From Bonthe we planned to find a beach on the other side of the island for camping. Easier said than done. We asked around and the general consensus was that boats were too expensive for a volunteer budget and hiking there was too difficult. However, one local man said it best: "Oh, there is no path. It will not be possible to reach there...but you are on a mission and you cannot be stopped." So we found a random boy to guide us and set out the next morning.
On the way out of town, we watched this blacksmith make machetes for us (just in case). Very impressive.
During the hike, we trekked across this swamp (James, Jason, and guides Alpha and Crew above) and sank into mud up to our thighs. We passed through lots of tiny villages along the way and stopped briefly to greet the chief of each one. Six white guys with giant packs entering their remote village must have been a sight to see.After five hours, we reached the promised land: miles of untouched beach stretching as far as the eye could see. The beachfront villagers of Gbalo greeted us with open arms. Most of them didn't speak a word of English or Krio (they speak the island language, Sherbro). Above, our new friends watch as we transform their hut into our camp for the night.
The hike back to Bonthe included a drinking water shortage, an endless march through 100-degree desert, a rattlesnake, a village swim, and a dugout canoe ride along the island coast. We all came back in one piece. Mission accomplished.
4 comments:
What an adventure! You have had so many different experiences in such a short time. Wow! Still like the beard.
Love love love the picture of you, the fish, and my wrist. Where to next? Liberia?
What are you doing to your poor mother! Grant Fuller! :)
you'll remember this forever. What an experience. so awesome...
grant, despues de leer to diario, mi vida suena muy aburrida; creo que tu prima Becky tambien tiene gran aventuras.
Me parece que aprendes muchos bailes; good skills as Napoleon Dynamite would say.
Abrazos, tia Cece
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