Blog 13
20th Feb … journey to Eldoret ... notes from an African bus !
I'm on the local African 'Whisper Service'
bus ! I grab the seat by the open door,
and sit and wait, here in the market, for this, the 11 o'clock bus to Eldoret
to leave town. Street traders, beggars
and hucksters keep coming on the bus or try to sell me things through the open
window. I could buy cold drinks,
biscuits and peanuts, both in their shells and roasted, sold in newspaper
cones. Also on offer are socks, condoms,
aspirin, SIM cards, Aloe flavoured toothpaste, bananas, CD's, t-shirts, Viagra
tablets (in this country, with its soaring birth rate) ? … street food (fried and very greasy … and
no, I don't want dysentery); Bibles, sun glasses, cheap watches, even cheaper
plastic jewellery; hair nets and coloured beads … gosh, I could buy all my
Christmas presents here in February !
11.30
… bus still waiting … I am
shocked to the core when another huckster tries to sell me an assortment of
tablets and capsules in their bubble packs … I assume more aspirins, but no, he
assures me they are American ARV's … the drug used for HIV treatment. I assume they are in reality vitamin pills,
or just sugar pills. And anyway, ARV's
are free to AIDS sufferers from the hospitals..
12 noon …. we
are still here; the bus driver hoots regularly to try and attract more
customers. Its getting hot … over 30
C, but having paid my 350 shillingi,
(about £3 for the 150 mile trip) I don't want to get off the bus to sit in the
shade and risk loosing my seat.
A number of
large sacks are dropped off by the bus … charcoal from the mess they make. The bus boys climb onto the roof and haul up
the sacks. There are already 60 water
drums up there, and other assorted bundles tied on with rope. A couple of men drive up in a pick up and
off-load 7 sacks of what I can smell are the tiny dried fish, much loved of the
Luo people. A shower of tiny fish and
fish scales flutter down as the sacks are put on the roof with the charcoal. The scales come drifting in the open window
and stick to my sweat. I shall soon have
a different smell.
12.30
…. we are still here, but the bus is slowly
filling. A man has just walked past
blowing his nose; its very clever, he breathes in deeply, then snorts it out
through his nose, where the snot lands on the spilt fish.
Hey … its 12.40
and the 11 o'clock bus is finally moving … but only around the corner to the
garage for petrol. We eventually leave
Kisumu at 12.50.
The route leads
out through the slums to the north, and climbs the Nandi escarpment, where the
temperature drops a little with the added altitude. Tea is growing in a few places; probably
part of small scale co-operatives.
Purple paint, a blinding almost glowingly vivid paint seems to be the
'in' colour and used mostly for 'hoteli' which are bars for beer and
good time girls. Is the purple paint the
local version of a red light ?
I have decided
not to drink anything on the journey … but when the screams of a three year old
stops the bus, he gets off with his mother for a pee, and then climbs back on
with his shorts in Mum's hand. I really
shouldn't have had two mugs of tea at breakfast. They are beginning to make themselves felt.
We cross a wide
river … I ask the bus boy 'What is that river ?' He thinks hard, and tells me 'It is water,
Memsahib' … A road-side sign announces
we are crossing the Equator … I'm back in my own hemisphere for a day or
two.
Finally,
reaching Eldoret at 4.45 instead of the expected 2 p.m., I stagger off the bus
with a numb rear, and try to decide how to find my friend. Still, one mzungu lady stands out in
an African town, and my friend soon finds me, and we drive to her home for a
loo, a large cup of tea and a shower to remove the fishy scales stuck all over
me. Bliss ! A great day …
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