Thursday 3 December 2015

Looking Back on 2 Years in Uganda

2 months after our return home and the 100th and final blog post is a good time to reflect on the whole experience of volunteering in Uganda.

Overall I would say it has been a positive experience. I had always wanted to have a period living and work abroad and have been thinking of volunteering with VSO since the boys were small. This was the culmination of a long held ambition and mostly lived up to expectations.

In a lot of ways I was very lucky. I had the support of my husband, who also gave 2 years of his life to live in Uganda, and the rest of the family. The placement was well thought through by my placement organisation and I had a clear job plan and a lot of induction support. Many of my VSO volunteer colleagues were not so lucky and had to work hard in the early months to gain acceptance from their placement organisations and to design and then negotiate for their workplans.

We also had a UK income from letting the house so could afford to buy and run a car and pay for holidays in Uganda. This also covered 2 trips back home over the 2 years and has allowed for an easier transition back to life in the UK without the need to start work immediately. The VSO volunteering allowance is very generous by volunteer standards but it would have been very hard if we had both had to survive on it alone. I think it would be helpful to future volunteers if VSO were clearer about the realities of the in country allowance and the cost of living.

We were based in Kampala, which really helped with the adaptation. There were restaurants, coffee shops and supermarkets enabling us to have a lifestyle that was familiar and comfortable. We also had less health problems than some of the volunteers placed in rural areas.

The other VSO volunteers are amazing people. They welcomed us with open arms and quickly became like our extended family. We had wonderful evenings and days out with them and there was always a shoulder to cry on when it all became too much. We have made friends all over the world that I'm sure we will keep in touch with for a long time. We just need to find the time and resources to take up all the invitations we have to visit different places.

There were times when we had had enough and would happily have climbed on a plane home. Ugandan bureaucracy was a challenge and usually involved shifting lots of pieces of paper around. Buying and then selling the car was the most difficult and presented many bureaucratic challenges.

We missed our family and friends lots and also all sorts of things you just take for granted in the UK. Live theatre, train travel, Sunday lunches, the sea, drinking water straight from the tap and cheese! Living abroad for a few years makes you really appreciate the much maligned British institutions, the BBC and the NHS!

Did I make a difference? I think I did for the people I worked with directly, certainly they have said so. I brought new ideas and different ways of doing things. I focussed on encouraging the programme and finance people to work together and to appreciate the skills and experience each brought to the outcomes the organisation was working towards. I introduced grant reconciliations into the reporting template and taught both the finance and programme people how to prepare these and find any differences. But it is hard to say whether what I did made any direct difference to the ultimate beneficiaries, the people returning to their land, working to establish their rights and learning how to farm again after a generation living in IDP camps (internally displaced persons).

I gained a great deal of knowledge about development work in general and sustainable agriculture programmes in particular. I learnt how to adapt to live and work in a very different environment. I enjoyed running training courses for large and small groups and ran residential courses for the first time.

Yes I am glad I did it but I'm also pleased to be back home. We've slotted back into village life again as if we've never been away and have been busier over the past 2 months than we were in Uganda. I miss my colleagues and the other volunteers and I miss the warm evenings sat outside enjoying a meal together.

I've been trying to think which of the many many photos I have most sums up the Ugandan experience. I think it has to be the Nile ferry in the middle of the Murchison Falls National Park. Not always reliable but definitely an experience in the midst of beautiful countryside and surrounded by the birds and animals East Africa is best known for.



Thursday 26 November 2015

An A-Z of Uganda Part 5

I wanted to finish the five parts of the A-Z so here is the final part - V to Z

V
Victoria
Lake Victoria, the Victoria Nile and so many lakes named after Queen Victoria's family (Albert, George, Edward etc.) mean that you can't really escape from the Victorian explorers who 'discovered' Uganda. Lake Victoria is huge and is a key feature in the south east with towns such as Kampala, Entebbe and Jinja on the shoreline. The lake helps to regulate the climate in the Kampala area and the south east, providing more regular rainfall throughout the year and keeping the temperature more moderate than further north. 

Many people make a living from fishing on the lake. 


It is also a great place for bird watching



We saw this family of Grey Crested Crane on the shores of the lake on our final day in Uganda

There is an ongoing battle to stop the lake silting up and being turned into marshland by plants such as papyrus. This is great for the shoebill, which lives in these swampy areas, but not so good for the local population and especially people making a living from fishing. The lake is also notorious for bilharzia. 

W
War
The north of Uganda is still recovering from 20 years of war, which only finished in 2006. Many people have returned to their homes from IDP camps (Internally Displaced Persons) after many years away. Working out what land belongs to who and also training people in agricultural skills are key parts of the sustainable livelihoods programme I have been working with. 

Welcome
Ugandan people must be some of the most welcoming in the world. Everywhere we went we were made to feel genuinely welcome. Even returning to the flat after working away for a week our neighbours would all say 'Welcome back'. 

Wildlife
Uganda is a great place to visit to see wildlife. It is one of the best places in the world for bird watching and along with Rwanda and DRC home to the last remaining Mountain Gorillas. The parks are smaller than their better known neighbours in Kenya and Tanzania, but much less touristy making a safari drive a really special experience. 

X
eXtra
The extra special memory of Uganda is of the many friends we made and the people we met there.

Youth
Uganda has one of the youngest populations in the world. The average age is around 15 with well over 80% of the populations officially defined as 'youth' (i.e. under 35). The number of young people gives the country a vibrancy not found in countries with an older population. Around 400,000 young people join the job market every year but there are very few jobs for them. Most join the informal economy driving bodas or selling from wheelbarrows or just what they can carry. There are tremendous opportunities for Uganda from their young population but also risks if there is not enough work and the young people become disengaged with society. 

Z
Zebra

There are wild zebra in Lake Mburo and Kidepo national parks. We saw lots of zebra in Lake Mburo on our two visits. Interestingly we saw many more zebra in Uganda than horses, which are very rare. 

Tuesday 10 November 2015

Back Home

It's been a whirlwind 6 weeks since I last wrote a blog post!

First was the final packing and saying our goodbyes to our friends and colleagues in Uganda. We had a lovely final afternoon with a meal and cake beside Lake Victoria and some lovely presents and photos to remember our time in Uganda. Then it was time to hand over the keys to the flat and head to Entebbe airport for our flight home. It all felt very unreal as we sat over lunch in Cafe Kawa on our last day and we really couldn't believe we would be home within 24 hours.



But we were! After a comfortable flight on the last British Airways plane from Entebbe to Heathrow we landed on an autumnal Saturday morning. We cleared immigration and found our cases in record time and headed out to find a coffee before travelling to Oxford. What a lovely surprise to find Ali, Rhian and Kieran all in the arrivals hall with a large 'Welcome Home' sign!

Our weekend in Oxford included a review of their wedding photos, the first time we had seen them, a harvest service and a Sunday lunch. It was a great welcome home.

Since then we've been catching up with friends and family around York, endless unpacking, finding things and sorting out the house and some trips out to enjoy the autumn colours.We have really appreciated the beauty of the season after 2+ years of summer weather. The colours have been beautiful and the weather unseasonably mild.





Tuesday 29 September 2015

An A-Z of Uganda Part 4

So to carry on from where I finished on Saturday

Q
Queen Elizabeth 
As a former British colony Uganda still has Queen Elizabeth as a figurehead and is proud of her various visits to the country. The most recent was to the Commonwealth Heads of Government conference when the Munyonyo Commonwealth Resort Hotel was built.

One of the best known and most visited parks in Uganda is the Queen Elizabeth National Park in the South West. The park is fairly easy to get to from Kampala in a day and is in the right place to combine with a trip to see the gorillas in the far south west. We trekked chimpanzees in QENP in the beautiful Kyambura gorge. This is real rain forest and made a very interesting trip.




R
Religion
Religion is very important in Uganda. Over 80% of the population is Christian with roughly half of those Catholic. There is an Anglican church in the Church of Uganda but many people attend the various pentecostal or miracle churches. Church buildings are huge and are beautiful inside with excellent sound systems and packed congregations. We went to the baptism of a friend's baby at a Catholic Church. The service started at 11.30 and was the 4th service that morning. 10 babies were christened combined with a large number of children taking their first communion. Overall the service lasted for 3 hours.

Namirembe Cathedral in Kampala (Anglican)

S
Sustainable Livelihoods
The partner organisations I've been working with are part of the Sustainable Livelihoods programme. This divides roughly equally between those working on land rights and those working with farmers groups on sustainable agriculture. A real bonus of my time here has been the opportunity to learn more about the sustainable livelihoods programme work. Even seeing so many of the things we are used using processed as the original unprocessed crops has been really interesting. 

 Cotton

 Pineapple

Teak trees
Swahili
Swahili is not a common language in Uganda unlike other countries in East Africa such as Kenya or Tanzania where it is one of the main languages uniting different regional groups. However, as Uganda becomes more integrated in the East African Union, Swahili is now an official language and is being taught in schools. 

T
Tribes
In Uganda the tribe you belong to is an important part of your identity. While I have been living here the government has been rolling out a national identity card programme and a key question is which tribe you belong to. Tribes have their own cultural identity and customs. 

U
Uganda 
Uganda is a fascinating, beautiful country with an interesting history. The name 'Uganda' comes from a mispronunciation of name of the tribe living in the central area by the British. The tribe is the Buganda but when the country was named the 'B' was lost. 

Uganda is a landlocked country bordered by South Sudan, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. There is a natural border formed by the Nile through the middle of Uganda. The official borders were drawn up when Africa was split by the colonial powers and don't fit with natural borders. Hence the borders in many areas are porous as people move between their different family members in different countries. Even the local languages are the same across many border areas. 

Saturday 26 September 2015

An A-Z of Uganda Part 3

I haven't posted any more on the A-Z since May as there have been so many other things to write about. I do want to finish the series so here is the next instalment.

L
Lakes
Uganda has them in abundance and so many are beautiful, Lakes Victoria, Albert, Edward, George and Kyoga are the large lakes. We have also visited Lake Bunyoni, Lake Mutanda and Lake Mburo among other smaller ones.

 Lake Bunyoni

 Lake Mutanda

Lake Victoria at Entebbe

Lugandan
The language spoken by the Baganda people of the central area, which includes Kampala. Many of the volunteers based in Kampala have learnt the basics but with 9 different languages spoken in the areas I've worked I've not learnt much. The most useful words are:
Ssebo - Man or sir, used to address everyone
Nyabo - Women
Weebale - Thank you
Kali - OK

Land Rights
A key area of work within the Sustainable Livelihoods programme I've been working with. As pressure on land increases with the growing population then more land conflicts are breaking out. Much of the land is unregistered so establishing ownership involves working back through the family tree to see who gave which bits to who, when and why. 

M
Matatu
A main form of transport around Kampala and other towns and also between the towns. Generally referred to as Taxis these 14 seat minibuses travel when they are full on unwritten routes so you need some local knowledge to use them. The fares are cheap, 1,200 UGX to get from where we live into the city centre or just over 20p. 


Mango
Mangos are one of my favourite fruits in the UK so living in a country where they literally grow on trees is a real bonus. Every village has a mango tree, it's wide shade makes it ideal as a meeting tree where the whole village can meet to discuss issues in the shade. In May and June mangos are everywhere, with a second season in December and January. 


Mountains
Uganda is home to the Rwenzori mountains, the highest mountain range in Africa. The highest peak, Mount Stanley, at 5,110 metres is the 3rd highest mountain in Africa after Kilimanjaro and Mount Kenya. Rwenzori means 'Rain Maker' and it is not easy to get a good view of the mountains as they are usually covered in clouds and mist. Several companies offer treks in the area of the mountains, which sound lovely but very hard work. 


N
Nile
The Nile comes out from Lake Victoria at Jinja and crosses through the centre of Uganda creating a giant swampy lake area which is virtually impassible. The road north crosses the Nile at Karuma falls then the river goes over the Murchison Falls, giving the park it's name, into Lake Albert and out heading north again. The Nile cuts the West Nile region off from the rest of Uganda with only one bridge at Pacwach and some ferries further north. From Uganda the Nile goes on into South Sudan, Sudan and Egypt. 

Crossing the Nile over the Owen Falls Dam in Jinja

Nilotic Languages
The natural barrier of the Nile is also a cultural divide between the Bantu people in the south of Uganda and the Nilotic people in the north. The different groups have very different languages so a Lugandan speaker from Kampala wouldn't be able to understand a Luo speaker from Gulu. Traditional dances, songs and costume from the different areas are also very different. 

O
Opportunities
The southern area of Uganda is beginning to prosper, although the development is not spread evenly. There is a growing middle class in Kampala and poverty levels are reducing. However, the same is not true in the north of the country where life is still a struggle. 

P
Pearl of Africa
Winston Churchill called Uganda the Pearl of Africa after a visit here. Uganda is very proud of the title and you see it everywhere in hotel and restaurant names, book titles and public buildings. As well as the beautiful scenery Uganda has very welcoming, friendly people. 

Population Growth
The average age in Uganda is around 15 and the population growth is around 4% per annum with families generally having 5 or 6 children. A young population gives great opportunities but only if the youth are engaged and employable. The focus of several VSO projects in the north of the country has been on training young people in vocational skills. 

Friday 25 September 2015

The 7 Hills Revolving Restaurant

Yesterday was a public holiday in Uganda so we decided to have one final trip into Kampala city centre in search of souvenirs and a nice lunch. The car has been sold so we are back to travelling on a matatu. We walked around the hill into Bukesa so that we could get a ride to the Jinja Road and save the long walk across the city. It was probably just as well as with the holiday we didn't see many and it was good to board at the starting point for the journey.

Riding on a matatu is always interesting. There are 14 official seats, including 3 that fold down into the corridor. However, children, goats, chickens and the conductor don't count. On top of that the conductor will often try to squeeze an extra person in so you usually travel with 4 people squeezed into each 3 seat row. Not so great for Glen who finds a matatu pretty small anyway!

Once we were in the city we headed to Banana Boat in the Garden City Mall to buy our souvenirs. Next door is the Golf Course Hotel which has a revolving restaurant on the 12th floor. Bizarrely it is closed on Sunday but it was open yesterday despite the public holiday and we settled ourselves in to enjoy our lunch and the 360 degree view of the city.





The section of the floor with the dining tables on revolves slowly, completing a full revolution in around an hour and 15 minutes. The bar and serving areas doesn't move so it must be odd for the waitress when the food appears to have to go and find her customers who have moved since she took their orders!

A bonus was the best steak we've had in Uganda! I wasn't allowed to eat it until Glen had taken the picture!


Wednesday 23 September 2015

Packing Up

With just 10 days before our flight home we're starting the process of packing our bags, clearing the flat and saying our goodbyes. We took 2 very full cases back in June but there still seems to be plenty to fit in now. Between us we have 3 cases of 23kg each plus a generous hand luggage allowance so Saturday was spent packing and repacking to get everything into the bags.

The packing process left us with a large pile of things to give away in the middle of the living room. Luckily we met up with most of the Kampala based volunteers for lunch on Sunday at Caffe Roma and they helped us out by giving most things a good home. The flat is now starting to look quite empty, especially as we've managed to sell most of the things we had for sale.

Sitting on the shady patio at Caffe Roma over a leisurely Sunday lunch is one of our favourite pastimes here so quite appropriate to spend our penultimate Sunday there with lots of friends.


Tuesday 22 September 2015

Experience Sharing in Ethiopia and Kenya

In the last few weeks of my placement I was asked to travel to the offices of my placement organisation in Addis Ababa and Nairobi to share the experiences gained from the work I've been doing in Uganda. I've developed a good understanding of the work with the partner organisations and lots of training resources and templates that I am only too happy to share. Plus of course it was a wonderful opportunity to travel to two very different African countries and meet the staff teams there. 

I set off from Kampala to Entebbe on Sunday afternoon on my week long round trip. I was to spend 2 full days in each office with a travel day on the Wednesday in the middle. I must confess to being rather nervous with 3 flights and 2 new countries ahead of me. But I needn't have worried everything ran very smoothly with the airport pick up in place each time and hotel accommodation all sorted out. 

First stop was Addis Ababa arriving early evening on Sunday. The hotel shuttle met me in the arrivals hall and we drove right across the city as the office and hotel were on the opposite side from the airport. It was a brilliant introduction to Addis. The hotel was very nice with a comfortable room that reminded me of a travel lodge. Another bonus of Addis is that it is one of the highest capital cities in the world at 2,350 metres, so no mosquitoes, no insect repellent and no need to sleep under a mosquito net. After a good nights sleep and a good breakfast I was ready to meet the team. 

The office was only a short walk from the hotel but the area is under construction so I had to pick my way over the stones in much the same way as in Kampala. Traffic is not quite as crazy as Kampala as there are good wide roads and people are a little more patient. Everywhere you look there are blue taxis, both the larger minibus taxis and small saloon car taxis. 

View from the hotel window

The office team were very welcoming and we had two successful days sharing experiences and discussing the issues arising with the partners in the two offices. Several were similar but there were also different challenges. In Ethiopia the distances are huge compared with Uganda meaning that visits require a flight to the North. But in the south there are no flights so some partners are 2 travelling days away! 

On the first evening we went to Yod Abyssinia, which is a cultural centre with traditional food, music and dancing. Then on the second evening we went for dinner at the Taitu Hotel. The Taitu hotel is named after the empress Taitu, who established the first guesthouse in Addis in the 1890s. 



I've enjoyed discovering Ethiopian food at Fasika restaurant in Kampala but it was even better to be able to try the authentic version. I have to say I'm hooked and I was very disappointed to discover that there are so few Ethiopian restaurants in the UK and that most of them are in London. The food arrives on a large platter which is covered by an injera, a kind of savoury slightly sour pancake. The meat and sauces are served onto the injera and there are more injera around the edge of the platter. To eat you tear off a small portion of injera from in front of you and scoop up some meat and sauce in it. It makes a somewhat messy but very sociable meal. I let my colleagues order the selection of food as much of it is very spicy but we had two wonderful meals. 

On Wednesday morning I had some time before my afternoon flight so the office allowed me to use the vehicle and driver and we went to the Entoto mountain. This is where the first palace in the Addis area was built by the emperor Menelik II. The story goes that his wife, the empress Taitu, found the palace too cold and damp at 3000 metres so moved down into the valley, where the emperor eventually had to follow her, founding the modern day city of Addis Ababa. 


The view from the mountain over the city of Addis Ababa was quite spectacular.


Unfortunately my time in Addis was over far too soon and I had to return to the airport to fly onto Nairobi. 

I had another very successful and interesting visit to the Kenya office before flying back to Entebbe at lunchtime on Saturday. 

Overall a wonderful opportunity, which I hope the country teams found as interesting and as useful as I did. But I would definitely like to return to explore Ethiopia properly. 

Thursday 17 September 2015

Bye Bye Rowena

Last week we were very sad to have to say goodbye to our trusty RAV4, which has taken us around Uganda on so many adventures.



Glen has put a lot of time and effort into keeping her maintained and fixing the numerous things that were wrong when we bought her. However, any hope of increasing the value has been lost in the depreciation of the Uganda Shilling over the past few months. Most importantly she has gone to a good home with another VSO volunteer in the north. No doubt she will have many more adventures to come.

We started the transfer process early and with good reason. Sorting out paperwork here can be tricky and selling the car has proved that to be true. But after 10 days we think we're nearly there and we still have just over 2 weeks to finalise everything.

Looking back we made the right decision to buy a car for the 2 years we've been in Uganda. It has dramatically improved our ability to travel both in and outside Kampala. We've been able to go out around Kampala in the evenings and at weekends without having to worry about how we're going to get back late at night. We've also had some wonderful holidays travelling the length and breadth of Uganda.


Saturday 5 September 2015

A Night Game Drive

With a sale hopefully agreed for our RAV4, we decided to have a final weekend away to Lake Mburo National Park. We went there last September to use our park passes for the first time so it seems fitting to have travelled there to use our park passes for the last time.

Lake Mburo Park is one of only 2 places in Uganda to see Zebra, the other one is Kidepo right up in the North Eastern corner.



It's a beautiful park on a smaller scale than Queen Elizabeth or Murchison Falls. We left early on Saturday morning to get to the park for lunch so we had a full 24 hours there. It was incredibly dry as there hasn't been any rain for 3 months! Rain was expected and hoped for at any time and while we were there it did feel like it would rain and there were a few drops.

After lunch we drove into the park with the aim of finding our way to the Kazuma Lookout viewpoint. This is on the south side of the park and gives a wonderful view over the plains stretching towards Tanzania and the 5 lakes along the southern edge of the park.

But en route we saw lots of zebra, impala, warthogs and a few buffalo.


A particularly grumpy impala!

We found the road to the lookout and headed up. And it was up, nearly a 1:2 we thought. Our little RAV struggled a bit on the stony surface but made it safely to the top. We were rewarded with a fabulous panorama over the plains and the lakes. 



The road to the viewpoint - before the steep bit!

We stayed in Rwakobo Rock again and had a lovely banda with a fantastic view across the park. After an early dinner we headed off on the highlight of our trip, a night-time game drive in the park. The Lake Mburo park is one of the few where you can take a night game drive. We decided not to drive ourselves but hired a land rover with a pop up roof and driver from Rwakobo Rock. We also had a UWA guide and a very large powerful spotlight.

We were barely into the park before we saw a spotted hyena on the road ahead. During our 2.5 hour drive we covered most of the park and saw several animals you only see at night, bush-babies with their big eyes glowing in the spotlight, a white tailed mongoose and a marsh mongoose, but sadly not a leopard. It was a beautiful clear night with a full moon so we could see quite clearly. There were many more buffalo around at night and at one point we had to follow a herd as it made its way slowly along the road. All in all a fabulous experience we'll remember for a long time.

Sunday morning was just a lovely quiet lazy morning followed by a good lunch and the drive back to Kampala.


Glen in the restaurant at Rwakobo Rock with the lovely views out over the park.

Tuesday 1 September 2015

'I need to go to Acacia Mall!'

It's 5.45 on a Friday evening and I'm having dinner with a volunteer who is about to leave Uganda. The restaurant we've chosen is on the other side of Kampala in the new Acacia Mall and traffic on a Friday night is always very heavy. Glen is not joining me this time so the best means of transport is a boda. The advantage of a motorbike is that they can weave through the traffic to get you there much more quickly than in a car.

I don't use bodas very often at the moment as we have the car so there is no need. But luckily my placement organisation has some boda drivers that they use for work journeys so at least I have a couple of contacts I know are safe and reliable. After a couple of calls Sula arrives more or less at the agreed time. I climb on hanging onto the bag with my wrap in for later in the evening.

The journey across town to Acacia Mall is one of the longest I've taken on a boda. But it's a warm evening and pleasant to be outside rather than inside a car. We head around the back way through the industrial area, avoiding the worst of the pot holes, the cars that just pull out and the other bodas. The many speed bumps are always a little unsettling but unavoidable.

Soon we're into the traffic as we approach the double railway crossing and the lights that control the Jinja Road junction. Sure enough there is plenty of Friday night traffic.


There is always plenty of interest when travelling around Kampala in watching the antics of the drivers. No one has any patience so they overtake or undertake to get to the front of the queue. Then the traffic trying to get out of the junction is 4 or 5 vehicles wide so nothing can turn in. All of the vehicles then push their way across the left hand lane to join the queue going right so nothing can move at all. If that happens at several junctions then the whole thing comes to a complete standstill as no one can go anywhere! The traffic police try to control the traffic at key junctions at busy times but it's a thankless task.

Bodas are fairly immune to all of this as they can just go around. We've seen bodas going the wrong way up a road or even the wrong way around a roundabout! Sula feels safer than most so we move up around the queue but without taking any risks. Soon we are stuck waiting for the lights to change so that we can move.


But it's not long before we're out of the traffic turning off the Jinja road to use a back way to get to the Mall.

I'm very pleased to arrive safely and get off the boda. I never feel very comfortable on a boda so various muscles ache from holding on tight! But we still have the car so Glen is travelling across town to meet me after dinner so at least there is no return boda ride at the end of the evening.

We have a lovely meal and a good chat. We arrived on the same flight and now I'm the last one to leave, with just a month to go.

Saturday 22 August 2015

A Final Visit to Murchison Falls

One of our favourite places to visit in Uganda over the past 2 years has been the Murchison Falls National Park (MFNP) Since we bought the annual pass for the parks last September we have been able to get into all of the parks as often as we like. Overall we've visited the MFNP 5 times, with what will almost certainly be our final visit last weekend.

MFNP has everything. A spectacular waterfall, the river Nile, interesting wildlife, both in the park and by the river, and a favourite place to stay at the Red Chilli camp.

The Murchison Falls waterfall is very narrow and therefore very fast flowing with the Nile squeezing through a narrow gorge 7m wide and plummeting down a 43m drop. The water level was very high when we visited this time making it even more spectacular.




The river Nile cuts through the Park with the north bank the place to see the animals and the south bank largely forested. The way across the river is the slightly dodgy Paraa Ferry. However, all was well in both directions and we arrived safely across the river. We rewarded ourselves with a chicken and pineapple salad by the pool at the smart Paraa Lodge on the north bank.


As usual we found plenty of animals to watch and photograph in the savannah area on the northern bank of the Nile. We have never been disappointed with the wildlife viewing in the Murchison Falls Park.


View of Lake Albert 


At the edge of the park we found a large single elephant blocking the road. We just had to bide our time until he decided to wander off!


On the way back through the park we stopped for the night at the Red Chilli camp on the south bank. We always love sitting in their banda over dinner watching the sun set over the Nile and lights coming on in the Paraa Lodge just on the other side of the river.

In the morning we watched some cheeky baboons climbing up on the safari tents!