No Pictures today, the wifi died last night before I could upload any, and I don't have time this morning...
When Werku told us how long the drive would be, I thought he said 10
minutes. After 30 minutes, I was
thinking, ok, that must be “Africa time” lol, and after an hour I was half
worried he was taking us somewhere to hold us hostage or something! lol Just kidding.
I realized he must have said “An hour and 10 minutes” as that is about
what it ended up being. We drove through
some beautiful countryside and a few villages to get to the base of the
falls. It was Saturday, which is Market
Day, so many people were out and about.
There were a lot of animals on the road, and I asked if they were all
being moved from one pasture to another or something. Werku explained that because it is rainy
season, the pastures are very wet, and so the animals are brought to the roads
(high ground) to graze along the ditches during the day. Many of the shepherds
were not any older than Faith and Thomas, and I was more than a little
concerned we would hit an animal, or even a child! But the drivers seem to know just when to
honk, and the kids and animals seem to know just when to get out of the way,
and somehow it all works.
When we got to the base of the waterfalls, the driver dropped us off and
we began the hike. Again, the path was
rocky and uneven, and there was a woman offering walking sticks. I asked the price, and she said “200 birr”. I
said, “No thanks”. She said, “10 birr”.
LOL. Ok, that I can do! The price fell from $10 to 50 cents! lol. It
was a sort of walking stick “rental” as one returned the stick at the end of
the hike, so that seemed reasonable.
As soon as we were on the path, we were inundated with children selling
souvenirs. “Please Miss, you buy a flute
for your babies.” “My name is
[Kalkidan]; you remember me when you come down the mountain!” We would just
finish with one child or group when we would be approached by the next. It felt nearly incessant. Werku would give a
gentle scolding if the children were rude or overly pushy, but in general, it
wasn’t that any one child was doing anything wrong, necessarily, but that there
were just so many of them! I ended up
buying 2 scarves, a small basket and 3 bottled waters but that felt like a drop
in the bucket. I especially don’t like
being pressured to buy when there isn’t anything that suits my tastes... We
were also approached several times to exchange USD for birr. Apparently some well-meaning tourists give US
cash to the people on the mountain, but there is no bank there and they have to
way to spend it. I exchanged for a few
people before I realized we would quickly become a walking ATM if I kept it
up.
The walk took about 1 hour to get to the waterfalls. They were beautiful, though very “red”
looking from all the soil that is washed downstream this time of year. It was a
gorgeous view of the whole valley, and a beautiful sight to behold.
After we spent a while viewing the waterfalls, we hiked back to the
van. Werku was worth his weight in gold,
as he helped us carry tired children down rocky paths and ran “interference”
with the vendors. We made it back to the
van tired, sweaty, but very glad we had made the hike to see such a beautiful
example of God’s creation.
The drive back to Bahir Dar went faster than the way out, probably
because I knew better than to think we would get there in 10 minutes! lol. They dropped us off at the hotel and made
plans to pick us up the next day at 7 am.
We ate supper at the hotel, which was surprisingly good, and then went
to bed. Poor Faith had a heck of a
time. There were holes in the mosquito
nets, which totally stressed her out, for there wouldn’t BE mosquito nets if
you weren’t supposed to use them, and yet surely the mosquitoes would just come
in the holes! The bed was lumpy and the
pillows were rock hard lumps and she cried herself to sleep, wishing we could
be “home” in Addis. Poor thing. As for me, I wrapped my pillow in a blanket
from home, wore full body pjs, took a sleeping pill and hoped for the
best! I got a few hours sleep, and was
very glad when the alarm rang in the morning and we could get out of there!
haha.
1 comment:
Oh you guys...I am laughing out loud (really) as I read your posts...so fun to "see" the culture from your perspective...so fun...Sarah thought Africa was very much like Ecuador and Hannah thought China was a lot like Ecuador, culturally speaking...of course there are differences...but all those place not like N America...so glad you are having this experience...priceless!
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