A couple of weeks ago I had asked Savanna and Pamela if they had ever been to Boti Falls. One said yes, one said no – and Savanna said, “We should go on 1st July because it is a holiday”. There was to be no school so we planned the trip. When the day arrived, we piled in the truck – Max, Savanna, Pamela, Precious and me. Precious was excited but looked pretty worried. Apparently Pamela hadn’t told her where we were going.
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We arrived about 10AM and the place was already hopping. In the U.S., when we go to a State Park or National Park for a holiday, we usually do it to get away from the city and commune with nature, or go for a hike or something quiet. Not so in Ghana, we learned. There were no less than 10 generators in the park, all powering monstrous sound systems at full blast with horrible speakers unable to accommodate the volume. You can imagine the rest. Savanna and Pamela were in heaven. Precious’ eyes were really big.
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Then, we had our picnic lunch. The girls had never had either PB&J or tunafish sandwiches before and they eagerly devoured both. Surprisingly, the tuna was the bigger hit. We also had banan
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Upon returning, I did read what the book had to say: “The round trip takes around 2-3 hours, and is tough going in parts (take decent walking shoes), but worth it for the great views and atmospheric jungle setting.” Max and Savanna had decent walking shoes – the rest of us were in sandals. And tough going is a mild term. There were long rocky ascents and descents that were scrambles, not hikes, or walks. We lifted Precious up or down 3 foot rock “stair steps” in many places and in both directions were in the midst of a long line of people going both ways and covering the entire trail. And if we were poorly dressed for the occasion there were women, who had to have come from Accra, in heels, scrambling right along with us. Despite school being closed, there were also a lot of students, in their school uniforms, on a school field trip for the holiday. Many of them actually ran by us as they raced thei
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Nevertheless, we did come to a large rock overhang just before a small stream crossing leading to another nearly straight-up set of rocky switchbacks. I was a bit concerned that Precious wouldn’t make it back if she climbed that next section of trail, so she and Max and I waited under the rock overhang (which seemed enough like an Umbrella Stone for me). Savanna and Pamela were way ahead of us by this time so we waited quite a while, then Max followed to tell them we had stopped. They all came down and we had a nice face-splash in the stream before turning back toward the park. It was a long line of people in both directions once again – I felt like an ant instinctually following some pheramone trail left by my mates.
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XO
3 comments:
Where will the poor people pee if you have covered their gutter?
Well, I only covered the section at the bottom of our stairs. There is still plenty of open gutter further along the courtyard. There is really no shortage of open gutter in Ghana!
Ok sis just wondered if you were going to make the poor people hold it. :)
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