Showing posts with label maps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maps. Show all posts

Sunday, April 16, 2017

A couple of Google Maps of our Southern African overlanding trip

Queleas in front of the setting sun at Mwandi View, near Chobe


Now that the main narrative of the blog of Stanley's Travels is done, it's time to start filling in details and looking at things from different perspectives.  In aid of this, I've been busy creating Google Maps.

These two Google Maps might be useful in following the blog, and visualizing where we went.  The maps have all the main places we visited, along with dates, descriptions and a few photos (click on the place markers to see them).  As well, if you click on the layers further down the page, it will show the routes we followed in sections of the trip.  I think it's a reasonably useful resource for following our trip, or to help you, gentle readers, in planning your own African adventures.

Click here for the map of the first section of Stanley's Travels, from March to October of 2016.

Click here for the map of the second section of Stanley's Travels, from December 2016 to March 2017.

I hope the maps (also available in the sidebar of the blog) are useful!

More "best of" posts coming up over the next couple of weeks.

I love maps and flags.  Hope these maps are useful!

Friday, April 29, 2016

By the Numbers--Up to Date

Here's a newly updated list of the countries I've visited over the course of my life, arranged by the date of my first visit to the country.  I don't count my home country, Canada.   Of course, exactly what constitutes a country is a bit slippery.  My well-travelled friend Natalya Marquand holds that the only objective list is the 193 permanent members of the UN.  Others hold that these countries, plus the non-UN-member Vatican City, make up the 194 canonical countries of the world.  I think the reality is a bit slippier.  When I visited Nagorno-Karabakh and Abkhazia, despite the fact that these countries aren’t universally recognized, I had to get a visa to visit them and cross at a border post manned by people in uniform who stamped my passport.  Somaliland not only has its own consulates and border guards, it even has its own currency.  And, to take an extreme example, anyone who claims that Taiwan isn’t effectively an independent country isn’t really recognizing what’s been de facto the case since 1949.

So my list of independent countries is a bit bigger than 194.  It’s about 204 countries; the number may fluctuate a bit, and it doesn’t include three countries (Western Sahara, Palestine and Tibet) with pretty legitimate cases but without their own border guards. One of the many lists of countries on Wikipedia lists 206 entries that either are recognized by at least one other state as being independent, or effectively control a permanently populated territory, but they include Western Sahara and Palestine which are at the moment illusory pipe dreams, to the distress of the people who inhabit them.  If I'm not counting Canada, that would make 193 or 203 possible destinations.

Anyway, without further preamble, here’s my list of the countries I have visited, arranged according to the date I first visited them.  The non-UN/Vatican members of the list are coloured red; there are eight of them, so if you’re counting by the UN+Vatican list, it’s 117 (out of 193).  I would make it 125 out of 203.  Whichever way you count it, I’m now well over half-way to my goal of visiting them all, and my to-visit list is now down into double digits.   

1969
1. US

1977
2.  France
3.  Switzerland
4.  Liechtenstein
5.  Germany
6.  Netherlands

1981
7.  Tanzania

1982
8.  Norway
9.  Italy

1988
10.  UK
11. Vatican
12.  Greece
13.  Hungary
14.  Austria
15.  Czech Republic (Prague, then part of the now-defunct Czechoslovakia)

1990
16.  Belgium
17.  Monaco
18.  Poland

1991
19.  Australia
20.  New Zealand
21.   Fiji
22.  Cook Islands

1994
23.  Egypt
24.  Turkey

1995
25.  Spain
26.  Kenya
27.  Uganda
28.  Democratic Republic of Congo
29.  Japan
30.  Singapore
31.  Indonesia

1996
32.  Philippines
33.  Malaysia
34.  Thailand
35.  Cambodia
36.  Nepal

1997
37.  India
38.  Sri Lanka
39.  Pakistan
40.  Luxembourg
41.  San Marino
42.  Andorra

1998
43.  China
44.  Portugal
45.  Morocco
46.  Tunisia
47.  Jordan

1999
48.  Israel
49.  Syria
50.  Lebanon
51.  Chile
52.  Argentina
53.  Peru

2000
54.  Bolivia
55.  South Korea

2001
56.  Mexico
57.  Brunei
58.  Laos
59.  Taiwan

2004
60.  Kazakhstan
61.  Kyrgyzstan
62.  Tajikistan
63.  Uzbekistan
64.  Turkmenistan
65.  Iran
66.  Bahrain

2006
67.  Vietnam
68.  Burma

2007
69.  Mongolia
70.  Palau
71.  Bangladesh

2008
72.  Bhutan
73.  Cyprus
74.  Northern Cyprus

2009
75.  Kuwait
76.  Azerbaijan
77.  Georgia
78.  Armenia
79.  Nagorno-Karabakh
80.  Iraq
81.  Bulgaria
82.  Serbia
83.  Kosovo
84.  Macedonia
85.  Albania
86.  Montenegro
87.  Bosnia-Hercegovina
88.  Croatia
89.  Libya
90.  Malta

2010
91.  Ethiopia
92.  Somaliland
93.  Djibouti

2011
94.  Denmark
95.  Abkhazia
96.  Russia
97.  Ukraine
98.  Trans-Dniestria
99.  Moldova
100. Romania
101.  Slovakia
102.  Belarus
103.  Lithuania
104.  Latvia
105.  Estonia
106.  United Arab Emirates
107.  Oman
108.  Qatar

2012
109.  Slovenia
110.  Togo
111.  Benin

2013 
112.  Maldives
113,  Iceland
114.  Ireland

2014
115. East Timor
116. Solomon Islands
117. Papua New Guinea

2015
118. Finland
119. Sweden

2016
120. Paraguay
121. Brazil
122. Uruguay
123. Zambia
124. Botswana
125. South Africa

Over the rest of 2016 I should add another 7 African countries or so (mostly from southern Africa) and then a few more in early 2017 from eastern and western Africa.  So many countries, so little time!

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Upcoming Plans: Kruger, Mozambique and points north!

April 28, Cape Town

This is just a quick post to let you, my gentle readers, know what our plans are, and what we've been up to since leaving Livingstone 4 weeks ago.
Looking pleased and relieved to have bought Stanley
Terri and I flew down from Livingstone to Cape Town on Wednesday, March 30th, determined to buy an overlanding vehicle for our upcoming Africa adventure.  We stayed in a rather ratty little backpackers located on the loudest intersection in the city for the first 4 nights, but our search for vehicles was frustrating.  We couldn't find anyone selling a complete setup like we wanted (a pickup truck, or "bakkie" as it's called here, with a camper insert in the back).  Trying to buy the truck and the camper separately looked expensive, with Alu-Cab offering us a new, well-engineered but cramped camper (Terri called it a man-cave for its dark, low interior) for 190.000 rand (about US$ 12.500) without a vehicle underneath it.  We had a line on 2012 HiLux pickup trucks for about the same price.  Then we would need to buy lots of extra kit to make the camper liveable and fully functional.  It all seemed more expensive than we wanted, and more hassle.

We took a bit of time to look around Cape Town on a sunny Saturday afternoon, enjoying the pretty Waterfront with its markets and good food, and climbed Table Mountain on Sunday, but we mostly kept our noses to the grindstone, going to government offices futilely looking for a Traffic Registry Number (they weren't willing to give one to non-resident foreigners), visiting dozens of car dealers, spending time on the internet, and all in vain.  By the evening of Monday, April 4th, we were discouraged, and at a low ebb in our enthusiasm.  The only bright spot was that we had moved into a much nicer and cheaper place to stay, an AirBnB house in funky gentrifying Woodstock.  At that exact moment, my former colleague Charlene sent me a link to the Africa 4x4 Cafe website and on there we saw the perfect vehicle for us, a 2002 Mitsubishi Colt club cab pickup truck with a Blinkgat camper in the back, freshly returned from a big trip as far north as Tanzania under the ownership of another Canadian.  The ad dated from early February, and we were worried that the vehicle would have been sold long ago.  Without much hope, we sent off an e-mail and Terri went to bed.  Before turning in myself, I checked my e-mail one more time and found an e-mail from Etienne, the owner.  The vehicle was still for sale and he was very keen to get it off his hands, as he had had to return to Canada without having sold it.  There were a couple of people interested in it but they weren't going to look at the vehicle for another week or so.
Living out of Stanley
In the morning I told Terri that the car was available but was in Johannesburg, stored in a garage.  Within an hour, we had bought air tickets to Johannesburg for the next day, found a place to stay, rented a car and were upbeat and nervous.  On Wednesday, April 6th we were on a cheap flight to Johannesburg and, after a long delay at the car rental desk, took off in our US$20 a day rental car, listening to our GPS and getting lost.  We headed straight to the garage and looked at the vehicle.  It seemed like what we wanted, and after a day of nervous thought and trans-Atlantic WhatsApp negotiation with Etienne we settled on a price (a bit under US$10,000) and started the process of bank transfers to pay for it.  By Friday night we had paid the purchase price, started the process of getting our Traffic Registry Numbers (via an "agent" who presumably greased a few palms at the government office), gone through the huge quantity of camping, cooking, cleaning, repair and electrical equipment that came with the camper and settled on a plan.  We would borrow the car for a few days to drive it around and test out how we liked living out of the camper so that we would know what (if anything) we needed to buy.  Then we would return the vehicle to Johannesburg so that the paperwork of changing ownership, along with a few repairs (oil change, oil and air filter change and a new leaf spring for the back axle) could get done while Terri and I went to NZ and Switzerland respectively for brief business-oriented trips.  Then, when we returned, we would pick up our newly optimized vehicle and head for Kruger National Park to start exploring the continent.  Unfortunately, our tickets to NZ and Europe, already bought, were leaving from Cape Town and we were now in Johannesburg, requiring another cheap-o return air ticket to Cape Town on the delightfully named Mango Air.
Meeting Erin Conway-Smith in Johannesburg
Once we had our plan, everything happened relatively quickly.  We spent the weekend enjoying our laid-back backpacker joint (The Birches, in Linden) and visiting an old friend of mine (Angelo) from long-ago grad school days, along with a fellow Thunder Bay-ite, Erin Conway Smith, who is now a correspondent for the Economist based in Johannesburg.  We had interesting discussions about the ongoing political scandals in South Africa and some of the other countries of the continent that Erin knows.  In the afternoons we went running and cycling in the Johannesburg Botanical Gardens and shopped for groceries.

From Monday afternoon to Thursday morning of that week we took our new vehicle, freshly renamed Stanley (short for Henry Morton Stanley ; Etienne had called the vehicle Zulu) for a three-night camping trip.  We drove northwest to the Magaliesberg, to Sleepy River Caravan Park, where we spent two idyllic nights watching birds, testing out our gear, eating well and enjoying the star-spangled sky.  The only problem we found was that our gas burners weren't working well, presumably getting gunked up by dust; either we need a new stove or a pressurized air source to blow out the gas pipes.  The bed was comfortable, the working space inside the camper was ample, and the electrical system, with a fridge/freezer, storage batteries and a solar panel, worked idyllically.  The only downer was the horrible traffic we encountered in Pretoria when we went to pick up our Wild Card, the amazingly good deal on South African National Parks where for US$100 each we get unlimited access to all the parks in South Africa (although we still have to pay for accommodation).  
Stanley at Magalies Sleepy River
On Wednesday we spent a wonderful day exploring the Cradle of Humankind, a UNESCO-listed site commemorating the amazing paleontological discoveries in the caves northwest of Jo'burg.  
Robert Broom and our tour guide at Sterkfontein
Sterkfontein Cave was memorable, as much for the cave itself as for the early specimens of Australopithecus  discovered there.  That evening we camped in Krugersdorp Game Reserve and watched tons of birds and mammals, including ostriches, wildebeests, hartebeests, giraffes and bushbucks.  
Krugersdorp Game Reserve
It was again an idyllic spot to camp, and whetted our appetites for further adventures.  Thursday morning we drove back into Johannesburg, left the vehicle at the garage, got a lift to the airport and flew back to Cape Town.  Our AirBnB hosts, the irrepressible duo of Leonie and Shanaaz, surprised us by picking us up at the airport.  The next day Terri flew off to Auckland, while I stayed one more day before flying to Switzerland.
My mom, sisters and I gaping at the wonders of the universe 
Pub quiz with my friend Avery
Hugh playing quizmaster
My ten-day jaunt to my old haunts in Switzerland was fun, with lots of mountain biking, skiing, socializing, wine, abortive ski tours, indoor climbing, reunions with old friends and colleagues and even a Leysin Pub Quiz.  
My sister Audie mountain biking above Sierre
My court hearing (I'm in a dispute with my former employers) went well, but there was no immediate verdict, leaving me in suspense for a few more months.  And then, suddenly, I was back here in Cape Town, trying (so far unsuccessfully) to arrange vehicle insurance and buying a fancy GPS and map set for our journey.  Terri arrives tomorrow and we fly to Johannesburg on Saturday to pick up Stanley, buy some groceries and hit the road to Kruger National Park for a 6-day trip.
Me riding the El Dorado trail near Sierre
Saakje
Skiing terrible snow in the fog
Taking our skis for a walk
Me showing my poor climbing skills
And then?  Well, the plan until today was to drive from Kruger straight into Mozambique, drive north along the coast as far north as the Quirimbas Archipelago, then double south and west into Malawi. From Malawi we plan to do a huge sweep through the outer reaches of Zambia, down into Zimbabwe and then a big north-then-south wave through Botswana and Namibia before finally returning to South Africa by mid-October, in time for another side trip to Europe to do some tour guiding.  After returning from this in late October, we might head to Madagascar for a couple of months before picking up Stanley from a secure parking spot and heading north.  We'd like to get as far north as Sudan before cutting across Chad into West Africa; this is the toughest part of the trip, as it's mostly regarded as being impossible to cross the Sudan-Chad border given current conditions in Darfur.  However with South Sudan suddenly reverting to peace, maybe a new route possibility will open up from South Sudan into Chad.  If we get into Chad, then we can drive west through the Sahel to Mauretania and then double back east along the coast before making a run through the horrible roads, expensive countries and unpleasant border crossings from Nigeria south to Angola.  The last leg would be driving back south from Angola through Namibia back into South Africa where we would try to sell the camper again.  

On the other hand, with political and security problems suddenly boiling over in Mozambique this week, we might have to curtail or eliminate our Mozambique leg.  Who knows?  Travelling in Africa you have to do your homework, but that doesn't mean the situation won't change radically while you're on the road.

We've created Instagram, Twitter and Facebook accounts for this trip, along with a Google Map, so I hope that at least one of these channels of digital communication helps you follow our progress over the coming months.  We're pretty excited, and I hope we manage to convey that excitement to you, gentle readers.  Stay tuned!!!!

Ostrich at Krugersdorp