Malawi
Malawi is a beautiful country with much of it taken up by a
huge Natural Lake. The lake, certainly in the northern and central portion, is
crystal clear and backed by white sand and palm trees giving it a Caribbean
feel. We had visited once before at the end of 2016 and spent Christmas in the
south. Our first stop was at Chitimba camp, a really beautiful spot right on
the white sandy beach. Here we rested and swam for a couple of days before
moving south to Chintheche Inn, about halfway down the lake. We had spent a
couple of nights here last December and again there is pure white sand with
just a few strategically placed rocks to add focus to the pictures. The local
fisherman supplied us with a huge fish that went down well on the braai that
night (well OK Sarah and I enjoyed it).
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Our Beautiful site at Chitimba Camp |
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Jan and Sarah up at first light by the Lake |
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Fishermen at Sunrise |
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A Hammerkopf at its nest |
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Some form of local celebration near Chintheche Inn |
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An enjoyable lunch |
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Our washing disappearing of to be cleaned |
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Dinner tonight |
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Very Tasty |
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This Mango tree on the beach will be ripe in about 2 months time |
We then left the lake and headed towards the Capital,
Lilongwe, and a quick trip back over the border to Zambia to get a car document
renewed. To take a Zambian registered vehicle out of Zambia you need to get a
Temporary Export Permit (TEP) from the police. These only last a maximum of 90
days and as we are going to be away from Zambia for around 120 days we asked
what we could do. Sadly you have to return to the country so we worked out the
nearest border would be Malawi-Zambia at Chipata as this was around 100Kms from
Lilongwe. I left the car with Jan and Sarah on the Malawi side and ran across
the border to find the Zambian Interpol office on the Zambian side. Knowing how
long these things take I had all the car documents plus passports of mine and
Jan’s and money. We fully expected it to take a couple of hours so it was a
real surprise when 20 minutes later I was back in the car and driving back to
Lilongwe for the night.
Mozambique
We had heard and read many things about getting to and
through Mozambique and most were not good. Originally we had thought about
driving directly from Tanzania, south through Moz to South Africa but had been
warned it was not safe at that time. Two rival factions are having a bit of an
argument from time to time in parts of Mozambique. Often they have to set up
convoys so you can drive in reasonable safety through the problem areas so we
decided to go the Malawi route and drive a safer route (but still with
problems) from Malawi through what is called the Tete corridor to another
problem country, Zimbabwe. We will say now that we found Mozambique to be a really
wonderful and friendly place, The police were helpful and not the problem we
had been told they would be. We stopped only one night in Mozambique at Tete
where we camped on the banks of the Zambezi River.
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Bridge over the Zambezi in Tete at sunset |
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Bridge at night |
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Wood Delivery
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Mountains in Mozambique |
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Mist and Haze in the mountains |
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A local village with flags flying |
Tete was a modern city with
shopping Malls and plenty of food in the shops. The next day we took a 350 Km
drive to the Zimbabwe Border and we now regret not staying longer and seeing
more of the country. The border was one of the most shambolic we had used so
far. First there was a queue of over 6 kilometres of large lorries waiting to
cross into Zimbabwe which we drove right by. Then you have the “Agents”, these
are just locals wanting money and saying you must use them and want to charge
you for parking and for getting any form. Inside were long queues of commercial
drivers shouting and trying to clear customs as well as a few others like us
trying to clear immigration, get visas and the clear the car through. This was
one of the most annoying border crossings which took an hour and a half, but
felt much longer.
Zimbabwe
We had all been to Zimbabwe last August so we knew what the
officials, especially the police, could be in Zimbabwe so we had many things
prepared. All the documents were correct, we had 2 fire extinguishers, 2 lots
of reflective triangles and other things ready at hand if stopped, We also had
plenty of one dollar bills ready to hand and my Zambian driving licence was
attached to the sun visor.
Our final day was a 300 kilometre drive down to the border
with South Africa. This was the part of the journey were looking forward to the
least. We knew there were many police roadblocks on this stretch. We then had
the busiest border crossing in Africa to contend with at the end.
Well the end result was a miracle, yes we were stopped many
times. They always asked for driving licence, Temporary Import Permit, our fire
extinguisher and two reflective triangles. All except two stops said all is
good and have a good journey ( to the next stop perhaps only 5 kilometres
away), One stop suggested our roof rack was not safe as it should be covered
with a tarpaulin. We said we would look at his advice. The only other one was
on the look out for some money as he picked up immediately that our Fire
Extinguisher is made by a manufacturer called “FireStop” AH! This is not an
extinguisher it is a “Fire Stopper” It says so on the label. “No that is the
brand” “No it does not say Extinguisher” I then looked at the instructions in
many languages on the unit and many including English use the phrase (or
something like it) “To Extinguish a fire aim at……..” After showing him this he
seemed ok. We are sure that as we had said we were from Zambia and used my
Zambian Licence he knew he could not intimidate us as we are used to it. Others
may have been forced to pay. We were firm but polite. Yes we got across the
border into South Africa without getting a fine, bribe or other payment in the
whole of Mozambique and Zimbabwe. A modern day miracle but hopefully one that
continues as both countries sorely need tourist to flock back.
We are now in Limpopo region of South Africa and tomorrow
move on into Kruger National Park. Updates will follow.
Mike, Jan and Sarah
1 comment:
you must be glad you had a 4x4! Wonderful photos, but the one I like best is the Scops Owl
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