July 14th - July 18th: We were up bright, early, and excited for our 8:30 am departure! We had each packed a backpack full of the essentials necessary for roughing it in the Masai Mara and walked out in the Mombasa morning heat to find the private bus we had arranged for our journey. There were near 30 of us and this bus was classic for the adventure! It was a lovely cream color, (the shade that bright white things turn when days of direct sunshine leave it discolored), there was no air conditioning, the seats were as comfy as cement, and (regardless) we were gung-ho for the supposed 14 hour trek!
Only a supposed 8 hours were to be taken on this bus (turned out to be 9.5 due to traffic) and I actually really enjoyed it! It was neat to see the african countryside and see the transition from Mombasa (the second largest city) to Nairobi (the capitol). I had figured Mombasa was a fair representation of all of Kenya but as we shifted away from the humidity of the coast we also shifted to a cleaner overall atmosphere. I THOROUGHLY appreciated this detail. Mombasa is really great and you really get to experience a feel for the village life that many Kenyans come from, but with that comes the smells, the filth, the flys, the stray animals, etc. I've never really been one to make a scene at the smell of manure or other unpleasant aromas. But I've never experienced the smell of burning all contents of trash. The way it lingers in the Mombasa humidity is enough to provoke my gag reflex at times. I think it's worse for me because you can't differentiate what exactly you are smelling. Its quite the pooparie, if you ask me!
But Nairobi turned out to have a much cleaner appearance. When I wasn't enjoying the african scenery along the way, I had my nose in a novel I picked up from the Nakumatt -which made those 9.5 hrs fly by!
We arrived in Nairobi around dusk so we just had time for a quick dinner (at an excellent chinese restaurant, YUM!) and checked into our hotel. Whitney and I shared a room in a really clean and well kept hotel (with hot showers) for only ~$10 each! What a steal! We had hoped to hit the hay early but ended up chatting in the dark, from one mosquito net to the other!
We awoke to find the most INTENSE safari vehicles waiting to take us the last 6 hr leg of our journey. We each grabbed a seat and were OFF! The last three hours were on unkept dirt roads, with bumps so big that our vehicle was practically horizontal on its side at times. We'd bounce around in our seats, hitting our heads on the roof, smacking into each other. It was quite a bonding experience! ;) And I've never been so happy that I'm not prone to car/motion sickness.
We arrived at our Masai Mara (name of the park) camp/house site. It was actually quite luxurious, a cute little cabin housing Halley, Whitney and myself! We threw our bags down and jumped back into the safari vehicles for our very first evening safari!
Holy Bajeezes, I say this with complete enthusiasm: add African Safari to your bucket list. It is amazing. Literally, the next two days were spent with lions. We saw an unprecedentedly absurd number of lions, they'd weave in front of us (brushing up against our safari van once!) We saw several prides of lions every day, males, females and little pups. We saw them up and roaming (once trying to hunt!), laying in the sun, and playing around with each other.
Every safari driver has a radio and if one van finds a high priority animal within minutes the poor little creatures are flooded with vans and camera flashes! It looks pathetic at times, silly little homo sapiens at the heels of a cheetah, lion, elephant, zebra, etc and they barely give you a glance in return! They don't seem to be affected by the presence of idiots! ;)
The nights got QUITE cold, I honestly wore every article of clothing I brought when I crawled in bed for the night -which I think added to the overall experience!
On Saturday after our day safari we stopped for a tour of the Masai tribe life. Let me share with you some facts about their way of life:
1. They drink cow blood. (Which takes the cake as the most off-putting). I respectfully asked if the cows were spared in the process. No, they assured me, they have a technological device to abstract the delicious fluid without harming the cows.
2. They live in houses that the women make from cow dung. This textile, I learned, is a great insulator for those cold nights in the Masai Mara. -It also attracts many many flys.
3. The baby cows live in the house with them. As a matter of fact, the calfs territory in the house is over 1/2 of the entire square footage! The need to share residence with these animals so the lions don't take them as bait in the middle of the night.
4. They gage their ears if they don't finish school.
5. They have open fires inside their houses -HEAVY fumes!
6. Boys are circumcised at age 13 in front of the whole tribe (200 people) in their manhood ceremony. This ceremony includes a lion wrestling (and yes, people often die in this battle...I still didn't understand exactly how they lure the lion into their village or why they would want to encourage such things but nonetheless you need to be stronger than the lion in order to become a man.
7. At age 15 each of these new 'men' need to prove this to their tribal community so they are sent into the wilderness for 5 WHOLE YEARS!
8. Despite this primitive living, I saw numerous cell phones in the hands of these people. Not sure exactly how that works.
9. They have arranged marriages
10. The men can have up to seven wives.
11. They buy their wives with cows (the going rate is 10 cows per bride and if you can't afford it/don't have that many cows, there's a simple solution: you can trade your sister for your wife! At which point your lucky sis gets to transfer to the village from which the wife comes)
11. They really know how to sucker you into a pity-purchase. They end the tour with a convenient stop at their market where they sell authentic merchandise, 'just for you!' ...somehow I walked away with a necklace containing an elegant tooth pendent? Not sure the logic on that one...
Despite all these extreme and absurd differences in culture, you still find yourself intrigued and impressed with their lifestyles. It is such a community lifestyle, its admirable. And of course you wonder, "what if I was born a Masai?" I would drink cow blood. I would do their dances, wear their vibrant fabric, be married by the time I was fifteen to someone not my choosing. And that would be normal.
I'm not sure how to treat the feeling that I'm glad I was born into the culture I was. It makes me feel guilty somehow. -As if it's my fault that they live in dirty, poverty. But actually I think the guilt comes from the fact that I pity them. Internally, I mock their customs, their ways, their rituals, their way of life. But they are happy, contented -possibly even moreso than I! And yet I pity them. I realize that my way of thinking is twisted, tangled a bit. 'Normal' is such a relative term and it hinges on your culture. The whole nature vs. nurture debate...
I wonder what kind of world it would be if we stepped away from the 'norms' of our specific culture and focused ENTIRELY on what is important? I think both Americans and Masai could grow from this mindset.
Anywho, we spent the next morning on safari and made the bumpy trek back to Nairobi. We spent the next night in the hotel and took the next bus back for Mombasa. (I have 50 pages left of my 656 page book!)
Safari was amazing, but it felt good to be back 'home!' Whitney and I made the realization that we had only 9 days left to be spent in the hospitals, so we went to bed early in hopes of spending a long day at the hospital the next day!