Sunday, 14 September 2014

Safari - Hey babe...take a walk on the wild side



Having waited almost a year for this trip, it was great to finally set foot in Tanzania and what an experience it was going to be... here the story of our 5 day safari (and yes, bear in mind that we already tried to be brief..)

Our ride for the coming 5 days
 1: Moshi – Karatu
The animals we saw were fantastic but the surroundings and people we saw en-route to Tarangire NP left the greatest impression. The contrast with our daily life couldn’t be bigger. During the day there are lots of people around the main road of which a large portion seems to do absolutely nothing but lean back on their parked motorcycle taking a casual nap.
Bizarre is also the difference between the Maasai cows grazing on the dusty shoulder of the road and the well-nourished animals of the National Park often surrounded by lush vegetation.




2: Karatu – Ikoma
Started at 08:00. Today was our transfer to Serengeti with game drive on the way. Our driver warned us that today would be a long drive. It took some 3 hours to drive to the gate of Ngorongoro park, drive up to and over the crater rim in order to go down again at another side of the crater. Then over a very “bad bad bad” (our driver’s words) bumpy road before we finally entered Serengeti National Park. After which it took another hour and a stop for lunch and some more paperwork (registration) at the park entrance, to at last get to a less arid portion where animals appeared in abundance we hadn’t expected.

'Pumba'

Male lion digesting his lunch..
Some of the highlights of today’s game drive: two male Lions resting some distance from their half eaten Buffalo-lunch; driving through plains covered with Zebra as far as the eye could see; and our favorites: Hippo’s residing in their “pools”, bathing, farting and making odd noises. These animals are gigantic but in some strange way also a bit cute...
Ikoma tented camp 


3: Maraa River- the Great Migration
Eating dust :-)
Michiel woke up with a Frankenstein-like eye: all swollen eyelids and a bloody red eye. (we’ll spare you the details about his eyelids sticking together with yellow mucus..;-) Turned out that standing with your head out above the jeep (the safari jeeps all open their roofs when in the parks) when driving 70km/h in a dusty  place like the serengeti does not neccesarily do your eyes much good, especially not when wearing lenses....

Anyway, today we would keep our head down a little more and set off on the search for “the great migration”. Our drive to the Maraa river takes us past Serengeti park offices at the old Ikoma military base, then further over a shear endless “bumps road” to Mugumbu where we turn right towards the gate of the Park. After passing the gate and driving another 30 minutes, we finally arrive at the Maraa River.
After an entertaining stop to help out a Land Rover stuck in the mud, we quickly find what we are after: Tremendous herds of Wildebeast waiting to cross the river. We watch in awe! The spectacle of the animals crossing the river took at least half an hour but felt like an eternity.

One Wildebeast lost it after failing to scramble up the other bank. After trying several times in vain, he turned back and crossed the river again. Back on the side where he had started he encountered the same problem and again turned. Reaching the middle of the river the Wildebeast seemed to ponder the situation, looking at both sides and eventually chose to give the bank he had initially come from another shot. At last, he climbed up on the bank and ended up exactly where he had started and had made the treacherous journey for nothing...  

Today I asked Isaac, our driver, about the Tanzanian school system. He told us a little about Foundation School, Secondary School and University. The first has school fees, with government support, of 150 Shilling/year ($0.10); the second 300 000 Shilling/year ($175) for public school or 700 000 shilling/year ($410) for private. As a result, he told us, most people do primary school. If your parents are poor, it probably stays at that. If your parents can afford it you will be able to finish secondary school. However, even though you might attend public secondary school, $175 is still a lot for a poor Tanzanian family. This started to explain the sight of so many people doing nothing in the villages; they just don’t have the knowledge or skills to do work or think of some enterprise.


4: Ikoma – Ngorongoro
Mesmerised! Not primarily by the animals today, rather by our visit to the Maasai. The welcoming visit we had, although commercially very attractive to them, gave a great insight into how these people live, even today in 2014.


The Maasai live a polygamous life. Each wife builds her own house, which the husband visits upon invitation. When I say house, I mean a clay hut no higher than 1.5m with two “bedrooms” (fitting just a bed of twigs) a central open fire and vented walls to let out the smoke. Male Maasai live a life most men only dream of: a diet of only meat (as they believe that vegetables should only be food for their cattle) and lawfully having several wives.
 
The contrast could not be bigger when we arrived at our lodge for the night: Ngorongoro Wildlife Lodge, perched on the rim overlooking the crater, our room giving a full view of the crater below. Having seen the Maasai still living happily, more of less like they did centuries ago, the frills of a luxurious hotel seem completely ridiculous. The thought occurs to me that it would be interesting to live with the Masaai for a week of so... On the other hand, the hotel also has it’s basic side: in the evening the temperature in the lobby is 12 degrees C and the Japanese are having dinner in their down jackets...




5: Ngorongoro Crater
Got up early and met Isaac at 07:00. Driving down into the crater gave a magnificent view and we had a Jackal running in front of the car for several minutes... not the brightest animal.

Goal for today was to see a Rhino. Unfortunately we did not get to see one. Even though we spent quite some time staring at what might be a Rhino (or was it a Buffalo?) through binoculars, we decided to call it a day and enjoy some of the other animals in closer range

After four days we are getting noticeably blasé about the animals. Before Isaac gets the chance to ask “It’s OK?” we usually indicate that he can drive on. 
Guess it's time to return to the Logde and start preparing for our treks...
elephant with an itch

I scratch your back...you scratch mine?



Friday, 18 April 2014

ijskonijnen goes dot com!

dear followers, we've got a new domain, a new layout but the same nut cases will continue blogging there. please go to:

www.ijskonijnen.com



Monday, 10 February 2014

Venabu 9 Feb 14 - Trabeliafjellet

Sunday: low visibility and snow. One more small peak we haven't conquered: Trabeliafjellet. After the approach on the tracks it's difficult to see where exactly we need to head off onto the wooded slopes as the top is not visible from our current position. Once on the wooded slopes, immersed in deeeeep powder snow, it takes a good hour full of laughs to get to the top edge of the woods. 
Leaving the woods, the rest of the climb is easy but the weather is putting up a fight: extremely bad visibility. On reaching what apparently seems to be the top we are forced to track back on our own tracks down to the treeline. There we take a different route back, once again great fun: weaving over, under and around the snow laiden trees, a Fantasy Forest.


An Oger





Saturday, 8 February 2014

Venabu 08 Feb 14 - Veslefjellet

Back at Venabu once again for a weekend of snow fun (it's raining in Oslo). The last few times we have collected quite some peaks around Venabu but until this morning we were still missing Veslefjellet. 

First few km's were cut after which we started plodding through some fresh snow. It turned out that Veslefjellet was not all that challenging to conquer but the views were none the less great! 

view from our room at Venabu

ascent to Veslefjellet

The Summit


Ice sculptures on the summit


sunset


Thursday, 30 January 2014

Local Powder sugar

FINALLY It's been snowing quite steadily over the past week and a half  result: powder-sugar covered neighborhood and....Oslo marka. Recon mission last tuesday: 
Thickness: good (new skies on, only a very little twig here and there)
Consistency: loose (like beach sand)
Glide: mwah outside the tracks
Stickyness: mwah inside the tracks;)
Fun: huuuuuge! :-)


Tuesday, 21 January 2014

Happy 2014!

Best wishes for 2014 to everyone! 


Kickstart of the new year with a weekend trip up to Venabu. We took a lucky guess to wait one more week before we drove up, which proved to be a good choice as the past week had steadily brought in new snow. Little or no wind made sure it was all still there, loose and powdery. Guarantee for knee-deep plodding, burning legs and breathtaking views.
saturday: the sun is giving it a try
Our sunday was an even more unexpectedly surprisingly fun and rewarding day. Deciding agains a posh-alpine resort we stayed around and had 2 unexpected outings. First we took along a group of guests of the hotel on one of their first round of cross-country skiing of their vacation. Surprisingly, even though their experience skiing was little, it did not take long before their pace actually made us break a sweat! Great, rewarding experience. 
The afternoon sort of escalated from a possible short round with our friend Robert, to a 'topptur' to Dynjefjellet. We made the hours and minutes of daylight left in the day count and plodded our way up (thank god for the short skins under our skies) and quickly down again. The descent was truly magical as we came down to a forest, with trees covered in a really thick layer of snow. Almost as in a fairytale. So quiet, so beautiful.  
See pictures below and some more under the links at the bottom of this post
sweat is weakness leaving the body, right?
Keep on rising....up to Dynjefjell
Dynjefjell - but nearly running out of daylight

fairytale forest

and deeeeep powder:)
See for more pictures and video:



A year comes to an end....

Valdres (Vestre Slidre) - Kringsjå.

Christmas 2013 brought no snow and temperatures in the plus areas about everywhere. Therefore we decided to leave Femundsmarka (our original plan) for another time. Our christmas gift from our neighbours was actually that we could borrow/use their cabin in the mountains. From the nearest parking lot you need to ski about 50 mins to the cabin:) totally our thing!
So, pulk (sled with supplies) and skies in the car...and off we went!

hers
his
King of the Pulk
Next day was quite windy. The first part of our day-trip we spend discussing the amount of work you need to put in to overcome friction & gravity and thus the forces needed to move yourself forward and upward. (Michiel can explain this in a much more scientific/fundamental way...:)). Then our path turned towards the wind which pretty much put an end to our discussion (discussion....I guess you could rather call it my private tuition into basic statics..)
 After another turn we headed back towards our cabin, with the choice of going over the lake (somewhat shifty in december with snow covering the ice and a history of improper cold..), going alongside the lake (safe, but slightly boring) or going through the birch forest (heavy, powder, up and down, no straight lines and unexpected bumps and dips). Take a wild guess where we ended up..
playing in the birch-forest
 Day 3: Sunshine. Yeah! It didn't last very long but long enough for us to get some nice snapshots of sunrise on the mountains :):):).


good morning sunshine


Kringsjå - the cabin

going back over the lake
 After we packed everything and skied back to the car, we drove up to Vaset to play around in the snow for a few hours there too. Luckily skies cleared up again and the colors around sunset are just....WOW!


Sky on fire

purple haze