Avis sur mon voyage à pied de Tananarive à Mandrivazo
by Leptiroutar
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
hello
Sachant que je ne connais pas le pays,
j'ai en projets de faire le parcourt suivant afin de le découvrir:
Tananarive Tuléar( via RN7) puis, Tuléar Mandrivazo et retour à Tana..
je pensais faire se voyage via le stop ou trensport en commun.
est-ce une bonne itinéraire ? les moyens de trensports que j'envisage sont t-ils possiblent? combiens de temps environ me prendra le voyage? les malgaches sont t-ils hospitalers vis a vis des touristes? j'ai prevu d'enmener un petit sac de couchage pour dépanner au cas ou, doi-je prendre une tente?
merci🙂
bonjour, l'auto-stop c'est pas possible, il faut que vous ayez beaucoup de chance mais le transport en commun c'est possible(taxi brousse), le taxi brousse part très tôt le matin et arrive la nuit à tulear et même chose pour miandrivazo c'est possible votre voyage
Bonjour
Oui, tu veux faire ce pays à la roots et bien cela est possible, mais effectivement concernant le stop, il ne faut pas trop y compter, c'est pas dans leurs coutumes...........Pour le contact avec les gasy pas de pbl tout en faisant attention quand même à ceux qui vous collent, l'hospitalité oui c'est aussi possible, le sac de couchage indispensable et voir la tente mais une très légère bien sur. Si tu peux dormir chez l'habitant et bien surtout dans les villages voir avec le chef du village. Le meilleur moyen de transport dans ce pays quant on a le temps, c'est le taxi brousse, on y fait plein de rencontres. La partie descente de la N7 pas de pbl, elle est très empruntée mais pour faire de Tulear à Mormbé puis de Morombé à Belo sur mer et ensuite de Belo à Morondava et puis Miandrivaza et bien là, tu verras que c'est plus compliqué avec très peu de taxi brousse et même c'est plutôt des camions brousse et en plus le bac de Bevoy est en panne mais il est possible ( enfin, c'était comme ça en juin ) de le prendre plus en amont avec des pirogues regroupées pour faire traverser les véhicules et en pirogue simple pour les passagers. Voilà, un peu comment cela se passe dans ce pays.😉
Oui, tu veux faire ce pays à la roots et bien cela est possible, mais effectivement concernant le stop, il ne faut pas trop y compter, c'est pas dans leurs coutumes...........Pour le contact avec les gasy pas de pbl tout en faisant attention quand même à ceux qui vous collent, l'hospitalité oui c'est aussi possible, le sac de couchage indispensable et voir la tente mais une très légère bien sur. Si tu peux dormir chez l'habitant et bien surtout dans les villages voir avec le chef du village. Le meilleur moyen de transport dans ce pays quant on a le temps, c'est le taxi brousse, on y fait plein de rencontres. La partie descente de la N7 pas de pbl, elle est très empruntée mais pour faire de Tulear à Mormbé puis de Morombé à Belo sur mer et ensuite de Belo à Morondava et puis Miandrivaza et bien là, tu verras que c'est plus compliqué avec très peu de taxi brousse et même c'est plutôt des camions brousse et en plus le bac de Bevoy est en panne mais il est possible ( enfin, c'était comme ça en juin ) de le prendre plus en amont avec des pirogues regroupées pour faire traverser les véhicules et en pirogue simple pour les passagers. Voilà, un peu comment cela se passe dans ce pays.😉
Tant que la couleur de la peau sera plus importante que la couleur des yeux, nous ne connaitrons pas la paix.
Re😉
Tu as aussi la possibilté de faire la remontée ou la descente de Tulear à Morondava ou en partie en pirogue vezo, c'est aussi une façon comme une autre d'aborder cette partie côtière.........😎
Amicalement😉
Tu as aussi la possibilté de faire la remontée ou la descente de Tulear à Morondava ou en partie en pirogue vezo, c'est aussi une façon comme une autre d'aborder cette partie côtière.........😎
Amicalement😉
Tant que la couleur de la peau sera plus importante que la couleur des yeux, nous ne connaitrons pas la paix.
Hi !
Vous seriez toujours le bienvenu chez nous. Mais quand on a un projet comme le votre il faut bien se préparer. Il vaut mieux prendre le taxi brousse et faire des étapes pour le trajet Tana/ Tuléar via RN7. A éviter si possible de voyager pendant la nuit pour de raison de sécurité.
Exemple : Tana/ Antsirabe (170 Kms)
Antsirabe/ Ambositra (90 Kms)
Ambositra/ Fianarantsoa (134 kms)
Fianarantsoa/ Ambalavao/Ranohira (295 Kms) vous pouvez continuer jusqu’au parc national de l’ Isalo et d’y rester 02 ou 03 jours. Activités à voir sur place.
Ranohira/ Tuléar (243 Kms)
Sachez que Ifaty et Anakao possède des jolies plages à ne pas manquer.
Beaucoup d’activités peuvent s’organiser sur place. Vous verrez ce n’est pas difficile du tout. Vous n’avez pas besoin d’apporter une tente car il y a toujours des hôtels sympas et à petit prix sauf si vous envisagez de camper dans les parcs nationaux.
Je vous encourage à réaliser vos projets car vous avez choisi une bonne destination.
N’hésitez pas à écrire si vous avez besoin d’information complémentaire
Salut
Salut
Kalhia
😉 Salut l'autre pti, 😄
Mon conseil est le même qu'ils disent avant. Je ne connais pas bien la route au de-là d'Ambositra mais j'aimerais simplement vous préciser des point indispensable qu'ils ont dit au-dessus du genre:
- pas d'auto-stop
- évite au maximum les voyages de nuit
- Je suis malgache et je connais bien notre réaction vis-à-vis des français; juste pour dire qu'il y plein de gens pas cool mais y a aussi qui sont très ouvert.
Hi!!!
Votre projet "marche Tana jusqu'à Miandrivazo" tient encore. Je vous souhaite bon courage et soyez athlète Slts
Votre projet "marche Tana jusqu'à Miandrivazo" tient encore. Je vous souhaite bon courage et soyez athlète Slts
Kalhia
Bonsoir!
Ton projet est super, mais j'aimerais savoir en combien de temps tu pense le faire.
Si tu a au moins 1 mois pas de probleme c'est realisable.
Il fauts avoir que le stop ne marche pas à Mada, en tout cas, j'en ai aps encore vu. mais le transport enc ommun oui, c'est aps cher et ça va partout. je te conseil de les prendre, c'est mieux pour ton projet. Tu peux facilementd escendre la RN7 en 2 semaines sans se presser avec les taxi brousse.
mais oui les malgaches sont très hospitaliers, ils peuvent t'accueillir quend ils le puevent, je veux surtout dire de Tana à Ihosy, oui, ils peuvent t'heberger sans difficulter. C'est aps comme l'afrique de L'est ou pour dormir chez les gens ta's quand même un peu de mal. Ici aps de problème. Aprés ça depend s'ils ont le smoyens de t'heberger ou aps, parceque vois tu, dans le sud, les gens n'ont aps trop de moyen, tu verras par toi même.
Pour un voyage à pied je te conseil plutôt de faire de Tana à Fianar, là je suis sur que tu n'auras aucun problème à aprt qeulque puce de temps en temps masi c'est aussi ça le charme de ton voyage.
Et emmene un sacs de couchage et du micro pure et si possible une tente ça te servira bien.
Allez bonne route à toi et si ta's besoin de plus d'infos, n'hesite pas.
A+
Marche doucement car tu marches sur mes reves
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I’m currently drafting the itinerary. We’d be crossing from Ullapool and were thinking of spending 3 nights on Harris and 4 nights on Lewis.
Does that sound balanced to you? Is it better to keep the same accommodation on Harris and the same on Lewis to explore the area? I’d love to hear about any past experiences you’ve had on these islands. Thanks!
Hi there, I’m trying to leave for 15 days very soon to São Vicente. I’m either looking to join an agency or figure things out on my own to go hiking on one of these islands or both. From what I’ve seen, it’s not easy to organize with local transport, so it gets expensive. Can I use the services of a small local agency? I’m looking for the simplest way to hike for several days. Also, how do you get from São Vicente to São Nicolau? Thanks in advance and have a great day!
Aichatou
Hi there,
I’ve been wanting to do this for several years, and this year’s the one. Next September, I’ll be trekking in Tusheti (Georgia), from Omalo to Shatili. Of course, I won’t be renting a vehicle that’d just sit unused. No problem getting to Pshaveli, but from there to Omalo, it’s a dirt road (still the case?) There must be some form of public transport since there are so many guesthouses, and not all travelers come in a 4x4. If any of you have been to Omalo, could you confirm that these shared transports exist and how often they run?
I’ve been wanting to do this for several years, and this year’s the one. Next September, I’ll be trekking in Tusheti (Georgia), from Omalo to Shatili. Of course, I won’t be renting a vehicle that’d just sit unused. No problem getting to Pshaveli, but from there to Omalo, it’s a dirt road (still the case?) There must be some form of public transport since there are so many guesthouses, and not all travelers come in a 4x4. If any of you have been to Omalo, could you confirm that these shared transports exist and how often they run?
hi
we’re planning a trip to Yellowstone and hoping to do a three-day backcountry hike if we get a permit. if any of you have done this before, could you let me know if it’s possible to find water along the way? And if we can transport it, are we allowed to use a stove?
thanks for any tips!
sandra
we’re planning a trip to Yellowstone and hoping to do a three-day backcountry hike if we get a permit. if any of you have done this before, could you let me know if it’s possible to find water along the way? And if we can transport it, are we allowed to use a stove?
thanks for any tips!
sandra
Hello,
I’ll be in Nepal from March 6th to 29th (we’re flying into Kathmandu via Varanasi and leaving via Delhi).
I’m a bit confused about the regulations requiring a guide.
My wife and I (we’re 63 and 64) aren’t experienced trekkers—we’re more used to walking on terrain with very moderate elevation changes. I’m looking for fairly easy hikes, possibly day trips. Here are my questions: - Does the Poon Hill trek from Pokhara require a guide, or is it better to go through a local agency? (I’ve seen a lot of them offering 4-day packages) - I’d like to do a few multi-day hikes around Jomsom (Kagbeni, Mukitinath, Lupra, Marpha)... Do you need a guide for those, and can you find accommodations easily without booking in advance?
Last question—I’m really hesitant to lug around a sleeping bag or down jacket during our 6 weeks in India. Can you easily find these kinds of items at reasonable prices in Pokhara?
Thanks in advance for any tips you can share! Yann
My wife and I (we’re 63 and 64) aren’t experienced trekkers—we’re more used to walking on terrain with very moderate elevation changes. I’m looking for fairly easy hikes, possibly day trips. Here are my questions: - Does the Poon Hill trek from Pokhara require a guide, or is it better to go through a local agency? (I’ve seen a lot of them offering 4-day packages) - I’d like to do a few multi-day hikes around Jomsom (Kagbeni, Mukitinath, Lupra, Marpha)... Do you need a guide for those, and can you find accommodations easily without booking in advance?
Last question—I’m really hesitant to lug around a sleeping bag or down jacket during our 6 weeks in India. Can you easily find these kinds of items at reasonable prices in Pokhara?
Thanks in advance for any tips you can share! Yann




