Tag Archives: Eastern Tanzania

Stone Town

8 – 13 November 2011

After our time on the coast we headed to Stone Town, the capital of Zanzibar for a bit of culture and history. As we arrived at Maruhubi Beach Villa’s just outside of town, we met Samantha – a post-grad student from ASU (the same university that Brian Watson is doing his post-grad at in Arizona) – who we ended up spending most of the next few days with. Samantha is our new hero; she is studying the behaviour of chimps (from an anthropology point of view so that her findings can be tied into human evolution) and she has just spent the last year at a remote field base in Western Tanzania. In a tent. Water had to be trekked from the nearest river. Four local male field assistants who only spoke Swahili. Nearest town 2 hours away. Yes, we thought she was extremely hard-core! After making it to the end of her year she decided to tag on a safari and a few days in Zanzibar which is where we met up.

Zanzibar was once famous for its spices and although they don’t produce and export anything near what they used to, one of their big tourist attractions is a visit to a spice farm. We visited Butterfly Spice Farm just outside of Stone Town at the top of “Zanzibar’s Kilimanjaro” and were taught about everything from cardamom (the queen of spices – a kitchen is not a kitchen if it doesn’t contain cardamom), cloves, lemon-grass (although I don’t think that’s technically a spice!), tumeric, ginger, cinnamon (the king of spices because every part of the tree from leaves to roots is used for something) as well as a whole host of fruits including finger bananas, giant bananas, coffee, litchis, mangoes, pineapples and jack fruit. The best part of it was tasting all the spices as we went along, and the tea and fruit tasting stop overlooking the beautiful tropical valley.

Next stop was a tour of Stone Town itself, which was fascinating. 90% of the Zanzibari population is Muslim and there are 50 mosques in Stone Town and only 2 churches. One of the churches was built on the location of the slave trading area of the town and there is a round tile in front of the altar marking the position of the slave beating post. We went down into the slave chambers where slaves were held in the most awful, cramped and airless conditions, a very sobering experience. The tour took us in around and about the buzzing city from the fruit and vege market past the fish auction, through the meat market, down alleyways full of shop-keepers trying to get our attention and tangles of wires hanging precariously overhead and ended up at the House of Wonders – the largest building in Stone Town and the first in East Africa to have electricity and an elevator, which has now been turned into a museum. As we passed through the old fort we heard that Prince Charles had been there earlier that day but unfortunately we must have just missed him…

After three nights outside of town we moved to a hotel in the centre of Stone Town and enjoyed being in walking distance of the sights and sounds and so as soon as there was a gap in the rain clouds, we dashed out and tried to find a decent cup of coffee or a meal. Some highlights of our time in Stone Town include:

  • Forodhani Gardens sea-front evening market: starting at sunset loads of stall owners set up barbeques and start selling the most amazing array of food. Kebabs, prawns, fresh fruit, Zanzibari pizzas (which are more like calzones but fried on both sides) filled with Nutella and bananas, ice creams, sugar cane and lime juice. We visited the first time on the last evening of the Muslim Haj festival and there were people everywhere. Literally thousands had turned up in all their finely – quite a spectacle.
  • The world’s most delicious latte served in a really funky glass “mug” overlooking the sea
  • Watching some of the SA vs. Australia cricket match after hearing on Facebook that it was turning into a game for the history books.
  • Lazuli: Stone Town’s hidden gem of a restaurant which we unfortunately found in time for our last meal on the island. It is the cutest little café serving delicious and healthy fresh wraps and sandwiches as well as smoothies which are to die for. What a find and a pleasant change from all things fried!
  • Supper at Mercury’s at the harbour where we felt like we were in a trendy Cape Town restaurant. (Incidentally, Freddy Mercury was born in Zanzibar and so you can visit the house he was born in etc.)

Sunday was time to say goodbye and head back to the mainland. The ferry ride home was HORRENDOUS and super choppy and so we braved the dark clouds in order to sit outside away from the madding crowd who were not coping with the seasickness. Not fun! But seeing Paul Hofmeyr (Stu’s cousin from the UK who is working in Nairobi for 4 months) waiting for us at the Dar es Salaam airport to join us for a couple of weeks made it all worthwhile.

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Lunch anyone?

One thing we like to do on our travels is eat like the locals.  In Jambiani, we became quite well acquainted with delicious Tanzanian chipati bread:

Here is how we rated it:

10 points for it being authentic

10 points for taste

10 points for value for money (R1.20 each and one is enough for lunch!)

But unfortunately only

1 point for healthiness (and that’s only because we ate them with bananas and not Nutella!)

The most beautiful beach on earth (part 2)

4 – 6 November 2011

Casa del Mar Hotel

Our second stop on the East Coast was slightly further south at the village of Jambiani.

Outside our chalet
Perfect book reading spot

The best thing about this lodge was that it had a stunning swimming pool which meant we could swim any time of day or night, even when the low tide meant the sea had retreated over 1km!  The tides changes are quite amazing in Zanzibar!

The place we spent a lot of time…

We spent one afternoon on a dhow with two locals who took us to a nearby reef for some snorkelling followed by a cruise which was, well, awesome. It was a much less energy intense than our Paje snorkelling trip whereby we walked out to the breakers (1.5km or so of knee-deep water!) where the nearest reef was, snorkelled and then had to swim the while way back to shore because the tide had started to come in…

Snorkeling and cruising

If you feel the need for a bit of a break from reality in a place that will take your mind of the troubles of life, then the Zanzibari East Coast should be your first stop. This has definitely been a highlight of the trip so far!

Beautiful dhows
So many pretty flowers

The most beautiful beach on earth (part 1)

1 – 3 November 2011

Most beautiful beach on earth

From the moment we arrived, Zanzibar totally blew us away. We’d been debating for weeks whether or not to make the trip to the island and as soon as we’d decided definitely not to, we regretted it and changed our minds! We caught the brand new Azam “Kilimanjaro III” ferry from the Dar port and the whole experience was amazing. Everything from the complimentary bottled water and bread rolls in the air-conditioned waiting room to the reclining spacious seats on board the brand new ferry (it’s only been in operation since September) to the speedy 1h20 journey (far less than the slow ferry and even quicker than the other fast ferries which take 2 hours) was impressive.

After checking through customs and being greeted with a friendly “Yebo yes!” when the official spotted our SA passports, we found our taxi driver and started off towards the East of the island. Paje was our first stop…it was probably the most beautiful portion of coastline we have ever seen!

Paje fishermen

We spent 4 days there, lounging on recliners at the water’s edge staring out to sea in between reading and trying to capture the beauty on camera.

Beach lounger anyone?

Or would you prefer a hammock?

Our Ndame Beach Lodge accommodation included full board which was eggs and fruit and pancakes with chocolate sauce for breakfast, two courses for lunch and a three-course dinner. The portions were enormous so we weren’t able to do them any justice but we became particularly fond of the fresh fish each day and the wood-fired pizzas. No matter how full we were we made sure we could still squeeze in some ice cream or a banana split and ice cream or fruit salad and ice cream at every meal. We certainly made up for any ice cream shortages we may have suffered over the last 3 months!

Lunch table

The Blue Door restaurant

One evening we were treated to a Masai show (yes, there are Masai everywhere in Tanzania, even on Zanzibar!), the height of the jumping was impressive but the singing/chanting and loud foot stamping somewhat intimidating!

Masai show

Paje was fun!