More Exploring Guinea
The Road Chose Me Volume 2 OUT NOW!!
The Road Chose Me Volume 2: Three years and 54,000 miles around Africa
While hiking through a rice field at the base of a small mountain overlooking a nearby town a local man spots a snake. It turns out to be a cobra, a bite from which I am told is deadly. Many local farmers are killed by these snakes, and everyone is clearly terrified and keeps their distance until it moves off the path of it’s own accord. It did stand up and frill out it’s neck, though I was too slow with my camera to get that. Sorry
I continue to find beautiful waterfalls around every turn, and mercifully the nights continue to be cool thanks to the elevation. The rain has not let up one bit, though at some point I just gave up and lived to learn with the perpetual state of drenched I find myself in. My camera keeps getting damp, I really hope the lenses do not get moldy.
Everywhere I go people are extremely friendly, smiling widely and inviting me in for tea or coffee. Tea is regular black tea as we think of it, served in a tiny cup with about 10 spoonfuls of sugar and optimally powdered milk.
Coffee is all instant (some people just call the drink “Nescafe”), very strong and is also served extremely sweet. It’s strange to drink a few steaming hot cups of coffee at 11am when the temperature is already 90 or 95F, though the locals seem to think it’s perfectly normal. I often leave a village with a coffee buzz.
I am mostly cooking my own breakfasts and dinner to save money and buying lunches wherever I find myself around midday. Breakfast is usually egg sandwiches with egg and tomato and dinner is often a stir-fry of whatever vegetables I have served with rice or pasta. I rarely buy meat to cook, though it’s always available.
Buying lunch in Guinea for under one dollar is virtually always “Rice with sauce” – the sauce usually being some extremely flavorful concoction from ground up cassava leaves or similar. Sometimes it’s extremely spicy (great!) and often if I pay an extra fifty cents or so I can get chunks of meat thrown in – almost like a stew. I’m never sure, but I suspect the meat is mostly the goats I see everywhere, and occasionally beef. Buying lunches has been a great excuse to walk around and talk to people on the streets – and to sit for 30 minutes and chit-chat with other locals. I have learned my lesson to buy early, they often have nothing left by about 1:30pm.
After a fantastic time around the Fouta Djallon mountainous region of central Guinea I am finally starting to move on, and my time in Guinea is coming to a close.
If you can’t tell, I really like it here!
-Dan
Good to get a report on the tires. I’m following your travels with great interest! Wishing you continued good luck.
Thanks Terry!
You must have a lot of curious onlookers, at most, and some individuals wanting to pluck items from your jeep, at worst. Are tourists a common sight in that area, or are you considered quite a novelty?
Hi Jake,
Oh for sure people are curios and interested. I have never ever, not even once felt worried about people plucking things.
They sometimes ask if they can have something, but they would never take it. Theft is very serious here.
There are some tourists around, though not many!
-Dan
I saved the link to your blog when you first posted about it to Reddit, and am now just starting to look and see what adventures you’ve had! The photo with the clouds off into the distance is so beautiful. The “cool caterpillar” you photographed looks like a centipede to me! I don’t know my caterpillars, though. I am going to go follow your trip from the start, be safe!
Thanks Joanna!
Let me know if there is anything in particular you’d like to see photos of or stores about!
-Dan