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Archive for December, 2011

Top 5 Cultural Adventure Tour Experiences in Africa

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

So you’ve met everyone down at the pub and you’re looking to meet some new people. Cool: we know people!  We know people who want to dance, eat, jump and share with you, and its nowhere near a bowl of bar snack pretzels. An overland trip adventure tour gives you the opportunity to step out of your comfort zone and experience the adventure of a lifetime, exploring the African continent and soaking up its rich culture. Go one, pick your adventure:

bellydancing in Turkey

Above: Belly dancing in Turkey

People and Culture on an Adventure Tour

1. Masai Cultural Village

Delve into a cultural experience very unlike your own by meeting the vibrant and colourful people of the Masai Cultural Village in the Masai Mara. Watch as the tribesmen perform their jumping dance, and get involved, trying this routine which proves to be tougher than it looks. This is an amazing opportunity for the old and new cultures to interact in the modern world.

Experience this adventure on one of these overland trips

Game Parks and Gorillas :  Nairobi to LivingstoneWildlife Wonderland

2. Soweto Cultural Tour

Experience one of the biggest townships on the continent with an adventure through the Sowetan township in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Known as the birth place of the struggle for liberation, the area hosts over 2 million residents in the township which came to be under the old apartheid system.

The lively culture that lives within the cardboard shacks and over-the-top mansions has seen 2 Nobel Peace Prize winners as well as the award winning movie, Tsotsi, emerge from its midst.

Experience this adventure on one of these overland trips

Kruger Safari : Bob’s Best of Zimbabwe : East Africa Southbound

3. Nubian Village Dinner

Be welcomed into a local Nubian family’s home for an evening of sharing food and stories in an experience where you’ll learn a bit about the Nubian culture. The evening is spent on the family’s island in the middle of the Nile River; you’ll be ‘taxied’ to and from the island on an Egyptian felucca. An extremely unusual, yet warm adventure tour to guide cultural discovery.

Experience this adventure on one of these overland trips

Middle East Trek : Best of Egypt : Kingdoms and Pharaohs

4. Cappadocia Belly Dancing Night

Turkey is brimming with intriguing culture. Spend the evening discovering it being entertained in an underground restaurant enjoying dinner and drinks. Try your hips out in a session of festive belly dancing. The gorgeous experts, with hips that don’t lie, offer their tips to bringing out your inner goddess.

Experience this adventure on one of these overland trips

Middle East CaravanMiddle East TrekIstanbul to Damascus

5. Ghanzi Trance Dance

The San people are serious about the Ghanzi Trance Dance. Only performed when someone is genuinely ill do they bust out in energetic movement. The dance is similiar to the Rain Dance enthusiastically performed in celebration of good hunting trips and the enjoyment of gathering together. The dance can range from three hours, to a whole night, depending on how the gods react to the rhythmical clapping, dancing and chanting of the San people.

Trance dances aren’t a bunch of actors paid to jump around for tourists. These are the real deal carried out by real Bushmen who still live traditional lifestyle deep in the Kalahari in Botswana.

Experience this adventure on one of these overland trips

Cape to Vic and MozambiqueDesert and DeltaSouthern Africa Adventure

For one of those fulfilling experiences that leave you feeling like you’ve just helped a little old lady across the road and shaken Nelson Mandela’s hand simultaneously, this journey of personal growth will leave you feeling like a million bucks. Adventure travel FTW*!

*FTW is online slang that stands for ‘for the win’ and is used in conversation to indicate that someone is supporting something strongly and positively. In this instance, adventure travel is receiving praise for being awesome!

Best Game Parks in Botswana

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

Botswana is known for its stunning eco-systems, with the Okavango Delta running through most of its land. This stretch of Africa is brimming with wildlife, birdlife and all sorts of lush vegetation making it a great destination for safaris in Africa. When keen to explore a section of Botswana’s natural beauty, a visit to one of the following game parks will not disappoint!

Botswana_Okavango_Delta

1.  Chobe National Park

Chobe National Park boasts one of the highest concentrations of game in Africa and is overflowing with migratory herds and the predators that follow. The Chobe experience offers travellers a rich wildlife viewing experience on Botswana’s beautiful plains. The park is also famous for its large elephant population.

2.  Moremi Game Reserve

Moremi Game Reserve is home to a variety of rare and endangered animals and is said to be Africa’s most beautiful wildlife sanctuary for safaris in Africa. A large portion of the Okavango Delta is part of the reserve, offering its lush vegetation and awesome array of wildlife and birdlife that survive in this unspoiled wilderness.

3.  Makgadikgadi Pans

The Makgadikgadi Pans make for a truly unique sight to experience on a safari in Africa! When dry, the stretches of landscape are broken with baobab trees and glistening salt fossil pans around which wildlife like zebra, springbok and impala can be seen grazing. When the pans are wet, the area is equally as stunning, with loads of migratory birds gathering around the water filled salt pan basins; wildebeest and zebra by their side.

4.  Selinda Reserve

Selinda Reserve is located between Chobe National Park and the Okavango Delta. The reserve has two permanent lodges and two fly camps and the ideal location for game viewing. Game drives allow visitors to get a great feel for what Africa’s wilderness and wildlife are all about. Herds of elephant and prides of lion are what the area is renowned for, as well as Selinda’s leopard, cheetah and giraffe population.

So if you’re looking for an utterly amazing trek through Botswana on a wildlife spotting safari in Africa, one of these game parks in Botswana are the way to go!

Pick your adventure through Botswana here!

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Vaccinations for Travel in Africa

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

A trip to Africa can be the experience of a lifetime. Whether you’re exploring the architecture and giant bazaars of Morocco, the pyramids in Egypt, or going on a safari in Sub-Sahara Africa, you are bound to have an unforgettable journey. Before you set out on your adventure, however, you should pay careful attention to which vaccinations are required. Some are mandatory and others are highly advisable, but the below breakdown tells you everything you need to know, when it comes to vaccinations for travel in Africa:

Medical_Precautions_Vaccinations_for_Travel_in_Africa

Photo by Kurhan

Routine Shots

Most adults try to keep up to date on their standard vaccinations, including things like measles, chicken pox and influenza. While there are no laws (either in Africa or abroad) that require you to be up to date on these shots, it is a great idea to have them done before you travel. These diseases which are not considered relevant or life threatening in a Westernised country can become more dangerous when you travel to Africa.

Required Vaccinations for Travel in Africa

There is only one vaccination which is mandatory at selected border crossings in Africa, and that is a Yellow Fever vaccination. You can either get this injection vaccine before you go, or when at the border. However, if you wait until you get to the border, be prepared to pay over double what you would’ve paid at home.

Other than Yellow Fever, there are no vaccinations you HAVE to take. Even malaria tablets are optional, however highly recommended. The most common optional, but important, vaccinations needed when travelling in Africa include immunisation against Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, Typhoid and Tetnis.

The Center for Disease Control also has an additional list which contains recommended or required vaccines for specific countries. Be sure to check this list and comply with the requirements well before visiting your intended African destination.

Is a Yellow Fever shot painful?

No. Yellow Fever shots are not painful. I heard horror stories about how the injection needed to be administered through the spine and was bone chillingly painful. I can safely tell you that this is absolute rubbish. I recently had the Yellow Fever and Typhoid injections in one arm, and the Hepatitis and Tetnis injections in the other.  There was a tiny prick of the needle and it was all over. The next day however there was a small bump where the needle went in, but this is completely normal and the lump eventually goes away, as does the slightly bruised feeling.

Plan in Advance

It is important not to leave your required vaccinations until the last minute. Many shots can be quickly administered, but take a week or longer to work effectively against a disease. Whenever possible, speak with your physician a few months in advance, and make an appointment to receive vaccinations 4-6 weeks prior to departing. Remember that if you require a series of shots, as is required for vaccines like those protecting against Hepatitis, you might need to have several shots, each a few days or weeks apart.

Bring Paperwork

Don’t assume that since you have had vaccinations that you can forget about it during your vacation. Bring along medical documentation of the various diseases you are protected against, in case any government authorities or border patrols need to see it before allowing you entry. In particular, you will certainly need documentation of yellow fever vaccinations if you enter most Sub-Saharan countries, including South Africa.

Malaria

While not technically a vaccine, it is wise to consider which preventative measures you can take against Malaria when visiting Africa. Understand what precautions you can take while there to avoid the disease, and take anti-malarial tablets before you depart, during your trip and possibly even after your return.

Watch this YouTube video for more guidelines for how to survive in African Wilderness and what vaccinations you will need to travel to Africa:

By following these guidelines, you will be ready for your safari in Africa! Remember that many vaccinations for travel in Africa are required, so be sure to plan for them during your vacation preparations.

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Zanzibar to Johannesburg – The Overland Trip Experience

Monday, December 12th, 2011

Anyone visiting Africa might wonder, where do rangers go when they have holidays? Well, Africa is still the perfect place! I decided to become a safari guide after travelling to Africa on overlanding trips and have now made South Africa home. By keeping in contact with friends and family over Facebook I was invited to enter a competition by Overlanding Africa that could lead to winning a trip from Zanzibar to Johannesburg. What do you know, I won!

Starting out on the beaches of Zanzibar, I was introduced to my group. We swam with turtles, we drank cocktails in hammocks on the beach, my camera even decided to take a trip without me around a local village before making its way back… luckily unharmed.

Tweedie01_Zanzibar

Above: Zanzibar Beach

Many days were spent driving through the vast expanses that Africa is known for but this meant that everyone in the truck was forced to interact to keep each other amused – and this is where friendships are made. This is what overlanding is mostly about and why people will always come back to this style of travel. It’s the people – everyone travelling together, initially as strangers and then leaving as friends. You can visit some fantastic places and see wonderful things but you know you’re going to meet some great individuals along the way.

Malawi, too, is all about the people and, of course Lake Malawi, or “Ocean Malawi” – so big you can’t see the other side. Being able to meet a witch doctor on these shores was a highlight. Apparently I’ll be married within 3 years with 3 children and a successful career, great stuff! But it was surprising just how moving it was seeing the children around there.

Tweedie09_LakeMalawi Tweedie05_MeWithWitchDoctor

Above: Left – Lake Malawi / Right – Alex Tweedie with a witch doctor

As we walked through little villages the younger children, not old enough to be in school, would yell out “The muzungus* are coming!” as they would crowd around and reach for your hand (or belt loop as I gathered a growing brood of 6 children at one point). On the shores of the lake we collected sunbeams and discovered “Exotic Fanta” during games of “Funny Bunny.” The favouritism of Exotic Fanta was only lost over the border in Zambia when a new drink “Janta” was discovered. It’s often about the little things when you travel, the stories that come out that often only your group will ever understand. Janta came about during a Birthday Cruise on the Zambezi. With drinks aplenty, the sun shining after the first storm of the season and birthday hats and party blowers for everyone we watched as the sun set over elephants crossing the Zambezi. It even overtook the fact that my tent got completely flooded – Janta can cure all of your woes apparently.

Tweedie06_MalawiKids

Above: Children in Malawi

Livingstone, on the border of Zambia and Zimbabwe is the centre for an adrenaline rush related activity you can think of, the most well known of these is the bungee jump over Victoria Falls. As I had done this previously, I didn’t feel the need to go again but went to support the overlanders who were tempted. Even those that came for moral support along with me ended up jumping by the end of our visit! For some it can prove a life changing moment of overcoming fears (or in the case of a friend, realise that your fears are not of heights… rather of bridges). For others it is a pure excitement of living in the moment! I often get told to “bring out the Indiana Jones in yourself” at work, and this is a prime example –WWID, What Would Indy Do? For the quieter types, there are always options available, high tea overlooking Victoria Falls rather than jumping might be more to the liking of some (the scones are worth it I hear!). With the mix of people, you’ll get reviews first hand of places to consider going to on your next visit.

Tweedie015_LivingstoneTheWaterfront

Above: Livingston Waterfront

Seeing the wildlife from the point of view of a guest rather than the ranger is something not to be taken for granted in my line of work and the possibility for wildlife sightings on an overlanding trip is unlimited. Of course you’re at an advantage having someone with knowledge of the environment around you rather than going it alone, and most guides have travelled the routes numerous times and gained an insight into the workings of each location – natural world and otherwise.

Tweedie014_StallsVicFalls

Above: Stalls in Victoria Falls

Chobe and Kruger were the stand outs for wildlife on this tour. Botswana’s Chobe National Park provided us with a never-ending supply of elephants, crocodiles, buffalo and hippos on the Sunset Cruise. Red lechwe, water monitors, and amazing birdlife including the rare saddle-billed stork were also located in a photographers dream setting. Taking the land option, Chobe gave us many other animals but the brief sightings of wild dogs and sable made the day for this little ranger. It doesn’t have to be the big things to make it memorable. In Kruger National Park, probably South Africa’s most famous National Park, watching a dragonfly in love with a backpack or reacting to a very cheeky vervet monkey who had a taste for Doritos (inside our vehicle!) were just as fun as seeing the rhinos and elephants not five-minutes from the gate. Buffalo, mating lions a fantastic Giant Eagle Owl spotted by one eagle-eyed guest, were some of the other delights of the day.

With the final evening at hand, we said hesitant farewells around the fire and blessed Facebook for an easy method of keeping in contact. Many of the group since being on the tour have already caught up further in their travels again in various places around the world – South Africa, Brazil, Australia to name a few. Although some may have gone straight home, for others, they’re always travelling. But in this sense it makes a tour like this even more memorable – now you have more friends to either live vicariously or to plan your next adventure with!

Check out the itinerary and book the

Zanzibar to Johannesburg trip here

Post written by Guest Blogger Alex Tweedie

Tweedie05_MeWithWitchDoctor

Alex is an Aussie expat now living in South Africa as a Field Guide (ie. ranger). She has travelled extensively through Southern and Eastern Africa on a number of overlanding trips as well as taking people around the lowveld of South Africa herself.

*foreigner or white person

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Giraffe rescued from Swimming Pool – YouTube Video

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011
Giraffe Rescued From Swimming Pool YouTube Video

Above: Giraffe Rescued From Swimming Pool YouTube Video

Giraffe rescued from Swimming Pool – YouTube Video

Check it out: a giraffe is rescued from a swimming pool in the above YouTube video!

The crew filming the television series Wild at Heart, were like ‘WTF’ when they found a nine-year-old, preggie* giraffe chilling in a swimming pool, as caught on the above YouTube video!

Filmed in the Leopard’s Den game reserve in South Africa, where wildlife roam free and the television series crew do their best not to interfere with wildlife in their habitat. Seems like the giraffe came looking for fame of its own though when the 14 months pregnant giraffe, named ‘Lucy’, managed to get through a fence around the set situated in the Glen Afric game sanctuary.

Producer Adam Friedlander says he is not 100 per cent sure how the giraffe landed up in the pool, but his guess is that she may have been drinking from it, and with her head being too low, became disorientated and fell in. Like that one time Lucy partied with the monkeys and got drunk on marula fruit. Good times.

Actor Stephen Tompkinson who was on the set at the time said: “It was such a bizarre sight – as soon as I walked around the corner all I could see was this great neck sticking out of the pool.”

The first step to Lucy’s rescue was for the crew to drain the pool. They wanted to use sandbags to build steps for the giraffe to trot out on, but just in case Lucy lost her footing while making her way out, the idea was abandoned.

The strapping young lads of the fire brigade were called to the rescue (*Queue superhero trumpet theme tune*) and decided to dig a trench at one end of the pool and lure the giraffe out with food. A gal can’t say no to a delicious carrot… as Lucy first discovered 14 months ago.

After three hours, Lucy eventually climbed out of the pool without a scratch. Go Lucy!

So for future reference thats how a giraffe is rescued from a swimming pool and caught on video!

Was this stunt an attempt to get 30 seconds of fame? Or was Lucy just looking for a respectable spot to have a water birth? Either way, good luck Lucy!

Source: The Telegraph

*preggie = pregnant

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The History of Surfers