In the continuing series, is it safe over there: The Ten Drunkest Driving States and the ten least drunk.
Author: Greg
2007 plans
Monique is planning to visit Guinea again next year and put on the Raid du Fouta Djalon, and she’s invited us to join them. We might bike the running route. Although the runners will probably be faster since it’s uphill and we’re always stopping to take images (still or moving) and visiting with the locals.
We’re both going to work on our French starting now. Tonight, I’m checking our a class at Savoir Faire to see which level I should be in. Louisa took a summer conversational class before our trip. I did nothing and with my already poor French missed a lot.
We’ll be looking at a month in France or maybe somewhere else before the trip to take an immersion course.
Site name change to Knobby.ws
The domain name is changing from KeepTheRubberSideDown to Knobby.ws. The former, athough fun and descriptive, was too long for emails. The prefix ws is supposed to conjure web-site or World Site, but is really Western Samoa.
The changeover as far as the blog is concerned will be mostly transparent and either URL will get you here for now, although a few things like embedded Google Maps won’t work if the KeepTheRubberSideDown is in the URL. Eventually the KeepTheRubberSideDown will cease to work. Whenever I think the transition is complete and I don’t want to pay the $9 or whatever is per year to keep the extra domain name. But the main driver will be to simplify it.
I’ll also be dropping my old linkLINE email on a similar schedule.
For you non mountain bikers, knobby refers to mountain bike tires which have “knobs” on them for traction.
The saga ends—a serious problem resolved
The trip home was necessary. Louisa had a torn retina which was laser repaired this afternoon. She’s lucky it didn’t detach in the ten days since it tore, because an untreated tear leads to a detached retina which results in blindness.
Sadly the photos of her eyes she was given in Conakry are not her eyes. The doctor in Conakry should have known that for at least two reasons: 1) the photos are of eyes that were a patient who has had a dye injected and he didn’t inject Louisa, 2) the lesion in the photo is in the right eye; the problem was with the left eye. He neglected to perform other necessary diagoses.
Fortunately Louisa’s eye doctor in the US gave good information by email to convince us of the necessity of getting good eye care. We considered going to Paris, but figured that we would lose time finding our way around the French medical system, so headed straight home. We didn’t know how lucky we were to get a flight booking; we had completely forgot about it being Thanksgiving week—we realized it when we heard someone on our flight from JFK mention Thanksgiving.
Travel guide
To complement and/or update the information in the Lonely Planet and Rough Guides for West Africa, I’ve together some notes. Partly for us since we plan to return next year and for other travels who plan to go. I’ll update the links here as I do the pages. UPDATE: We had the 2002 edition of LP and the November 2003 edition of Rough Guide. Lonely Planet West Africa was updated to the sixth edition in October 2006, so much of what I have to add may already be the new edition which we now have, but didn’t when I wrote most of this.
We found Guinea easier than we expected. The people are helpful and friendly, with few touts. The lack of touts may be that there is so little independent tourism that the tout industry hasn’t developed. Another example of the lack of tourism is that the restaurant service is not westernized—I’ll explain what I mean by that. The staff is nice and will try to meet requests, but little initiative is shown. I’m mainly speaking of the medium quality hotels which are often the top hotels away from Conakry. When you walk into the restaurant things move at a leisurely pace; maybe it’s developed from the hotter parts of the country were that may be only pace possible. After serving you, the waiter disappears. Hors d’oeuvre were almost never offered. None on the menu, occasional peanuts. Petit déjueuner was often as expected, but often confiture was omitted and not available. Although sometimes it was a special treat as in Labé with guava jam. The lack of confiture is consistent with a seeming lack of sweets, certainly desserts were rare. The cookies/biscuits offered at taxi stand shops were never locally made, but imported from Brazil, Turkey, and India in our limited experience.
The transportation system is adequate. Phones aren’t too good. Although the cell phone service is better than land line apparently. People often carry phones for two cell phone providers since calls within each system works, but system to system doesn’t work as well. The phone numbers now seem to be eight digit, usually a 60 in front of the six digit number found in the guidebooks and many on-line resources.
Water is available on the street in at least four ways: 1) bottled, 2) labeled sealed plastic bags—supposedly safe—I got away with drinking it once, 3) hand tied plastic bags (presumably local generally unsafe water, 4) in pots. All the hotels had tap water, but no signs assuring any kind of treatment or quality. We use iodine and bottled water.
Knowing French definitely enhanced our visit and makes it easier to travel. Louisa’s French is good enough for communication. Mine is at the basic travelers level. Since they have so few tourists, they don’t seem to understand how to deal with people who aren’t fluent.
The articles:
Conakry update
Kindia update
Labe TBD. Main comments: stayed at Tata which was fine. Different CyberCafe which worked well, but not air conditioned.
Traveling with Bicycles
We’re back in the US
After about 40 hours of travel, we’re back home.
Unfortunately we also displaced our cat/house sitter. We’re sorry Ethan.
We’re planning to try again same time again next year.
NYTimes on China in Africa
We see a bit of evidence of the Chinese presence. And we talked to a European who works for the cement company here, and who says there are fewer westerners and more Chinese here.
Heat
Bob related in a private email that it takes about 7-10 days to become accustomed to the heat. Either it’s become cooler in Conakry or that’s true. We aren’t as bothered by the heat as when we arrived two weeks ago, even after an all too brief respite in the cool mountains. There also seems to be more of a breeze which of course helps. We also were suffering from jet-lag when we arrived. I’ll be interested to read the information and if possible check the highs for Conakry.
Shopping
Louisa took advantage of being stuck here for another day and we hit the local downtown market. Hard bargaining for some nice fabric. Moderate pressure haggling, but it takes a lot of patience. The market was probably quiet relatively early on a Monday.
This is in the context of sweating in hot, humid weather and being in the air conditioned CyberCafe which can’t be less than 80F, and carrying a warm jacket for the plane and NY, and maybe CA.
Water
Some trivialities. There is very little running water here apparently. We see many people carrying water. One can buy bottled water in 1.5l bottles for about $0.25 on the street. The apparently better off locals buy labeled water in sealed plastic bags of about 1 cup in size. We are told this is good water. The less well off buy water in hand tied plastic bags. On either kind of plastic bag, they bite off a corner and drink. They also use the tied bag water to fill radiators and wash feet and hands.