Glorious Gabon

Roaming around Gabon is breathtaking. Jungle, beaches, rolling hills, wildlife – Gabon has it all.
Locals are extremely friendly – and refreshingly very respectful. Even when stumbling across my campsites locals are very content to shake hands and continue on their way, rather than stare for hours and beg constantly, as I have come to get used to.

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Another great side-of-the-road campsite

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Yet another campsite

More and more frequently I see bush meat for sale on the side of the road, hanging from sticks. This is quite literally anything locals are able to kill and hope to sell as food. Reptiles, snakes, eels, fish, rats, bats, rodents and even monkeys are all sold on the side of the road. I asked the price of the monkey, and was told 10,000CFA (about $15USD), though I expect there is a lot of negotiating room in there.
No, I didn’t buy anything, especially not monkey – eating monkey and bats is one possible way to get Ebola.

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Small animals for sale on the side of the road

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Monkey for sale on the side of the road, for food

Coming through a monster pot hole on a broken and cracked road a truck driving in the other direction at breakneck speed kicks a massive rock into the windshield of the Jeep. It doesn’t come right through, but it’s extremely close.  Little pieces of glass covered me and the whole front area, and now the windshield where the rock hit is soft when I push gently on it. Luckily it’s right in the middle, out of my eye line.
Given that I’m thousands of miles from Jeep parts, there is nothing more I can do than put some tape over it to keep the rain out and continue on.
A few hours later, I have already forgotten it’s there.

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Large rocks make big cracks

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The BFG KO2 A/T Tires are eating up the mud

After days inland with intense heat and humidity I venture to the coast, just south of Loango National Park and spend a couple of days camped under a palm tree. The ocean is still bath-water warm, though the massive waves smash into the shore and make swimming intense.

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Searching for a camping spot on sandy beach-side tracks

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Beach camping – always a crowd pleaser

I move towards Mayumba National Park in the extreme South of the country, right on the border of Congo and on the ocean. This is an extremely important nesting sight for turtles, though again I have arrived at the wrong time of year. I won’t get to see big ones laying eggs, or little ones hatching. It’s a supremely beautiful area nonetheless.

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Get ready for take-off! (yep, a runway, in the middle of nowhere)

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Sunsets are reliably spectacular

-Dan

3 Responses

  1. Jeff says:

    Hi,
    I am very intrigued about your trip in Gabon and above all by the car you drove. How and where did you buy it? Locally or elsewhere and how much was it?

    Thank you.

    Jeff

  1. August 21, 2017

    […] I continually see "street meat" for sale on the side of the road, including monkeys: Read More: http://theroadchoseme.com/glorious-gabon After that I decided to cut right through the middle of the country, exploring deep into the […]

  2. August 21, 2017

    […] see "street meat" for sale on the side of the road, including monkeys: Read More: Glorious Gabon | The Road Chose Me After that I decided to cut right through the middle of the country, exploring deep into the […]

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