After being home for a couple of months it now seems like a good time to pen the rest of our African venture. Following the heatstroke of Vic Falls, PE made our way back to our unwelcoming hub of Johannesburg for some of the strangest few of days we have ever experienced. We booked into a nice sounding hostel-like abode and jumped on the plane to escape the heat. After a short flight we were back in Joburga airport, with the persistent badgering of porters wanting to help for a fee. Somehow our entire plane full of luggage had been put on a different plane, and we found ourselves sitting in ‘arrivals’ for a few more hours while our driver waited outside helplessly with a small sign saying “HURRY UP”. With no way of contacting him without losing contact of each other, we waited, and he waited, and we waited some more. Finally (hours later) our bags arrived and we were on to our accommodation. We were greeted by a friendly staff member and run through the rules; YOU: ‘can’t go out at night’, ‘can walk to the supermarket’, ‘not safe to travel around alone’, ‘not safe to catch a taxi’ etc.
Here’s an nice photo from later in our journey (Uganda). We didn’t take a single photo in Joburg.
Our first impressions of Joburg were unwelcoming for a good reason, no matter where we went we saw huge fences surrounding nice looking houses protected by angry looking canines. Some of the stats you read regarding safety in South Africa are staggering. The first line you will read on the Wiki page for ‘Crime in South Africa’ makes it pretty clear “South Africa has a very high rate of murders, assaults, rapes (adult, child and infant), and other crimes compared to most countries.” Knowing this we made sure we chose a safe sounding place to rest before out East African adventure, however friendly first impressions turned into strange and lonely times.
Another nice, but unrelated photo (also QENP, Uganda)
We were staying at the place for four nights, and after the first two days realised we were on our own. Our friendly hostess had all but disappeared, and staring down the barrel of starvation we ventured out to find some food. The shopping trip was happily uneventful, and our hapless host finally resurfaced with her boyfriend, strangely giggly and wanting us to pay for our room if that was OK with us. It was OK with us, however we didn’t have the heart to tell her that we had had a terrible time and would never return to her god-forsaken lot. One night we did experience a full blown African thunderstorm – possibly one of the most awe-inspiring events you will ever lay your ears upon. We finally returned to our now second home, OR Tambo International Airport to fly far away from Johannesburg and try our luck at adventuring in a place with an even more treacherous past; Rwanda.











