As we set out, I met two Americans for the first time, both new to our group. Mike and Andy were buddies though work and hiking together. Mike is from Orlando, where he runs his own law practice. He has three teenage kids and a very wacky sense of humour. Andy had left a corporate job to start his own practice too, but he was based in Los Angeles. He seemed older than Mike, and had a big bushy beard behind which he hid a somewhat retiring personality. He was the quiet one, Mike the life and soul. They seemed an unlikely pair to be planning to share a tent, but both turned out to be great guys to have on a trek. However on this first morning in Arusha, getting to know the guys was ahead, and we merely traded polite tales of the flight to Tanzania. Mike’s luggage hadn’t arrived, which was a bummer.
Mike seemed extremely cheerful for someone whose luggage – including his hiking boots – had not yet arrived. Hiking boots are the one item you can’t just borrow, or go out and replace at the local hiking shop. They have to have been worn in by your own feet if problems on a long trek are to be avoided. So no boots could very well mean no trek, or at least one with bad blisters. I immediately began to do quite enough worrying for Mike. He remained perfectly cool. Mike’s looks are Average Mr. America, with his dark hair worn neatly slicked back. He’s open-faced, approachable and funny, and speaks quickly, with a slight lisp. And he’s cool under pressure, it seems. While I was worrying for him, he was telling funny stories about his training hikes in the Florida Everglades, somewhere below sea level. No altitude to be found in Florida. One story involved an alligator barring his way and having to go home the long way, which he also seemed quite calm about.
The Mt Meru foothills hike set out happily through lush village farms and plantations. We could tell that this was a rich coffee-growing area. African children and their cows and goats were all around us. We ate our boxed lunches (so many were to follow!) in the grassy grounds of a school, giving away titbits from the boxes to the children who clustered around. I assumed it was a school, as there were buildings, children and a playing field, although I saw no teacher or other adult, and the kids were barefooted and in ragged clothes.
Feeling full of liveliness and camaraderie, we took our first group photo, with Meru in the background and a colourful batik sign made by Berg Adventures’ Arusha office. Then we continued on up into the foothills. It grew a little cooler and the trail flattened out a bit. Catching up with friends and absorbing Africa – it was very enjoyable.
Just as I was thinking that we’d been out for two or three hours and our short hike must soon be ending, it actually began. Wally had mentioned a stream and a waterfall at the briefing. We descended. Vertically. I’ve never been on such a steep trail before or since (including Roland), and if I hadn’t been with companions I never would have attempted it. The narrow, vertical track was merely a flattened-out line through the lush jungle growth. It led down a heavily wooded cliffside, barely wide enough to take a boot. The only saving grace was the presence of saplings and vines to grip. I descended hanging from these useful props, using my arms and hands more than my feet, swinging like a monkey. After what seemed a very long time, and with much complaining from me, we reached a pretty creek bed.
I now suspected Wally of a set-up. This short hike was clearly a Berg test of some sort, and not only of physical readiness. There had been an announcement about walking in a creek before we left base, and an informal sort of discussion about bringing sandals, or maybe Wally had said his guides had some spare pairs? A number of people had not brought sandals with them, and a general contretemps ensued. I suspected Wally of noting all this down for future reference. Who is self-sufficient? Who is going to expect the guides to cover for them?
I need not add that I had my sandals with me. Naturellement. Responsibility for your own gear. Once bitten, etcetera.
The creek walk was actually great fun and the icy cold water was soothing for tired dusty feet. We waded and rock-hopped as far as a spectacular waterfall and pool, which attracted a few hardy swimmers. John, a large, strong New Zealander with an enviable tan, exuberantly stripped off his shirt and was one of the first to dive in. Baladi is a hard-core swimmer – he swims every day if he can – but he hesitated, concerned about possible African parasites in the water. However, the cool spray beckoned and he succumbed, diving in while carefully keeping his mouth shut tight. We spent about an hour and a half down in the creek.
I had avoided thinking about the climb out. I find it’s best to worry about the way back only when you have to. Yes, it was just as steep as the way down – Wally said we’d encounter nothing as steep on Kilimanjaro. But mercifully it was shorter. However the hike back to the bus, through villages and towns, seemed interminable. Mike’s casual town shoes, which he’d been forced to wear because of his lost luggage, were by this stage very much the worse for wear. Wally later confessed that our short hike had been sixteen kilometres, which is not inconsiderable for a single afternoon, including steep terrain. I think Wally was sorting a few sheep from goats, but I don’t think he found anyone particularly wanting, and we all seemed to thrive on it in the end. We were in Africa!
Next stop: Kilimanjaro.
Chapter 6: Helping Out Africa
My training program powered on. April was the month that I participated in a community event organised by the charity Oxfam, a cheerful get-together called ‘Walk Against Want’. Oxfam, I learnt, organises these walks all the time. This one began in the beachside suburb of Manly and continued around the bushy coastline to another waterside hub called The Spit. If you walked back again, as I did, it was twenty kilometres. This seemed like a good workout for a Sunday morning, with the added bonus of some great views, and beaches and cafes at each end for picnicking or a latte.
It so happened that Oxfam and I were, at this time, getting to know each other. I had decided to use the impending ‘Great Kili Climb’ to raise some funds for Africa. Having already encountered the mixed and challenging feelings of an affluent Western traveller in a third world country, I knew I was likely to get to Tanzania and want very much to help. Handing out a few bucks to the nearest and shrillest beggar wasn’t going to cut it. So I came up with the idea of choosing an African cause before I even got to the continent, and doing what I could to raise a reasonable sum in advance of seeing the challenges up close.
So I Googled ‘African charities’ and was swamped with tens of thousands of extremely needy projects. Africa was daunting. Still, better to light a candle than curse the gloom and so on. I ended up choosing Oxfam Australia’s African Appeal, since I wanted my potential donors to be able to claim a tax break on the large sums I hoped they’d send to my appeal. Oxfam assured me that whatever I raised would be directed to Africa and whatever present need was most pressing when I handed the money over.
The ‘Walk Against Want’ was my first sponsored venture, thereby neatly covering two bases – training and fundraising. Several generous souls sponsored my walk, which I finished tired but satisfied. I also set up a small amateur website to explain the cause and the climb, which included pictures of Africa, Kilimanjaro and my training exploits.
Donations rolled in steadily if slowly. I emailed everyone I knew, pestered friends and colleagues, and invited my clients to support the cause. Some very generous gifts were given. I set a target of $10,000 and was well on the way to it by the time I left for Africa.
I also offered the inducement of a Summit Bonus. The idea was that a donor could pledge an amount which would be payable only if I reached the summit. If I didn’t, then I promised to contribute the same amount. This attracted a few sporting souls. My trainer at the gym, Steve, pledged a Summit Bonus and then paid it in advance anyway. He said that I had better make the top because his professional reputation was riding on it. I took this as a welcome vote of confidence.
I must admit that the fundraising was proving a bit of a burden as I spent time concentrating on training, as well as the usual busy round of life. I did, however, manage to drum up about twenty good folk for an African dinner, complete with kindly-donated South African wine. This we held at an East African eatery