Ghana… When life was
hard traveling through Guinea and Ivory Coast we all dreamed about Ghana. We
heard about the white sand beaches, the other travelers, cheap beer and English
speaking. Crossing the border was again very easy. We had to get out fill some
paperwork, get stamped and our picture taken. All in all it took around two
hours to cross. From the border we drove about three hours to Busua. We were
going to stay two days at Alaska beach resort. So far the only difference Ghana
is to the rest of West Africa is all the hundreds and thousands of churches and
English signs. The locals speak their own dialect and most of them don’t speak
English at all so that was different then I thought. I thought it would be like
Belize. Don’t get me wrong it was still nice to be able to know what I was
ordering and how much it cost. The beaches in Busua were absolutely amazing. We
were told to live it up here; these will be the best beaches in West Africa. No
rips, no litter, and fun waves to body surf. The two days went by pretty fast.
Just down the beach was a restaurant we were told had Mexican food J J J. We spent the day body
surfing and in the afternoon we all got our first burritos which were to die
for. I could tell I was really going to like Ghana.
We left Busua and drove to the famous Big Millys. Arriving
at Big Millys was a huge culture shock for all of us. We had spent the last 3
weeks being the only tourist or white people and now we arrived on a Sunday and
the place was packed with them (finding out they are all volunteers). Myself,
Ben and Steph upgraded to a 3 person a/c room for $10 U.S. a night. Since I was
sharing the room with them we had to come up with some ground rules hat or
towel on the door handle means for me to come back in 30 minutes or so. For the
first two days we stayed there the people who didn’t get the Nigerian visas
spent the day in Accra (40km pain in the ass to get to) trying to get them.
Everyone was successful thank god. Now all along West Africa we were told
Angola doesn’t issue visas and most likely we were all going to fly over
Angola. Suse who just spend 4 years in South America (speaks Portuguese
fluently) was able to basically get on her knees and sweet talk them in issuing
us. We had to deposit money ($160 US) into their bank (that way the money is
there account and it would be hard to refund us) then get a letter from our
embassy with a stamp as a letter of invitation or introduction. Myself,
Brittany and Jareb took a taxi to the bank then went to the American embassy.
The embassy was closed from noon to 2pm for lunch so we waited and ate lunches
ourselves (fufu-Ghana dish which made me almost puke). At 2pm getting into the
embassy was easy. We were the only American with 200 Ghanaians trying to Visas.
After 30 minutes of waiting we talked with a lady who looked at us like we were
insane and was no help whatsoever. She said they don’t do those types of
letters. I asked her if she could write a letter stating they don’t do those
letters she said WE DON’T DO LETTERS! We left with no help at all. We later
talked with Suse and she said not to worry. Basically everyone but the Aussies was
unsuccessful. Suse said we could try again on Monday before we meet with the
Angola embassy. That night Steph had chills and was really cold. Brian also
spent the whole night puking his guts out (he was drinking the water) the next
morning we were going to leave for Kumasi but both Brian and Steph were in no
travel shape. They decided to go to the clinic down the road. Brian was going
to get a something so he could hold water in and Steph was going to get tested
for Malaria. Noon came along when Suse got the phone call. Brian basically had
food poisoning, and was on 5 bags of trip and they wanted to keep him
overnight. Oh yea and he had type 1 Malaria. Steph had type 2 Malaria and the
doctor had no idea why she was as chipper and she was. Needless to say we were
going to stay at Big Millys until Monday. On Saturday we did the previous
mentioned centurion. Jareb lost, but beat Brittany so I lost $20 buck but
didn’t have to pay the bar tab. Nico won the whole thing with little Rhys
coming in second with 97 shots, everyone got pissed and it was a lot of fun…
The next day Jareb woke up and said he wasn’t feeling good at all. He said he
had a fever and chills. I thought it was him being hung over but after a trip
into the doctors he now has Malaria as well.
On Monday we dropped off our passports at the Angolan
embassy and then headed to Cape Coast. The drive to Cape Coast only took a few
hours and we stayed on the beach again at this nice campground called Oasis. We
ended up staying there 3 nights. The first night was our cook group again. We
whipped up some stir fry and called it a night. The next morning Brittany, The
boys, Ben, Steph and me when to the largest slave port in West Africa. It’s
what cape coast was known for. We spent about 45 minutes walking through the
museum then took the guided tour. I was really affected by being here. Seeing
what the slaves had to go through before they were even slaves was very
emotional. There was one section called the CELL where the bad slaves who tried
to escape or resist it were put. They were locked 50 people deep in a pitch
black cell. They were left there with no food, no water until they died. There
are still marks where the slaves tried to grind their teeth against the cement
to try to escape. While we were there, there was a African American women from
Florida who was extremely emotional making a bad name for herself and every
American. She was yelling at anyone who was on the tour talking about her
ancestors and black rights. She was absolutely out of control. I believe in
being passionate about something you believe in and at no way do I condone
slavery or thing what our ancestors did was right. She was being a hypocrite
because if she went into the museum she would know that tribes would capture
other slaves and sell them so they can take over the land. Not only that but
she made comments about Brittany (who is Asian), and other black people on the
tour (saying how they forgot their roots)… The rest of the evening we played a
3 on 3 game of basketball in the 95 degree temperature with 90% humidity. It
was Ben, Rhys, and Toby vs. Nico, Brittany, and me. We lost, and we all almost
passed out from heat exhaustion (not my brightest moment). The next day we took
a taxi to Kakum national park. This park was known for its canopy walk
basically 10+ rope bridges stretched across the canopy of the rain forest. It
was a little disappointing and probably the first time this trip I could have
saved my money and not done it. It was okay but we had two large groups of
American student with us and I felt hurried the whole time… We left for Kumasi
the next day. Kumasi is known for the biggest markets in West Africa… To try to
explain these markets in writing or pictures doesn’t do it Justice. They are
massive, with endless rows of shops and stalls. It made for locals and not
tourist. You can get anything from dried fish, to used underwear. We stayed two
nights there at a Presbyterian church that had rooms. Everyone paired up double
occupancy except me I was the lone man out which was good because I got the
room to myself… We left Kumasi to go back to Big Millys again. It is once again
our time to cook. We are also going to meet the two new people joining us on
the trip and unfortunately loosing Brian then later in the week my best mates
Ben and Steph.
Right before Big Millys there is a place about 30 minutes
away called “the barrier” Suse dropped myself, Ben and Steph to go food shopping.
We took a taxi 10 minutes from there to a market called Mally Market. We were
buying supplies for dinner (Steph and my famous coleslaw) when Ben looked up
and saw the darkest clouds ever. We had all the supplies minus breakfast so we
decided it was time to get out of dodge. We negotiated with a taxi to take us
back to big millys right before I got to observed up-close and personal my
first insane tropical storm. Once we started driving the wind blew like a
tornado and tin roofs, garbage and even a half sheet of plywood landed in front
of the taxi. The taxi sign even blew off his car. It was pouring down rain with
massive wind. We even had a palm tree collapse in front of the taxi. We were
driving on the smaller road to Big Millys when a huge coconut palm tree
collapsed about 50 yards right in front of our vehicle blocking both sides of
the road. By the time it hit the ground every kid close by came running to cut
the coconuts and free the road. There was one boy no older than 7, butt naked,
and after he wrestled a coconut free from all the older kids he danced a very
comical celebration. You would have thought he kicked the winning goal in a
soccer match. Once we passed the tree there was a maroon Nissan Xterra that passed us.
About 5 minutes later around a corner the Xterra and another vehicle had a head
on accident. Both drivers looked bloody but were walking so that is a good
sign. Shortly after that we say another taxi went around a corner and didn’t
turn and rode off the road. We eventually made it to Big M safe and only a
little wet. It was one crazy drive. Our plan is to be there until Wednesday so
the two new people can get their Angola Visa…
We met the two new people Cecilie (23 Denmark), and Yoshi
(73 Japan). Both will be a great addition to our family. I instantly bonded with
Cecilia. She has been volunteering at Ghana a month before and is really excited
to join the trip. Her original plan was just to go to South Africa but after a
few days she decided to go to Istanbul with everyone else. On Sunday 20th
of May I was feeling really tired and not myself. I thought it was just the
heat but I didn’t even have the energy to pick up my Kindle and read it. The
next day Monday I told Steph I would go to the hospital with her to keep her
company while she got tested to see if the malaria is gone. I talked Denise to
go with me and within two hours I was looking a sheet of paper that said I had
+ 1 malaria… WTF! I guess the anti-malaria medicine I am on was fighting it but
that was the reason I have been so exhausted. The next two days I took it easy
and took their prescribed medicine. I only had one fever night, but it passed
within a few hours.
On Wednesday we drove 5 hours to Aylos bay right on the
largest manmade lake. We stayed at this awesome little hotel/campground right
on the lake with a rope swing. Myself, Ben, Cecilia, Rhys, and Toby spent as
much time as possible swinging and playing in the fresh water. We had to get
out because it was getting dark and the mozzies were coming out. That night we
slept under mango trees and around 0200 in the morning monkeys decided to climb
the trees and throw mangos at our tents keeping us up for most the night.
The next day we drove 6 hours to Wli (a national park) we got
there around 4pm and quickly hurried up a 35 min hike to one of the most
spectacular waterfalls ever. All of us minus Carlos, Maria and Denise went up.
The water was little higher than waste level and the waterfall was 100 feet
plus. It was so powerful that we felt like we were getting beat up by the
water. Rhys, Toby, Ben, Nico and I linked arms and walked right through it. We
were all laughing and having a great time. By the time we got back to the truck
we got stuck in a torrential downpour. After the rains past we all set up camp
and spent the night at the foot of the national forest. The next day we drove a
few hours to a endangered monkey sanctuary. The monkeys are called the Mona
monkeys. We walked about 10 minutes into the forest when our guide started
making this weird noise. Rhys and I looked at each other when all of a sudden
100 of the cutest monkeys came out of nowhere. The guide gave us bananas and
the monkeys would crawl all over us and eat the bananas. The guide told us that
there are only 400 Mona monkeys left in the world and they are called the god
messengers. They were so adorable; I could spend all day watching them jump
from tree to tree. We left the monkey sanctuary and drove back to Aylos bay
(the manmade lake) this was going to be Ben and Steph last night here with us
so we canceled cook group and everyone but Carlos ate at the hotel restaurant.
Ben and Steph went around the table and gave a speech about everyone. It was
really sweet and they are going to be missed. I instantly became best mates
with them. I told them that because of them I am still here. I told them from
the start I was second guessing myself and really concerned of this trip and
the fact I made the wrong decision. After meeting them everything turned great
and I am so happy that I am on this trip. I will miss them deeply and hopefully
one day I will see them again. The next day we took off to Big Millys (again).
We will pick up our Angolan visas and spend 3 days there. It will also be my
birthday (which I could of spent it in a whole lot worst of places) not sure
what I will be doing. Because of the malaria I can’t drink because malaria eats
your liver. Anyone that knows me also knows that I have a very high liver count
(unknown reason) the VA hospital has been trying to find out for years why my
blood test comes up high. So I will be sober and enjoying my 31st
birthday in GHANA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!