Durée du trajet Douala - Yaoude - Kribi? (Cameroun)
by Marie81
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
Voila l'itinéraire que nous allons faire, en faisan des escales dans la famille .
Combien de kilométres et surtout en combien de temps faisons nous ce trajet : douala / yaoudé/kribi/douala
A bientot😛
Bonjour Marie,
Le trajet que tu viens de citer sera d'environ 700 kilomètres.
Douala / Yaoundé par la Nationale 3 aussi appelée "l'axe lourd" fait dans les 180 kilomètres.
C'est la route la plus fréquentée du Cameroun et aussi l'une des plus meurtrières au monde (environ 1000 morts chaque année sur cet axe).
La route est en bon état et autorise des allures identiques à une route nationale française à la différence près qu'il faut être très vigilant quant aux grumiers, chauffeurs ivres et ceux qui doublent dans les côtes...et animaux sauvages qui traversent la forêt🤪
Elle traverse Edea où tu peux aller voir le barrage hydro-électrique sur le fleuve Sanaga, puis Pouma où tu peux t'arrêter manger un peu de viande de brousse en lisière de forêt tropicale, puis Matomb et Mbankomo et enfin Yaoundé.
Yaoundé / Kribi fait dans les 240 kilomètres. En fait, de Yaoundé il faut reprendre la nationale 3 jusqu' à Edea et prendre à Edea la Nationale 7 jusqu'à Kribi. La route Edea / Kribi roule très bien c'est du billard. Les villages traversés à proximité sont Elogbatindi, Fifinda et Longdi
Pour revenir à Douala de Kribi il faut reprendre la N7 qui repasse à Edea. Environ 240 kilomètres. Tu passeras au dessus des cours d'eau Nyong et de la Lokoundjé.
Pour faire Yaoundé / Kribi, il est aussi possible de prendre la N2 en passant par Mbalmayo et jusqu'à Ebolowa puis la N17 jusqu'à Kribi. Environ 250 kilomètres et je connais pas l'état de ces routes.
Pour le temps de trajet, je dirais entre 2h30 et 3h00 par portion en roulant à rythme normal, après tout dépendra de tes arrêts et des flâneries en route...😉
Le trajet que tu viens de citer sera d'environ 700 kilomètres.
Douala / Yaoundé par la Nationale 3 aussi appelée "l'axe lourd" fait dans les 180 kilomètres.
C'est la route la plus fréquentée du Cameroun et aussi l'une des plus meurtrières au monde (environ 1000 morts chaque année sur cet axe).
La route est en bon état et autorise des allures identiques à une route nationale française à la différence près qu'il faut être très vigilant quant aux grumiers, chauffeurs ivres et ceux qui doublent dans les côtes...et animaux sauvages qui traversent la forêt🤪
Elle traverse Edea où tu peux aller voir le barrage hydro-électrique sur le fleuve Sanaga, puis Pouma où tu peux t'arrêter manger un peu de viande de brousse en lisière de forêt tropicale, puis Matomb et Mbankomo et enfin Yaoundé.
Yaoundé / Kribi fait dans les 240 kilomètres. En fait, de Yaoundé il faut reprendre la nationale 3 jusqu' à Edea et prendre à Edea la Nationale 7 jusqu'à Kribi. La route Edea / Kribi roule très bien c'est du billard. Les villages traversés à proximité sont Elogbatindi, Fifinda et Longdi
Pour revenir à Douala de Kribi il faut reprendre la N7 qui repasse à Edea. Environ 240 kilomètres. Tu passeras au dessus des cours d'eau Nyong et de la Lokoundjé.
Pour faire Yaoundé / Kribi, il est aussi possible de prendre la N2 en passant par Mbalmayo et jusqu'à Ebolowa puis la N17 jusqu'à Kribi. Environ 250 kilomètres et je connais pas l'état de ces routes.
Pour le temps de trajet, je dirais entre 2h30 et 3h00 par portion en roulant à rythme normal, après tout dépendra de tes arrêts et des flâneries en route...😉
Le jour où l'on enfermera les cons dans les placards, il n' y aura plus personne pour fermer les portes...(M. Audiard)
Les grumiers sont les camions qui transportent les billes de bois (les grumes) extraites de la forêt. Ils n'ont rien a casser sur leur chargement, des troncs d'arbres, et par leur taille ils se croient prioritaires en toutes circonstances.
De plus ils roulent pied au plancher avec des camions hors d'age.
😉
De plus ils roulent pied au plancher avec des camions hors d'age.
😉
Le jour où l'on enfermera les cons dans les placards, il n' y aura plus personne pour fermer les portes...(M. Audiard)
Salut
Ca m'intéresse ce que tu dis
Donc c possible de kribi aller à ebolowa puis Mbalmayo puis yaoundé; possible en transports en commun tout ca?
a++
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
oui mon pett Alex, c est possible en transport en commun. Le Cameroun est pas mal niveau transport même si ce n est pas toujours du meilleur confort.
vs avez prévu de passer cbien de tps à kribi? et cmt ferez vs pr l hebergement?
Bonsoir à tous,
Oui c'est faisable en transports je sais qu'il y a au moins une ligne de bus sinon plusieurs plus les taxis brousse habituels.
Depuis Kribi, il faut prendre la Nationale 17 qui passe à Angalé, Akok, Akom, Ebemvok, Méfo, Mvieng puis Ebolowa Aller jusqu'à Mengong et remonter vers le Nord par la Nationale 2 qui passe à Ngoulémakong, Menguémé, Mbalmayo, Nkolnso puis arrivée à Yaoundé.
A Mengong (une vingtaine de kilomètres d'Ebolowa) il est possible de prendre la N17a qui rejoins Sangmélima aux portes de la réserve du Dja et sa forêt vierge luxuriante.
Mais l'état de ces route n'est pas le même que la route Yaoundé / Edea / Kribi, après les sensations de découverte et d'aventure ne sont plus les même non plus...🤪 à moins que cela aie changé je n'ai pas pris cette depuis trois ans
J'ai vu faire Douala / Kumba en passant par Buea, la nationale 8 de Buea à Kumba en passant par la piste dans la bananeraie d'Ekona en 4 heures 🤪 pour une centaine de kilomètres tant la route qui fut un jour goudronnée était compliquée. (Et en s'arrêtant boire une bière à Muyuka). Ben oui le conducteur aussi fait le plein de temps en temps...😛
Oui c'est faisable en transports je sais qu'il y a au moins une ligne de bus sinon plusieurs plus les taxis brousse habituels.
Depuis Kribi, il faut prendre la Nationale 17 qui passe à Angalé, Akok, Akom, Ebemvok, Méfo, Mvieng puis Ebolowa Aller jusqu'à Mengong et remonter vers le Nord par la Nationale 2 qui passe à Ngoulémakong, Menguémé, Mbalmayo, Nkolnso puis arrivée à Yaoundé.
A Mengong (une vingtaine de kilomètres d'Ebolowa) il est possible de prendre la N17a qui rejoins Sangmélima aux portes de la réserve du Dja et sa forêt vierge luxuriante.
Mais l'état de ces route n'est pas le même que la route Yaoundé / Edea / Kribi, après les sensations de découverte et d'aventure ne sont plus les même non plus...🤪 à moins que cela aie changé je n'ai pas pris cette depuis trois ans
J'ai vu faire Douala / Kumba en passant par Buea, la nationale 8 de Buea à Kumba en passant par la piste dans la bananeraie d'Ekona en 4 heures 🤪 pour une centaine de kilomètres tant la route qui fut un jour goudronnée était compliquée. (Et en s'arrêtant boire une bière à Muyuka). Ben oui le conducteur aussi fait le plein de temps en temps...😛
Le jour où l'on enfermera les cons dans les placards, il n' y aura plus personne pour fermer les portes...(M. Audiard)
Hello..
Tu dois avoir une si bonne voiture que tu vois les kilometyrages en moins...
Yaoundé Douala fait plus de 180km, entre 258 et 280 selon les documents et autres, toujours est t'il qu'il faut entre 3h et 3h30 pour couvrir ce trajet les tracasseries et autres en moins
Par ailleurs la route Yaoundé kribi via Mbalmayo et Ebolowa est bonne jusqu'à Ebolowa, car d'Ebolowa pour Kribi la route n'est pas du tout bonne, heureusement nous sommes en saison seche, donc pratiquable sans trop de difficultés
A+
Voyager, Découvrir, Connecter
Bonsoir bergerone,
Moi j'ai 200 km à peine en prenant porte à porte, c'est vrai que quand je suis au dernier d'entrée de Yaoundé je considère être arrivé...😇
Disons que partir de Bonabéri à la poste centrale à Yaoundé fait tout de suite un peu plus allez disons 230 kilomètres et si tu prends en compte les bouchons surtout pour passer le pont du Wouri effectivement il faut compter une heure de plus.
Moi j'ai 200 km à peine en prenant porte à porte, c'est vrai que quand je suis au dernier d'entrée de Yaoundé je considère être arrivé...😇
Disons que partir de Bonabéri à la poste centrale à Yaoundé fait tout de suite un peu plus allez disons 230 kilomètres et si tu prends en compte les bouchons surtout pour passer le pont du Wouri effectivement il faut compter une heure de plus.
Le jour où l'on enfermera les cons dans les placards, il n' y aura plus personne pour fermer les portes...(M. Audiard)
Oui mon cher il est possible d'aller de Kribi pour Yaoundé en passant par Ebolowa et Mbalmayo.
Kribi-Ebolowa pas goudronnée, mais praticable, et d'Ebolowa pour Mbalmayo et Yaoundé, assez bonne route et bien evidemment par transport public...
J'entrevois deja des changement et mutation dans ton circuit😉😎
Voyager, Découvrir, Connecter
coucou,
Comme vous avez pu le voir sur mon autre post, je préfererai loué un mini bus, mais parlez moi des transports en commun svp, y'a t il des risques je serait avec mon mari, ma belle mére qui est camerounaise 😎mes 3 enfants 14, 15, et17 ans et 2 ou 4 neveux en plus (entre 10 et 13 ans) tout ce petit monde pour leurs faire visiter le pays ou es né leurs pére ou mére ! Donc vous vous doutez bien que je veut prendre le moins de risque possible ma belle mére nous as dit que les accidents étaient fréquents du a la vitesse et peut étre a l'alcool ?
a bientot et merci
Coucou🙂
Pas vraiment une modification, plutôt une simplification
Com je veux passer à ebolowa et mbalmayo pour voir le parc des singes, il me semble plus logique de faire ca au départ de kribi; plutot que d'aller à yaoundé direct et redescendre ensuite à nouveau sur mbalmayo😉
Et puis les routes secondaires, plus dures mais plus belles souvent🙂
a++
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
merci pour les infos
a++😉
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Salut
petit alex ne s'inquiète pas😄; les transports semblent en effet assez denses au cameroun, c bien
Mais c vrai que c bien d'avoir qq avis surtout qd on s'ecarte des itinéraires les plus fréquentés
a++
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
bonjour en ce qui concerne le trajet douala-yaoundè
c'est 243km et si le chauffeur roule entre 80-100km/h
vous ferez 3heures de temps net.
et celui de yaoundè-kribi c'est environ 180 km
vous n'aurez pas de problème si le chauffeur est
prudent parceque c'est axe lourd a sens unique.
je parle par experience sinon bonne chance vous.😛
je suis votre humble serviteur
Pour votre information: douala -yaounde fait a peu près 240km et on y met 3h ou 3h30 en transport public douala- Edéa fait 60 kmm Edéa- kribi fait 104 km environs
facil donc de savoir la distance entre Yaounde et kribi
A mon sens il serait bien de donner des info sure et vérifiables sur le forum, car bcp de gens se servent de ces info pour préparer leur voyage, ils ont besoin pour cela d'etre rassurer sur le moindre détail.
Aussi je trouve exagéré de dire que que douala- yaounde est l'axe le plus mortel du monde, sur quelle base le dis tu? d'ou tires tu tes statistiques?
Il n'est pas possible de rouler sur l'axe lourd douala yaounde à la meme vitesse que sur des autoroutes en france. si tu as deja roulé un une autoroutes en France je pense que tu ne le dirais
bonnes fetes a tous
A mon sens il serait bien de donner des info sure et vérifiables sur le forum, car bcp de gens se servent de ces info pour préparer leur voyage, ils ont besoin pour cela d'etre rassurer sur le moindre détail.
Aussi je trouve exagéré de dire que que douala- yaounde est l'axe le plus mortel du monde, sur quelle base le dis tu? d'ou tires tu tes statistiques?
Il n'est pas possible de rouler sur l'axe lourd douala yaounde à la meme vitesse que sur des autoroutes en france. si tu as deja roulé un une autoroutes en France je pense que tu ne le dirais
bonnes fetes a tous
La vie est trop courte pour la vivre tristement
Pour votre information: douala -yaounde fait a peu près 240km et on y met 3h ou 3h30 en transport public douala- Edéa fait 60 kmm Edéa- kribi fait 104 km environs
facil donc de savoir la distance entre Yaounde et kribi
A mon sens il serait bien de donner des info sure et vérifiables sur le forum, car bcp de gens se servent de ces info pour préparer leur voyage, ils ont besoin pour cela d'etre rassurer sur le moindre détail.
Aussi je trouve exagéré de dire que que douala- yaounde est l'axe le plus mortel du monde, sur quelle base le dis tu? d'ou tires tu tes statistiques?
Il n'est pas possible de rouler sur l'axe lourd douala yaounde à la meme vitesse que sur des autoroutes en france. si tu as deja roulé un une autoroutes en France je pense que tu ne le dirais
bonnes fetes a tous Bonsoir Sylvain, pour les distances que je donne je me base sur le compteur de mon véhicule, à moins que celui-ci ne soit faussé ??? et je base sur une distance Douala quartier de Bonabéri donc Est de la ville / Kribi centre (pas les premières plages à l'entrée de la ville). On est pas à dix kilomètres près sur ce genre de trajet de toute façon, que le trajet Douala Kribi Yaoundé Douala fasse 650kms ou 700 ne change rien au problème...qui n'en est pas un d'ailleurs. Quant à mes statistiques je les tiens d'une haute instance de la gendarmerie camerounaise. Il y a chaque année plus de mille morts sur l'axe Douala/ Yaoundé 3 morts par jour en moyenne cela suffit à en faire une des routes les plus meurtrières du monde. Le bitume est propre et autorise des vitesses pas loin d'égaler celles des autoroutes françaises à condition d'avoir une voiture sécurisante. C'est l'état du véhicule et le taux de fréquentation de cette route qui dicte la vitesse. Ce n'est pas un jugement, c'est une constatation, j'en ai autant à propos du style de conduite et de la médiocrité de la moyenne des conducteurs français si c'est cela qui te vexes. Et puis au Cameroun, même si je sais que cette route est dangereuse, quand je conduis je ne suis pas exempt de défauts. Moi aussi je roule vite et sans ceinture de sécurité...et parfois avec plus d'une bière dans l'estomac...comme la plupart des camerounais. Mais je ne double pas en haut des côtes et sans visibilité et je suis sur de l'état de mon véhicule...aventurier mais pas suicidaire 😏
A mon sens il serait bien de donner des info sure et vérifiables sur le forum, car bcp de gens se servent de ces info pour préparer leur voyage, ils ont besoin pour cela d'etre rassurer sur le moindre détail.
Aussi je trouve exagéré de dire que que douala- yaounde est l'axe le plus mortel du monde, sur quelle base le dis tu? d'ou tires tu tes statistiques?
Il n'est pas possible de rouler sur l'axe lourd douala yaounde à la meme vitesse que sur des autoroutes en france. si tu as deja roulé un une autoroutes en France je pense que tu ne le dirais
bonnes fetes a tous Bonsoir Sylvain, pour les distances que je donne je me base sur le compteur de mon véhicule, à moins que celui-ci ne soit faussé ??? et je base sur une distance Douala quartier de Bonabéri donc Est de la ville / Kribi centre (pas les premières plages à l'entrée de la ville). On est pas à dix kilomètres près sur ce genre de trajet de toute façon, que le trajet Douala Kribi Yaoundé Douala fasse 650kms ou 700 ne change rien au problème...qui n'en est pas un d'ailleurs. Quant à mes statistiques je les tiens d'une haute instance de la gendarmerie camerounaise. Il y a chaque année plus de mille morts sur l'axe Douala/ Yaoundé 3 morts par jour en moyenne cela suffit à en faire une des routes les plus meurtrières du monde. Le bitume est propre et autorise des vitesses pas loin d'égaler celles des autoroutes françaises à condition d'avoir une voiture sécurisante. C'est l'état du véhicule et le taux de fréquentation de cette route qui dicte la vitesse. Ce n'est pas un jugement, c'est une constatation, j'en ai autant à propos du style de conduite et de la médiocrité de la moyenne des conducteurs français si c'est cela qui te vexes. Et puis au Cameroun, même si je sais que cette route est dangereuse, quand je conduis je ne suis pas exempt de défauts. Moi aussi je roule vite et sans ceinture de sécurité...et parfois avec plus d'une bière dans l'estomac...comme la plupart des camerounais. Mais je ne double pas en haut des côtes et sans visibilité et je suis sur de l'état de mon véhicule...aventurier mais pas suicidaire 😏
Le jour où l'on enfermera les cons dans les placards, il n' y aura plus personne pour fermer les portes...(M. Audiard)
Bonjour je pars toute seule au Cameroun de janvier à février 2010, je voudrai visiter le pays et sur la fin de mon voyage aller donner un coup de main pour une association à Pongo près de Kribi
Auriez vous des adresses de personnes fiables qui pourrait m'héberger dans le pays ? en tant que femme seule ça ne craint pas trop le Cameroun ?
Merci d'avance pour vos réponses
Bonjour je pars toute seule au Cameroun de janvier à février 2010, je voudrai visiter le pays et sur la fin de mon voyage aller donner un coup de main pour une association à Pongo près de Kribi
Auriez vous des adresses de personnes fiables qui pourrait m'héberger dans le pays ? en tant que femme seule ça ne craint pas trop le Cameroun ?
Merci d'avance pour vos réponses
Bonsoir, le débat sur l'insécurité à déjà été abordé des dizaines de fois sur ce forum. Il y a des gens fiables au cameroun et qui seraient heureux de recevoir une française. Cela dit pour les connaitre il faut avoir passé plusieurs semaines en leur compagnie. Tu trouveras toujours plein de gens prêts à t'aider et te faciliter la tache, mais beaucoup seront trop altruistes et en tous cas jamais désintéressés et pourront même t'attirer dans des pièges ou des situations délicates. Pour une première fois je te conseille de prévoir un budget hotel et de te faire de sincères amis qui pourront t'héberger ultérieurement...
Je suppose que l'association dont tu parles est l'association "Papaye France" sur l'ile de Pongo qui réabilite des bébés chimpanzés dont les mères ont été tuées par des braconniers. Patricia sera je pense en mesure de t'héberger à Pongo si tu lui demande et que tu viens lui prêter main forte. Ou pour loger chez les autochtones demande à l'équipe de Patricia Bosco et les autres...ils ont leur réseau de confiance. Attention Patricia n'a pas que des amis à Pongo et alentours notamment parmis les chasseurs pour qui le braconnage est une question de survie.
Moi je serais au Cameroun tout le mois de février... a+
Bonsoir, le débat sur l'insécurité à déjà été abordé des dizaines de fois sur ce forum. Il y a des gens fiables au cameroun et qui seraient heureux de recevoir une française. Cela dit pour les connaitre il faut avoir passé plusieurs semaines en leur compagnie. Tu trouveras toujours plein de gens prêts à t'aider et te faciliter la tache, mais beaucoup seront trop altruistes et en tous cas jamais désintéressés et pourront même t'attirer dans des pièges ou des situations délicates. Pour une première fois je te conseille de prévoir un budget hotel et de te faire de sincères amis qui pourront t'héberger ultérieurement...
Je suppose que l'association dont tu parles est l'association "Papaye France" sur l'ile de Pongo qui réabilite des bébés chimpanzés dont les mères ont été tuées par des braconniers. Patricia sera je pense en mesure de t'héberger à Pongo si tu lui demande et que tu viens lui prêter main forte. Ou pour loger chez les autochtones demande à l'équipe de Patricia Bosco et les autres...ils ont leur réseau de confiance. Attention Patricia n'a pas que des amis à Pongo et alentours notamment parmis les chasseurs pour qui le braconnage est une question de survie.
Moi je serais au Cameroun tout le mois de février... a+
Le jour où l'on enfermera les cons dans les placards, il n' y aura plus personne pour fermer les portes...(M. Audiard)
Merci pour tous les renseignements que vous m'avez apporté. Oui c'est bien de l'association Papaye France dont il s'agit. Avez vous déjà été rendre visite à cette association ? apparement vous connaissez le Cameroun quels sont les endroits sympa à visiter, merci
Merci pour tous les renseignements que vous m'avez apporté. Oui c'est bien de l'association Papaye France dont il s'agit. Avez vous déjà été rendre visite à cette association ? apparement vous connaissez le Cameroun quels sont les endroits sympa à visiter, merci
Bonjour,
j'ai plusieurs fois entendu parler de l'association au Cameroun et entendu parler dans diverses émissions francaises. Je ne m'y suis jamais rendu mais cela a toujours été dans mes projets. je suis invité cette année par un Prefet basé entre la frontière Guinéo-équatoriale et gabonaise au sud du Cameroun, et je profiterais bien d'être dans ce secteur pour qu'il m'organise une virée dans la réserve de Campo. En remontant vers Kribi par la piste 8 à Ebodjé voir la plage aux tortues puis le rocher au loup, Pongo et finir par un bain sur la plage du Grand Batanga et la soirée autour d'un petit poisson braisé au Débarcadaire de kribi. Voilà un circuit d'une journée très bien remplie autour de Kribi et la réserve de Campo. Après dans tout le pays il y a plein de choses à voir tu faire des sorties à thème, nature ou spirituelle ou anthropologique sachant qu'au Cameroun le tourisme n'est pas hyper développé et que chaque sortie à un petit gout d'aventure qui donne vraiment l'impression de voyager et de vivre des moments de découverte, de se prendre pour un aventurier en herbe. Tu ne croiseras pas de cars de touristes l'appareil photo en bandoulière !!! N'hésite pas à trouver des guides tels que le petit futé ou de vieux livres sur le Cameroun. il y en a sur Ebay...Personnellement je prefère m'installer dans une province et y passer du temps avec les otochtones afin de bien visiter plutot que de vouloir faire voir tout le pays du nord au sud en passant par toutes les réserves au pas de course.
Bonjour,
j'ai plusieurs fois entendu parler de l'association au Cameroun et entendu parler dans diverses émissions francaises. Je ne m'y suis jamais rendu mais cela a toujours été dans mes projets. je suis invité cette année par un Prefet basé entre la frontière Guinéo-équatoriale et gabonaise au sud du Cameroun, et je profiterais bien d'être dans ce secteur pour qu'il m'organise une virée dans la réserve de Campo. En remontant vers Kribi par la piste 8 à Ebodjé voir la plage aux tortues puis le rocher au loup, Pongo et finir par un bain sur la plage du Grand Batanga et la soirée autour d'un petit poisson braisé au Débarcadaire de kribi. Voilà un circuit d'une journée très bien remplie autour de Kribi et la réserve de Campo. Après dans tout le pays il y a plein de choses à voir tu faire des sorties à thème, nature ou spirituelle ou anthropologique sachant qu'au Cameroun le tourisme n'est pas hyper développé et que chaque sortie à un petit gout d'aventure qui donne vraiment l'impression de voyager et de vivre des moments de découverte, de se prendre pour un aventurier en herbe. Tu ne croiseras pas de cars de touristes l'appareil photo en bandoulière !!! N'hésite pas à trouver des guides tels que le petit futé ou de vieux livres sur le Cameroun. il y en a sur Ebay...Personnellement je prefère m'installer dans une province et y passer du temps avec les otochtones afin de bien visiter plutot que de vouloir faire voir tout le pays du nord au sud en passant par toutes les réserves au pas de course.
Le jour où l'on enfermera les cons dans les placards, il n' y aura plus personne pour fermer les portes...(M. Audiard)
Et bien me voilà avec quelques renseignements qui pourront m' être utile.
Je préfère également me retrouver avec les locaux donc c'est possible que j'aille directement à Papaye France une fois sur place j'aviserai.
Merci pour ces quelques renseignements
Bonjour,
Est-il possible à votre retour de faire un petit résumé de votre séjour? Car j'apprécie vraiment ce que fait l'association papaye france et je souhaiterai savoir comment ça se passe là-bas.
Merci par avance et bon séjour!!!
Est-il possible à votre retour de faire un petit résumé de votre séjour? Car j'apprécie vraiment ce que fait l'association papaye france et je souhaiterai savoir comment ça se passe là-bas.
Merci par avance et bon séjour!!!
Le trajet c'est environ 800km et environ 4 heures de route. ça dépendra de la vitesse que vous utiliserez lors du trajet.
Merci
Sandy
80 kms plutôt que 800😉😎
erreur de frappe🙂
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Bonjour,
As tu eu un résumé du séjour ? Car nous devons nous rendre au cameroun et je souhaiterai savoir comment ça se passe là-bas pour être recu sur l ile pongo
merci par avance
si d'autre info de visite dans le sud du cameroun avec deux enfants en fevrier-mars 2011
As tu eu un résumé du séjour ? Car nous devons nous rendre au cameroun et je souhaiterai savoir comment ça se passe là-bas pour être recu sur l ile pongo
merci par avance
si d'autre info de visite dans le sud du cameroun avec deux enfants en fevrier-mars 2011
quel est le mieiileur et plus sur autobus de voyage yaoundé-vers douala jai des commentaire de tous et chacun
garanti, central et buca quoi dautre je veux le meilleur , et le plus certain
merci
merci
Nathalie.....L'horizon est dans les yeux et non dans la réalité....
Bonsoir
le trajet Douala Yaoundé fait près de 260 km pour 3h30 de route par autobus et 2h30 en voiture personnelle (en roulant sans excès)
par ordre de sécurité et de ponctualité tu as les compagnies suivantes: Bucavoyage, Central Voyage, Lecar, Garanti Express
salutations
La vie est trop courte pour la vivre tristement
Hello....
Garanti Express, Le Car, Central Voyage et City Stars sont les agences que l'on conseille généralement en ceci qu'elles ont des Bus VIP dont le ticket est plus cher que le Classique.Conseiller untel par rapport à l'autre est hasardeux car malgré tout on est pas à l'abri de surprises désagréables comme une panne, la clim qui ne marche pas, un petit ou gros retard......
En ce qui me concerne je fonctionne avec garanti bine qu'il m'arrive de temps à autres de voyager avec les autres.
Bien à vous
Voyager, Découvrir, Connecter
bonjour
le trajet Douala - yaoundé fais 10 euros en transport prestige et 5 euros en classique.
a vous de voir
je reste néamoins disposé a te donner plus amples info
La vie est trop courte pour la vivre tristement
oui et non, avec la royal air maroc l'arrivée à yaoundé ou douala est parfois au même prix ou minime différence
mais dans tous les cas le bus est une option simple aussi^^
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Bonjour
pour avoir ete a 2 reprise a douala vers yaoundé la prochaine fois je vais essayer de prendre billet direction yaoundé direct car de toute facon souvent les avion a douala arrive apres 19h00 et pas questio de prendre un bus de nuit douala vers yaoundé cest proscrit. alors faut tu prenne une chambre minimum 10000cfa et ca ce 1 etoile mais 25000 cfa comme a etre bien, manger 1000cfa, taxi 1000 cfa , bus 3000cfa alors au bout du compte 50000 cfa de plus pour direct yaoundé pas de casse tête et de stress avec les bus voila mon opinion.
Mais javoue que le charme du paysage entre douala et yaoundé et arreer au ville prendre des jus, du plantain ect par les marchant sur le bord des routes en tk on verra biens quand jy retournerai...
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
pour avoir ete a 2 reprise a douala vers yaoundé la prochaine fois je vais essayer de prendre billet direction yaoundé direct car de toute facon souvent les avion a douala arrive apres 19h00 et pas questio de prendre un bus de nuit douala vers yaoundé cest proscrit. alors faut tu prenne une chambre minimum 10000cfa et ca ce 1 etoile mais 25000 cfa comme a etre bien, manger 1000cfa, taxi 1000 cfa , bus 3000cfa alors au bout du compte 50000 cfa de plus pour direct yaoundé pas de casse tête et de stress avec les bus voila mon opinion.
Mais javoue que le charme du paysage entre douala et yaoundé et arreer au ville prendre des jus, du plantain ect par les marchant sur le bord des routes en tk on verra biens quand jy retournerai...
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
Nathalie.....L'horizon est dans les yeux et non dans la réalité....
le charme du paysage entre douala et yaoundé?🤪bof bof ça ne m'a pas laissé un souvenir impérissable; c'est l'axe lourd; un des axes les plus encombrés d'afrique; ya mieux comme route pour voir du pays et en prendre plein les yeux😉
Après une 1ere nuit à 20000 ou 25000 CFA c pas ingérable non plus; quand on se paye plusieurs centaines d'euro un billet d'avion sans parler du visa et des frais de prévention santé, on doit pouvoir se payer 1 ou 2 nuits à 25000 CFA et pour ce prix à Douala on a une chambre confortable; A yaoundé les hotels ne sont pas donnés non plus.
Tiens tu m'as piqué mon dicton de profils lol😛
Après une 1ere nuit à 20000 ou 25000 CFA c pas ingérable non plus; quand on se paye plusieurs centaines d'euro un billet d'avion sans parler du visa et des frais de prévention santé, on doit pouvoir se payer 1 ou 2 nuits à 25000 CFA et pour ce prix à Douala on a une chambre confortable; A yaoundé les hotels ne sont pas donnés non plus.
Tiens tu m'as piqué mon dicton de profils lol😛
Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regarde d'où tu viens (proverbe Africain)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
Ni aujourd'hui ni jamais, la richesse ne suffit à classer un homme, mais aujourd'hui plus que jamais la pauvreté le déclasse (Charles Maurras)
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More discussions
Hi there,
I’ve been looking for a destination for a 2-week trip early next spring, and Cape Verde has been growing on me. (The flight isn’t too long, the temperatures are more than pleasant, and it’s an unknown country for me.)
The thing is, Cape Verde is pretty complicated when it comes to inter-island transfers, and I don’t want to spend my time in airports or on ferries—especially since those transfers aren’t exactly known for their reliability...
So, I’d like to limit internal flights to just 2, meaning the island I arrive on plus one other.
I’ve ruled out the all-inclusive islands: Sal and Boa Vista.
I’m torn between combining Santo Antão + São Vicente or Fogo + Santiago.
The goal of the trip is to see beautiful landscapes, go on day hikes (nothing multi-day), swim a little—though I prefer quiet spots—and enjoy 1 or 2 days in a city, but not much more than that!
In your opinion, which option would be the best, and why?
Thanks! :)
I’ve been looking for a destination for a 2-week trip early next spring, and Cape Verde has been growing on me. (The flight isn’t too long, the temperatures are more than pleasant, and it’s an unknown country for me.)
The thing is, Cape Verde is pretty complicated when it comes to inter-island transfers, and I don’t want to spend my time in airports or on ferries—especially since those transfers aren’t exactly known for their reliability...
So, I’d like to limit internal flights to just 2, meaning the island I arrive on plus one other.
I’ve ruled out the all-inclusive islands: Sal and Boa Vista.
I’m torn between combining Santo Antão + São Vicente or Fogo + Santiago.
The goal of the trip is to see beautiful landscapes, go on day hikes (nothing multi-day), swim a little—though I prefer quiet spots—and enjoy 1 or 2 days in a city, but not much more than that!
In your opinion, which option would be the best, and why?
Thanks! :)
Hi,
Have you got any recent feedback from a trip back from São Tomé?
We're heading there in a few months.
One question among others: is swimming—well, snorkeling—risky there?
Thanks for your feedback, tips, etc.
Hi everyone,
I’m heading to Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire for a long stay from July to September 2026. Could you please recommend any apartments for rent or a real estate agency? Thanks
I’m heading to Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire for a long stay from July to September 2026. Could you please recommend any apartments for rent or a real estate agency? Thanks
Hi everyone,
I’m planning a trip to Benin in July, and I saw there were a few recent discussions about this destination. Would you have any suggestions for nice places to stay in Cotonou that won’t break the bank, as well as in other cities (Porto-Novo, Ouidah, etc.)? Thanks sooo much for all your valuable tips!
I’m planning a trip to Benin in July, and I saw there were a few recent discussions about this destination. Would you have any suggestions for nice places to stay in Cotonou that won’t break the bank, as well as in other cities (Porto-Novo, Ouidah, etc.)? Thanks sooo much for all your valuable tips!
Hello,
We’re two senior travelers and would like to visit Cape Verde in Feb 2027.
We don’t hike but love meeting people, culture, and nature.
Which islands would you recommend, and do you know of any local agencies?
Thanks a million!
Hello,
We’re a family of 5 (2 adults and 3 kids who’ll be 2, 7, and 10 years old) planning to visit the islands of Santiago, Fogo, and Maio this summer. We’ll have 22 full days on the ground. It’s a shame (financially, logistically, and environmentally speaking!), but we’ll be taking 4 flights: a round-trip from Santiago to Fogo and another from Santiago to Maio. We’d like to position Maio toward the end of our stay since we enjoy ending our trips with a quieter beach phase.
For now, based on flight schedules and dates, we’re thinking of doing: 23/07: Arrival in Santiago 24/07 – 30/07: Fogo (5 full days) 30/07 – 05/08: Santiago (5 full days) 05/08 – 11/08: Maio (5 full days) 11/08 – 15/08: Santiago (3 full days) 15/08: Return to France
FOGO: Of course, we want to visit Cha das Caldeiras, where we’d like to spend 3 nights. We’d love to explore the valley and are also considering hiking the smaller Pico (the taller one seems too ambitious for us with the kids). Do you have any info on that hike? What else do you recommend doing on the other days? Where can we go for other walks? I’ve seen that it’s possible to descend from Cha das Caldeiras to Monteiros, but I’m worried it might still be too challenging. It looks amazing!! But how do we manage with our luggage? Otherwise, the north of the island intrigues me, though we’re not thrilled about São Filipe, even though we know we’ll have to spend at least one night there before returning to Santiago.
On this island, we initially thought about not renting a car, but I’m wondering if that’s a good idea for us with all the luggage. If we do rent one, is it easy to reach Cha das Caldeiras by car? Any advice is welcome!
MAIO: Here, I think renting a car will be essential for us to get around easily. We’d like to do an excursion to observe turtle nesting. I haven’t found much info on this—where and with whom should we go? Otherwise, the plan is to do some snorkeling directly from the beach, independently, since we’ll need to take turns so one adult can stay with our 2-year-old. Any spots you’d recommend?
Which towns would you suggest staying in? All options work for us—we’re fine with settling in one place or splitting our time (e.g., 3 nights in one spot and 3 nights elsewhere).
Basically, I’m open to all tips and recommendations for this little week on Maio (short walks, places to relax, beaches, etc.)!
SANTIAGO: Nothing too original, but for Santiago, we’re considering visiting Cidade Velha, Tarrafal, and Ribeira da Prata (for the black sand beach and natural pools), as well as Serra Malagueta for a hike. There must be so much more to do, especially with the time we have. What else would you recommend?
I’m struggling to figure out how to organize our time there since we’ll have 5 full days first, then 3 more. How would you do it?
Thanks,
For now, based on flight schedules and dates, we’re thinking of doing: 23/07: Arrival in Santiago 24/07 – 30/07: Fogo (5 full days) 30/07 – 05/08: Santiago (5 full days) 05/08 – 11/08: Maio (5 full days) 11/08 – 15/08: Santiago (3 full days) 15/08: Return to France
FOGO: Of course, we want to visit Cha das Caldeiras, where we’d like to spend 3 nights. We’d love to explore the valley and are also considering hiking the smaller Pico (the taller one seems too ambitious for us with the kids). Do you have any info on that hike? What else do you recommend doing on the other days? Where can we go for other walks? I’ve seen that it’s possible to descend from Cha das Caldeiras to Monteiros, but I’m worried it might still be too challenging. It looks amazing!! But how do we manage with our luggage? Otherwise, the north of the island intrigues me, though we’re not thrilled about São Filipe, even though we know we’ll have to spend at least one night there before returning to Santiago.
On this island, we initially thought about not renting a car, but I’m wondering if that’s a good idea for us with all the luggage. If we do rent one, is it easy to reach Cha das Caldeiras by car? Any advice is welcome!
MAIO: Here, I think renting a car will be essential for us to get around easily. We’d like to do an excursion to observe turtle nesting. I haven’t found much info on this—where and with whom should we go? Otherwise, the plan is to do some snorkeling directly from the beach, independently, since we’ll need to take turns so one adult can stay with our 2-year-old. Any spots you’d recommend?
Which towns would you suggest staying in? All options work for us—we’re fine with settling in one place or splitting our time (e.g., 3 nights in one spot and 3 nights elsewhere).
Basically, I’m open to all tips and recommendations for this little week on Maio (short walks, places to relax, beaches, etc.)!
SANTIAGO: Nothing too original, but for Santiago, we’re considering visiting Cidade Velha, Tarrafal, and Ribeira da Prata (for the black sand beach and natural pools), as well as Serra Malagueta for a hike. There must be so much more to do, especially with the time we have. What else would you recommend?
I’m struggling to figure out how to organize our time there since we’ll have 5 full days first, then 3 more. How would you do it?
Thanks,
Hello from Quebec,
I’m a French-Canadian from Montreal. I’d love to go to Senegal during the Quebec winter to shorten this long season. Two people told me it’s not worth spending a lot of money to get there from Canada because there’s not much to discover. But I’m still skeptical. I’d love to read real testimonials from travelers who’ve been there, with as much info as possible. Thanks
Hello, my wife and I are planning a trip to Cape Verde at the end of May for 20 days. We’re still unsure which islands to prioritize (they all look amazing!). Santo Antão and São Vicente seem like must-sees. Which other islands should we visit, given that we love hiking (nothing too challenging) and swimming?
Thanks
Hi everyone!
The forum has been a huge help during my moments of doubt, and since Cape Verde isn’t a destination with many discussions, I felt I had to share my trip report 🙂
First, the EASE: I could never validate it from my phone—I tried 50 times without success, and on the computer, it worked the first time. Then, Cabo Verde Airlines: forget online check-in. I went to the airport early to get my window seat (and in the end, the plane wasn’t full—I had three seats to myself, so I could finish my night peacefully). No in-flight entertainment for those who don’t sleep on planes.
Monday 9: Flight + arrival at Antonio’s (Oia Mindelo Guesthouse). Antonio’s apartment is up on the hill, but really, it’s only a 10-minute walk to the beach and 10 minutes to the city center (depending on where in the center). He picked me up at the airport (1000$). I continued relaxing by doing... nothing on the beach. Dinner in town at Café Mindelo: a pretty place, but otherwise meh—expensive and not necessarily good (2100$ for a beer and a fish that didn’t seem freshly caught as advertised). Tuesday 10: Antonio offered to do a tour of the island (for cheap), and we left with his other guests (a lovely English couple, 76 and 77 years old). Stops at Salamansa (I felt something special on that beach—I could’ve stayed there for an hour doing nothing), then another scenic spot, a restaurant, and Baias das Gatas (I took a quick dip, but to me, it had less charm than Salamansa). Then we crossed the island to return to São Pedro (beautiful but windy; the village looks cute). Exhausted, I went to bed early because of the ferry to Santo Antão the next day. Wednesday 11: Antonio took me to the ferry, and we’ll see each other again since he’s hosting me at his aunt’s place during Carnival. On the ferry, I had a Booking.com reservation for what I thought was in Ribeira Grande (the town), but it was actually *in* the ribeira—specifically in Manta Velha (aluguer to Cruzinha ~600$). I thought I’d fallen into a hole, but I ended up loving it—Casa Familiar Gilda. Gilda is a divine cook (dinner for 1000$—don’t eat lunch, or there won’t be room), the village has a typical rural Santo Antão vibe, the place has great energy, and you can get around easily by aluguer. Thursday 12: I left early by aluguer to Ribeira Grande (250$), then another aluguer to Ponta do Sol (100$)—a sleepy beauty at that hour—to do the Ponta do Sol-Cruzinha hike, finishing in Cha de Igreja. Departure at 8:22 AM from the cemetery in Ponta do Sol, passing through Fontainhas (those doing it the other way will have a fabulous climb at the end 😏), and let’s go! I loved this glimpse of rural life—past or present—the sea is stunning, and we were shaded most of the way (though it goes up and down, it’s manageable). The arrival at Cha de Mar is breathtaking, and Cruzinha is a charming little town (arrived at 12:30 PM). I’d brought my swimsuit after reading there was a beach, but I packed it back up—too many waves and big pebbles. I continued to Cha de Igreja (25 more minutes) after a short break (ask for the path that doesn’t go by the road). It’s adorable with its church square (you don’t see this layout much elsewhere). I might’ve stayed longer to enjoy the place, but a taxi driver asked if I wanted to return to Manta Velha (1000$), and like a fool, I said yes (it was 2:30 PM—I could’ve waited for the 4:30 PM aluguer for 100$, but oh well). But since I still had energy, I decided to see if I could find a grog distillery. I ran into a French guy arriving at Gilda’s, and we ended up talking to Rodrigo, who explained everything from A to Z about how they make grog (the simple cane juice is amazingly good—but the work is clearly tough). Friday 13: Transfer to Xoxo on Djalma’s advice 😉, where I’d booked a room at Casa Xoxo. I did the hike to Rabo Crusto... it’s tough, but I kept quiet when I saw a pregnant woman doing it with her two little ones 😄. There’s also a distillery I didn’t linger in, and I took a tea break with that wonderful landscape before heading back. I couldn’t find the path Jean-Michel had told me about (take a right at the village entrance), so I went back down to the water reservoir to turn off and take the waterfall path (anyone can point it out if needed). The bedding at Casa Xoxo was perfect, but the dinner atmosphere was less family-like. Saturday 14: No one at Casa Xoxo could tell me when the aluguer passed, so I scarfed down my breakfast and headed down a bit. I found one (not sure if he’d planned to work, but there were three of us, so he left). Arrived in Ribeira Grande, an aluguer driver told me the coastal road to Porto Novo was closed and we had to take the Corde road—but no one was leaving, so we’d have to charter... Sometimes, you just have to say it: aluguer drivers say there’s no ride just to make you pay the private price (3500$). But this time, it was true! With another French couple, we wanted to go to Tarrafal. Our driver called the Porto Novo-Tarrafal aluguer to wait for us. The Corde road is stunning—more different landscapes (thorny forest, misty peaks...). Changed aluguers in Porto Novo and headed to Tarrafal. Another world—lunar landscape on the way. Arrived in Tarrafal and relaxed. Sunday 15: Hike from Tarrafal to Monte Trigo, left at 8 AM, and I’m glad I did—I was in the shade until about 9:30 AM, then the sun got strong. Beautiful walk, arrived in Monte Trigo around 11:30 AM. The people weren’t particularly friendly, but oh well. Swam at the little beach in Monte Trigo (the water is *so* good). I waited for other French people who had “booked” a boat for the return. Came back with Javi (50 min—1000$ each), who lent us masks and snorkels for some snorkeling. Had grog with Ludo, Estelle’s husband, who was waiting at the bar, then filled my grog bottle at the *mercearia*. I admit, it’s delicious, but I don’t remember much of that evening 😇🤪. Except Javi put on a show saying he’d been robbed, had no money, and needed to pay the boat owner, etc. People paid again (apparently not me, since Ludo, Estelle, and I arrived at the restaurant after Javi’s drama). FYI, Javi does this often—my host had warned the couple renting the other room to watch out for him because he scams people for money. So Javi is 35 with hazel/special-colored eyes. But if you don’t repay the “service,” the day was still great. Monday 16: Several of us were taking the late-afternoon boat, so we chartered an aluguer (7000$) to avoid the 6 AM one—trip—boat to Mindelo. Antonio picked me up at the ferry, and boom—Carnival! I found a spot on Rua de Lisboa. My neighbor was from Santo Antão just for Carnival, spoke French, and explained that last year’s Carnival started 3 hours late because a float couldn’t fit under the power lines 😏 (like they don’t know the height by now hahaha). On Monday, it’s the teachers (nice—kind of a warm-up) and the Madingas. Once they passed my spot, I followed them along the route—I LOVED it! By midnight, they still hadn’t reached Praça Nova, and the police told them to speed up, but I loved that energy! Tuesday 17—Mardi Gras: Beach day, then Carnival! Antonio had bought me a seated ticket just in case (300$). Ended up in front of a punch stand, where I ran into two French women I’d met in Manta Velha. Two guys from Mindelo talked to us, and we did Carnival with them. And what was bound to happen, happened: a float couldn’t pass because... it was taller than the power lines 😏😏😏. The dancers kept dancing while the crowd tried to lift the cable. Finally, a guy in a tree climbed higher and used a pole to lift it... and the parade could continue 😉. Around 12:30–1:30 AM, when the concert was supposed to start, the power went out. I went home and later learned the concert started around 3 AM. Wednesday 18: I went home because I was taking the boat back to Santo Antão, heading to Casa Familiar Gilda. Walked the loop from Manta Velha. Thursday 19: Left early for Ribeira da Paul to do the loop to Sandra’s House. It’s truly breathtaking! Back at Gilda’s, I chilled. I wanted to go to Sinagoga’s natural pools, but the hike had worn me out. Friday 20: Return to Mindelo on the red company’s ferry—no comparison: way more comfortable than the blue company’s, especially for someone prone to seasickness. Beach. Exhausted, I struggled to sleep because the shop on the ground floor of my rental had a party until 3 AM (and the windows aren’t double-glazed—*hi*—but that’s common in Mindelo). Saturday 21: Ran into Estelle and Ludo by chance (the city’s small), and we arranged to share a taxi the next day since we had the same return flight. Beach (I tried Lazaretto Beach, but nope—not great—dead fish + weird smell = bad signs). So Laginhia was fine, and in the evening, a restaurant with singers, then Caravelle (the ground-floor shop didn’t bother me since I got home when they were saying goodbye 😏). Too bad—I dance salsa, bachata, kompa, zouk, but not kizomba hahaha, but it was still fun. Sunday 22: Took a taxi with Ludo and Estelle (1200$). Arrived *ages* before takeoff (no exchange office—get escudos in town if you have any left). Boom—CDG, boom—RER... home.
There you go—a super long trip report. Not sure if it’ll help, but the digital detox was amazing. These two islands are very different but so beautiful. I only got a glimpse, but they’re worth the trip. I was lucky to see Carnival (what joy in that city!) and happy the Cambodia ticket (my first idea) was way too expensive 😉
First, the EASE: I could never validate it from my phone—I tried 50 times without success, and on the computer, it worked the first time. Then, Cabo Verde Airlines: forget online check-in. I went to the airport early to get my window seat (and in the end, the plane wasn’t full—I had three seats to myself, so I could finish my night peacefully). No in-flight entertainment for those who don’t sleep on planes.
Monday 9: Flight + arrival at Antonio’s (Oia Mindelo Guesthouse). Antonio’s apartment is up on the hill, but really, it’s only a 10-minute walk to the beach and 10 minutes to the city center (depending on where in the center). He picked me up at the airport (1000$). I continued relaxing by doing... nothing on the beach. Dinner in town at Café Mindelo: a pretty place, but otherwise meh—expensive and not necessarily good (2100$ for a beer and a fish that didn’t seem freshly caught as advertised). Tuesday 10: Antonio offered to do a tour of the island (for cheap), and we left with his other guests (a lovely English couple, 76 and 77 years old). Stops at Salamansa (I felt something special on that beach—I could’ve stayed there for an hour doing nothing), then another scenic spot, a restaurant, and Baias das Gatas (I took a quick dip, but to me, it had less charm than Salamansa). Then we crossed the island to return to São Pedro (beautiful but windy; the village looks cute). Exhausted, I went to bed early because of the ferry to Santo Antão the next day. Wednesday 11: Antonio took me to the ferry, and we’ll see each other again since he’s hosting me at his aunt’s place during Carnival. On the ferry, I had a Booking.com reservation for what I thought was in Ribeira Grande (the town), but it was actually *in* the ribeira—specifically in Manta Velha (aluguer to Cruzinha ~600$). I thought I’d fallen into a hole, but I ended up loving it—Casa Familiar Gilda. Gilda is a divine cook (dinner for 1000$—don’t eat lunch, or there won’t be room), the village has a typical rural Santo Antão vibe, the place has great energy, and you can get around easily by aluguer. Thursday 12: I left early by aluguer to Ribeira Grande (250$), then another aluguer to Ponta do Sol (100$)—a sleepy beauty at that hour—to do the Ponta do Sol-Cruzinha hike, finishing in Cha de Igreja. Departure at 8:22 AM from the cemetery in Ponta do Sol, passing through Fontainhas (those doing it the other way will have a fabulous climb at the end 😏), and let’s go! I loved this glimpse of rural life—past or present—the sea is stunning, and we were shaded most of the way (though it goes up and down, it’s manageable). The arrival at Cha de Mar is breathtaking, and Cruzinha is a charming little town (arrived at 12:30 PM). I’d brought my swimsuit after reading there was a beach, but I packed it back up—too many waves and big pebbles. I continued to Cha de Igreja (25 more minutes) after a short break (ask for the path that doesn’t go by the road). It’s adorable with its church square (you don’t see this layout much elsewhere). I might’ve stayed longer to enjoy the place, but a taxi driver asked if I wanted to return to Manta Velha (1000$), and like a fool, I said yes (it was 2:30 PM—I could’ve waited for the 4:30 PM aluguer for 100$, but oh well). But since I still had energy, I decided to see if I could find a grog distillery. I ran into a French guy arriving at Gilda’s, and we ended up talking to Rodrigo, who explained everything from A to Z about how they make grog (the simple cane juice is amazingly good—but the work is clearly tough). Friday 13: Transfer to Xoxo on Djalma’s advice 😉, where I’d booked a room at Casa Xoxo. I did the hike to Rabo Crusto... it’s tough, but I kept quiet when I saw a pregnant woman doing it with her two little ones 😄. There’s also a distillery I didn’t linger in, and I took a tea break with that wonderful landscape before heading back. I couldn’t find the path Jean-Michel had told me about (take a right at the village entrance), so I went back down to the water reservoir to turn off and take the waterfall path (anyone can point it out if needed). The bedding at Casa Xoxo was perfect, but the dinner atmosphere was less family-like. Saturday 14: No one at Casa Xoxo could tell me when the aluguer passed, so I scarfed down my breakfast and headed down a bit. I found one (not sure if he’d planned to work, but there were three of us, so he left). Arrived in Ribeira Grande, an aluguer driver told me the coastal road to Porto Novo was closed and we had to take the Corde road—but no one was leaving, so we’d have to charter... Sometimes, you just have to say it: aluguer drivers say there’s no ride just to make you pay the private price (3500$). But this time, it was true! With another French couple, we wanted to go to Tarrafal. Our driver called the Porto Novo-Tarrafal aluguer to wait for us. The Corde road is stunning—more different landscapes (thorny forest, misty peaks...). Changed aluguers in Porto Novo and headed to Tarrafal. Another world—lunar landscape on the way. Arrived in Tarrafal and relaxed. Sunday 15: Hike from Tarrafal to Monte Trigo, left at 8 AM, and I’m glad I did—I was in the shade until about 9:30 AM, then the sun got strong. Beautiful walk, arrived in Monte Trigo around 11:30 AM. The people weren’t particularly friendly, but oh well. Swam at the little beach in Monte Trigo (the water is *so* good). I waited for other French people who had “booked” a boat for the return. Came back with Javi (50 min—1000$ each), who lent us masks and snorkels for some snorkeling. Had grog with Ludo, Estelle’s husband, who was waiting at the bar, then filled my grog bottle at the *mercearia*. I admit, it’s delicious, but I don’t remember much of that evening 😇🤪. Except Javi put on a show saying he’d been robbed, had no money, and needed to pay the boat owner, etc. People paid again (apparently not me, since Ludo, Estelle, and I arrived at the restaurant after Javi’s drama). FYI, Javi does this often—my host had warned the couple renting the other room to watch out for him because he scams people for money. So Javi is 35 with hazel/special-colored eyes. But if you don’t repay the “service,” the day was still great. Monday 16: Several of us were taking the late-afternoon boat, so we chartered an aluguer (7000$) to avoid the 6 AM one—trip—boat to Mindelo. Antonio picked me up at the ferry, and boom—Carnival! I found a spot on Rua de Lisboa. My neighbor was from Santo Antão just for Carnival, spoke French, and explained that last year’s Carnival started 3 hours late because a float couldn’t fit under the power lines 😏 (like they don’t know the height by now hahaha). On Monday, it’s the teachers (nice—kind of a warm-up) and the Madingas. Once they passed my spot, I followed them along the route—I LOVED it! By midnight, they still hadn’t reached Praça Nova, and the police told them to speed up, but I loved that energy! Tuesday 17—Mardi Gras: Beach day, then Carnival! Antonio had bought me a seated ticket just in case (300$). Ended up in front of a punch stand, where I ran into two French women I’d met in Manta Velha. Two guys from Mindelo talked to us, and we did Carnival with them. And what was bound to happen, happened: a float couldn’t pass because... it was taller than the power lines 😏😏😏. The dancers kept dancing while the crowd tried to lift the cable. Finally, a guy in a tree climbed higher and used a pole to lift it... and the parade could continue 😉. Around 12:30–1:30 AM, when the concert was supposed to start, the power went out. I went home and later learned the concert started around 3 AM. Wednesday 18: I went home because I was taking the boat back to Santo Antão, heading to Casa Familiar Gilda. Walked the loop from Manta Velha. Thursday 19: Left early for Ribeira da Paul to do the loop to Sandra’s House. It’s truly breathtaking! Back at Gilda’s, I chilled. I wanted to go to Sinagoga’s natural pools, but the hike had worn me out. Friday 20: Return to Mindelo on the red company’s ferry—no comparison: way more comfortable than the blue company’s, especially for someone prone to seasickness. Beach. Exhausted, I struggled to sleep because the shop on the ground floor of my rental had a party until 3 AM (and the windows aren’t double-glazed—*hi*—but that’s common in Mindelo). Saturday 21: Ran into Estelle and Ludo by chance (the city’s small), and we arranged to share a taxi the next day since we had the same return flight. Beach (I tried Lazaretto Beach, but nope—not great—dead fish + weird smell = bad signs). So Laginhia was fine, and in the evening, a restaurant with singers, then Caravelle (the ground-floor shop didn’t bother me since I got home when they were saying goodbye 😏). Too bad—I dance salsa, bachata, kompa, zouk, but not kizomba hahaha, but it was still fun. Sunday 22: Took a taxi with Ludo and Estelle (1200$). Arrived *ages* before takeoff (no exchange office—get escudos in town if you have any left). Boom—CDG, boom—RER... home.
There you go—a super long trip report. Not sure if it’ll help, but the digital detox was amazing. These two islands are very different but so beautiful. I only got a glimpse, but they’re worth the trip. I was lucky to see Carnival (what joy in that city!) and happy the Cambodia ticket (my first idea) was way too expensive 😉
Hi,
Without booking in advance through an agency, is it possible/easy to organize luggage transfer from one night to the next between accommodations in Santo Antão?
Thanks.
Easily accessible from Sal or São Vicente, São Nicolau is the forgotten island of the Barlavento group. With two large villages, volcanoes, jagged peaks, lush valleys, and vast rocky expanses, it has nothing to envy its big sister Santo Antão. It’s slipped under travelers’ radar a bit (in January, there were probably fewer than a hundred European tourists on the whole island), and that’s just fine! Accommodations aren’t overrun by groups like in Santo Antão, and connecting with locals is even easier. But don’t come to São Nicolau for wild nightlife—it’s incredibly peaceful here, and on Sundays, it’s total silence!
A little favorite of mine: Pensão Jardim in Ribeira Brava, the capital; Residencial Palice in Queimadas; and especially Pousada d’Anna in Estância de Brás, where the raging sea crashes against the black lava spurs.
Weather-wise, it was chilly this year but perfect for hiking. If you’re up high (like Monte Gordo), dress warmly or wait for spring! Fog gusts can ground you completely. Trails are generally less marked than in Santo Antão; if you’re wary of apps, you can find a 1:50,000 map at the small travel agency in Tarrafal.
Those who enjoy sharing experiences with other travelers over a Strela or two in the evening might feel a bit frustrated on São Nicolau, but the island’s beauty, the resilience of its farmers in extreme conditions, and the kindness of its people make it a fantastic stop for any visitor to Cape Verde!
A little favorite of mine: Pensão Jardim in Ribeira Brava, the capital; Residencial Palice in Queimadas; and especially Pousada d’Anna in Estância de Brás, where the raging sea crashes against the black lava spurs.
Weather-wise, it was chilly this year but perfect for hiking. If you’re up high (like Monte Gordo), dress warmly or wait for spring! Fog gusts can ground you completely. Trails are generally less marked than in Santo Antão; if you’re wary of apps, you can find a 1:50,000 map at the small travel agency in Tarrafal.
Those who enjoy sharing experiences with other travelers over a Strela or two in the evening might feel a bit frustrated on São Nicolau, but the island’s beauty, the resilience of its farmers in extreme conditions, and the kindness of its people make it a fantastic stop for any visitor to Cape Verde!
Hi everyone,
I’m planning a trip to Senegal in early July 2026 for a week with my teenage daughter.
We’ll be staying in a bungalow at Club Les Filaos.
I’d love to hear your advice, especially about visits and excursions. The hotel offers them directly, but I’m wondering if it’s better to go with their organized tours or hire local guides you’d recommend.
What do you think are the pros and cons of each option?
I’d also appreciate tips on currency exchange—where’s the best place to do it to avoid any nasty surprises?
Finally, if anyone’s stayed at this hotel recently, I’d love to hear your thoughts! I’ve read both glowing and terrible reviews, so I’d really value your firsthand experiences.
Thanks in advance for your tips and feedback! !
Thanks in advance for your tips and feedback! !
Hi
Which taxi app do you recommend for Senegal? Are there shared taxis from Dakar Airport to La Somone? If not, do you have an idea of the price for a taxi?
Thanks in advance
Which taxi app do you recommend for Senegal? Are there shared taxis from Dakar Airport to La Somone? If not, do you have an idea of the price for a taxi?
Thanks in advance
Hi everyone,
After a year where I’ve worked way too much and with a house under renovation, it’s become essential to take a breather. My contract ends on 01/30, and I’ll try to find a new client for early March, so overall, let’s go somewhere in February!
I thought Réunion with the full trek around the Mafate cirque for reconnecting with Nature would be perfect, but since it’s cyclone season, it wasn’t such a great idea. Then came the idea that Southeast Asia could fulfill the peace-and-beach vibe, especially Cambodia with its cultural past, but the flight ticket price and a chat with a friend made me change my mind—and boom, Cape Verde popped up, with Santo Antão for hiking and São Vicente for culture and the beach.
So I bought a ticket a week ago, and oh, what a coincidence—it’s during Carnival!
Except now, I don’t know if it’s reality or just exhaustion talking, but I feel like I’m making a mess of things.
I’ve traveled a lot without even booking the first night, but this time, I pre-booked 2 nights in Mindelo (though one of them ended up canceling itself).
But the main issue is that I arrive on Monday, 02/09 at 6 PM and leave on Sunday, 02/22 at 11 AM, and there’s a little hiccup in the logical organization—actually, several hiccups—since I don’t really have any organization right now, and that’s where I need help
Because Carnival is in full swing from 02/15 to 02/17, right in the middle of my trip, so the logic of my visit to Santo Antão isn’t clicking for me. Plus, I just checked, and there’s zero accommodation available in Mindelo from 02/15 to 02/18 😕
So I don’t know: should I skip Carnival, should I forget about planning and just wing it once I’m there, should I stay on São Vicente after Carnival (because I read Montaganrd’s trip report, and he made São Vicente sound like a rock !), or should I keep in mind the option of heading to Santiago afterward and buying a return flight to Paris from Praia?
I need help 🏴☠️
Hi everyone, thanks for your advice! I’m starting a new thread because it seems my first one about Senegal was deleted—or maybe it’s just my computer acting up again 😉. Anyway, I’ve decided to go to Benin instead. I’ll be there from January 5th to February 2nd—why count the days when you love traveling😄? I’d love all your tips on accommodations, restaurants, and itineraries. I’m basically starting from scratch to plan my trip.
Hi there,
We’re heading to Senegal for 4 weeks in February 2025.
We’ve booked a 7-day cruise on the Bou el Mogdad departing from Saint-Louis.
That’s all we’ve planned so far—we’re also thinking of exploring Casamance after the cruise.
Any ideas for things to do while traveling between Dakar and Saint-Louis? We’ll arrive in Dakar 5 days before the cruise sets off.
Thanks so much for your tips!
Edith
Hi there,
I’d planned to go to Benin in 2026, but given the recent events and upcoming elections, I’m thinking I’ll wait to see what happens after the elections.
Has anyone traveled to Benin recently or is planning to go soon?
I’d planned to go to Benin in 2026, but given the recent events and upcoming elections, I’m thinking I’ll wait to see what happens after the elections.
Has anyone traveled to Benin recently or is planning to go soon?
Hi there,
I’m trying to find out the dates for the best parades at the Mindelo Carnival in 2026, but I’m having trouble figuring it out. When I search for "Mindelo Carnival 2026," I get different dates and no clear schedule. I’ve found the parade on Tuesday, February 17, 2026, and the one on Sunday, February 22, with the grotesque makeup, which seem the most interesting. On the other hand, some say the São Nicolau Carnival is more authentic than Mindelo’s. If you’ve experienced this firsthand—not just theoretically but actually been there—I’d love to hear your practical tips.
Thanks in advance!
Elisabeth
I’m trying to find out the dates for the best parades at the Mindelo Carnival in 2026, but I’m having trouble figuring it out. When I search for "Mindelo Carnival 2026," I get different dates and no clear schedule. I’ve found the parade on Tuesday, February 17, 2026, and the one on Sunday, February 22, with the grotesque makeup, which seem the most interesting. On the other hand, some say the São Nicolau Carnival is more authentic than Mindelo’s. If you’ve experienced this firsthand—not just theoretically but actually been there—I’d love to hear your practical tips.
Thanks in advance!
Elisabeth
Hi,
We’re heading to Cape Verde in January. We’re scheduled to arrive in Praia on a Saturday around 11 AM.
I read somewhere that the exchange rate for Euros to Escudos is the same everywhere—110 escudos for 1 euro. Can anyone confirm this? If that’s the case, I assume there’s a currency exchange desk at the airport, and the rate isn’t too bad? So, it’s better to exchange at the airport, right? What do you think? I don’t want to use ATMs.
Otherwise, are banks in town open on Saturdays? I read they close by 3 PM?
Hi there, I’m planning a trip to Santo Antão with some hiking (for me) but not for my partner. I’d love some help figuring out if my plan is doable in terms of time and transportation:
- Day 1 – Arrival by boat from Mindelo, then aluguer to Cova (and overnight nearby)
- Day 2 – Hike to Paul / aluguer for my partner
- Day 3 – Aluguer to Ponta do Sol
- Days 4 & 5 – Ponta do Sol
- Day 6 – Hike to Cruzinha / aluguer for my partner (overnight in Cruzinha)
- Day 7 – Aluguer (or taxi) to Xoxo (overnight in Xoxo)
- Day 8 – Aluguer to Porto Novo + boat to Mindelo
Does this plan make sense with the local transport options? For accommodations, I’d love any suggestions you might have. Thanks so much for your help!
Does this plan make sense with the local transport options? For accommodations, I’d love any suggestions you might have. Thanks so much for your help!
Hello,
We’ve booked our tickets for July—there’ll be 4 of us, maybe 6 (all in our sixties). We’d like to visit 4 islands: Arrival in Praia on July 8th Return from São Vicente on July 29th
Between those dates, I’m not sure how to split our time across each island. We’ll definitely spend at least a week on Santo Antão. We’re planning to visit Santiago, Fogo, São Vicente, and Santo Antão. We’re looking for easy hikes, diving, sightseeing, and a little beach time (but not too much). How do you think we should divide the 3 weeks among the islands? Is 3 days in Fogo enough? Are guides essential, and can we easily find them on the spot? Should we rent a car, given we won’t just be hiking?
Thanks in advance for your advice, tips, warnings, and anything else you can share… and I’ve still got plenty more questions! Valéry
We’ve booked our tickets for July—there’ll be 4 of us, maybe 6 (all in our sixties). We’d like to visit 4 islands: Arrival in Praia on July 8th Return from São Vicente on July 29th
Between those dates, I’m not sure how to split our time across each island. We’ll definitely spend at least a week on Santo Antão. We’re planning to visit Santiago, Fogo, São Vicente, and Santo Antão. We’re looking for easy hikes, diving, sightseeing, and a little beach time (but not too much). How do you think we should divide the 3 weeks among the islands? Is 3 days in Fogo enough? Are guides essential, and can we easily find them on the spot? Should we rent a car, given we won’t just be hiking?
Thanks in advance for your advice, tips, warnings, and anything else you can share… and I’ve still got plenty more questions! Valéry
Hi,
I arrive in Fogo at 11 a.m. (if the ferry is on time) from the ferry departing Praia. From what I understand, the collectivos to Cha das Caldeiras leave late morning? Do you think I can leave the same day?
My question is: should I spend a night in São Filipe? I don’t want to take a taxi—it’s too expensive.
Thanks,
Patrice
I arrive in Fogo at 11 a.m. (if the ferry is on time) from the ferry departing Praia. From what I understand, the collectivos to Cha das Caldeiras leave late morning? Do you think I can leave the same day?
My question is: should I spend a night in São Filipe? I don’t want to take a taxi—it’s too expensive.
Thanks,
Patrice
Hello,
We’re a couple in our sixties and have finally decided to spend 15 days in Cape Verde from March 1 to 15, 2025, focusing exclusively on the four Leeward Islands.
We’ve planned to take the boat between these four islands and adjust our stays based on the ferry schedules. If there are any difficulties or need to adjust the route, we might take a flight instead.
Here’s our planned itinerary with the boats:
Day 1: Flight from France to Santiago Island
Day 2: Boat from Santiago Island to Brava Island
Day 3: Brava Island
Day 4: Brava Island
Day 5: Boat from Brava Island to Fogo Island
Day 6: Fogo Island
Day 7: Fogo Island
Day 8: Fogo Island
Day 9: Boat from Fogo Island to Santiago Island
Day 10: Santiago Island
Day 11: Boat from Santiago Island to Maio Island
Day 12: Maio Island
Day 13: Boat from Maio Island to Santiago Island
Day 14: Santiago Island
Day 15: Flight from Santiago Island to France.
Based on your experiences and knowledge, could you share: - Your favorite places to visit and hikes - Accommodations that charmed you - Restaurants you enjoyed
Thanks in advance to all travelers and locals from these islands who’d like to share their favorite spots! !
Based on your experiences and knowledge, could you share: - Your favorite places to visit and hikes - Accommodations that charmed you - Restaurants you enjoyed
Thanks in advance to all travelers and locals from these islands who’d like to share their favorite spots! !
Hello,
We’ve just returned (2 senior couples) from 18 days in Cape Verde (21/01 to 7/02) that we really enjoyed. The temperature was great—20° to 27°—admittedly a bit windy at times, but the friendliness of the Cape Verdeans made up for it.
Paris Orly, direct flight with Transavia (cheap if you book in advance). We landed in São Vicente, with a 12 € city transfer. We had a fantastic 2-bedroom apartment in downtown Mindelo—Av. Fernando Ferreira Fortes, "Casa So Morabeza"—for 58 € per night. The owner lives in France and communicates instantly via WhatsApp.
We spent 2 days exploring the (beautiful) city of Mindelo and its port activity, plus a private taxi tour of the island (6000 CVE for the day).
Then we took the Armas ferry (recommended company—1500 CVE) to Santo Antão.
From there, a collectivo (450 CVE per person) took us to Ribeira Grande, a central base for hikes.
We stayed in a brand-new, modern, and well-equipped 2-bedroom apartment—*Apartamentos Modernos*—for 6770 CVE per night, staying 6 nights. I highly recommend it for its location in town and proximity to *aluguers* and *collectivos* for hiking.
The hikes were stunning:
- The coastal trail from Fontainhas to Cruzinha (taxi for 1500 CVE)
- The route from Corda to Coculi (taxi for 2000 CVE + 100 CVE per person for the return)
- The trail from Cova to Cidade de Pombas (taxi for 2000 CVE + 100 CVE per person for the return)
- The hike from Miradouro to Ribeira Grande (taxi for 2000 CVE)
- The coastal road from Ribeira Grande to Ponta do Sol (visit and lunch at *Mini Familiar* in the city center—excellent and affordable) for the round trip.
Ribeira Grande has plenty of restaurants, but avoid *5 de Julho*—it’s loud and slow.
We loved: *Bellcanto*, *Cantinho da Amizade*, and *Boca-Fina Churrasqueria*.
Meals with drinks cost around 800–1000 CVE.
Back to São Vicente by ferry (1500 CVE), then an airport transfer (12 €) and a flight (99 €) to Santiago’s Praia. The airport-to-city transfer was 15 €.
We stayed at *Kelly’s* in Plato, Praia, which was disappointing—not ideal for two couples—but well-located.
One day was spent visiting the massive *Suspicia* market, then a collectivo to Cidade Velha (2 x 200 CVE round trip per person). We hiked up to the fort, explored *Rua Banana*, and had lunch at *Praça do Mar* by the beach.
We rented a car for 6 days (29000 CVE) from *Slimpycar* in Praia.
On Saturday, we visited the huge *Assomada* market—don’t miss it!—then hiked to *Boa Entrada* and *Poilon*, the largest and most impressive tree we’ve ever seen.
We stayed for 2 nights (138 €) in a beautiful valley in *Picos*—a spacious, lovely house with 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, and a large living area, surrounded by nature and animals.
Lina, the charming neighbor, prepared dinner (8.50 €) and breakfast (4.50 €) for us.
Next, we headed to *Tarrafal*, stopping to visit the concentration camp (500 CVE)—a must-see—before arriving.
We spent 3 nights (184 €) in a fantastic house called *"Maison Familiale"*—huge, with 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 kitchens, 5 toilets, and a large terrace with sea views. It was absolutely stunning and very close to the beach and numerous restaurants.
We did a beautiful 3.8 km hike to the *Farol da Ponta Preta* lighthouse.
Tarrafal’s beach is lively and pleasant, with bars, restaurants, and even acrobats!
We also explored *Ribeira da Prata* to see the *Piscina Natural de Cuba* (not easy to find).
We loved discovering isolated villages like *Ponta Furna*, *Ponta Labrão*, and *Fazenda*.
For food, I recommend *Mira Mar* at *Mama’s*.
On the way back to Praia, we took the east coast route via *Calheta de São Miguel*, *Pedra Badejo*, and *Praia Baixo*—nothing extraordinary, just a rugged, wild coastline with beaches that seemed a bit tricky to access.
Our last evening in Praia was nice. The seaside esplanade was lively, and many Cape Verdeans were swimming at *Prainha* beach, which seemed very accessible and safe.
If you’d like more info—addresses, etc.—feel free to message me privately. I’ll respond.
Jacquesler.
Hi everyone,
I’d like to share our travel plans for March 2026 to get your valuable feedback...
- Arrival in Sao Vicente on Tuesday, March 3rd at 9:20 AM from Lisbon (EasyJet) - Direct departure the same day or the next day for Santo Antao – 3 or 4 nights on Santo Antao (depending on whether we spend the first night in Mindelo or on Santo Antao) - Return to Sao Vicente for 3 nights - Flight to Boa Vista via Sal (Cabo Verde Airlines) on Tuesday, March 10th – 5 nights on Boa Vista - Return flight on Sunday, March 15th (Boa Vista to Porto: EasyJet)
Given the various bits of info I’ve seen about the unreliability of inter-island transport, is this itinerary realistically doable without stress? Would it be better to just take a simple flight from Sao Vicente to Sal and end the trip there (from where it’s also possible to return to Europe or France)? I’m still more drawn to Boa Vista... but I’m worried that two flights in a row might be complicated, unless it’s the same plane that just makes a stopover and continues...
Also, I’m calling on the expertise of hikers for Santo Antao: I’m not a big sports enthusiast—I enjoy walking when I travel, but not distances much longer than 10 km, and nothing too difficult (especially steep climbs where I quickly run out of breath)... For the hike from Ponta do Sol to Cruzinha: can you confirm that the hike is easier in the direction from Ponta do Sol to Cruzinha (less climbing)? I’ve found info that this hike is 14 km and takes about 5 hours. Do you think it’s possible to shorten it by taking a taxi or *aluguer* to Fontainhas? If so, how long would the hike be then, and how much time would it take?
For the hike from Xoxo (starting at the Bela Vista kiosk on the Cova road), I’ve found info that it’s 12 km and takes 5 hours of walking. I think it goes to Ribeira Grande. Apparently, you can shorten the hike and find *aluguers* on the road near Café Melicia... In that case, do you know how long the hike would be? Is this the hike that lets you walk along *levadas* (like in Madeira), cross banana plantations, and pass by the Cachoeira de Vinha waterfall?
Sorry for all these questions, but I can’t find a guide with hikes and difficulty levels... I think two hikes (one along the coast and one inland with terraces, *levadas*, and banana plantations) would suit our level.
On the third free day, do you think we could rent a 4x4 to explore: take the two scenic routes on the east side and maybe venture a little off the beaten path (without taking risks, of course)... Otherwise, hire a guide for the day: do you have any recommendations and an idea of the price?
One last thing: in March, is it worth (or pointless) to choose accommodation with a pool (especially on Santo Antao)? Is the pool water warm enough? What about the ocean temperature?
Thanks so much for your help, have a great day!
I’d like to share our travel plans for March 2026 to get your valuable feedback...
- Arrival in Sao Vicente on Tuesday, March 3rd at 9:20 AM from Lisbon (EasyJet) - Direct departure the same day or the next day for Santo Antao – 3 or 4 nights on Santo Antao (depending on whether we spend the first night in Mindelo or on Santo Antao) - Return to Sao Vicente for 3 nights - Flight to Boa Vista via Sal (Cabo Verde Airlines) on Tuesday, March 10th – 5 nights on Boa Vista - Return flight on Sunday, March 15th (Boa Vista to Porto: EasyJet)
Given the various bits of info I’ve seen about the unreliability of inter-island transport, is this itinerary realistically doable without stress? Would it be better to just take a simple flight from Sao Vicente to Sal and end the trip there (from where it’s also possible to return to Europe or France)? I’m still more drawn to Boa Vista... but I’m worried that two flights in a row might be complicated, unless it’s the same plane that just makes a stopover and continues...
Also, I’m calling on the expertise of hikers for Santo Antao: I’m not a big sports enthusiast—I enjoy walking when I travel, but not distances much longer than 10 km, and nothing too difficult (especially steep climbs where I quickly run out of breath)... For the hike from Ponta do Sol to Cruzinha: can you confirm that the hike is easier in the direction from Ponta do Sol to Cruzinha (less climbing)? I’ve found info that this hike is 14 km and takes about 5 hours. Do you think it’s possible to shorten it by taking a taxi or *aluguer* to Fontainhas? If so, how long would the hike be then, and how much time would it take?
For the hike from Xoxo (starting at the Bela Vista kiosk on the Cova road), I’ve found info that it’s 12 km and takes 5 hours of walking. I think it goes to Ribeira Grande. Apparently, you can shorten the hike and find *aluguers* on the road near Café Melicia... In that case, do you know how long the hike would be? Is this the hike that lets you walk along *levadas* (like in Madeira), cross banana plantations, and pass by the Cachoeira de Vinha waterfall?
Sorry for all these questions, but I can’t find a guide with hikes and difficulty levels... I think two hikes (one along the coast and one inland with terraces, *levadas*, and banana plantations) would suit our level.
On the third free day, do you think we could rent a 4x4 to explore: take the two scenic routes on the east side and maybe venture a little off the beaten path (without taking risks, of course)... Otherwise, hire a guide for the day: do you have any recommendations and an idea of the price?
One last thing: in March, is it worth (or pointless) to choose accommodation with a pool (especially on Santo Antao)? Is the pool water warm enough? What about the ocean temperature?
Thanks so much for your help, have a great day!
Hi there,
We're on a backpacking trip, traveling by public transport/motorcycle taxis. We're in Noubou, south of Salemata in Senegal, just a stone's throw from the Guinean border. Do you know if it's possible to cross the border in this area? Where do we register? Can we cross the border without an official border post and just register in the first town we come to? We have our visas for Guinea.
Hi there,
Which island would be best for a one-week solo trip at the end of November?
I’d like to explore with a local guide who can help me discover Cape Verdean culture.
It’s still just the beginning of the plan…
Thanks to anyone who’d like to share some tips!
Which hotels offer half-board on Santiago Island?
Also, I’d love some contacts for guide-taxis—I’m traveling solo and really want to discover authentic spots.
Hi there,
I’m leaving for Cape Verde at the end of the week. I’ve heard that transportation isn’t very reliable, so I’d love your advice:
- My return flight is from Sal on the night of August 13–14
- I’ll be in São Vicente until August 10
- I found an indirect flight (São Vicente–Praia–Sal) on August 9–10 and a ferry on August 10 as well
- I’m traveling alone with two kids, ages 6 and 9
In your opinion, which option is more reliable and comfortable?
Thanks!
In your opinion, which option is more reliable and comfortable?
Thanks!
Hello,
We’re planning a trip to São Vicente and Santo Antão in January.
We’re a couple (ages 51 and 57).
My husband is really into hiking. As for me, I’m not at my best right now—I’ve just recovered from a long illness and am still on medication that exhausts me and causes a lot of pain, so I won’t be able to keep up with very "physical" hikes.
That said, I still enjoy walking in nature.
We’re looking for advice on where we could stay. A place where my husband can go hiking while I take shorter walks. But also somewhere I can relax in nature, maybe go for a swim if possible, and enjoy local life—markets, music, etc.
Boat trips would be a great bonus for us.
Thanks in advance for your suggestions.
Virginie