This is an authorized translation in English of a post in French by @terresco: De Cape Town à Mombasa, 3 mois, 8 pays, 12 500 km – Le Zimbabwe 2
Remember that the person who speaks here is NOT me, Vincent Celier (@vcelier), but @terresco, a French guy.
To cross Zimbabwe from west to east we chose to explore the shores of Lake Kariba. This is the wild side that attracted us, this part of the country has never been highlighted, far removed from the main communication axes. We were looking for the "deep" Zimbabwe, full of authenticity and tangible reality. We found it thanks to the easy contact with a simple and hospitable population.
300 kms that turn into 500 by the tracks and that will take us a good ten days.
Mbilizi
Binga
We did not take the boat, we chose to take the the trail, because we wanted to see people. The second step was not planned, a gentleman with a tired and dusty suit was hitch-hiking. He was the principal of a school in Binga, another small town on the banks of the lake. He invited us to his place, we accepted. It is incredible the number of beautiful encounters that can be made in Africa by taking people hitchhiking. I confess that sometimes I abuse a little, a soldier or a police officer in the car is very convenient to go through controls more easily.
Our new friend introduced us to Binga, facilitated everything we needed, introduced us to his friends. They told us the story of the dam that flooded the villages where their parents lived, forcing thousands of people to involuntarily move. New lands less suited to agriculture have ended up impoverishing a people that did not need that. He showed us how they are trying to cope with the lack of means in education. And everywhere we saw this mixture of resignation and invincible optimism.
The Trail
It was necessary to leave again, we must always leave again. In Zimbabwe the police are not always easy, the controls are often meant to give you a fine. After almost 20 years hanging out in Africa we are used to it, we manage. A good technique is to learn a few words of local languages to make the police laugh, they then do not know how to continue to play the bad guys. A beer out of the fridge at the right time works wonders to move from the status of a potential culprit to the one of a guest of honor.
No road, no police, so I was surprised to see my way hindered by an improbable barrier with a stop sign in faded colors. A man in uniform arrives, armed ... with a butterfly net. This is a tsetse fly control. With his net he looks in the car the presence of these beasts thirsty to make us sleep. Nothing to report. He advises us to drive with the windows closed, welcome to tsetse zone, "the fly that kills livestock" in the Twana language, the one that transmits the sleeping sickness. We will see many, fat, ugly and particularly difficult to murder.
Our last hitchhiker, while the track had become more easy, was a national guard. He explained to us that when the dam was filled it was not only people who had to be displaced, but also a large number of animals. An operation nicely named Noah has saved "in extremis" several thousand large animals over 5 years. Some could not be evacuated and were lucky to take refuge on islands where they still are and where they flourish in beautiful closed ecosystems.
Effective signage, a dozen km after the sign
The 1st police barrage signaled the return to civilization and delayed for half an hour a well deserved shower that we hoped to be able to take in the next village. We had to tell our journey and the difficulties and wonders of the last days, with our very tired faces. How could these young policemen punish a poor couple of old dusty travelers?
They told us that the dam is in a dangerous state and that many engineers have warned that nothing will prevent it from collapsing if urgent repairs are not carried out. If this were to happen, 3 million people would be at risk of death in Zimbabwe and neighboring Mozambique. Let's hope they just wanted to scare us.
It is with this vision of terror that we continue our journey to one of the most spectacular places of our trip, the Mana Pools National Park.
-- @terresco
Africa, the long crossing
From Cape Town to Mombasa: South Africa
From Cape Town to Mombasa: Namibia
From Cape Town to Mombasa: Botswana
From Cape Town to Mombasa: Zimbabwe
Great trip...i liked when the elephant crossed your path..Awesome look..
beautiful country
Very nice. You can see elephants in the roads. It seems the people in there care about the animals in their place.
Great translation! Africa is a beautiful place and it would be great to take a journey like this one in the future.
Meeting people seeing places and learning things!
There is so much content waitinng to be created!!
Great protocols are exist in animals. That's why they are always supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
I was checking the posts in Travel tags and found this post.
itinerary story of French guy Terresco is great when he wrote about old white Zimbabweans and that paragraph of police is awesome.
This long and beautiful Karimba lake has so many eye-catching views in Zimbabwe and the view from Karimba Dam is awesome.
And the photographs are extremely good which increased the value of his story.
Great experience @vcelier
Amazing photgraphy...
Are you photographer for those capture ? Means You capture some wonderful scenery .
Happy travel....thanks
This is absolutely amazing and also great photography
Such a long and eventful travel. You guys must have really been tired but I'm glad you finally arrived your destination.
The kariba lake is actually beautiful. I am certain you loved being there.
This just got me.
Apparently most women enjoy been driven around town but one wont knw its actually enjoyable. It's ofcoure a lot of stress for yoa as a man, but dats how life is. Lol
Especially in Africa, a police-man can delay one for so long and one wont be able to say anything. So painful.
I hope the dangerous dam wont affect any life talkless of 3 million. Everything will be fyn. Beautiful travel story and pictures @vcelier
I can relate very well to this. African countries like zimbabwe I have heard little of. Thanks for sharing your experiences. I look forward to seeing your next post on your next stop to mana pools national park.
When it comes to great rivers, animals, parks, etc. Zimbabwe has always been a country that comes to the mind.
Do enjoy your travel over there @vcelier
Bagus **
Amazing photos !
Zimbabwe is a beautiful country. They work so hard and overcome the flood.
What a lovely elephant!
Stunning story, remember us of the importance of history, thank you very much for sharing
gorgeous framing of shoots and story
Wow so amazing nature its impress me photography is very so nice such a fresh lovely feeling thanks to share
Great man thanks :)
I have never been to Africa. I look at your picture and I want to go to Africa. The next story is also expected.
Very nice country
Great pictures mate, beautiful images.
Upvote and follow
hi Vincent. sorry for writing this here (we don't have yet a messaging system on Steemit, you know). I'd like to know what do you remember about the 1968 student protests: I'm collecting memories and impression for a post about it --> https://steemit.com/history/@paolobeneforti/1968-50-years-later-call-for-memories-impressions-opinions
Thx! :)
You made a great job by translating the whole article. His journey is truly inspirational
Great post tnx for sharing I just upvoted.
steemit all the way.
check out my new post.
UPVOTE COMMENT RESTEEM.
@gclipse
Oh to tip another Tusker In Mombasa again. Nice shots.
Zimbabwe is a beautiful country with many hidden jewels currently free of hordes of tourists and is relatively cheap. Just a few places to see if you ever find yourself there:
-Chinhoyi Caves, one of the biggest limestone cave systems on the continent
-The Matopo Hills near Bulawayo, a region with breathtaking vistas and granite formations
-The Eastern Highlands, a beautiful mountainous region with cool year-round temperatures, beautiful hiking spots and amazing waterfalls
-Gonarezhou National Park, which has one of the highest wild elephant populations on the continent
-Great Zimbabwe, an astounding early settlement built with unmoderated stones. It is where the country derives its name from.
Its nice, actually look cool @vcelier
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Bro plis response my coment , followback porfavor , excelente post un abrazo sigue asi !!