Category Archives: Africa

Free Background Wallpaper ~ Serengeti Acacia

Serengeti-Acacia

 

This month’s free wallpaper is one of my favorite images – a beautiful acacia tree on a knoll overlooking the Serengeti Plain. Enjoy

 

Just click on the one that best represents the size of your monitor. If in doubt, click on the largest size.

For Tablets (1280×800)

Older Monitors (1600×900)

Widescreen Monitors (1920×1080)

Need help changing your wallpaper? Here’s instructions for iOSAndroidMac OS XWindows, and Ubuntu.

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Sambusi’s Two Tables by Lynne Mayhew

Stone Town, Zanzibar

 

Zanzibar is an island recognized for growing and exporting African spices. With its mysterious alley ways, known for their ornately carved doors, Birka-clad women move silently through the streets while loud speakers call faithful Muslims to prayer. An array of exotic and exciting food tempts the foreign traveler in selecting and savoring the island’s exotic cuisine.

It is evening and Paula has made reservation’s for us to eat at Sambusi’s Two Tables,  located in a private home .We have the address and decide to walk from our hotel, the Dhow Palace, in historic Stone Town. It is dark and we are walking single file along the semi-lit street hardly wide enough for two cars.  Huge arched doorways cast shadows into the street creating a somewhat ominous atmosphere. This reminds me of the honeymoon couple from Norway I met today who told me they were robbed of their money, passports, everything, while at the beach yesterday. Standing on a corner, we check the address and turn toward a residential section. Paula and I comment on the absence of traffic and people. Robert and Ron pause, look around for signs, house numbers, anything, and decide on a route. We are now cutting through yards and wishing we took a cab like the hotel desk clerk recommended we do, but stumble on the correct house only to find the entrance is hidden around the back, something the owner failed to mention. We knock on the door and after a couple of minutes are greeted by a teenager who asks us to come in and leave our shoes inside the door. This we do, and are led upstairs to the living room where a woman is watching TV. She barely smiles, indifferently nods to us while the son leads us on to the enclosed porch with two tables. We are the only ones here this evening, we are told.

It is a long narrow room with jalousie windows overlooking the deserted, dark street. Void of any decorations or pictures on the pale green walls, a ceiling fan hums on low speed, enough to drown out the TV.  Each table has six chairs, a clear plastic tablecloth like our grandmother’s once used, paper napkins and cutlery.

Our host, the father of the house, introduces himself as Salim by saying that he and his wife, Hidaya, prepare the food themselves. He appears in traditional Muslim attire, long shirt over baggy pants, shoeless but wearing a white lace prayer cap. Knowing we would be in a Muslim home, Paula and I were appropriately attired in skirts and shirts with sleeves, our husbands in long pants.  Courteously, in broken English, our host explains there is no menu and we would be served a course at a time. The guide book didn’t mention any of this, but the four of us are always open to adventure and something unique. We are brought bowls with warm water to wash our hands  and warm towels to dry them. He now brings us chapattis to nibble on and fruit drinks made from tamarind. Next, we are brought small bowls of pumpkin soup made with coconut milk and a touch of allspice. We food snobs give this the thumbs up. When Ron asks for more, our host politely reminds him that he must save room for the other dishes. One by one, the courses come, seasoned perfectly with spices grown on the island and prepared with skill and knowledge of age old Persian/Indian/African recipes. The curried chicken and baked fish were excellent.

This, we decide is the way to enjoy a meal. After two hours, we are finished, rewash our hands and get a bill which in American terms is $20.00 a couple. We thank our host, shake hands, find our shoes and announce we don’t have a clue how to get back to our hotel.

He makes a few gestures as to you walk here, turn there, so forth and so forth and we ask him to please call us a cab. Instead, he offers his teenage son to escort us back through the yard and the unlit streets. He takes us a different way, darker and lonelier then the way we thought we knew. We find our steps quickening through the maze of alley ways until we are in the light of our hotel. We bid him goodbye and a thank you with gratitude and relief. Robert offers a tip and he accepts.

Sambusi’s Two Tables. Zanzibar.  Another culinary experience.

Great images of Zanzibar.

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Zanzibar’s Doors by Lynne Mayhew

Upon arriving in Zanzibar, a large island off the coast of Tanzania in East Africa, the first things visitors marvel at are the magnificent wooden doors found in Stone Town, a World Heritage Site. Dedicated to preserving the remaining 200 plus doors and buildings out of the 800 that once existed, the Stone Town Historical and Cultural Society work hard to preserve the past, while educating visitors on the significance of the doors.

Click on images to see detail


Zanzibar’s Stone Town is a blend of Arab, Indian, European and African cultures. Each door represents the owner’s occupation as well as his status. Many of the tradesmen and ethnic groups are clustered together, giving each section of Stone Town its own cultural distinction.

When houses were built, the first part to be erected was the door. Its craftsmanship was reflected technically and artistically. Originally, doors were made from Burmese teak shipped across the Indian Ocean. East African teak replaced that and now other exotic woods are used. Skilled carvers from India were brought to Zanzibar to create the doors.

One of the well known doors is the Indian or Gujarati. These are heavy door panels made into small sections and reinforced. They were built for security and often used in the gold trading district. The Punjabi door style, also from India has an arched top over the frame. Carvings of the Taj Mahal and minarets adorn it. Heavy brass studs jut out of the paneling and are referred to as “elephant doors” when Indians once protected their homes from war elephants. Today, the brass studs are merely elaborate decorations.

Another door type is the Arabic door. Most have carved inscriptions from the Koran on the door lintel, a holy and protective influence.  The sides of the door frames are intricately carved as well.  Often time carved chains representing slave trading or keeping evil spirits from the home are featured. Other doors may use fish scales signifying the owner was a fisherman, sold or exported fish. Rope symbolizes security and signified the owner owned fishing vessels. Arab merchants used carved waves to signify their wealth and ties to the sea.

Carved symbols on the Zanzibari doors may include pineapples which are a sign of welcome.  When a merchant dealt in the spice trade, he would have floral designs carved on the door frames. Frankincense and date palms symbolize wealth and plenty. Jewelers had carved beads to advertise their trade. Geometric patterns often times indicated the owner was an accountant.

Living and trading as they did hundreds of years ago, Arabic, Indian, African and Asian families continue to reside and work in Stone Town.

Click the “Full Screen” icon at the far right of the thumbnails for best viewing.

More great images of Zanzibar and Tanzania can be found here.

 

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The Allure of Zanzibar

Just hearing the name Zanzibar conjures mysterious and exotic images in my mind’s eye. Zanzibar, off the east coast of Africa in the Indian Ocean just south of the Equator, is a lush, beautiful tropical island with palm fringed beaches mingling with the scent of cloves and other spices grown and exported from there. However, Stone Town with its winding alleyways and markets is what I associate with Zanzibar. This ancient city has been a port of call for Arab traders since the eighth century. Traders from Persia followed the monsoons down the African coast to trade in ivory, spices, and slaves. Today Zanzibar is the most economically prosperous state of Tanzania.

The alleys of Stone Town along with its architecture and massive carved doors give this ancient city its allure. I have included several images that, for me, depict what is “Zanzibar.” Click the “Full Screen” icon at the far right of the thumbnails for best viewing.

Additional Zanzibar pictures of mine can be found here and for still more Zanzibar here.

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POD ~ Moms and Babies

Moms and Babies

Moms and Babies

I met these young Moms and their babies in Ilula, a small Tanzanian village near Iringa, Tanzania. They are dressed in their traditional kanga cloths, a rectangle of cotton cloth with a border all around  printed in bold designs and bright colors. Kangas are usually worn as a pair – called a “doti”. One or two more kangas are often used to carry babies papoose style on mom’s back.

Moms and Babies

Moms and Babies

For more be sure to see “African Eyes,” a gallery of image of the people of south central Tanzania.

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Masai Matriarch

Masi Matriarch

Masi Matriarch

This dignified lady is the matriarch of a Masi village in central Tanzania.We had just finished a lunch of goat stew and rice with the village when this elegant, poised lady sat on a log under a tree for a brief visit. She thinks she is probably about ninety, and although nearly blind and a little hard of hearing she chatted patiently with us through an interrupter.

Be sure to see my gallery, African Eyes, showing additional images of  some of the people of the Southern Highlands of Tanzania.

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POD ~ Sisters

Sisters

Sisters (click to enlarge)

While wandering the back alleys of Stone Town, Zanzibar, we happened upon these two young girls (sisters?) apparently waiting for someone. They were shy but at the same time inquisitive, as we were and they patiently endured my photographing them.

I have posted two Zanzibar galleries and more on Tanzania here.

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African Eyes, part 2

Compared to Northern Tanzania, where the large parks such as the Serengeti and Ngorongoro are located, the Southern Highlands are extremely impoverished. The average annual income is less than US$200. Additionally, the area has the second highest rate of HIV/AIDS in Tanzania, exceeding ten percent of the population by some estimates. Consequently, many of the children are orphans and are forced to support themselves. They do not get adequate health care and are malnourished. Public education is available but many children do not go to school because their parents can not afford school fees, books and uniforms.

In the photo essay, African Eyes, you can see the dire conditions many of the children find themselves in. The children appear to be at much greater risk than many of the adults. Because of the HIV/AIDS epidemic many parents have died leaving more children than resources to care for them.The Ilula Orphan Program (IOP) is doing a tremendous amount of good in the area and is worthy and in need of your financial help.

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African Eyes

African Eyes is a new photo essay featuring several portraits of people of the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. Most of the images are of Bantu people with two exceptions. Can you identify the two Masai?

Tanzania is thought to have been inhabited for over 200 million years. The Bantu speaking people began to migrate to what is now Tanzania some 2,000 years ago from western Africa, while the Masai began their migration south from the Nile Valley about 500 years ago. Swahili, a spoken Bantu language, is the “official” language of much of East Africa including Tanzania.

Mostly peasant farmers, the people pictured here are warm and friendly. Though incredibly poor, they are proud and dignified and seem resigned to their way of life and economic situation.

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