By the time we got to Kafue National Park, I needed a chiropractor and a Valium. We had driven for 10 solid hours, 100km of which could barely pass as a road. There weren’t potholes, there were trenches. And the irony? We had to pay a road toll! To add insult to injury, teeth-rattling speed bumps were spaced at random intervals- you know- to slow those pesky speedsters down from 15km/h to 10! It is all political- or so we were told by one of the rangers. The punishment meted out by the government on those constituencies which don’t support it is to withhold service delivery. There is always a way around democracy.
A very unwelcome welcoming party met us at Makuyukuyu Lodge…tsetse flies. They have an unfathomable attraction to cars! And they don’t buzz off when the car moves, they cling onto the side mirrors like Narcissus. I’m pleased to report, though, that I have yet to experience one of their bites.
Once again, we were the only campers and had the campsite to ourselves.


It was a wind-still night as we watched a full moon rise over the Kafue River. It was strangely quiet – only the distant rumbling of rapids and the territorial grunting of hippos. As we sat taking in the beauty of the moonlit river, we imagined the travails of the early explorers and wondered whether David Livingstone’s concerns were as pressing as ours: Would there be cold beer in the next village for example, and a clean toilet? What were the chances of finding ingredients for a green salad? Ah, the silliness of our conversations 🙂

Annoyingly, the road took its toll in more than one way. The caravan’s battery lurched out of its bracket at some point and we watched with some concern as we slowly ran out of power. The details are too frustrating and dull to relate, suffice to say that we had to spend hours of the little time we had in Kafue sorting out mechanical issues.
We shall be back, though.
























