Saturday, 1 November 2025

Last blog post

 

I have been writing this blog now for 16 years so I think it's time to stop!  Just one last post about our trip to Africa in April and May this year.

Our first trip to Africa was in 2006 when my sister Lyn was living in Pretoria working for Ford.  We spent time in Gauteng Province; and Toby and I travelled up through Botswana to Zambia to see Victoria Falls.  The thrill of white water rafting on the Zambezi River below the falls will never get old!

Anyway, I have always wanted to return to Botswana and this year we did.

With friends Rob and Lou we travelled to Namibia and spent a month visiting birding hotspots and scenic delights.  Rob and Lou were returning to Namibia, last visited when they were AusVols in Zimbabwe in the 1990s, so it was interesting to hear how much had changed and how much was still the same.

Steve and I had a month in Namibia in 2015 and again in 2021.  We love it there.  It is so easy to travel.  The national parks are excellent and the geology is stunning.

Then we travelled to Botswana for a week around the Okavango Delta - somewhere we've always wanted to go.  

From southern Africa we travelled north for 3 weeks in Tanzania, via Rwanda, then home, via Kenya and South Africa .  Most of you will have heard the aeroplane saga already from my Facebook page so I won't re-prosecute that!  

Here are some annotated pictures. (A work in progress but I will post to before I lose it)



We stayed at Arebbusch Lodge - Rob and Lou had stayed there in 1996!


At 










The White Lady rock art at Brandberg Mountain.

Waterburg NP.  No maintenance in at least 4 years - a real shame!










Love these birds

A Gondwana relic

Who doesn't love a Leopard Tortoise!  We didn't make it to the Sakina Compound to check up on T1 and T2 but have heard they are doing well.

It was great to be back at Olkokola Catholic Mission.  Much was the same but there was a new group of trainees to get to know and there are always improvements happening.  

We stayed at the Amani Forest Research Institute which is almost derelict.  The forest was wonderful, the building maintenance was not!


We stayed on the Indian Ocean coast near Tanga, north east Tanzania.  The tidal difference was huge.  This is the breakfast spot - sometimes there is water, sometimes there is not.

Thank you to my family for funding some much needed equipment for the physical therapy room including an examination bed, a TENS machine and a massage gun.  Plus some extra books for the library.

The physical therapy room, funded by an AVI grant in 2022, is in frequent use.

Mt Kilimanjaro was visible from the airport hotel, with just a little snow on top.




That's it for this blog!  Thank you all for following along, love from Jenny.

ps.  We are currently living in Lae, Papua New Guinea.  We are with the Australian Volunteers program again, this time both working at the Papua New Guinea National Agricultural Research Institute.  If you are interested in have a new blog at https://clarksinlae.blogspot.com/.  JC



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