or kill you. I have no desire to infringe on hippo territory, but today, deep water is at a premium and we must somehow navigate down-stream. Pods of hippos are everywhere, both in the river and basking on the river banks. As we near, they plunge into the river for safety, their combined splashes as loud as a significant waterfall. Depending on what guide book one reads, hippos can stay underwater between 6-10 minutes, so Matthew in the lead canoe, must watch, time and wait for them to surface in order to know their whereabouts. At one point, there is no hippo safe channel for us to paddle on the Zimbabwe side of the river and we must paddle upstream and around a large sandbar to access a channel on the far side of the river. The river is not terribly swift, but I am anxious about this maneuver and grateful to have John’s paddling power to propel us upstream. When we reach the up-river end of the sand bar we reverse directions, traveling again with the current, but the water is less than a foot deep and it isn’t long before all of the canoes go aground. Our guides, John and Laura all get out, wade, and pull the canoes off the sand bars and into deeper water. Although the water is quite shallow, I worry that one of the many large crocodiles we have sighted, may be lurking out of sight and take a bite out of someone’s feet. For several hours we are challenged by unsettled pods of hippos, sand bars and crocodile worries. I am looking forward to relaxing at lunch stop, but when we near the usual site, it is occupied by a lone bull hippo. As anticipated, he plunges into the water and we wait the appropriate amount of time in order to determine his whereabouts in the river and safely beach our canoes. We are entertained during our lunch break by a territorial fight between the bull hippo we chased from our picnic spot and another bull hippo already in the river. Our picnic site is only 10 feet above the river and the hippo challenge is less than 20 feet from the shore.  I caution John to stand back, worried that the defeated male may take to land, but our guides seem confident that it is safe to observe them from above.  They rise, clash and roar, submerge, rise and clash and roar in another spot and repeat this sequence for nearly 15 minutes.

Tent Camp on the Zambezi River

The afternoon paddle is relatively easy and we arrive at our final campsite at 5:30 P.M, just as the sun is setting.  After showering in our gravity filled shower stalls, we sit by the campfire, enjoy “sundowner’s” and listen to our guides tell hippo stories; ones that would not have been advisable to hear, prior to the end of our trip.  Eventually, Carlie places a grill on top of the coals and barbeques long coils of sausages, steaks and chops.  Having enjoyed fine spirits during our sundowner hour, we are all in good spirits and enjoy our final dinner together.

Marty and John Sunset on the Zambezi River


Hippo Trivia: What we have learned about Hippos to date is that they are very dangerous and cause more deaths in Africa than any other animal. They are shy and have poor eyesight and breeding females are very protective of their calves and the bull hippos, protective of their females.  Although they spend much of the day mucking around in the river and basking on the river banks, at night, they wander inland to graze and the males mark their territory with massive sprays of dung. They eject their feces and at the same time, vibrate their tails at top speed to spray the dung over as wide an area as possible; the shit literally hits the fan. Over 1200 hippos were counted at the last hippo census, along this 80 kilometer stretch of the Mana Pool National Park and their grunts, gurgles and territorial roars are the music of the river. We know that we must not come between a hippo and deep water or it will feel cornered and in an effort to reach the safety of deeper water, it may charge and injure or kill you.     
Mana Pools to Victoria Falls –July 3, 2011.  Our wake up knock is not until 7:00 A.M; we dress and pack quickly and sit by the morning camp fire enjoying our final mugs of coffee along the Mana Canoe Trail. Last night, three tip envelops were placed on our camp cots and I give one each to our guides, Matthew and Henry, thanking them profusely for their part in our experience. I give the third envelope to Carlie who will distribute the amount between the 5 support crew members. The support crew is busily breaking down camp, even as we finish our breakfast. After breakfast, we take a morning game walk from our campsite, following the single file protocol and see the usual impala, wart hogs and water buck, grazing in the early morning light. An hour later, Carlie intersects our walking route, picks us up in the safari vehicle, reuniting us with our luggage and takes us to the bush airstrip to wait for our plane. It is no surprise to see an elephant grazing on the runway and Carlie roars the engine, establishing our dominance, and the elephant spins towards us, flaps its ears and makes a backwards retreat into the hide of trees. The other four guests are also flying out, but to a different destination and we wait together, in the still morning heat, alongside, the red dirt airstrip. Their small aircraft arrives first and we listen hopefully for another plane. Ours eventually arrives, but an hour late with a father and son already on board, having just come from Richimuchi. We are squeezed into the tiny plane, take off land to refuel at Kariba, take off land again at______, finally arriving at the Victoria Falls airport at 2:30 P.M. 

Mongoose and Cheetah

Cheetah

Day Three at Ruckomechi Camp

When I awake, I find a small toad in the bathroom, so my game drive starts earlier than anticipated. I catch it gently and place it on John’s pillow as a morning surprise but even though he loves amphibians during waking hours, he grumbles crossly and pulls the covers over his head. I release the toad outside, but not before it has peed all over me.

Cheetah

We have a private morning game drive with Kevin and immediately sight two honey badgers leaping across the road, having been caught out late (or early) as they head for the safety of their borough. They have a wide white stripe along their backs and look somewhat like a cross between a skunk, a sloth and a badger. Our sighting is brief, but impressive and we learn that the honey badger is a member of the mustelidae family (weasel) and is a fierce predator with powerful jaws and claws. Moments later, two slender mongoose race across the road, making this the third species of mongoose that we have seen on our trip so far. We have seen the white tailed mongoose on our night drives and several days ago we watched a troupe of dwarf mongoose scurrying for the safety of their boroughs.  Prior to this trip, mongoose were not on my radar, but I am quite amused by them and am not surprised to find that they are related to the  meerkak. Did you know that a meerkat is a mongoose, but a mongoose is not a meerkat? We have our best zebra sighting to date and watch a small group of these elegantly striped equines graze at the edge of the scrub forest.  We see the backside of many skittish warthogs, their tails pointing straight up as they jog their retreat into the brush and John jokes that their tails are the antenna for a remote control and twiddles his fingers in a well rehearsed pantomime.  This morning is rich in game and we see eland and kudu and herds of the ever present impala.

Curious Impala

Zebra Herd
Monkey Business

Foraging in a Misty Forest 
John up in a Hollow Tree
During today’s siesta break, I write and John sits in a canvass deck chair reading Jurassic Park and drinking a beer.  18 is the legal age in Zimbabwe and Zambia, and I am doing my best not to be too much of a mother.  John has never been an avid reader but this is his second book of the trip. For graduation, his sister, Alisha, gave him Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, and without the distractions of television and the internet he zipped through that book. When I glance across at John, I am struck with the perfection of the moment; my son, now a young man absorbed in his reading, the Zambezi River reflecting the afternoon sunlight and the inundating cacophony of bird song and hippo grunts.  
Lunch with Tom, Mary and Michael
Writing my Blog at Ruckomechi
Earlier today, cheetahs were sited on the concession and it is Kevin’s agenda to find the two cats. During break, he has communicated with other guides and he apparently has an idea of their whereabouts. After bumping along the dirt road for 30 minutes, we come to an abrupt halt and he points at two cheetahs, lounging 30 meters away, at the edge of the underbrush, overlooking the road and the clearing beyond. One rests on a slight rise, somewhat obscured by a rotting log and a clump of brush and the other is behind the mound, with only his ears visible. Initially it is exciting to watch them, but their only movements are the flip of a tail, or a turn of a head.  Kevin has a powerful zoom on his camera and I suspect would prefer to wait patiently for a spectacular shot but after watching for nearly an hour in the fading light, John and I are ready to move on.
We stop for our sundowners in a pretty Mopani forest, golden with slanted afternoon sunlight; continuing afterwards on a chilly and unmemorable night drive. It is our last night at Ruckomichi camp and the dinner of roast pork, potatoes and grilled vegetables is excellent but the evening winds down early. We are all a little subdued and although there are new guests at the camp, Claire the geologist has a cold and the elderly newlywed couple head for the privacy of their tent.
Sunset over the Zambezi

Wild Luxury on the Zambezi River

Ruckomechi Camp Safari.

Silvie and Frederick are taking a sleeping safari this morning so John and I enjoy a private game drive with Kevin. The dirt roads, made for the vehicles, are also a natural route for much of the wildlife.  Kevin frequently leans over the side of the vehicle, examining the footprints in the dusty tract; teaching us their identification and how to determine which way the animal is walking. Kevin carries a rifle as we walk through the mopane forest, examining the butterfly shaped leaves of these trees, that the elephants are especially fond of these.  He explains how the trees have a defense mechanism that releases tannins into their leaves, making them bitter tasting and discouraging absolute browsing of a single tree. Kevin picks up an assortment of dung pellets, explains how to identify each dropping and why the elephant dung is scattered about.  Elephants have an ineffective digestive system and baboons forage in the dung, looking for undigested seeds and nuts.  All is fascinating, but I feel a bit like I am on a high school science field trip. We drive back to camp passing countless birds; my favorite of which is the amusing yellow billed hornbill, (Zazu, in the Lion King.) We see a variety of antelope and families of wart hogs that John is sure are operated by remote control, their tails acting as the antenna as they trot off into the brush.
Heart Shaped Mopane Leaf
Wart Hogs

Bee Eater
Termite Mound
Zambezi River Siesta

Hammock Siesta
Mother and Baby Elephant
Mother and Baby Elephant

Pontoon Boat

We take to the river this afternoon with Silvie and Frederick as company. Our guide, Kevin maneuvers the pontoon boat upstream along the edge of the Zambezi River and we watch meter long monitor lizards basking on overhanging branches and logs at the river’s edge. Rafts of Hippos abound and we discuss the various classifications of animals and wonder if it is a raft or a pod of hippos? As we discuss this trivia, a female elephant and her calf come to the edge of the bank to forage in the afternoon sunlight. We watch them for sometime before the mother elephant becomes aware of our presence, flaps her ears and backs off into the underbrush.  Kevin motors the pontoon boat into a sheltered inlet where dozens of colorful bee-eaters (birds) perform a sunset ballet, catching insects at dusk.  Their erratic flight pattern is bat like as they dip and soar in pursuit of the insects. We sip our sundowners watching their dance and the sun, a ball of orange, sinking into the Zambezi river. 
Monitor Lizard

Our friends; Tom, Mary and Michael, who we met at Davison Camp, are on a similar itinerary to ours and have arrived at Ruckomichi this afternoon. We are happy to have their company again at dinner and visit afterwards, standing beside the fire overlooking the moonlit river. Tom mentions that he is receiving business e-mail on his blackberry phone and offers to let me send a message home. His phone is back in his tent, but tomorrow I will e-mail Art.  We sleep to a serenade of grunts, snorts, splashes and crackling brush as hippos and other nocturnal creatures make their nightly maneuvers.  



Bush Pilots and Cell Phones over the Zambezi River


Flight over Zambia 

Linkuvasha Bush Airstrip

Zambezi River Paradise





It is June 27th as I write this entry, sitting at the edge of the Zambezi River in the remote luxury of Ruckomechi Camp.  This segment of our adventure began yesterday when after breakfast at Davidson Camp, we were transported an hour to the remote airstrip, Linkuvasha, for our flight here.


The morning’s temperature is 1 degree centigrade as we huddle around the fire circle, holding tin mugs of hot coffee, warming our extremities and waiting to depart Davison Camp. At 8:00 A.M. bundled warmly, we bump along the rutted dirt road to catch our plane. Upon arriving, Brian our guide races our vehicle along the grassy airstrip to clear the runway of a flock of ground hornbills in preparation for the incoming plane. We wait patiently, soaking in the morning sun and enjoying the solitude when our vehicle’s radio sputters to life.  Our plane has been delayed an hour, so in the interim, we hop back into the vehicle and Brian takes us on a short game drive.  Returning to the Linkuvasha airstrip we watch as a small silvery speck in the sky takes the shape of a tiny bush plane and lands on the grassy runway.  After brief farewells, we climb onboard the 4 seated air plane and are immediately bumping along the runway for takeoff.  We are the only passengers and we catch our breath as the small plane lifts off, shudders, banks, and stabilizes. The teak and acacia forest below becomes a melody of fall colors and as we gain altitude, I see the curly grey smoke from many forest fires clouding the horizon.  The landscape soon changes from sparse forest to a patchwork of monochromatic farm land and I am lulled by its monotony.  Initially, our pilot busies himself with control dials and radio, and I am beginning to relax until I realize that he has begun texting on his Nokia cell phone and is paying little attention to our flight path.  An hour and a half later, we land safely at the tiny airport of Kariba to refuel.  John and I enter the bleak terminal to use the facilities and John gazes longingly through the closed grill of the snack stand at several ancient and certainly stale packages of cookies.  The second leg of the trip takes just 30 minutes and the flight is spectacular. The ground below is sculpted by canyons and dry curving river beds and when we reach the Zambia River we fly low along the river, a maze of islands, lagoons and marshlands, studded with pods of hippos. 

Zambezi River Hippos









We touch down on another barren airstrip and are met by Champion, who offloads our baggage into a Wilderness Safari land cruiser to drive us to Camp.  He takes the scenic route and we are delayed by the Ruckomechi version of a traffic jam; two female elephants with their babies, foraging contentedly in the middle of the road.  We are delighted to wait and watch until they move off road to forage elsewhere. 



The camp is situated along the banks of the Zambezi River and when we pull in we are met by JuJu and Carl who hand us cool wet towels to wipe the dust from our faces and hands.  We have missed the official lunch but two places are set in the open dining area, at the far end of a long plank table and we enjoy a late lunch of cold cuts, salads and fresh fruit. The staff hovers over us, attending to our every need but mostly, I just wish to marvel and the hundreds of hippos, inhale the river view,  and refuel in peace.  After lunch we are briefed on the safety regulation and escorted to our room.  There are 10 tented rooms, 5 fanning out from either side of the center dining and lounge area. Ours is number 4 and we are escorted along a long raised boardwalk skirting the other bungalows to our palatial tent, overlooking a river clogged with hippopotamus.  Our screened and curtained bungalow is 15 feet by 35 feet across; the bedroom and bathroom partitioned by an iron meshed wall, filled with river pebbles. I give John the first shower and begin to settle in when I hear brush crackling and look up to see an elephant walking just a few feet from the screened side of our cabin; it turns and crosses along the front of our tent.  John exclaims his amazement from the shower, feeling perhaps a little more vulnerable than I do, in his state of nakedness. 

























Kevin will be our guide for the duration of our stay here and we depart for our afternoon and evening game drive at 3:30 P.M.  Each open safari vehicle has three rows of tiered seats so that all guests have good visibility. Silvie and Frederick, French newly-weds are with us this afternoon. They are in their 40’s, delightful and funny; his English is perfect and hers is considerably better than my French. We spot the usual suspects; impala, water buck, eland, wart hogs, baboons and countless birds. 
Curious Impala 
Cape Buffalo
Kudu
We have sightings of Cape buffalo from afar and enjoy “sundowners” at the edge of the Zambezi River. I surmise that the psychology of these safari camps is to keep the guests happy and warm, by moderately medicating us, even if the white Rhino remain elusive. We are well layered for warmth, but when night falls we wrap ourselves in the provided blankets, top it all with fleece lined canvas ponchos and are still chilled. Kevin is a patient and excellent guide and drives slowly, scanning the base of the tree line with an infra-red spot light. When we see a pair, or pairs of eyes shining back at us, he stops the vehicle and motions us to be quiet and perfectly still. He has perfected the sound of a wounded rodent and for minutes on end repeats this chirpy-squeal until a pair of eyes begins to move closer to investigate. A small spotted genet, a feliform and somewhat related to cats, moves warily towards the vehicle, obviously hoping to catch an easy dinner. Although it comes quite close to the vehicle, it is hard to see clearly, illuminated by the eerie red light. Tonight, the forest is full of eyes and we soon see an African civet, a much larger, spotted animal, crouching under a shelter of branches and at first, I mistake it for a leopard. Civets, genets and mongoose are all related and part of the viverridae family. Prior to tonight, I have never heard of a civet or genet and it is exciting to meet these nocturnal creatures for the first time.
Sunset over the Zamezi River
We get back to the camp at 7:30 P.M. to find that an extended family of 10, from Utah, have arrived during the afternoon. John and I dine with the family, at the end of the long table; they are friendly, but very autonomous, and we don’t find much common ground.  Silvie and Frederick have arranged for a romantic dinner for two and their table is set above on a rise, shining with candlelight and overlooking the Zambezi River.  

Walking Safari

Examining a Termite Mound

Davison Camp Walking Safari.


Alan and Annette are departing this morning and Brian will drive them back to the park entrance, 2 ½ hours away. Our guides today are Charles and Honest and we are going on a walking safari in the company of Mary, Tom and Michael. Both guides are carrying rifles with Charles in the lead and Honest bringing up the rear.  It is warmer this morning and we follow single file behind Charles, stopping frequently to examine footprints, termite mounds and animal dung. We approach a herd of Cape buffalo grazing in the distance, a lone bull standing off to the side. Apparently, Cape buffalo are quite aggressive and both guides are cautious.  We get within a hundred meters of the herd when Charles motions for us to get down and gather closely around him.  The intent is to look like a single large unit, not individuals. With nothing to stabilize my zoom, I take many blurry photos until instructed to lead a slow retreat to behind a distant termite mound. Returning to the vehicle, we head back to camp, stopping to watch a jackal and families of wart hogs along side of the road. 

Walking Safari
Lion Footprint


John and Michael
International Friends

John is good at making friends and during the afternoons rest period, he instigates a game of cards in the open air lounge area, including Michael, the two girls and Claire’s younger brother.

Cape Buffalo
Sundowners at Hawange National Park


17 year old Jade abandons her family and sits between John and me during our afternoon game drive. We are fortunate to see many giraffe as we follow the edge of the trees along side a large open plain. As 5:00 P.M. approaches, we drive out onto the plain to enjoy our late afternoon sundowners, gazing at herds of grazing wildebeests and families of giraffes browsing on the trees at the edge of the forest.
Wildebeests-Hawange National Park
Giraffe in motion
Three Giraffes at Hawange National Park



Lions and Ray Bans

Cecil the Lion on his morning patrol


Davidson Camp Safari






We are awakened at 6:30 by a soft “good morning” and a gentle tap on the canvas of our tent. We dress quickly, walk to the open lounge and breakfast area and are soon holding cups of hot coffee and standing close to the large fire, warming our extremities. We focus our binoculars, in the pale morning light and see ostrich, wildebeests and Chacma Baboons drinking at the watering hole, 100 meters away.  Breakfast is an array of cold and hot cereals, toast, muffins and exotic fresh fruit salad and yogurt. By 7:00 A.M. we are sitting in land cruiser with our guide Brian, setting out for the morning game drive. 

Cecil the Lion

The safari vehicles are designed with three graduated tiered rows of seats so we all have unobstructed views. The sides of the vehicle are open, and study roll bars support a canvas roof to shield us from the sun. The morning is cold and biting and we bundle ourselves in the provided wool blankets and canvas ponchos. Our first sighting is a male lion, nonchalantly patrolling the road in front of us and not the least disturbed by our presence. The sun is directly in front, making photography challenging, but I take many backlit photos. The lion is nonplused by our presence and we follow him until he veers into the “ambush grass,” wanders 20 meters away, and lies down to bask in the morning sun. John focus’s his binoculars, leans out of the vehicle slightly, and drops his Ray Ban sunglasses in the dirt below. Brian is less than pleased, since retrieving the glasses with a male lion just 20 meters off is not a healthy practice. He curses softly, drives forward and then backs up, maneuvering the vehicle off the tracks of the road, and positioning it between Cecil the Lion and the fallen Ray Ban’s. With considerable drama, instructing us to keep a close eye on Cecil, Brian slips out of the vehicle and retrieves the sunglasses.  John feels badly about his blunder and is rather subdued for the next hour, until later in the morning, I lean out and my sunglasses fall in the tracks of the road. 

Monkey Business
Tail Gate Morning Tea

Three Elephants
Eland
Dingo
Sable at Watering Hole

We will grow accustom to the camp schedule of an early morning game drive, returning for a late and elaborate brunch around 11:30 A.M; resting until 3:00 P.M. when tea is served and heading out on an afternoon game drive at 3:30 P.M.

On this afternoons safari, we see herds of wildebeests, impala and smaller groups of kudu and eland. I am surprised by the many varieties of antelope and we spot the lone dik dik, steenbok, common waterbuck and Cape buffalo.  Shortly after 5:00 P.M. Brian drives the vehicle out onto a vast open grassy plain with a watering hole in the distance. We all climb out of the vehicle and watch a breeding herd of elephant at the watering hole beyond. Brian sets up a small table in the dusty tracks beside the land cruiser and proceeds to arrange the bar, for our late afternoon, “sundowners.”  We are here for a magical 30 minutes, watching the elephants also drink in the slanted, golden afternoon sunlight until the sun dips behind the trees.   
Elephants at watering hole at sunset
Marty and John – Sunset Hawange National Park

We return to camp after dark and discover that three other families have arrived at Davison camp.  Mary, Tom and their 21 year old son, Michael from the U.S.A;  an extended family from Victoria Falls with a pretty 17 year old daughter, Jade and a family of 4 relocating from Brazil to the U.S.A. They are French and have a pretty 15 year old daughter, Claire.  Things are looking up for John and our evening meal is quite a party with the varied energy of our mixed families. Including our host and hostess and the several guides, over 20 of us share dinner and stories afterwards, as we stand around the fire sipping wine and other libations.  

View of the tent cabins from the dining area
John in front of our luxury tent cabin