Saturday, October 2, 2010

Okavango: day 2

We woke up early the second morning to take a stunning makoro ride to another island

Chris was to be our guide again for a walking safari
I will say it was a beautiful walk
As a safari though, it kind of sucked.
It became more of a game of avoid the tourist, rather then find the animals.
The elephant skeleton was kind of cool
It was impressively big.
This is a femur. Getting it vertical was not an easy task by yourself.
Bee eaters
Back at our camp
Irene here is making one of the baskets that I bought.
They make them out of this palm
Our tour guide spent this part of the trip in camp. While we jaunted around to varying degrees of success, he had some precious time to himself. Imagine, being with a bunch of strangers 24/7 for 3 weeks. By the time you get to know them, they leave and you start it all over again. huh
Even in the delta, technology rules (or girlfriends, depending on your point of view)A small group of us went off to take a swim. This is not the spot that we swam (it was really beautiful of course), but it's on the way there

A nicely dorky picture of me in my safari getup
Utricularia! These are such cool plants! Carnivorous. The little beads you can see are capsules for capturing prey.
They live under water, but their flowers float, so they can be pollinated. Can you see the little flotation devices?
Another one of the amazing things about the Okavango is the fact that all that water dumps into a desert, and yet it is not yet another salty lake. The reason is complicated, but part of the puzzle is this - a lot of the salt in the water is pulled out and deposited on the shore by plants.
This was somewhat comical for me, they fed everyone cattail rhizomes as a sort of tourist trial.(though the polers loved them and kept munching long after the tourist took their brave little nibble) I was reminded of feeding people my plant (mine tastes better too ;)
This is our main crew of polers.
They even let us try to pole the boats
It definitely is not as easy as it looks.
Like how Chris is laughing at me?
Another lovely sunset over lily pads

It was a truly beautiful place I wish I could have stayed there longerWe had a hippo opposite our campground. He didn't love all the commotion of us coming and going. Makes this scene just a little less serene once you know that, no?My final view of the Okavango the next morning. What a lovely place

1 comment:

SteveK said...

They're trying you out on Cattails? Wonderful! There is enough wild cattail in Africa to feed everyone. Not all is edible- the plant collects toxins. But with proper inspection, we could simply exterminate famine. What isn't fit for human consumption is first class biomass for ethanol production or charcoal making. And it causes so much trouble. The Cattails in Lake Chad are the driving force in Africa's desertification.