Well my time in Tanzania with Greenforce is over and i'm now in Singapore.
My last week in Zanzibar was amazing it was a paradise beach with white sand, hammocks on the beach and clear brilliant blue sea that you could see right to the bottom of. I had massages on the beach (for the very extortionate price of 50p!!), got some henna done and also got all of my hair braided in corn row type things - see the pictures, it really didnt look that bad!!
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday were spent lazing on the beach indulging in the above activites or ocasionally venturing from the hammocks to the bar and then into the sea. On Thursday we went on a snorkelling trip for the day to a nearby island and had King fish for lunch (yes i am tending to eat fish now) barbecued for us on the boat. All was great until i woke up on Friday realising that, having faleln asleep on the boat ont he 2 hour journey to the island i was now ridiculously red on my front making walking, sitting, sleeping, standing (pretty much just existing) painful! my head was also burned in between the braids - not good!! Im more brown than red now but it is 4 days later and i am strangely patchy!
Saturday saw us make a 10 hours bus journey from Dar es Salaam abck to Arusha which was painful as there was no air-conditioning and we only stopped once...
On Sunday we left to begin our marathon journey to Singapore which was suppoed to begin with an 8.00am flight from Kilimanjiro airport to Nairobi but upon turning up at 6am (2 hours before the flight..) we were told that the flight was at 6am, it always was at 6am and there had never been an 8am flight to nairobi!! Due to it beign sunday STA (our travel agents) were closed and for some reason do not have a 24 hour helpline so it was left for me to go mad at the airport staff which resulted in us beign put on the next flight (1hr 20 mins later) free of charge. Upon arriving at nairobi we had a 7hour wait until our flight at 5.15 to Dubai - a 5.5 hour flight. I was amazed by the plane - they all had TV's and playstation's in the backs of the seats so you could watch whatever you wanetd or play games. You could also play games with other people on the flight, send e-mails, texts and even make phone calls. Now why don't they do that for spain!Dubai airport is AMAZING. Its like a bigger and more stylish version of the trafford centre - not like an airport at all! I FINALLY got the McDonalds i had been craving for 3 months at 1.30am (yes it was worth the weight - rice and cabbage really makes you want some pure junk!)
After 3 hours in Dubai it was time for the flight to Singapore - 7 hours, again on an amazing plane. The other thing that i love about these long haul flights is the food - pasta, chicken, curry and it is all such good tasting food and its a 3 course meal. You also constantly get free drinks throughout the flight, i sat there in luxury. Well actually i slept for most of it!!
We got to singapore at 2.30pm (7 hours ahead of the UK i do believe) and it was so refreshing to be in a nice clean airport where people understood what you were asking and everything went prefectly, our bags only took 10 mins to get off the plane all all arrived perfectly! A taxi took us to our hostel which turns out to be incredibly big and very very very nice (tom and my room has 3 beds, an en-suite bathroom, an incredible view of the city, a desk and a sofa as well as a large wardrobe and a lot of room to walk around - its HUGE!! There is a laundry room (the first thing i did was wash all of my clothes, having been handwashed for 3 months they wernt looking or smelling their best!), free internet access, the roof is a big flat area which loads of deck chairs, a swimming pool and a barbecue area, there is a pool table, and a chill out room where there is a huge plasma screen TV that shows movies daily. The whole place is immaculately clean and decrorated to a really high standard - its nicer than any hotel i have been to in england!!
Anyway enough ranting about how amazing 'The Hangout' is, tonight we wnt for a wander to get some food and see the city. We ended up eating at KFC (yes old habits die hard!!) before spending hours wandering around a gigantic street market. Due to the time differernces we are both pretty jet lagged so are havign an early night (well 10.30). Tomorrow we are going on a hunt for the Thai embassy to sort out getting our visas - we couldnt get them before we left the UK because they are only valid for 3 months from date of issue.
We will be in Singapore until Sunday 8th when our first tour from singapore to Bangkok begins... soemthing to look forward to! until then we will be exploring this city - so far i love it. It;s big and exciting whilst being clean and you can cross the road without thinking you are going to get squashed!
One thing id never get used to in tanzania is the driving - and you thought spaniards were bad!! nI have NEVER seen so many near misses in my whole life - people drive with smashed windowscreens, bumpers hang off often trailing on the floor, the cars dont have seatbelts, traffic lights are something very very rarely seen, people drive 3 abreast up the wrong side of the road and just sit there when its busy blocking up the whole thing and the roads are usually dirt tracks so you feel like you are in a washing machine!!
I really did love Tanzania, despite being dirty, driving being Horrendous and nothing ever getting done when it is supposed to (the motto for Africa is 'no hurry in africa' which is extrermely fitting!) and the Maasai are wondeful people. I will definately go back at some point when i have finished my travels of the rest of the world, Tanzania had a certain heart and vibe about the place, everyone is always singing and dancing and havign a good time - even those who dont have anything.
On the subject of the Maasai 6 of them are comming to run the London marathon in 2008 to raise money for a water hoel int heir willage!! At the moment they have to walk miles to a disgustingly dirty reservoir which always goes dry int he dry seasonlevaing them with no access to water - clean or otherwise. The Maasai are running the marathon free of charge and will be the first people ever to run without wearing numbers. All are terrified of the idea of flying - many have never even left their tiny village in the middle of knowhere before but they are all really excited about comming to London. AT the moment we have been given the task of getting the 20,000 sponsorship needed for the waterhole so if anyoen has any ideas of who may help, tom and i are going to be contacting Carphone Warehouse to see if they will - the BBC has already expressed an interest.
Anyway time for me to go and catch up on my much needed beauty sleep, will update on my travels around singapore as the week goes on. I will also be uploading all of my photos from Africa and will be sending them home once again.
I have also sent a parcel home containing some gifts my Maasai friends ghave me and stuff i bought which you will probably find really interesting - they were delivered to tom's house on Sunday so Mum will be able to show you them once they get to mine.\
Hope eveyone is well - missing you
lou
xxxxx