Wild Eastern and Western Cape, 3 Weeks in South Africa, September 2017
FR

Translated into English.

MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
On arrival, the sun greets us and Undermilkwood is untouched.

First, you have to cross the mountain range



Follow the coast with Wilderness beach



Home sweet home under the sun





Rest... Tomorrow?

michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
I could’ve done a recap of Die Hel.

The road is: stunning but stressful, so you should tackle it knowing how long and challenging it is...depending on the weather, possible traffic, and with a suitable vehicle...and know how to change a tire if needed.

I recommend it!

The valley:

Bring your own food and drinks! Keep in mind it’s a bit rustic but decent. You’re in a "world of its own." Activities include...relaxing and hiking in nature, mountain biking...you can also fish in season.

I loved it. For the history and the stories. The road.

PS: You can camp, and it seems nice. Remote but nice.
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Whales in sight!

The weather is really uncertain today, the boat is small, and leaving Knysna Lagoon is always a bit challenging.

Here, it's calm, but at the Heads... wow, it's rough!



No wonder this entrance was considered the most dangerous by the British Navy. There’s even a dive site here on a shipwreck.

We’re worried we’ll come back empty-handed, but...

They’ll be at the meet-up, right there and very much present.





michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Prince Alfred Pass

Between Knysna and Uniondale.

We start by leaving Knysna via the townships, which aren’t great, especially in the rain.



To cross the forest. Lots of spots for walks, mountain biking, picnic sites... But it’s raining!





It’s raining and the cloud ceiling is low.

Being adventurers like we are, we didn’t hesitate to head to The Point Of View...





Only to find that... well, with the clouds... we couldn’t see a thing.



That said,

I’ll go ahead and say that because of its length, the variety of landscapes, and the fairly easy track, the Prince Alfred Pass is more interesting and more beautiful than the Swartberg!
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
The pass, the sequel

We’re now in the forest-farm area where wildfires are the big obsession—constant calls for vigilance, monitoring, and that massive "siren."







michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Back in the early 2000s, during our first trips, you’d genuinely and systematically find a Black neighborhood and a white neighborhood everywhere. The Black neighborhood was extremely deprived—a township, poor, with one water point for x number of houses, often no electricity, no public lighting, let alone sewers or anything else. The "houses" were makeshift, cobbled together—having walls seemed like a luxury.

The in-flight ad on SAA (South African Airways) touted "progress" as a "house" made of bricks, with one window, one door, one room... a tin roof. No mention of running water, heating, or toilets...

Something like this but smaller:



So, townships back then were similar to today’s shacks (shacks are the slums within townships).



The first mission at the time was water, electricity, and public lighting... so we started seeing poles! Yep, electric poles and streetlights!





Second step... either new housing was built—like "subdivisions," starting from scratch in a way.







Or the old areas were upgraded.



With the next goal... toilets. Outside at first.



Now, the goal is indoor toilets... we’re not there yet. (On the theme of "having toilets in the house is fancy—it really makes you somebody!")

Little by little, you see much "fancier" neighborhoods popping up... with real houses, even stylish touches like columns.



It’s often in rural areas where things lag the most.







What gives me hope is that in just fifteen years, we’ve seen firsthand how things have improved... There’s still work to do, but...
michel85200
MU Muriel18 Globetrotter ·
Being adventurers like us, we didn’t hesitate to head to The Point Of View...

I did the same thing in Costa Rica at Poas Volcano... with identical results! 😏 Muriel
Si tu diffères de moi, mon frère, loin de me léser, tu m'enrichis (Saint Exupéry)
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
This pass is varied, pleasant, beautiful...

I know the weather’s not great, but I suspect this pass—which owes me a rematch—is absolutely stunning.

We finish in Uniondale and we’ve definitely earned lunch!

















michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Willowmore:

So after Uniondale comes Willowmore.



What do we do in Willowmore?



A tiny, very quiet town.



And our guest house...



During our last kilometers through the pass and on the road... mountain bikes... mountain bikes... cars with mountain bikes... loads of mountain bikes.

Actually, this weekend is a big Uniondale/Knysna mountain bike race weekend...

That explains their presence and the difficulty we had finding accommodation for tonight.

Willowmore, the founding of this town... mid-18th century (you’ll understand later why I’m lingering on this...) A tiny, quiet town where everyone says hello as they pass by... Black, White, Tourists, Locals...

The vibe is pretty chill.

A group of women, like a local Kiwanis club, sipping white wine in a "tea room"... And ladies, it’s only 4 PM! A "tea room" where you shouldn’t bring young kids... the decor is downright creepy... "Sophie’s Choice"... just the name...

Moms are shuttling their kids home from school... Lots of Hilux-style 4x4s with canopies... a bit like ours... Oh, here’s one... White woman driver... no one in the front with her... no one in the back seats of this Hilux... The little Black boy... He’s in the canopy... in the canopy? Yep... Would you have this idea? Transporting a kid under 10 in the canopy of your 4x4? When all the other seats are empty? Huh? No harm done... the canopy window is cracked open... so he can get some air... (I think you caught the sarcastic humor there)

It’s a bit like often... In the open bakkie, exposed to the wind, 3 or 4 workers freezing their butts off while there’s room in the cab... Some things still haven’t quite become the norm... Too bad.

Anyway... The guest house isn’t bad... but it’s sorely lacking a critical eye and/or a bit of investment... In the bathroom... the frosted glass hasn’t seen a sponge in ages... so mold has moved in. Only one side of the bathroom door is painted... the rug in the room dates back to before the Great Trek, dirt included... Nicely rolled up (I didn’t want to walk on an antique), it’ll serve as a "doorstop" to block the huge gap where a horde of "critters" could get in.

The meal will be pretty excellent, as was the very friendly welcome from the two young women running the place.

Oh, right... They claim the Baviaanskloof passes are worse than Die Hel’s... gulp? Really? Gulp! !
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Baviaanskoof:

A little map



We’re going from Willowmore to Patensie, so from west to east along the valley (the Baviaans one, crossing the other river, the Kouga). The reserve is in orange—it was created in the early 2000s. The uncolored part is still private. Our base for a few nights is at the entrance of the "reserve" section, crossed by the "road." It *is* a road... It’s on the maps, has its own number... We’ll see its condition later.

Shall we go?













michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
The first part of the route isn’t too challenging. You go up a bit, then back down... But after rain, it can be a completely different story because at the bottom of every valley, you keep crossing fords... dry for us, but potentially flooded!









A quick stop at Vero's "restaurant"... which is a restaurant in name only—the selection is super limited.



And another tortoise—one more!













michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
So here we are, settled in for 3 nights at our base.

A farm bought in the 2000s (sheep for the main production)



where the new owners (not farmers by any stretch) had stone cottages built at the top of a hill.



Isolation and a guaranteed viewpoint, with baboons as our main company,



especially since we’re the only guests.



Though getting to the top is another story...





michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Any photos?









michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
It's mid-November and...

It's snowing in Karoo National Park and Beaufort West!

https://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/western-cape/gallery-snow-in-beaufort-west-1341946

My rhinos and lions in the snow ?????
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Baviaanskloof does have a nature reserve section. For now, we're in the private part.

In this private section, several farms share the territory.





A very dry valley, at first glance, but one that still holds great wealth... springs.

Water... Springs (7) managed collectively according to rules dating back to the early colonization of this valley. So many days for each. That’s for the surface water that emerges at the figtree forest.



The other is pumped.



To adjust the flow... a piece of wood in the collection box (padlocked).



Any issues with this distribution? No! "Everything’s been written in black and white for ages."
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
The best-maintained police station in SA!



And the big winner is the Baviaanskloof police station!



It’s already so remote out here.



The valley’s population... well, there aren’t many people... everyone knows everyone... and crime is practically non-existent...

"The police have so little to do... that maintaining their station keeps them busy!"

Fun fact: Here, people speak Afrikaans or English. The authorities sent Xhosa-speaking police officers... which makes sense since we’re administratively in the Xhosa country, the Eastern Cape... Except that no one here speaks Xhosa... Things had to be adjusted pretty quickly.

Besides, this region (if I got it right) was only attached to the Eastern Cape after 1994... before that, it was part of the Western Cape. A source of problems and neglect, according to locals... especially when it comes to maintaining the pass... see the next episodes!
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
So, who’s up for hearing all this?

Well, this is Peter.

A solid Afrikaner pushing forty.

Around these parts, everyone’s got lives that aren’t exactly "linear."

He comes from the Kalahari, where his parents were farmers. He’s traveled quite a bit in the US and France.

His plan—besides breaking out of the isolation he’s stuck in, still single—is to have his own farm. But for that, he needs cash, and he doesn’t have enough... So he ended up here about ten years ago. Tasked with running the farm, raising sheep... and managing the lodge—meaning the campsite, self-catering, and the "luxury" side—while also playing butler and guide... A bit too much work, a bit too underpaid, and a bit too squeezed out of vacations he never gets to take. On top of that, he’s passionate about... distillation! He distills just about everything, including his own whisky! (And apparently, he’s far from just a home consumer!) So he tells stories... Those who’ve followed the old travel journals know that when you’ve got a guide like this, you don’t let go... He talks about floods with cars trapped in fords or swept away by the current. Tourists who head to Beaufort West and take a straight line through Baviaans... only to end up stranded, exhausted, hungry, lost after dark, desperately searching for shelter and a meal! He recounts the old trail of the first settlers, the original Baviaans route when the path was still maintained. His favorite fishing spots. In short, he shares a side of South Africa that’s way more real than tourist brochures. Exactly what we needed.

By the way... The valley was colonized in... in... 1725! Doesn’t that make you do a double-take? 1725? Well, what’s the big deal? Uniondale and Willowmore are more like 1850/1860... Grahamstown is 1805/1815!

So the first Afrikaner settlers arrived here over a century earlier! Even better, they didn’t come from the west but from the east.

Following the coast, unable to find a way through the Tsitsikamma forest, they continued toward PE and arrived from that side. And they never found the way out to the west!

The new Trekkers, coming from the west—those who founded Uniondale and Willowmore—were pretty surprised to find people had beaten them to it!

Five original families... The Ferreiras... of Portuguese origin, which explains the huge number of Ferreiras in the area. The Smitts from Holland, and the De Prezes... the Dutch version of the French Després and others...
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
And now, a walk with Kiwit.

Kiwit was born here and lives here, in the next village over. He only speaks Afrikaans and English. He wants to learn Xhosa... another peculiarity of this area... see the Xhosa police officers no one could communicate with.

A walk at the bottom of the valley.





We’ll see... the tree where the leopard sharpens its claws...

Leopard tracks



Otter droppings

And an eagle!



We’ll do a bit of geology (don’t worry, I won’t make you do any)



michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
The lodge was created by a wealthy South African couple from CT.

In the 2000s, they bought the farm...without really knowing what being a farmer entails...

It’s Peter who’s been repairing the damage and getting the operation back on track for the past ten years...on top of his role as lodge manager...

Today, a couple is taking over the lodge’s management. Another non-linear life story. He’s of Scottish origin, and she’s a pure Afrikaans. Since we’re the only guests...and interaction is kind of our thing...we chat.

We talk about them...how for several years they managed a hotel on the edge of Addo...owned by French people who weren’t exactly gifted in hospitality. Life isn’t that easy...They also have a dream—having their own place...but for that, you need money. South Africa isn’t a land where all whites are rich and exploitative and all Blacks are poor and exploited. The situation is far more complex. Many white South Africans work hard just to make ends meet. There are plenty of Black people who are much wealthier. Even if it’s true that in this valley, too, the Black population is mostly poor, even very poor. That’s actually why I wanted to see where the guest house employees lived. Peter and the manager couple share a small, not-so-luxurious house.



The managers’ place is much nicer and well-furnished.



The Black employees (those working on the farm, handymen, etc.)...We won’t say it’s luxury. But it’s already much better than the other houses. Let’s just say we’ve seen far worse.

michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Okay, that's not all... but tomorrow we're tackling the Baviaanskloof Pass with Peter... which will give me a taste of what's in store when I'm behind the wheel alone...

Hopopop... What's going on here?

A monument commemorating the deaths of several people swept away by floodwaters during a flash flood...



And the water level? Well, up to the red strip! A good 3 meters!



We're at the bottom of the valley, which is dry, and the water rose by 3 meters? Yep, that's right.
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
The pass

It didn’t disappoint me! Long and rather challenging! Beautiful!

Since the rain didn’t show up, the river crossings were easy. We climb up, we go back down... the edges are sometimes steep.























michel85200
MU Muriel18 Globetrotter ·
Hey Michel, wouldn’t you try adding a map?... ‘cause I’m kinda lost here 🤪 Muriel
Si tu diffères de moi, mon frère, loin de me léser, tu m'enrichis (Saint Exupéry)
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Any animals?

Yes, buffaloes and rhinos too.

Baviaans was largely unknown for a long time. Until the day a buffalo gored a hiker...

Big spotlight moment, and it became clear that the walk had to take these big beasts into account. Around 20 rhinos... all black!

Rhino dunk



Tree destroyed by baboons



Kudus and an antelope whose name I’ve forgotten, sorry





Vervet



The Hilux and the tortoise



Who got there first?

michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
And a map, here we go!



So, in the West, Willowmore, where we’re coming from.

In the East, Patensie, where we’re headed.

The orange section is the reserve, and the enclosed blue area is private (that’s where we stayed)... We’ve just entered the reserve by following the road.
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
The pass has existed since the beginning, so since the mid-18th century.

You can still see traces of it (a bit like the route to California with the wagon wheel ruts... or the Great Trek route, same thing).



Near the summit, the current road—the "black" trail is the old track.
michel85200
MU Muriel18 Globetrotter ·
Uhh, I meant a map with your whole route on it 😇 ... because you kinda left me hanging since Knysna 😊
Si tu diffères de moi, mon frère, loin de me léser, tu m'enrichis (Saint Exupéry)
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
In the middle of the pass, you'll cross the biggest ford—the Kouga River.

Just before that, if you're coming from the west, there's a picnic area... A little tip: cross it by continuing to your left, and 1 km further on, you'll find a second picnic area, deserted with the river all to yourselves!

Great spot for fishing or even a swim.









michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
And a map, here we go...

https://www.google.fr/maps/dir/Port+Elizabeth, +Afrique+du+Sud/Mountain+Zebra+National+Park, +Afrique+du+Sud/Graaff-Reinet, +Afrique+du+Sud/Karoo+National+Park+Campsite/Die+Hel+(Gamkaskloof+Wilderness+Valley)/Knysna, +Afrique+du+Sud/Willowmore, +Afrique+du+Sud/Patensie, +Afrique+du+Sud/Port+Elizabeth, +Afrique+du+Sud/@-33.6757234,23.7135791,8z/data=!4m81!4m80!1m5!1m1!1s0x1e7b290045ffd62b:0x86fd2337cd894226!2m2!1d25.5207358!2d-33.7139247!1m5!1m1!1s0x1e7d6dc564b5af1b:0x188b4e28ebe5be84!2m2!1d25.1355545!2d-32.1692586!1m5!1m1!1s0x1e7d9232c51e82c5:0x934a33e520825f81!2m2!1d24.5480227!2d-32.2547052!1m10!1m1!1s0x1c2aae9c6fa2a4cf:0x88b07308deb182e!2m2!1d22.4925895!2d-32.3330535!3m4!1m2!1d22.2352305!2d-33.5922912!3s0x1dd5e9f2607bd387:0xabaa7fa335bc6c8e!1m10!1m1!1s0x1dd45a2f0b698ad9:0xb0c2c09fa1b66041!2m2!1d21.62871!2d-33.36282!3m4!1m2!1d23.0356994!2d-34.0369323!3s0x1e78ea91b06e3d67:0xaa3a43765760ef16!1m10!1m1!1s0x1e78ea4096010cd9:0xbe2ab9e17550cecd!2m2!1d23.0464693!2d-34.0350856!3m4!1m2!1d23.1547156!2d-33.8978048!3s0x1e78c48f065ac1c3:0xc63d0f2ea6e2efad!1m10!1m1!1s0x1e7edc2b32bac591:0x3f19c0abc4c4b67f!2m2!1d23.4895156!2d-33.287665!3m4!1m2!1d23.9471911!2d-33.5355988!3s0x1e794d65b2bbad1f:0x474e82d6999331f5!1m10!1m1!1s0x1e7ba6a7ee95a53d:0xf6d819c770fbcf44!2m2!1d24.8122367!2d-33.755182!3m4!1m2!1d24.8085854!2d-34.1351284!3s0x1e7a50cd7278cf23:0x3a9d86e9d43a597a!1m5!1m1!1s0x1e7b290045ffd62b:0x86fd2337cd894226!2m2!1d25.5207358!2d-33.7139247!3e0
michel85200
RJ Rjulie95 Globetrotter ·
and an antelope whose name I don’t remember, sorry

The Bushbuck 🙂
"Je suis africain, non pas parce que je suis né en Afrique, mais parce que l'Afrique est née en moi." Kwame Nkrumah.

"J'ai appris que le courage n'est pas l'absence de peur, mais la capacité de la vaincre." Nelson Mandela

https://www.en-voyages.fr
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Thanks 😉
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
There are still people living in the reserve who were there before it was created. Not many, but a few. Here, it's... donkeys at every corner... uh... no streets... just tracks... Quite a few are semi-free-roaming, actually.

Almost as many as the tortoises...

michel85200
MU Muriel18 Globetrotter ·
Oh, there we go! Thanks! 🙂
Si tu diffères de moi, mon frère, loin de me léser, tu m'enrichis (Saint Exupéry)
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Part 2 of the pass is even a bit more complicated.

We start with the most important ford... but it's easy this season.





There are two campgrounds run by Baviaans officials, Rooihoek and Dooringkloof...

Fellow campers, the place is pretty nice, but the baboons are always around and relentless in their persistence! Also, the restrooms are in a state... (if you can even call them restrooms).











The landscapes and challenges keep coming.









michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
A little note for those who might get a flat tire...

First off, if you leave the main road like I did, you’re moving away from any traffic... which isn’t the best idea. If you do, try not to do it in the middle of a baboon convention... And to avoid a flat, steer clear of acacia thorns.

Anyway, since I didn’t do either of those things—or listen to my own advice...

Here I am with a flat tire. Check out the "rescue" T-shirt!



No big deal, except the spare tire is secured with an extra chain (to prevent theft) and, of course, a padlock...

When you’re not too bright and lying under the car, it’s hard to realize the lock is protected by a plastic cover... and it’s only after... well, duh!... that you figure it out!

That said, if you break down there... No signal, hardly any traffic, and at least 2 hours either way to get a tow truck.
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
The final part.













michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
So we end up in the valley.

What a surprise!

Here, everything is green, dust-free, lusher—citrus is grown like crazy...









Why did the settlers leave this obvious oasis—so much more pleasant to live in—just to get lost on the other side... and stay there???

Couldn’t our Peter, the lonely bachelor working in his lost valley, come here instead???

You really have to have bush in your blood and a taste for isolation to go and stay in the first part of the valley. As a tourist, I appreciated the isolation, but to live there...

Anyway, Patensie welcomes us... A small, peaceful town that lives off citrus.

By the way, if you need a tire repaired... don’t hesitate... less than 50 ZAR! Unbeatable!
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
We’re staying at Ripple Hill tonight.

An old-school hotel... right in the middle of renovations and very basic. A bar with... whites and blacks. Same for the restaurant, and a cheap meal.

We’re definitely in everyday South Africa, that’s for sure!

So much so that you have to book and choose your breakfast and what’s in it the day before...

Make sure to arrive on time to have it (or else you’ll be punished?)

And before 8 AM because after that... there’s no more electricity! And this has been going on for a year!
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
So all that's left is to head back to our starting point, PE... Stopping by to say a quick hello to the ocean... with wind strong enough to blow the horns off a bull.



St Francis and Plettenberg Bay are really upscale beach resorts.

Deserted... They even built a fake "marina" with a real lagoon...





Upscale for some, much less so for others...

michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
The A380 is waiting for us in Joburg via PE.



A little recap?

You might have noticed we stayed far from the classic, "touristy" routes in South Africa—both in terms of wildlife and landscapes.

The pace, too... slow, in contrast to the usual rush.

It was intentional. Taking our time. Trying to see and experience a deeper, more real South Africa. Getting off the beaten path.

Sure, it’s easier when you’ve already got a few trips to South Africa under your belt.

We wanted it, we got it!

The highlights?

The stunning Karoo parks (Mountain Zebra and Karoo NP, Camdeboo to a lesser extent) with the added bonus of spotting buffaloes, lions, and black rhinos—beyond the usual sights in those areas! And a tracking story to tell!

The incredible 4x4 roads that took us to beautiful, surprising, and unusual places.

The whales in Knysna.

All those encounters!

The lows?

Meh, maybe one or two dodgy meals?

A personal highlight?

The reactions of South Africans (Black and white) when they heard me speaking Zulu! With the cherry on top being our last meal at Tambo, at Ocean Basket... where the servers (who spoke Zulu themselves) were completely surprised... ending in genuine laughter.

Well, that’s about it...

I think I’ll have to go back... Gotta keep practicing my Zulu, right? (Good excuse, isn’t it?)
michel85200
AT Atila Globetrotter ·
Thanks for this travel journal! !😉
DI Diamina Globetrotter ·
Hey again Michel,

I’m devouring your travel journal—it’s as great as always and super informative. And the icing on the cake? Those mouthwatering photos! You should totally get paid by the South African tourism office!!🤪
Nord Chili, NOA, Sud Lipez, La Paz août 2012 https://voyageforum.com/forum/mois_dans_andes_peripeties_en_altitude_D5526293/ Apologie du southwest en hiver https://voyageforum.com/forum/apologie_sud-ouest_etats-unis_en_hiver_D5851267/ Impressions d'Afrique et de Namibie
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
Don’t hesitate to tell them
michel85200
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
And glad to hear from you!
michel85200
DI Diamina Globetrotter ·
So glad to hear from you!

Thanks.... Same here!!! I just finished your travel journal and really enjoyed it. When you said the photos didn’t do justice to the landscapes you saw in the Karoo, I totally get what you meant. Those wide-open spaces are so hard to capture. It’s like the photos of Lesotho..... And now you’ve got me feeling that call of southern Africa again...

Thanks, Michel.
Nord Chili, NOA, Sud Lipez, La Paz août 2012 https://voyageforum.com/forum/mois_dans_andes_peripeties_en_altitude_D5526293/ Apologie du southwest en hiver https://voyageforum.com/forum/apologie_sud-ouest_etats-unis_en_hiver_D5851267/ Impressions d'Afrique et de Namibie
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
In 2000, I set foot on this African land Since then, it’s had a special pull on me Madness or wisdom? Doesn’t matter—I’ll be back
michel85200
DI Diamina Globetrotter ·
You're lucky if it's just South Africa. You should do like Le Voyou: move there.

Me, it's the whole world that has that effect on me. Well, the part of the world that has much cooler temperatures than here and is a bit desert-like!!! 😄
Nord Chili, NOA, Sud Lipez, La Paz août 2012 https://voyageforum.com/forum/mois_dans_andes_peripeties_en_altitude_D5526293/ Apologie du southwest en hiver https://voyageforum.com/forum/apologie_sud-ouest_etats-unis_en_hiver_D5851267/ Impressions d'Afrique et de Namibie
RJ Rjulie95 Globetrotter ·
For me, it's the whole world that has that effect. Well, the part of the world that's much cooler than where I live and a bit desert-like!!! 😄

That rules out a big chunk of the world 😏
"Je suis africain, non pas parce que je suis né en Afrique, mais parce que l'Afrique est née en moi." Kwame Nkrumah.

"J'ai appris que le courage n'est pas l'absence de peur, mais la capacité de la vaincre." Nelson Mandela

https://www.en-voyages.fr
DI Diamina Globetrotter ·
The whole world has that effect on me. Well, the part of the world that has much cooler temperatures than where I live and is a bit desert-like!!! 

That rules out a big chunk of the world

You mean the tropics and the equator make up a big part of the world. I totally agree with you there. But since I already live there......😮 🤪
Nord Chili, NOA, Sud Lipez, La Paz août 2012 https://voyageforum.com/forum/mois_dans_andes_peripeties_en_altitude_D5526293/ Apologie du southwest en hiver https://voyageforum.com/forum/apologie_sud-ouest_etats-unis_en_hiver_D5851267/ Impressions d'Afrique et de Namibie
MU Muriel18 Globetrotter ·
Hi Diamina

The whole world has that effect on me. Well, the part of the world that has much cooler temperatures than where I live

Same here... except I replace "cooler" with "hotter" 😎. Well, actually, it's the other part of the world 😉. Muriel
Si tu diffères de moi, mon frère, loin de me léser, tu m'enrichis (Saint Exupéry)
MI Michel85200 Globetrotter ·
A message to myself to revive this travel journal
michel85200

Similar discussions

You might also like