It is!
Next stop is the east coast for some beach time, swimming and surfing. It's all go!
|
12 years ago I arrived in Zanzibar and it was the most exotic place I had ever been. It was a highlight of our year travelling and as I lost the roll of film somewhere in the world during that year, I wondered had I just imagined it or was it really that special. It is! Stone Town, the principal town of the island hasn't changed much at all. Same chilled atmosphere, narrow streets, beautiful sea and great food. In 2004 we ate in the night market every single night, loving the cheap food, the bartering and the fresh fish. The night market is still there. The Forodhani Gardens were refurbished in 2010 and are now quite pleasant. There is more of a semblance of hygiene and safety on the stalls. The meat is already precooked and there's no fish now. You can still bargain for your plate of food and you'll be ushered to the plastic seating beside the drinks kiosks. Zanzibar is 95% Muslim and this is strongly in evidence in Stone Town with no less than 53 mosques and only 2 Christian churches, an Anglican and a Catholic Church. I returned to the famous Mr Mitu spice tour. The oldest spice tour, 55 years on the go. For 15 US dollars you get a tour which begins at 9.30am, finishes at 3pm, includes minibus to spice plantations, guided tour and tastings, lunch and an hour at the beach. Talk about good value! I also did some sightseeing around the city. I visited the Grand Palace which I'm afraid hasn't been painted or swept since we wandered through it in 2004. I would recommend reading Memoirs of an Arabian Princess from Zanzibar to get into the history of that time. She was an interesting lady! There is a new exhibition at the Slave Chambers which is well worth visiting. Zanzibar was a slave island and from here slaves were bought, sold and deported around the world. The exhibition is extremely well put together and very thought provoking. Other than that it's been a few days of eating, trying various Tanzanian coffees - spiced/ginger/iced. I'm actually staying in a coffee house - Zanzibar Coffee House, so there is a serious coffee theme to these few days.
Next stop is the east coast for some beach time, swimming and surfing. It's all go!
0 Comments
Eventful day..... Got taxi with 12 year old driver. Bags were taken and runnning out of the boot as soon as the taxi stopped at the dock. Thrown on a (cattle) ship for 5 hours. Arrived Zanzibar. Passport stamped and a guy helped us find a hostel. Bargained price down to €8 a night. Met 3 other girls, 2 English and 1 Irish who showed us the night market. Great food, so cheap. Sweet Easy for drinks. Home to our room with a curtain for a toilet door and straight to bed. As believed in 2004, we were indeed in a container ship. The Shipping Corporation of Zanzibar is still in existence however I really don't know how we ended up with tickets for the crossing. We did find it suspicious that there were no seats and we couldn't go out on deck! Our highlight of all of Tanzania was the night market in Stone Town Zanzibar. I really hope on my return this summer, that the night markets will be as special as I remember. I cannot seem to find any mention of the Florida Inn on Trip Adviser or any site online. The curtain divided en-suite must not have taken off!
|
TanzaniaTravel diary entries and emails from 2004. Archives
September 2018
Categories
All
Tanzania BooksSpeak Swahili, Dammit!
James Penhaligon |