An 80-Day Tour of Southern Africa
FR

Translated into English.

VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
The die is cast! Probability of returning to France on March 30th: 98% Probability of going back to Southern Africa: 102% 😉
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Well, since no one’s asking, here are a few photos, dedicated to you all.

To Ming2, who wrote elsewhere that they need photos like a child to enjoy a story and to illustrate the part with the Chinese surveyor—a Sotho hat. This woman set up in front of the Chinese workers’ camp: is she doing good business with her hats? I don’t know, since I forgot to ask her. (Should I use this as my avatar? ;))

VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
(Sorry for creating a post per photo, but with the spotty connection, I’ll have less to redo if it cuts out.)

For Muriel, Pierre, and AirOne who’ll soon be heading to Lesotho: the dress code.

VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
For Herikles. This isn’t Death Valley, but someone who knows how to make images speak, like you, do they really need Artist Drive? It’s not Valley of the Gods either—it’s Valley of Desolation in the Karoo, South Africa. You’ll agree we can’t leave a photo like this online: we’re waiting for yours. 😏

RJ Rjulie95 Globetrotter ·
Well, we’d stopped asking for photos, but I notice that when you don’t ask, you post them anyway 😎
"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
MU Muriel18 Globetrotter ·
Thanks for the dress code... I'm digging through my closets😎

Muriel
Si tu diffères de moi, mon frère, loin de me léser, tu m'enrichis (Saint Exupéry)
RI Rivièrefox Globetrotter ·
Hey!

...for Pierre...the dress code

Don’t you worry it might get adopted to the point we can’t get it back? 😇

More photos, pleeease! 😎
Michelle
PI Pierre77N Globetrotter ·
And what kind of bugs do they eat up there? 😛
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Say, don’t you worry it might get adopted and never come back to us? 😇

You’re right. Here’s something maybe less flashy and less sexy.😎 (that way they’ll give it back to us)

Muriel: you’ll send photos of your fittings for Michelle, right?😇

VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Oh, come on! Sir, we’re civilized here. It’s Porridge & Porridge. (and sometimes horse when, like right now, the French don’t want it anymore🏴‍☠️)

Here, a beautiful Dutch beast, on a five-year round-the-world trip, spotted at Sani Pass.

AI AirOne Globetrotter ·
the dress code

Hmm, let's see... I already have the boots and the kangaroo pouch underwear. The rest should be easy to find.
Erwan La vie est belle ! La vie est belle ! Je me tue à vous le dire disait la fleur. Et elle meurt ( J.Prévert)
PI Pierre77N Globetrotter ·
In the doggy bag? 😇
AT Atila Globetrotter ·
178 rooms in Satara?

179. Not counting the campsites...😮

Didn’t you forget we’re meeting up next week in the 4X4 only section of Karoo NP?

I thought I’d totally blanked on something...🤪😉
AI AirOne Globetrotter ·
In the dog's basket? 😇

Poor thing. ...no, I'm gonna swipe that from the retirement home. 😛
Erwan La vie est belle ! La vie est belle ! Je me tue à vous le dire disait la fleur. Et elle meurt ( J.Prévert)
LA Lacalo Globetrotter ·
Me too, me too, I want my autographed photo too! 😠
" Nous ne saurons jamais tout le bien qu'un simple sourire peut être capable de faire." Mère Teresa
KA Kate Globetrotter ·
What about me?
Mes photos sur Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/153304262@N05/albums "Le Temps nous égare. Le Temps nous étreint. Le Temps nous est gare. Le Temps nous est train".
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Come on Yo, you’ve already seen it! Wasn’t the baobab in the middle of the Mana Pools airstrip big enough?😛
LA Lacalo Globetrotter ·
True, but it wasn’t signed 😎
" Nous ne saurons jamais tout le bien qu'un simple sourire peut être capable de faire." Mère Teresa
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Hey there, Marrakech crew, chill out. For you, Kate, who complains in your travel journal (I’ll get to that🙂 ) about the state of Cambodian restrooms, I didn’t dare post these photos (you’ve seen ‘em, there are two!) of a Mozambican camp on a stunning coast, run by white folks who couldn’t care less. Address available on request (the curious can abstain😎).

(Just so you know, I’m not enlarging them, okay!)
KA Kate Globetrotter ·
run by white people who don’t give a damn about anyone

It’s not just over there!...

Thanks for your photos of Chios.... 😄🤪
Mes photos sur Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/153304262@N05/albums "Le Temps nous égare. Le Temps nous étreint. Le Temps nous est gare. Le Temps nous est train".
HE Herikles Globetrotter ·
You’ll agree we can’t leave such a photo online: we’re waiting for yours.😏

Oh, you *can* leave it. It speaks for itself. 😉 On my end, I’m a bit behind—no photos yet. 🤪 Plus, I haven’t even changed the camera’s time zone, and there’s no way I’m dumping raw exif data out there. 😄

Dress code

😏 Is that Kenzo? 😮
Les concours photos VF
MU Musungu Veteran ·
Hi Jean,

I don’t have a signed photo, but I’m enjoying everyone else’s 😎. Thanks.

Lesotho seems to be stripped of everything: no trees (or no more trees?), very modest clothing, and when you think about how much the population has been devastated by AIDS. 🙁

...I didn’t dare post these photos (you saw, there are two of them!) of a Mozambican camp on a stunning coast, run by white people who couldn’t care less about the world. Address available on request (the curious can abstain😎)

On their website, the camping a**holes are way more... marketing.



Later,
Carnet : Retour en Namibie : août 2011
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Homeless & jobless

Johan and Theurus, two brothers aged fifty-three and forty-three, have been crisscrossing the country for two years, hitchhiking in search of work. For the past six months, they haven’t found anything and no longer even have enough to buy a loaf of bread. They live on the soup churches serve at midday to people in their situation and pitch their tent along the roads or, like tonight, for free in a campsite when their plea has been heard.

Johan is a carpenter and, as if to prove he’s got the trade in his blood—or as a form of attestation—he shows me his hands. He’s only got nine fingers left but insists that the missing one communicates with its neighbors when he’s working. Theurus is a cook and learned from a French chef (Aaah! The French cui*sine).

They barely knew their father, and their mother was murdered in her car a few years ago during a routine robbery. When he talks about it, Theurus, who stands at six foot three, seems like a child. They have no family left and seem very attentive to each other. Though they still look good for their age, their blue eyes are startled. Even in the camp, they’re on alert and say they’ve been violently attacked twice by gangs. Johan still bears the scars.

Feeling scorned by both Black and white people, who they say shame them, they claim there’s no solidarity among white people like there is among Black people. They confirm the official 30% unemployment rate and the tightly regulated affirmative action policy that leaves them little chance of finding stable work anytime soon. They talk about God, who sustains them. They’re appalled by the omnipresent violence and corruption but still regard Nelson Mandela as a lovely man and president and say, in the past tense, it was a beautiful country.

And in the morning, when these two lanky men, as lean as a Sotho from the mountains, accept enough to buy bread for a week, suddenly overwhelmed by their distress, they struggle to hold back their tears.

These are Africans I wouldn’t have seen smile.

Makkie’s, the Gift of God

Hand-painted sayings on slates, rag dolls, hearts made of fabric, wood, or metal, porcelain coat hooks, weathered clocks, crosses of all sizes in stone, wood, and steel.

That’s just a small part of what Rita sells in her coffee shop in Edenburg, under the sign of Makkie’s, the Gift of God.

The armchairs are halved galvanized wash tubs, and the tables are raised iron bed frames.

She’s framed family mementos with grandeur: letters, glasses, a Bible, a marriage certificate, an embroidered child’s dress, silverware. On a console by the entrance, old meat grinders push aside coffee mills that jostle with irons. And in the garden, succulents thrive in old chamber pots.

Everything seems like an ode to the good old days, a tribute to the voortrekkers, the pioneers. And while it might seem kitsch to a European fond of simplicity, it’s also deeply moving in its sincerity.

Rita, whose family has been in this country for so long she’s lost track, opened this coffee shop two years ago after her sister Makkie—the Gift of God—passed away, as a memorial.

She insists nothing could make her leave this place, confirming in her own way the name given to this village by her ancestors.

I’ll leave without paying for my coffee and be rewarded with a generous hug.

The Madwoman of the Karoo

Is it because of its unpronounceable name that Nieu Bethesda nestled in this crater of a high desert plateau in the Karoo? Or because she couldn’t stand her reflection that Miss Helen Martins chose to live a reclusive life there? Or was it the telluric pressure that, at sixty, made this jumble of cement statues burst from her mind?

In the garden next to her house, which isn’t even three hundred square meters, three hundred cement statues were sculpted between 1955 and 1976, most at half to double scale, until Miss Helen, nearly blind, ended her earthly existence. Many camels, some ridden, various birds with a preference for owls, men, women—often in pilgrim poses—children, and monuments, pyramids, and churches all jostle in a biblical atmosphere.

The cement is enhanced with crushed glass or shards, creating green eyes or multicolored trails. Some figures wear painted capes. Stricken early with arthritis, Miss Helen held the images to copy in front of a young mixed-race man, Koos Malgars, who sculpted, and it’s the work of this unlikely duo that people now come from all over the world to see.

Helen Martins is a sister to the Facteur Cheval and Robert Tatin.

In the small township next to the town, the houses are made of stone, not much different from the smaller ones in the old white town, though more modest in size, and the gardens are planted with trees. Young people sculpt cement owls to sell to visitors of Miss Helen’s house-museum, worthy children of Koos Malgars.

Or how the legacy of an eccentric, considered mad in her lifetime, sparked the rebirth of a village.

A Wild Goose Chase

In this lovely coffee shop, over a scone and a cup of tea, I learn that fifty kilometers of tarmac plus a hundred of dirt road away, the Karoo Food Festival is taking place. Off I go!

Arriving in Cradock, though well-kept, nothing signals the event—no banners, not even a simple poster. I prowl around, nostrils twitching, but detect no scent of herb-crusted lamb chops, no whiff of sosaties, not even a hint of oxtail stew. And no one in the street has heard of anything.

I have lunch in a nursery-coffee-shop facing Sarah Palin and resume my investigation.

I flag down a police car, which complies. He’s a David Bowie lookalike from his peroxide era, and she’s a Halle Berry double, but they’re clueless. They ask me to follow them. We stop at a restaurant, then a school. I can tell things are coming together—they’ve found someone who knows someone who’s heard of it. Hope returns, along with saliva. I’ve clearly stumbled upon sharp detectives. The net is closing, and we burst into the town’s best hotel, which is supposedly involved in this affair.

I’m handed a festival program, offered a welcome drink, and when I mention I’m French, practically the Victoria suite.

As for the festival itself, I’ll say nothing more than that it’s its first edition… and you can tell.

Oh well! On the way, I crossed the Brankberg Range through a series of passes and valleys and discovered Mountain Zebra NP, home to these stocky mountain zebras that, lacking ground clearance, have lost their belly stripes.

To the Winds of the Karoo

There’s always been a wind here strong enough to straighten a sheep’s wool.

No wolves in the Karoo—the sheep thrive.

The country’s roads are perpetually under construction, and on a secondary road, this man, directing alternating traffic with others, fell asleep in the shade of his stop sign, unable to see the furious waving of his colleagues’ flags urging him to flip the sign and let traffic through. Was it the intensity of my stare? Suddenly, he jumps up, looks around in surprise, and, embarrassed, flips the sign.

In the small towns of the Upper Karoo, you meet many San people, these southern bohemians, nomadic like them but never in the right place.

French collection in Colesberg: the Colesberg Kemper (Quimper in Breton) Museum, featuring an exhibit on nomadic San people moving from farm to farm for sheep shearing, all their possessions loaded onto a cart pulled by two mules; a lovely house called Molene Place; Bordeaux, a century-old restaurant serving local specialties; La Provence, a pale pink B&B.

Incorrigible optimists, the pioneers named this patch of veld “Wheatland,” but I see no miracle, and a little further on, at Leopard’s Valley, there isn’t one either.

Ostriches sometimes seem a bit slow on the uptake—is it because the distance from brain to muscles is so great?
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
😏 Is this Kenzo? 😮

I don’t know much about fashion, but I’d say it’s more grunge style.🙁
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
I don’t have a signed photo, but I’m enjoying everyone else’s 😎

Ah, Loïc, I recognize your big heart.😉

Would you tell us how you managed to identify the place from my photo? Is it another EXIF data story? (Do the details really say I was alone?)
KO Kola Globetrotter ·
... that jumble of cement statues ...

Wouldn’t you have brought back any photos?
RJ Rjulie95 Globetrotter ·
The first two stories are so moving! They offer a different perspective on poor whites rejected by their community. While we might assume they’re at least somewhat financially comfortable by default.
"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
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Wow, what a whirlwind! Do you want them signed or not?😎
RJ Rjulie95 Globetrotter ·
Would you tell us how you managed to identify the place from my photo? Is it another EXIF data story?

Uh, no! It’s not the EXIF data—I don’t think your camera records GPS info ;-) But I think it’s easier than that.

Take a closer look at your second photo, Jean Luc—I think you’ll get it 😇

Sorry, Loïc, for answering in your place
"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
KO Kola Globetrotter ·
Legendary... (The dedication will be in the choice of photo.)
AT Atila Globetrotter ·
Take a good look at your second photo, Jean Luc—I think you’ll get it 😇

What’s the phrase again…

Oh right!

It’s like Port-Salut, it’s written right on it…
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Okay Régis (and Attila)! That's what happens when you try to keep a travel journal in real time—you get overwhelmed and make mistakes. Oh well, that night, I was really fed up with Savora.😏
RJ Rjulie95 Globetrotter ·
Oh well, never mind—that night, I really couldn’t stand the Savora anymore.😏

Given the state of decay in the toilets, it must’ve been a real stinker 🤪
"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
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
More photos, pleeease! 😎

Michelle, let’s be serious, shall we?

A fresh gastronomic dedication (had to make up for the Karoo Food Festival letdown) in case I don’t make it to the place you recommended.

A Karoo lamb stew, served in grand style in the period dining room of The Willow Historical Guest House. Picture an Irish stew base with veggies but less sauce, plus a parade of sides: braised cabbage, roasted sweet potato, banana (not plantain, unfortunately), shredded coconut, chutney. All paired with my first glass of red wine in two months.
SI Sitaelle Regular ·
Hey Jean,

Check out what I just found: the Mana baobab, all dried up!

Funny 🙂

PS: Any resemblance to existing or past persons is purely coincidental, okay... 😄
RI Rivièrefox Globetrotter ·
Hi there! Thanks for sharing the delicious scents of the menu and that "Karoo lamb stew." But ever since we got our own tiny flock of sheep (and those playful little lambs), I’m not so keen on eating these adorable animals anymore. 🤪 Still, I get why you’d dream of those flavors! 😉

I read—unfortunately—your posts in reverse: first the last one about the Karoo hostel, then the one where you tell us about those two brothers. So now I’m feeling pretty down. 😕🏴‍☠️

...when he talks about it, Theurus, six-foot-three, seems like a child. ... their blue eyes are filled with shock.

😕 😕

Feeling scorned ... by white people, who they say shame them,

😠 😕 😠

they claim that among white people, there isn’t the same solidarity that binds Black people.

Do you think that solidarity extends to travelers passing through? I doubt it. 😕 😠 🏴‍☠️

suddenly overwhelmed by their distress, they struggle to hold back tears.

And they’re not the only ones... 😕 🤪 😕 🏴‍☠️ 😕 😕
Michelle
AI AirOne Globetrotter ·
What a storyteller! 😮 I'm totally blown away... it's as simple as that, those two brothers: I SAW them!
Erwan La vie est belle ! La vie est belle ! Je me tue à vous le dire disait la fleur. Et elle meurt ( J.Prévert)
KA Kate Globetrotter ·
Like characters straight out of a Tarantino movie! I can totally see Le Voyou as a film director 🙂
Mes photos sur Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/153304262@N05/albums "Le Temps nous égare. Le Temps nous étreint. Le Temps nous est gare. Le Temps nous est train".
MU Musungu Veteran ·
Ahhh! Sorry for the delayed relaxation 🤪

No EXIF or geotag—it really was a question of the caption. Thanks, Régis, for sparing Jean the agony. 😇

Jean: You shouldn’t have told us "Curious minds keep out"—I’m definitely the type to press the big button when there’s a huge sign saying "Do Not Press Here." I looked... and the sign really helped.

See ya!
Carnet : Retour en Namibie : août 2011
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Régis, you’ll definitely pass through Nelspruit on the way to Kruger, and there you’ll see a lot of very poor white people at the traffic lights. You can tell from their general demeanor that they’ve given up and now just hold out their hands.

The issue with the "poor whites" is that they didn’t have enough money to emigrate, even if they’d wanted to. I learned this year that a hundred thousand South Africans have moved to Perth (Australia) alone in the last twenty years. I wouldn’t have guessed that when I visited Perth a few years ago.

The twilight of the gods? Or, at the very least, of the religious fanatics? The Boers, too, were long convinced they were the chosen people.
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
PS: Any resemblance to existing or former persons is purely coincidental, huh...

Little Tawana, I looked for the resemblance and I found it!😎 Your photo next to mine, in that order, doesn’t it kind of collide with the current French political scene?

It reminds me of those old ads for hair implants we used to see in magazines at the hairdresser’s—like before-and-after shots. And a minister whose job was implants, but who now wanted to scalp us—wouldn’t he have gotten a recent buzz cut after, it seems, touching the forbidden fruit?
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
I’m not as drawn to the meat of these charming animals anymore). 🤪

Ah! Michelle, I’m sorry. Will you forgive me if we decide to rebrand the menu as Belgian fox stew? 😎🏴‍☠️
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Erwann, reading your kind words after Michelle’s emotional reaction gave me goosebumps. Is it from thinking about the two brothers or from knowing we touched you? (Still, you’re *amazing* at seeing fictional characters! Nah, I’m kidding—shouldn’t have said that.)
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Like characters straight out of a Tarantino movie!

... but with a Ken Loach twist?🤪

I can totally see Voyou as a film director 🙂

No way, Kate! Erik said the book was better than the movie!😎 (or maybe just a lowly assistant screenwriter)
AI AirOne Globetrotter ·
Erwann, reading your compliment after Michelle’s emotion, I’ve got tingles in my head. Is it from thinking back to the two brothers or from having touched you both? (Still, you’re really good at seeing fictional characters! No, I’m kidding, I shouldn’t)

What can I say, you’ve got a real descriptive talent—it definitely deserves a little compliment. The story of the two brothers really moved me, it’s true.🙂
Erwan La vie est belle ! La vie est belle ! Je me tue à vous le dire disait la fleur. Et elle meurt ( J.Prévert)
RJ Rjulie95 Globetrotter ·
Thanks for shedding light on this! It's true that the last time I took a quick trip for the World Cup, I only saw Black people begging. But the number of immigrants is really impressive. I also read that there’s a trend of children starting to return to their home countries!

Anyway, it’s complicated for everyone, I think
"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
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
The legend is in Helen’s garden. Her legend. 🙂
KO Kola Globetrotter ·
There’s a force, a presence, a gentle and incoherent madness that emanates from these slender, tormented silhouettes, from these mystical processions, from these outstretched hands... A disorder that would have meaning. Something both fragile and unyielding.
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Coloured

Abandoned in the high plateaus of the Great Karoo, surrounded by mesas, Carnarvon is to the *coloured* community—keeping things in perspective—what Soweto is to Black South Africans: a symbol of their struggles.

At the start of apartheid, an obscure mixed-race civil servant passed off hundreds of Black South Africans—Black as the mines that employed them—as "proper" coloured, falsifying their papers to spare them from being sent back to their homelands, those infamous *homelands*.

Later, when white authorities voted to build a township outside the city (which had never had one before), the coloured community resisted. Through strikes and boycotts, they managed to get the measure overturned, with whites settling for the main street as a symbolic border, just as before.

Early this morning, around a hundred men in work overalls waited in clusters at intersections, hoping for a ride to a farm or construction site. I didn’t see any fewer two hours later.

Time seems to stand still here. While Autohaus Göbel garage fixed the damage from Lesotho on my car, I was served the most disgusting *scones* in the country at a lime-green coffee shop where everything was written in Afrikaans. But last night, the municipal campsite was the cheapest of the trip (1.8 €).

Carnarvon remains remarkable, then.

Karoo Express

If you only have two days to capture the essence of the Karoo, I’d recommend heading to Prince Albert via the backroads of the Swartberg massif, through villages and farms, crossing the Swartberg Pass, and ideally pushing on to Die Hel (Hell).

This year, I didn’t make it all the way to Hell—just a few kilometers, to Purgatory—but I remember the effect it had two years ago:

In the semi-desert Karoo, a forty-kilometer track clings to the mountainside one moment, then winds through canyons the next, leading to a paradise valley called Hell’s Valley. The hell was getting there, and those on the outside gave it that name. Those inside weren’t fooled: a narrow valley, five or six hundred meters wide and a few kilometers long, where water is abundant and trees provide shade from the sun. The only way to reach the outside world was a single footpath.

In 1900, during the Anglo-Boer War, a Boer general discovered around a hundred people in this valley—white and dressed in animal skins. They had been there for generations with no contact with the outside world. They were descendants of Huguenots (our people, then—Marais, Cordier, and other Jouberts).

The road wasn’t built until 1960, and after that, the valley slowly emptied. The last resident left in 1991. The dozen or so houses these lost—or wise—pioneers had occupied were falling into ruin one by one. They’re now being restored by a foundation.

Cubic in shape with flat roofs, perfectly blending into the surrounding rock they’re made from, they resemble the adobe houses of New Mexico.

We camped by the stream, alone, deeply moved.

If you accept the theory that this part of the world is the cradle of humanity—that from here, our common ancestors set out along the Rift to colonize the world—it’s unsettling that just as the species reaches a kind of white apogee, we discover representatives of that race in the land of the "savages," dressed in animal skins.

Admittedly, Prince Albert is now frequented by Cape Town’s *upper class*, and it has everything from the *Historic Hotel* to a polished museum and plenty of restaurants, some even serving *gay-friendly* dishes. But it’s all so good and beautiful, and we all have our weaknesses.

Red-Eye Flight

(Upcoming) BA 042 Cape Town-London, March 30th at 10:10 PM. At that hour, there’ll be nothing to see—just questions.

Why come to Southern Africa? Why, above all, keep coming back relentlessly?

For its vast deserts, its escarpments, and its canyons? For its coasts, which—from one ocean to the other—give the word "wild" its full meaning? For its herds of antelope, dozens of species strong, from the tiny dik-dik to the majestic Cape eland? For the *Cape Dutch* architecture or that of the huts, for the cultures? For the company of Africans? For the "exotic" populations—the San, the Himba, the Basotho? For summer in winter? For the sense, especially in South Africa, of being in the midst of history unfolding?

Even if all that—or even just some of it—justifies the trip, other countries offer the same.

So why? What’s unique about Southern (and Eastern) Africa?

There’s the possibility of a day that starts with breakfast shared with graceful giraffes, midday disrupted by hippopotamuses’ grunts, dusk spent watching elephant herds at the watering hole, and nights filled with roars.

And isn’t that kid-like wonder what brings us here, after all?
RJ Rjulie95 Globetrotter ·
And there you have it—a beautiful travel journal coming to an end... more amazing stories you’ve shared with us. Even if the return might be tough, safe travels back, Jean Luc! And be careful—it’s still winter in France, more so in the north than the south, but still!
"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

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