miðvikudagur, desember 28, 2005

Christmas time

When I put myself down to write it seems as if nothing is happening in my life right now... compared to the last few months at least.

Christmas as usual!

But then again, that is what I wanted. I could have stayed in Kenya and still be working on my tan!!! But I came home. Home to my family, home to the christmas I know, home to the christmas which is always the same. It's not about the cold, it's not about the snow (if it was, then most Icelanders could be very disappointed this year) and it's not about the food, the gifts or dressing up.
It's about quality time with family and friends. Meeting up with the people you love or getting in touch with them by other means. That's why we love christmas. That's why I came home this christmas. And that's why I don't care if I don't have a breathtaking travel story this time.

So merry christmas everyone, gleðileg jól, joyeux noël, krismasi njema, hyvää joulua, god jul and a happy new year!

fimmtudagur, desember 15, 2005

Goðir farþegar, velkomin heim!

Is there anywhere else in the world that the stewardess says "welcome home", upon arrival? I haven't heard it anywhere.
But I love it. I love going away and traveling, but I love coming home as well.

Iceland was a bit darker than I expected, funnily enough. It's a funny thing, every year it's the same. Every year people seem to be surprised just how dark it gets and just how short the day is. And every spring, they get just as amazed to see the day getting longer and how fast it happens.
In my case it's exaggerated by coming from the equator. The sun doesn't always rise at the same time of day, Peter told me on Mt Kenya, now it's at 6:07 but at certain times of the year it's as late as 6:35!
It's funny how you're stuck in thinking in the same nature pattern: four seasons, one coldish, one warmish and then the two gray zones in between. But this given is not applicable in all parts of the world and it takes so long getting used to.

Iceland is coldish right now. - If you're a Kenyan, that is.
If you're an Icelander, than this is a pretty warm December. Just a bit of snow in Mt Esja and Bláfjöll, nothing of any use since the late October cold.
I'm just hoping that we'll have a half-decent winter, at least. Would like to put my new ice axes to use, they're arriving on saturday from Greenland, my new favourite toy for the winter. Who'll go with me?

þriðjudagur, desember 13, 2005

Out of Africa

Some stories to tell. First of all the story of Mt Kenya, then the story of uncanny coincidences and last but not least the story of when I missed the Elvis impersonator evening in Berlin.

The story of Mt Kenya

I met up with Peter, my guide, in Nairobi in the morning. About six hours later when we were at the park gates, readying our backpacks, I asked him for the tents.
“Oh, yeah, the tents. We didn’t go to get them,” he informed me matter of factly and continued packing.
“But I thought we needed tents to be able to go down Timau route?”
“Yes, that’s why we’ll be descending via Chigoria route.”
“Oh…”
Because before leaving, Peter had heard Cliff at the office convincing me that the much less frequented Timau route was the best, and us agreeing on that plan after lengthy discussions. But Chigoria route is the most popular route, and for a good reason, so I wasn’t unhappy with this sudden turn of events, although more than a little surprised.
Very Kenian, especially hearing that after coming down, he told the guys at the office that going down Chigoria route had been my idea!!!

To make a long story short, we went up to Old Moses camp (3300m) the first day, past elephant droppings the size of three footballs, - wildlife is a completely different concept at 16km from the equator then in the subactic…
Next day we encountered the first cases of altitude sickness on the way up to Shipton’s camp (4200m). We came upon a girl who was lying unconscious on the trail. A part of a poorly organized school group, she had been encouraged to keep on ascending when already not well, and on the way down her condition wasn’t very promising until finally she passed out. Her teacher was crouching by her side, pouring water in her mouth and telling her firmly: “swallow… swallow!” as if she wasn’t really unconscious but just a bit slow on the uptake.
Some more of that group came in shortly and five minutes later she was being carried down in a sleeping bag. I continued my climb with the nagging feeling that I should maybe have went with her, knowing that I have probably have more first-aid training behind me than all of the people in that group combined. (Not to say that I’m an expert, but to accentuate how poorly they were performing.)

At Shipton’s camp, two of the people traveling with me went veeery early to bed, with headache, nausea and other unpleasant symptoms of altitude sickness. One of them got better before the night, the other one never went to the top.
At 3:00AM, on a clear and oh so starry night, we started out for the summit climb.
The goal was to reach the summit before sunrise. At 4600m we could leave the backpacks and then the race started for real. At 16km from the equator the sun rises very fast, and just halfway up the summit I was panting like an overweight librarian, battling to get up there before the colourful sunrise broke into white direct sunlight. If I couldn’t make it, the adventure would dissolve before my eyes: the shoe would vanish before even catching the eye of the prince and the mountain would melt into a rubbish heap in Mombasa.

The story of uncanny coincidences
I did make it to the top 6 minutes before sunrise, impeccable timing! And oh what a view and oh the stillness and oh… what do I hear? I had to listen for three minutes before believing that this unmistakable accent could really be Icelandic. It was just too big a coincidence. Out of eleven guests summiting the mountain that morning, two just happened to be Icelanders. Now what are the chances of that happening? We’re not even 300.000 people yet! This guy from Akranes had come up a different route so we didn’t even meet before both of us were up there waiting for the sunrise.

Small world, huh? Well, the story of uncanny coincidences is not over yet.
We didn’t think of exchanging phone numbers, then his group descended faster than we did. My last day in Nairobi I was thinking what a shame it was, since he had been talking about showing me the slums of Kibeira, one side of Nairobi that I hadn’t seen.
So there I was, waiting for a matatu in a suburb of Nairobi when this same guy just walks up to me and says hi… Surely the chances of that happening are smaller than Iceland taking home three Miss World titles in twenty years. Yet, everything is possible.
Nothing is going to surprise me anymore.

The story of when I missed the Elvis impersonator in Berlin
The evening before flying out of Kenya I was stuck in bed with a skyhigh fever, which made the people staying at the hostel with me very worried. After all, this is Africa, where a fever can be anything. Some malaria- and typhoid stories were swapped, all to stress the importance of having this checked out.
The day after I spent two hours at an airport, eight hours on a plane, three hours at an airport, then another hour on a plane. When I finally came to Berlin and met Þórhildur, we decided to go to the airport information desk to ask if it was possible to see a doctor at the airport. No, he said, but he’d call for us the firemen, who could come and check me out and if needed, they could take me to see a doctor. I told him that it was probably nothing serious, but since I was coming out of Africa, I just wanted to be on the safe side.
So he called the fire department and said something in German and then told us to sit down. Þórhildur told me that he had described my condition on the phone as: cold sweat, shivering, can hardly walk, - not exactly the way I was feeling or acting, but it makes a good story… So the firemen came and three minutes later, me and Þórhildur were sitting in an ambulance going to the Berlin hospital of tropical and endemic diseases… While we were waiting for results from blood samples, Þórhildur told me that her father-in-law, whom we would be staying with, had suggested that we might go see an Elvis impersonator who would be performing in the bar next door. So when I later on was saying that this was a great story: the night I went in an ambulance from the airport to the hospital to be checked for malaria, she told me: "No, that’s not the name of the story. This is the night when you didn’t go see the Elvis impersonator with my father-in-law!"

laugardagur, desember 03, 2005

Mount Kenya

Probably going to Mt Kenya tomorrow... it's all booked and payed but I'll keep saying probably and maybe until I'm down again.

It's a four days trek, up to Point Lenana (4985m) on the Sirimon route and down the Timau route. Probably lots to see on the way, including possibly elephants, lots of monkeys, half-tame hyraxes, huge bamboo forest, equatorial tundra and snow on the equator!!!

You'll hear from me again on thursday, probably...

föstudagur, desember 02, 2005

Plan B

Yep, not going to Kilimanjaro, time out, or I would miss my flight back.

Plan B: hopefully I'll manage to arrange a trip to Mount Kenya, but I won't have the time to go do the climbing part (let alone that I haven't climbed for one and a half years). I'm going to Nairobbery for the weekend with Katrin, still plenty of things to do there.

I'm expecting a struggle getting my money back from Keffa. Luckily, I have a safety net there, he's a teacher at Katrin's school, when this has happened before (and you wonder why he's still teaching there...) money he owed to another teacher was in the end withdrawn from his salery!
I don't have a safety net with Paul, however. Now Paul is the travel agent who got me in touch with the diving instructors. I paid him a sum of four hundred dollars, but in the end, only about 200 euros came through and I had to pay the rest myself. Now I'm battling with him to get my money back. He said that there was some second agent in Mombasa that means to keep the money, around 160 dollars remaining. Now the "guy in Mombasa" (and you wonder whether there really is a guy in Mombasa,) has sent a check to Paul, but Paul does still not want to pay me the amount due, - yet. Always saying wait, wait... and it's all about biding time because he knows that I'll run out of time and eventually stop bothering him.

What I find the most frustrating is the complete lack of customer service I have met with the two local tour operators that I have done business with. You end up with not trusting the locals, when they keep biting the hand that feeds them.
In both cases they're saying sorry sorry for the inconvenience, but offering nothing to redeem for it. And I'm having to struggle to meet with them, they don't come or call as they say they will and I'm going to have to chase them if I want mine back.

And what is very annoying is also to have to spend a vacation hunting down fakes and phoneys and cheaters and liars, when I would rather spend my time doing something completely different.

fimmtudagur, desember 01, 2005

The unpredictability of traveling in Africa

So, I'm not starting my hike today, like I was supposed to.
When I was waiting for my bus in Mombasa, Keffa (my travel agent) called me and said that my departure was being delayed one day. That was less than twelve hours before I was supposed to leave for Tanzania... So I came back to Nakuru and am still waiting for a green light.
Appearantly the guide who was supposed to take me, took some other guys up there first and isn´t down yet... hmmm... but Keffa is still assuring me that I WILL go, that's 100%, well, as much a hundred percent as anything can ever be here in Kenya.

If you don't hear from me within three days, I must be on the mountain. If it doesn't work out, I'll tell you about my plan B as soon as there is one.

It actually was convenient that I didn't have my bus to Tanzania yesterday morning, because the overnight bus from Mombasa got delayed...
It arrived late from Malindi, but the boarding went quickly and soon we were moving. But not for very long. After just 1000 meters or so, it stopped and was left running, so we just waited. After having waited for about twenty minutes without any explanations, I went out to check what was going on. Some of my fellow passengers pointed to a leak from under the bus. The driver wasn't there and no staff available to tell us what would happen.
The tension mounting with the passengers, half of them soon decided to go to the police. I stayed in the bus, because I couldn't be bothered to carry all my luggage around.
But just five minutes later we were moving, - jerky movements indicated that the driver was not very used to drive a 50 passengers bus. My suspections were confirmed by a fellow passenger: the bus was being taken to the police with all of us in it. The driver had some difficulties, held up traffic when backing very slowly out of a wrong turn, and rounded off a few corners and crossed some roundabouts.
Appearantly, we weren't headed for the police, though, we came to a stop outside the bus office, where it had all started over an hour ago.
Word got around the bus that it wasn't anything wrong with the bus, but it was the driver that had driven from Malindi, he had quite simply run away soon after leaving the bus office. So we were provided with a new driver and soon the bus started moving again, (after having been pushed onto the street when it wouldn't start). This time we only got as far as a hundred meters before stopping and backing back to the office. Another unexplained wait of around twenty minutes and finally we could get going, two hours and twenty minutes after we had been supposed to leave.