Thursday, May 19, 2011

Actually sailing on the Niger












March 10, 2010

We woke to Westerlies, as Jonathan referred to them in his dubious sailor vernacular. Wind blowing from the west. After weeks of wind that came from the northeast, directly into our bow, we were now getting a tail wind, meaning sailing would be possible. I assumed that they would turn around any minute, but just in case they didn’t, we packed the boat and got out on the river as quickly as possible.



The wind filled our sails, and we were moving fast. It took a while for us to get the hang of moving the right direction, though, as we zigged and zagged, occasionally getting stuck on sandbars. After an hour, or so, we had the hang of it, and we were cruising. We were all surprised that the wind had held out in our favor as long as it did. I sat in the front, controlling the jib, while Jonathan controlled the main sail and Blai performed rudder duties in the back.


We had one small problem, though. Blai was worried about Fura, who was still producing large amounts of milk, but only had one puppy to give it to. She was leaking milk everywhere, and it must have been painful for her to have so much of it still in her. Blai was sure that she needed to eat parsley, which he said would stop her from producing milk. So we stopped in a small village to inspect their gardens for parsley. We were able to find it in Segou, but I doubted it would be in these villages, as it is not normally used in the local cooking. He walked around all the gardens in the village, asking everybody for “perejil”, the Spanish word for parsley. We didn’t know the French word for it, let alone the Bambara word. Of course, nobody had any idea what we were doing there, and Blai couldn’t see any herb that looked like parsley. So we got back in the boat and started sailing again.


Fura, you're so high maintenance.


Gardens were all along the river, so Blai soon decided to get out of the boat and just walk through all the gardens looking for parsley. He was almost in a panic over this.



Jonathan and I had to manage the sailing with a two-man crew. I tied off the front sail, and just controlled the main sail, while he continued to steer us. We managed to hug the bank tightly in the light winds, following right along with Blai for at least thirty minutes. The wind died for a few minutes and we lost him. When it picked up again, we never caught up, or perhaps we passed him, as we were making good speed.



We weren’t sure what exactly to do, until we saw a concrete building on the side of the river. I noticed the building had beer posters on it. This was no coincidence. “Jonathan, it’s a bar! Let’s stop!”


We figured word would spread about where we were and Blai would eventually make his way to the random bar in the middle of nowhere. Sure enough, he showed up within minutes of our arrival. We went into the dingy bar, curious what we would find.


This is probably one of the best bar discoveries of my life. Bars are fairly rare in Mali, so to find one in the middle of nowhere, right on the side of the river, on the day that you happen to be sailing instead of paddling, was a miracle. The reason it was here was because we were on a military base. This meant that the beers were sold to soldiers (and us) at cost. We sat around and drank a few of the cheapest beers in Mali. The décor was also memorable, leaving little to the imagination of what else was sold here at night. Shoddy paintings of scantily clad women, in suggestive positions, with sexy phrases coming out of the talk bubbles next to their mouths. There were also a few paintings of burley men in camouflage mingling with the wall women.


We sailed a couple more hours before sunset, making an estimated 17 km in the day without paddling. Blai still had no parsley, and he was getting panicked. As we set up our camp, we could hear gunfire come from the military base, that we may or may not have still been on. If it was not for the occasional cattle herder or fisherman wandering along the trails near our camp, I would have been worried that we were vulnerable.



That night we had our first taste of rain. A storm rolled in, wind rattled our tents all night and thunder cracked all around us. Jonathan, who had gone to sleep early, and had not put his rain fly on, was impossible to wake up when the rains came. So I put his clothes and things under my tent’s rain fly, but he would be left in the elements due to his stubborn sleeping.


Our good fortune, predictably, ran out, and our westerly wind was nowhere to be found. I felt thankful enough, though, that we at least didn’t have headwinds. We were thinking of arriving in Markala that day to meet Jonathan’s friend Jordan. We still weren’t sure if he would be there, but he had sent a text that he was on the way.


Meanwhile, Blai was on the parsley hunt. He tried all morning to find a path from our campsite to the highway. He was going to hitch back to Segou to get the parsley. Jonathan and I had long thought that this whole parsley hunt was a little ridiculous, but there wasn’t much we could do. Blai never found a way out, as we were trapped by swamp on all sides. So we would try our best to get to Markala that day, so he could get back to Segou.


We could see on the map that Markala had a bridge crossing the river (the only one outside of Bamako) and we had heard that it was actually dammed at that point. This would explain the complete lack of current that had been getting worse since Segou. In the early afternoon the bridge was within sight. So we stopped in a Banankoro, a small village, for a break and lunch.


Because I did not take notes on this part of the journey, I have forgotten the name of the young man who helped us around in this village, which I regret because I he was very kind. After he showed us around the village, we invited him to eat lunch with us. There were probably a dozen kids and a few adolescents and adults crowded around our mat to watch. I felt bad that we couldn’t offer lunch to any of them, but what could we do?


Our friend who showed us around the village.


Village Mosque.


The kids chased Blai into the river as he took a swim.


Our friend was very fond of Blai.


Eating lunch with an audience.


The last few km before arriving in Markala were miserable. Because of the dam, there was no current and the river bottom was made of deep mud, making it nearly impossible to pole our way along.

We got a hold of Jonathan’s friend Jordan, who had just arrived in Markala about an hour before. Perfect timing. When he saw us approaching, he dove into the river and swam out to our boat. I could tell that he would be a perfect addition to the crew. He was a hearty farm boy who looked like Brett Favre. He seemed enthusiastic about everything and always spoke in superlatives. Every mango he had was the best mango he had ever had in his life, and every jump into the river was the best swim he had ever had in his life.


He got in the boat with his incredibly small pack, and we paddled to the center of town, right next to the dam. They all headed to town looking for the proper materials for a welcoming party/goodbye party for Jordan/me.


While I hung out by the boat, I found the people in Markala to be extremely friendly and hospitable (no surprise, really). The guys that worked next to the dam, and seemed to have some control over the land we were parked on, said we were welcome to camp there for the night. One of the men even gave me a piece of old rope, which we could never have enough of.


Jonathan, Blai and Jordan returned an hour later, with a chicken, some mangoes, a bottle of wine each, and few bottles of beer. We did our normal chicken grilling routine, while getting deep into our wine bottles. Jordan couldn’t stop talking about how impressive our trip was. He is a seasoned traveler who has been on some serious adventures, and he said that what we had done with the boat trip, the donkeys, the hitchhiking, amounted to one of the most amazing trips he had ever heard of. I had almost forgotten that what we were doing was anything that unique. I mean, I knew it was, but we were simply trying to do what we thought would be the most fun. That’s it. It was a simple formula that led us into situations weren’t the norm for travelers. He thought the boat trip was especially perfect, especially how the idea of it could be replicated in so many other rivers in the world.


It was good to hear his praise, but it was also hard. I would be leaving the next day, and the last thing I needed was someone coming in to tell me what I was about to miss out on. There was something about his presence and the way he talked that made me really feel like I would be missing out on something epically great. Worse, he took up my cause. He couldn’t believe I was leaving all of a sudden, for what seemed like such trivial reasons. He had quickly figured me out, and saw how conflicted I looked about leaving, even though I held a firm statement about leaving the next morning. “No Joey, you’re meant to be on the river, I can just tell. It’s in you,” he would tell me as we guzzled our wine. This was so hard to hear, because I knew it was true. I had felt so free on the river. It was only the times in between that made me feel like leaving. The truth was, his presence had already changed the social dynamic of our group, and I somehow felt a lot better with him there. That three’s a crowd thing is always true, but I didn’t expect adding another character to our story would have evened things out.


That night I also had heart to heart discussions with both Jonathan and Blai about my departure. Jonathan and I were very emotional, and we both had serious spells of beer tears. I went to bed early feeling stressed and conflicted. I considered vanishing in the night, to avoid an even more difficult goodbye the next day and further pleas for me to stay, but fell asleep before I could leave.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Leaving Segou


A few days before our departure from Segou, I broke the news to Blai and Jonathan that I would be leaving the boat trip. This had been an incredibly difficult decision for me to make, and there were many factors. I told them that I was running low on money (not that low), and that I was considering going to Cote d’Ivoire or Liberia to report on the conflict. I didn’t really know what I would do next, but I felt that my days in West Africa were numbered, and I felt I needed to do something different, and travel alone for a bit. Additionally, I was weeks away from hearing if I had received a Fulbright grant, which would send me to Kenya in August for a year. If I received the grant, I would need to get back to Seattle as quickly as possible to prepare. Additonally, my student loans would be starting again in May and that would put an abrupt end to my travel funds. I had had many plans for this trip, and had not accomplished many, although the most pipe dreamy ones of donkey travel, hitchhiking, train-hopping and buying a boat on the Niger had somehow happened. I had not visited Harley as promised, or my friend Awine in Ghana.

They were shocked and told me I was making a bad decision. They both offered to loan me large sums of money to continue the trip. I was touched with their generosity, but the fact was that I had already made my decision and wouldn’t be changing my mind. They felt snubbed and I didn’t blame them for this. I also would have felt like I was leaving them high and dry if it wasn’t for the fact that one of Jonathan’s old travel buddies was high-tailing it in our direction from Morocco to join the trip. Paddling the boat trip with only two people would be nearly impossible and I would not have put them in that situation. I told them that I would wait until Jonathan’s friend had arrived, even if that meant that I would go with them to Markala, a town 35 km from Segou, the last town that is easily accessible from a main road before Mopti, some 300 km away.

Our last few days in Segou were filled with constant guilt trips and interventions trying to get me back on board with the boat. I stayed firm and managed to be strong emotionally. The truth was that our social dynamic had been wearing on me more and more every day, and I felt desperate for a new situation. For me, traveling alone is very important and I had only had very brief moments of this in the past five months. Sure, traveling with other people is always more fun, but sometimes you miss a lot because you are too preoccupied with those around you to appreciate the great places you are in. I wanted to throw myself back into the vulnerable, exciting and sometimes lonely act of solo travel.

It was a weird time for me and even though I knew I would be leaving the boat trip in Markala, I couldn’t picture myself being alone, and I still didn’t have a real plan.

So things moved forward, and by March 8, we were finally ready to get back on the river. Blai was in the process of giving away the last of his puppies. He had given two to the chief, who he trusted to take care of them (and not eat them, as he was a good Muslim). We went to Kadi’s house one last time, and gave a puppy to her family. She was not there, though, as she was visiting family in Bamako. Blai gave another one to Husseini, our friend and fisherman who lived nearby.

Chief picks out his puppies.

Husseini and his new puppy.

Everybody in town wanted one of Fura’s puppies. The Lebanese woman that ran the shop where we bought our wine was incessantly asking me about the puppies. Blai had promised one to her during our first day in Segou, but he had since boycotted her due to the way she treats her own dogs and the single local employee of the shop (hint: she treated them similarly). She had repeatedly proved herself to be one of the least likeable people in Segou, and there was no way Blai would give her anything.

Blai wanted to make sure he gave them to people that would treat them well, and wouldn’t eat them. It was hard to find trustworthy candidates and Blai was careful about who he would give them to. In fact, by the time we left, we still had one puppy that he was unable to give away.

We went to visit Katia, next door at the hotel. She had been so sweet to us during our stay in Segou, and it was sad to leave her. She worked so hard to run this hotel, and it was always obvious that Jacques, the owner, did not treat her well and worked her hard. We bought her a Coke and insisted that she come and hang out with us as we had our last beer in Segou. She told us that she hadn’t had a day off in a long time, and that Jacques wasn’t even around today to help. It was International Women’s Day and she was doing all the work while Jacques was nowhere to be found.

Hanging out with Katia.

We spent most of the day cleaning out the house and packing the boat. A bunch of the local kids came to help us carry loads down to the boat.

Blai packs up his room.

Jonathan packs up his room.

The rewards we gave them in the end were modest and it gave me mixed feelings. The kids had been watching keenly to see what we were throwing away. We had kept our trash boxes inside to quell the grabiness. When we were finished, we brought the boxes out, and they were torn apart by the small mob of kids. The empty glass or plastic bottle were popular and could be easily sold for a few pennies. I don’t know what they would do with most of the things we had left behind, but their resourcefulness would leave nothing wasted. It felt awkward that they had stuck around to help us in exchange for our garbage. When it was all claimed they then turned to the house, that Chief had already locked. There was something left. I saw Chief open the door a crack to allow one kid to run in and grab the small piece of a dried out baguette that was left behind. The kids tore it apart, dividing it evenly so each kid got a small bite. Blai gave them his soccer ball that he had been traveling with for a long time. He did his best to explain that it would need to be shared among the group, and based on their performance with the bread, I felt that they would do ok with this.

One last water run.

The kids divvy up the bread and trash.

At sunset, we were finally ready to go. We had just enough daylight to get halfway across the river, and set up camp on an island. We felt free again. I knew I would need to truly savor these last few days of river life.

The next day we had to paddle to Segou to provision. The seven km paddle to town and shopping took most of our day. We took turns watching the boat as we individually hustled around town to get a million errands done. Again, we escaped back to the river just before sunset.

It was exciting as we passed the port area of Segou where large crowds were gathered (for working purposes, not to see us off). We turned the little boom box up loud and made a big scene as the people paused in their work to wave to us. After five weeks, we were finally leaving Segou.

Puppie Portraits!!!!!!!

Just let me get this out of my system so I never have to do it again. A couple weeks after Blai's puppies were born, I finally took some portraits. I did not put any effort to put them in flattering light, or use my own light, and just shot them in their room. I hope I am never lowered to taking cute dog pictures again.