Four days in Zanzibar: First time in Stone Town

To begin with, I must admit that I spent regrettably little time in Stone Town during my first visit.

For me, like for most tourists crossing the waters to the island of Zanzibar, Stone Town was scheduled to be a stopover for a couple of days, an in-between place on the way from the “mainland” Tanzania to gorgeous tropical beaches of Zanzibar.

But at the moment I came out of the ferry terminal I became intrigued. Stone Town is a charming door to Zanzibar, and it fully deserves to be a main destination of one’s journey.

Temptations
The first temptation was to go and discover how a labyrinth of narrow streets is put together in the older part of Stone Town.

The next temptation was to make a nice photo collection of carved wooden doors and colourful window frames that lavishly decorate Stone Town houses – I already imagined my nice new photo album featuring those beauties.

Zanzibar Stown Town street

Then there were terraces and restaurants that smelled so good, looked relaxed, well organised and welcoming. And then I still had to decide about a place to watch the sunset that night (an everyday luxury challenge of a traveller in Africa!), and I had to plan my Stone Town must-do’s: a Spice Tour, a boat trip to Prison Island, a snorkelling trip and a visit to Freddy Mercury’s house on Kenyatta Road.

Stone Town sea side

Anyway, I got out of the hotel and started walking – and then I could not stop admiring. Stone Town is a real treat for a photographer: because of its colours and lights, but mainly thanks to its contrasts.

Contrasts between old and new, renovated and worn out, plain and glamorous, Africa and Middle East, nice crafts and made-in-China souvenirs. Contrast between yesterday’s chaos in Dar Es Salaam and today’s calm coziness in Stone Town, dominated by prayer calls during the day hours, and by local and Western music tunes during the night hours.

To see and to be seen

The business at the night market was going well that evening.

Zanzibar night market food

The density of crowd was high, it looked like all available tourists and at least half of Stone Town residents were there.

Zanzibar night market stalls

The food was abundant and fresh, but the most spectacular thing was – the dress code of the Stone Town ladies.

The dress code: a long flowing gown a la opera diva, the brightest colour fabric you can get, maximum paillettes, maximum Swarovski, hair accessories and shoes in matching colours, shiny bag and a smartphone. Even baby girls were dressed in line with the dress code (smartphone and bag excluded)! And the most amazing thing : it did not look cheap and vulgar at all, it would fall out of context in any other place, but felt so appropriate here in Stone Town, a place already full of contrasts. It felt like all ladies that night were bride’s maids at a huge wedding party.

It was definitely a grandiose show off: the family with their many children would make an entrance to the night market, but would not mix with the crowd. They would first organise a place to sit down on the ground (have you ever seen an opera diva in her concert gown sitting on the ground in a crowded place?), make sure children are comfortable, and then arrange getting some food.

Zanzibar night market

Kenyatta Road under a morning rain
Sooner or later everyone discovering Stone Town ends up on Kenyatta Road. All roads in Stone Town seem to lead to Kenyatta Road. Your guide or your hotel receptionist will show you the street on the map, and most probably say something like: this is the central street of Stone Town, “don’t buy souvenirs here, you can get them cheaper around the corner”.

If you walk around for a couple of hours visiting shops and cafés, you will start bumping into the same people and start noticing same young couples walking back and forth, popping out of narrow streets, first looking a bit disorientated and then getting a happy look of recognition on their faces. I got a cozy déjà vu feeling of a small relaxed holiday town that suddenly reminded me of Provence and of Tuscany.

Be comfortable about staying here for the evening: on Kenyatta Road you are close to the night market and to many good restaurants. Here you can get a bit of a vibe from the night market, have a perfect romantic candlelight dinner, or drink some local beers with your group. Or just stay enjoying a glass of wine admiring the starry African sky (this is Africa, remember?)

Kenyatta Road can get filled up and busy every now and then. But when in the morning on my second day a short rain broke out, the street became empty for a few beautiful moments. And when the sun came out, I was overwhelmed by a pure sense of happiness and appreciation, by a certainty of being in the right place at the right time.

…and by the way, I still need to do a Spice Tour when I come back.

Do you want to get your own first hand Stone Town experience? Contact us at info@empakaaiculturalsafari.com. We are happy to answer all your questions, discuss your preferences and help you to book your trip.

Olkinyei Football Club: we are fans!

The Olkinyei Football Club was born in 2012 in Narok, Kenya. The mission of the Olkinyei FC is to coach, lead to success and develop talents of young people from Narok and surrounding Maasai villages. At present, the team unites 20 players, all ambitious young men (age 19-25) with a passion for the game of football and a strong drive to win.
The Olkinyei FC is registered with the Federation of Kenya Football and currently stands at the top of the Narok North area league, comprising of 16 teams.

Olkinyei Football Club

Every Olkinyei FC player is a very motivated individual, committed to the team’s success and willing to go an extra mile to become the best at the game. On a weekly basis the team follows an intensive training schedule. Some players live far from the training location, however the team comes together on every training day and works really hard, united by their shared dreams and ambitions.

At present the team is supported by private means of players’ parents, who provide their training field, do the coaching work, purchase uniforms and equipment, organise any required transportation and logistics during tournaments.

To the extent possible in a basic environment of a Kenyan province, the Olkinyei FC creates an encouraging and positive environment for each player to make the best use of their talent and to develop to the top of their physical and mental abilities. Both the team’s coach and the team’s manager pay attention to technical skills as well as to interaction skills of the players. The players are encouraged not only to become top players, but also to learn what every one of them can do in order to make the team successful.

The supporters of the Olkinyei FC love their team for their positive spirit and their talent to play an exciting game!

The Olkinyei FC gives back to their communities, by supporting primary schools in their villages with uniforms and shoes.

Empakaai Cultural Safari wishes the team many successes and victories in the upcoming matches!

Our trip to Maasai Mara and Great Rift Valley visits the town of Narok in Kenya. Contact us on info@empakaaiculturalsafari.com for more information about our trips to Kenya, and about the Olkinyei FC.

Four days in Zanzibar: Dar Es Salaam ferry

The morning is in its very early dark hours in Dar Es Salaam.
An incredible crowd gathers on a platform that transports people across the water to the Zanzibar ferry terminal. The crowd moves forward slowly and almost silently, in tiny steps. People are packing tighter and closer to each other with each step. Tourists and locals, who are pressed close together on this platform, seem to be very obedient, everyone accepts an inconvenience and a high degree of physical contact. Maybe everyone is just sleeping; it is 6am after all. With more and more people getting on to the platform, I am slowly losing control over my three pieces of hand luggage and a photo camera hanging on my neck. When I realise that I cannot even rearrange my arms, I let the worries go and try to find comfort in thinking that this must be the real Africa way of travel.

Once the platform hits its destination spot, we are released. The packed coziness quickly dissolves itself. All my pieces of luggage and the camera are still there and are luckily intact. But we are not there yet, we still need to find our way to the ferry terminal through narrow streets, jammed roads, crowds, buses, bicycles, pedestrians.

The boarding process is surprisingly quick and efficient. The ferry actually looks more like a speedboat (and very soon shall we all find out that it also moves like a speedboat)! But first there are a couple of moments to enjoy the sunrise over the harbor of Dar Es Salaam.

Sunrise Ferry to Zanzibar

The upper deck of the ferry is slowly getting filled up. The public looks and sounds very international. Everybody, including children, are watching each other with a calm curiosity. A little girl (she travels with her large Indian family) treats all her neighbors, including me, to candy. Some Tanzanians and a couple of tourists decide that it is a good idea to lie down on the floor and take a nap. Most of upper deck dwellers are watching the ocean, mesmerized by its beauty. The ferry is moving ahead very quickly at this point in time, so when someone shouts out “Whales!”, everyone starts taking pictures of the water very diligently, without even taking a good look first.

Fishermen’s boats and small islands give us a hint that we are approaching Zanzibar. The harbor is decent in size, with cargo containers and ships scattered around. I start wondering how big actually the Stone Town is. Judging by the size of the harbor I would not expect to see a small and cozy town. In reality, the harbor and the town look like two different worlds coexisting next to each other.

Zanzibar harbour

The offboarding process requires passengers to wait next to the ferry for their checked-in luggage. That’s how I become a witness and a participant to a very non-safe process of luggage unloading. Travel bags and other transported goods (I’ve spotted lamps in boxes and fans) are packed in trolleys, which roll out fastly and furiously from a luggage compartment! It looks like some kind of construction fault gets them accelerated. They roll down with such an enormous speed that at least four staff are required to act as a trolley brake!

Zanzibar ferry arrival

But once I am out, I am immediately in peace with the feeling of the Zanzibar’s Stone Town. This is Africa without any doubt, but here it dresses, smells and tastes Arabic.

Zanzibar Stown Town street

Would you like to get your own Stone Town and Zanzibar experiences? Contact us on info@empakaaiculturalsafari.com.  We are happy to take you on a journey to these beautiful places.

Amazing Maasai and Samburu by Jimmy Nelson

See how beautiful the Maasai and the Samburu are on the superb photographs of Jimmy Nelson.

Exhibition Leiden Museum

Jimmy Nelson pictured a number of unique ethnic groups from all over the world for his project Before They Pass Away. All his works are impressive, but the Maasai and the Samburu series are obviously special to our hearts!
Jimmy Nelson is a master of showing people at their best and letting their character shine through. Short stories about traditions and a current lifestyle of Samburu and Maasai are included next to the pictures, you can read them on the website, when you visit an exhibition and in the gorgeous book dedicated to Before They Pass Away.

Don’t miss the exhibition of Before They Pass Away when it moves close to you. It just finished in Leiden, The Netherlands, and is moving to London and Brussels. Take your time and have a close look. Get inspired while thinking about your next journey to Africa (contact us at info@empakaaiculturalsafari.com to discuss your Africa travel plans)!

Our Story

The beautiful Maasai people, breathtaking views of the Ngorongoro crater, charming lakes of the Great Rift Valley, paradise of Zanzibar beaches, surprising wildlife of the famous Maasai Mara and Serengeti National Parks… Right now you might be planning your very first journey to Africa. Or perhaps reflecting on what should your next big discovery in Africa be. Or maybe you’ve just realized that you’d actually love to visit some of these magic places again in the near future.

Make your journey to Africa with Empakaai Cultural Safari.

Empakaai Cultural Safari is a Kenya based tour operator. We deliver safari holidays, camping trips, local culture discovery tours in Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda and most Southern African countries. No matter which itinerary you choose, we take care of all logistics of your trip, so that you enjoy a smooth travel. Immerse yourself into  Africa, its nature and wildlife, people and communities, history and cultural heritage.

Africa is our home.

Our family roots are in the Maasai land in Kenya. We speak the local languages of East Africa. This connects us and our guests with the local communities in a very close and enriching way.

We are passionate about our homeland and love taking our guests through its most beautiful places, and beyond. We will guide you by showing and sharing Africa as we know it. We will be happy to join you on your journey as your travel companions rather than as a service staff only (while remaining fully responsible for giving you all service you need, seamlessly and efficiently).

Contact us at info@empakaaiculturalsafari.com. We are happy to answer all your questions and inspire you to book your trip to Africa with us.