Wednesday, 12 January 2011

The Road to Kumasi

So, a promised, the updated list of missing and forgotten items:

The Sirius Mystery - Robert Temple (looked boring anyway, didn't want to read it. Really)
Insect repellent (remedied at Amsterdam while waiting for delayed flight)
Hand sanitiser (not a great thing to forget)
Camera memory cards (rather more serious)

My flight landed a few hours late, due to some connection problem.  Coming through immigration, there was a huge and lengthy queue (Accra airport seems to have a number of international flights, all of which arrive within a few minutes of each other).  The stoic Brits in the queue waited patiently, muttering quietly about inefficiency or 'charming African character' depending on their disposition.  A few of the Ghanains, however, were more vocal in their disapproval - one chap stood for several minutes shouting from the back of the queue at the officials before pushing to the front, shouting, vaulting over the barrier, shouting, banging the desk, and shouting a bit more  A few more in the crowd began to shout as well, whether in support or not I couldn't tell.  It seemed to me a tad unwise though to be openly supporting the guy, whether you sympathised (I did) or not.  A 'crowd scene' looked to be potentially developing.

A brief confusion followed, during which several passengers walked through the customs check without stopping or handing over their customs declaration - not sure if that's allowed, but as I slipped through with themI saw a young English girl in tears.  Her mother had her arm comfortingly round her shoulder saying 'don't look, just keep walking, keep walking.'  Bless.  And, er, welcome to Ghana.

Shortly afterwards I went on my first overnight bus trip in Africa.  www.ypwc.org (more about them later) sent their Accra rep to the airport, who duly took me to a bus station full of coaches named 'Hallelujah' and 'Amazing Grace'. I boarded 'The Lord is my Shepherd', and a gentleman climbed in with a plastic bag full of DVDs.  He began what I initially assumed was a sales pitch, but as I looked at the titles (the Passion, St Paul, Samson and Delilah) I was less sure whether  he was evangelising or selling.  Some the titles confused me a bit ('The Arse of the Apostles' - I think I might have misheard 'Acts'), but eventually he left, my wallet no lighter and my soul resolutely not saved.

The following morning, I arrived at Kumasi bus station or rather, was turfed out by the side of the road.  A characteristically African melee of stalls, traders, hawkers and passers by greeted me as I retrieved my rucksack and looked vaguely around for ideas about what to do next.  Culture shocked and unslept for over 24 hours, I was possibly now vulnerable to touts, so was wary when a 'helpful' taxidriver asked me where I was going.  Bleary eyed, I handed over my welcome letter from YPWC, before realising that he had no idea where the address was (to be fair it was a PO Box number).  He eventually managed to get through to George, before taking me a short distance from the bus to wait.  While waiting, I had the first of a number of conversations about Chelsea FC (my opinion - they're losing - good), and gradually began to regret classifying my new buddy Mike as a 'tout'.  I've been told many times that Ghana is one of the friendliest, unhassliest countries in Africa, and finding only help - in the middle of the night, in a city, from a stranger, in my hour of need?  Surely a good sign.

Yes, I think I'm going to like it here. .





3 comments:

  1. i wonder if you will have a problem on exit if you haven't got the piece of paper from customs you should have had on entry.... i got into some difficulty with this at grantley adams in bridgetown - we had been given the paper work but i think hannah had used it to do her colouring-in or something. there was an enormous to-do hugely compounded by the fact that i was carrying needles (hannah's epipens)in my hand luggage and hadn't got the proper paperwork for those either. i still don't really understand how i might have over-powered the on-board security team of an aircraft armed only with two epipens, a five year old and a toddler but i guess you can't be too careful. at one point i thought our stay was going to get an indefinite extension (and not in the nice hotel we had just left) but in the end i think the luggage handlers refused to go in and retrieve our bags so we were allowed on the plane

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  2. Thanks Annette. A true beacon of darkness amid all the light. I expect the Grantley Adams people just got annoyed because you started telling them 'I'm a lawyer don't you know'. I won't try that, even if it means spending the rest of my days in a malarial dungeon.

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