Days 53 thru 56

(Dan’s comments are italicized)

The last few days have been a whirlwind of travel so this post will be mostly musings!

We drove from Gweru to Bulawayo with the intent of getting a room, booking a bus ticket, and then going to see some ruins before handing the rental car back the following morning. Oh what folly! I never cease to amaze myself as I KNOW how things work in Africa but still, occasionally, make 3-4 step plans and expect them to work out πŸ˜‚

We got to Bulawayo without incident. We thought the room would be simple as we knew where we wanted to stay and the owner had shown us the room and told us the price a couple of weeks earlier. Sadly, she didn’t remember us nor, seemingly, the price quoted; so the price was higher, which annoyed me, which meant we had to look for a room!! We actually probably would have ended up there anyway, but they could not swipe, which is the lingo for taking a payment with a credit or debit card. We tried to book a room downtown…but they were horrid and too expensive for what they were! In one place, even after I told the lady we didn’t want to stay there as the bathrooms didn’t have showers, she begged me to stay and told me she’d give us a nice bucket to use!!!!

Yeah…no! Thank you, though.

At the same time as trying to get a room, I was also trying to book a bus back to Harare in order to fly to Lusaka, Zambia. There are about 10 different bus companies running that service, but all the offices are in different places. The busses are different, too. They range from Super Luxury (with toilets on board at $30 each) to Luxury (nice seats but no toilet at $15 each), to what Dan and I refer to as, Chicken busses (at $7 each!) These Chicken busses shove in people (and their chickens, pots and pans, and whatever) until the doors barely close. I used to travel on these when I was young and stupid (as they’re cheap); but now…

Yeah…no! Thank you, though. Sometimes, I think I should experience that form of travel just to see how I would feel. It would give me a deeper understanding of the conditions that most of the people in the world live in. Oh…you’re welcome to; I’ll meet you at our destination!

After our last bus experience, we had decided to go Super Luxury! But finding the right office was a challenge. Still, undeterred, I kept going and, finally, I found it. Although it was hard for me to spend FOUR TIMES WHAT WE HAD TO SPEND, I forced myself to go up to the counter. I confirmed that it was a Super Luxury bus with a toilet onboard (yes it was), but then, just as I was about to pay, the lady clarified that there WAS a toilet onboard but nobody was allowed to use it as it got dirty when they did. What?? Pay extra money for a toilet that can’t be used?

Yeah…no! Thank you, though!

So it was back to a Luxury bus station to buy $15 tickets for comfier seats, but no toilet. Now we just needed a room to stay in. When I returned to the car, Dan (who was relaxing inside because he wasn’t feeling well) asked if I wanted to keep looking for a place downtown, and I just thought,

Yeah…no! Thank you, though.

Umm, true that I wasn’t feeling well, but the parking spots were being monitored by a sprightly meter maid Who wanted one of our precious $1 bills to park…

Yeah…no! Thank you, though. So I drove around the block numerous times dodging taxis and pedestrians until Rhia came out.

So we went back to where we’d stayed previously. In hindsight, we should have just started there and saved a couple of hours.

Happily, before handing the car in, we made the time to see the ruins near Bulawayo. There are some 300 sites in Zimbabwe. We’ve seen the biggest (Great Zimbabwe), the most diversely decorated (Naletale), and now we were visiting Khami, the second biggest site.

Museums here aren’t like those in the US or UK; they’re much simpler (and things are covered in dust) but we still find them charming!
The baboons around here are huge; this photo shows my hand next to a baboon paw print.

Again, the ruins were beautiful (albeit in a falling-down way…but I suppose that’s what makes them ruins!) There’s an ethereal, quiet stillness around all these ruins that feels healing. I love walking around through ancient areas. It reminds me that there is so much more to this world than my short 56 years of experience. There he goes again, bragging about how young he is!!

These ruins also contained a gameboard carved into a rock. Apparently, merchants from the east brought a game that was similar to checkers or bao so people started carving the board into random rocks.

Though I look confident with my piece placement, I really have no idea how to play the game.
I don’t know what this fruit is but thought it was beautiful. It felt a little cucumber like, though.

The next couple of days were all business; we returned the car, took the bus back to Harare (and spent the night in our favorite hotel) and then flew to Lusaka, the capital of Zambia.

Here are a couple of random photos from the bus…
Once you see one vendor selling (in this case) oranges and tangerines, in the next kilometer or so you’ll see 50 others. I’d love to organize them so they would all sell different fruits and vegetables!
I think, sometimes, I’m missing something. People sell things (in this case shoes) at gas/petrol stations. I mean, do people really go out to fill up the car and come back with a new pair of shoes instead???

And so, we’re in Zambia; a country I worked in a lifetime ago! This is going to be interesting! The capital city, Lusaka, is certainly more than I expected. I can’t wait to start exploring.

Dr. Rhia Avatar

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2 responses to “On the Move”

  1. Constance Dent Avatar
    Constance Dent

    The spiky fruit is Cucumis metuliferus jelly melon, or kiwano, isΒ an annual vine in the cucumber and melon family
    The process of selecting hotels and buses would have tried my patience to beyond the limits I’m afraid! Sorry to hear Dan wasn’t feeling well – hope that’s resolved itself happily by now.
    I love the lacy look of those massive stone wall in the ruins. Very artistic to be sure. And I must agree with you that merchandising skills are certainly different there! Shoes? At a gas station? And all the oranges – do they not have multiple crops – at least like lemons or grapefruit? Curious.
    I assume the flight you took was on a plane in better shape than you picture shows! But after descriptions of hotels and buses, one cannot assume anything really, I guess. At least your weather is great! We’re having 90+ here in the mountains, I can only sympathize w/ Tucson and Phoenix! By 8 am today, it was already borderline too warm to be out walking the dog.

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    1. Dr. Rhia Avatar

      Oh Connie, once more I’m impressed by your knowledge!!! Thank you for the info. We’ve both had the flu but are on the mend. And yes, the hotel/bus selection drove me a bit batty. Re the merchandising, I don’t quite understand it! It’s not only with fruit and vegetables either; in one place, a person was selling padlocks and electrical cords…so the next 50 vendors were selling the same!! It confuses me quite a bit. The plane was fine…it was Ethiopian Airlines 😱 but arrived safely, though we weren’t even offered water on the flight. I’m so sorry you’re getting such hot weather…I must say that Africa in the winter is perfect! Dan was pointing out the other day that we’ve just had our fourth winter solstice in a row (with no summer solstice!) Weird!

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