ferry from zanzibar to dar es salaam

ferry – stone town, zanzibar to dar es salaam, tanzania

we took the fast ferry from stone town to dar es salaam to catch our flight out, and it was quite nice! the first step was spending basically an entire afternoon sweatily trying to procure ferry tickets by pushing to the front of a large group of people much more skilled than me at the art of not getting in a line. definitely do this the day before, as multiple folks missed the last ferry that afternoon because this process is exceedingly inefficient.

procuring ferry tickets, stone town
zanzibar fast ferry
leaving zanzibar

in dar es salaam, we used some hotel points for a free night at the holiday inn, and i went on a run on the newly constructed seaside barack obama boulevard before our flight home. a great time in zanzibar!

downtown dar es salaam

changuu / prison island, zanzibar

tortoise on changuu island, zanzibar, tanzania

about 6 km off the coast of stone town, zanzibar, is the fascinating little island of changuu. the first use of the island was as a prison for zanzibar. later, in the 1800s, it was used as quarantine facility for travelers during cholera and bubonic plaque outbreaks. (btw, did you know there was a bubonic plaque outbreak in india in the 1800s that killed over 10 million people?)

you can easily hire a boat from stone town to the island for about $5-10, about a 30 minute trip. the prison is interesting to explore. even more exciting are a population of large tortoises, the oldest of which are 180 years old! they were initially brought to zanzibar from the the seychelles, and when they started to be stolen, were retired to the island for their own protection.

boat to changuu island
changuu island
changuu island
prison buildings on changuu island
changuu island
tortoises on changuu island
tortoise on changuu island
tortoise on changuu island

zanzibar!

stone town, zanzibar, tanzania

we spent an amazing 4-5 days in stone town, zanzibar! zanzibar is a semi-autonomous archipelago off the coast of tanzania. for much of the last 500 years it was under the influence of the sultanate of oman – it was even the capital of the entire sultanate for a few decades in the 1800s. it remains almost 100% muslim. in the 1960s, it merged with the mainland colony of tangyanika, and the names combined to form the new country of tanzania. it was also the childhood home of freddy mercury of the band queen, and produces much of the world’s spices. though part of tanzania, it retains its own immigration policy and other laws.

the capital, stone town, is a maze of alleyways that one can wander for days! we stayed in a relatively inexpensive boutique hotel called the shaba. it was close to the beachside park hyatt, which ended up being a cooler place to hang out (both literally and figuratively), which they were fine with as long as we bought some refreshments.

shaba hotel, stone town
from the rooftop of the shaba hotel, stone town
breakfast at the shaba hotel, stone town

the beachfront is where the action is, and the forodhani gardens turn into a street food market at dusk. we found the best restaurant in town – lukmaan swahili restaurant where one can chose any number of east african delicacies from a picture menu.

forodhani gardens, stone town
forodhani gardens, stone town
stone town
stone town
old dispensary, stone town
stone town
stone town
stone town
stone town
art gallery in the stone town castle
former home of the sultan of oman, stone town
stone town
stone town
house of wonders in the distance, stone town
stone town
stone town
stone town
stone town

trip to africa

kenya

when i was in grade 9, long before starting this blog, my family took a month-long trip to africa. my mother grew up in kenya and had lots of family around so there was a lot to see. we spent some time in and around nairobi, kenya, where a couple aunts and uncles lived at the time. we then took a little plane to mwanza, tanzania, on the shore of lake victoria, where another aunt and uncle lived. from there, we took an epic roadtrip across tanzania – through the serengeti national park and ngorongoro crater with our own vehicle for a private safari, to tarangire national park which is famous for its elephants, to moshi and arusha where another aunt and uncle lived, and to the coast at tanga, then up to mombasa, kenya, where we spent some time at the beach before returning to nairobi. we then flew up to ethiopia for 5 days where we visited another uncle and aunt. on the way home we stopped in amsterdam for a few days, where we visited the rijksmuseum and went to edam where we saw windmills and ate cheese.