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- From: kaye@uniwa.uwa.edu.au (Kaye Stott)
- Newsgroups: rec.travel
- Subject: RE: Info on WEST Africa Needed
- Message-ID: <1k5mhtINNs4k@uniwa.uwa.edu.au>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 10:01:33 GMT
- Organization: The University of Western Australia
- Lines: 67
- NNTP-Posting-Host: uniwa.uwa.edu.au
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-
- In article <5234@equinox.unr.edu> alan@.wrc.unr.edu wrote:
- :
- : I'll be spending some time in the West African country of Ghana
- : this year as part of a water development project we're getting
- : involved in.
- :
- : My primary questions deal with travel to surrounding/"nearby" west
- : African countries (Togo;Ivory;Burkina;Cameroon;Senegal;Nigeria;Sierra
- : Leone, etc.). This would include everything from recommended spots
- : for the adventurous traveller (although I'd rather not have to jump
- : through too many hoops in obtaining entry visas for a particular
- : country), great beaches or other physically appealing landforms,
- : and good sources for purchasing native arts, especially masks, batik,
- : and woven goods.
- :
-
- Lucky you - they are great countries to travel in. I particularly liked
- Ghana, and could have spent more time there.
-
- I've travelled in Mali, Burkina Faso, Togo, Ivory Coast, Senegal and the
- Gambia. Best places for me were Mali and Ghana; the people are great, and
- there are interesting towns to visit. In Ghana you should go along the coast,
- looking in a little places like Apam, and stop at the towns with old
- slaving forts. The history is graphically layed out in many of the
- displays they have at the old forts, now museums. The beaches look good,
- but the coast is treacherous, and the sand and surrounds very dirty and
- unsanitory (no, I'm not fussy, but Africa has some of the shittiest beaches
- I've ever picked my way along!).
-
- If you do want a reasonable beach, go to Togo and camp at Robinson Plage.
- It has a fairly protected beach (offshore sand bar) and is clean. Alternatively,
- there are places in the Ivory Coast. We stayed at Grand Lahou (sp?), a day
- trip out of Abidjan by bush taxi, at a great hotel out on one of the
- islands dotted along the waterway to the west of the capital - I can
- recommend it happily - great food! It is run by an ex-pat French family
- and is mentioned in the Lonely Planet book.
-
- Mali is one place you should go to, and visit the Dogon villages. You can
- trek alone, but you would do much better to get a local guide and spend
- about a week there if you can spare the time. I can also recommend the
- boat trip from Gao to Mopti; it takes four days, and is very relaxed and
- sociable. The mosque at Djenne is also worth visiting, but try to go there
- on a market day (Monday, if I remember correctly).
-
- Further afield, the Casamance in Senegal is a good place to visit. There
- is a series of 'campements' offering accomodation, well worth staying at,
- and the area is very lush and green. The beaches there attract many
- package holiday visitors from Europe, but we spoilt Australians were very
- unimpressed. However, in the northern Casamance, we did enjoy staying at
- fishing villages and strolling along miles of deserted beaches, with only
- the occassional wreck for company.
-
- You are in the best place for handicraft as far as I am concerned. Ghana
- had some fantastic carvings, drums, mask, etc. and the Government-sponsored
- market in Accra was as good a place to start looking as anywhere. We did see
- great carving in Senegal, but it all came from else-where, particularly
- from Ghana. We were also impressed by handicrafts in Mali, particularly
- Dogon carving. I had trouble finding fabric - most fabric in the market turned
- out to be imported from Holland! I finally bought some Ivory Coast fabric;
- not too bad, but not spectacular.
-
- You should also find out about the stools in Ghana - they play a central
- role in the tribal culture of people in the main part of the country.
-
- Do have fun.
- Kaye
-