30 May 2023 – Day Four of the Old Legs Zanzibar Tour – Tete to Mwanza. Ouch.
Distance – 129 kilometers
Time – 11 hours 29 minutes
Av heart rate – 135 bpm
Max heart rate – 180 bpm
Av temp – bloody hot.
Touted as the second hardest day on Tour, yesterday was brutal and deserves promotion. But first the good news, we found our tent. Alastair Watermeyer has been sleeping in it. He claims not to have seen the word De Jong written all over the tent bag and the tent itself. He is also claiming squatters rights because he likes our tent. He says it has a better than his tent. I have started legal proceedings to recover 2 days rent and hardship compensation but fear it will be a long and protracted battle.
Tasked with making sure we leave town, we were joined for the ride out of Tete by Brendan and Fraser. We could not have asked for nicer hosts.
Riding out of Tete in amongst rush hour traffic was hectic. Apparently Tete rush hour drags out for hours and hours. It is a very busy town.
The ride out of Tete was like riding through a Mad Max Armageddon movie set with palls of smoke hanging low over crazy bastard gangs of motor-bikers. They mostly ride Chinese 150 c.c. street bikes, using them to ferry passengers or goods, any number of people, or anything, taking non-existent gaps in the traffic, whilst looking cool. Cedric saw 4 live pigs trussed up on one bike.
I tried to swap my bike for a motor bike at the bottom of a hill. It looked to have a very comfortable saddle as compared to my hard-arsed skinny thing. The owner of the motor bike accepted my swap deal immediately and started pushing my bike away. I had to chase after him to cancel the deal. I think he’d worked out that motor bike riders in Tete have the life expectancy of gnats.
The first 50 kilometers to breakfast stop fairly flew along, despite the hills that Alastair said weren’t there being attritional. For the first time on this Tour, I enjoyed the ride, briefly, until I got knackered.
I was able to get some spring back into my step when I was ambushed by a dead Mozambique spitting cobra. Just when I had built up to a decent speed by my standards, Zack called me to attend a summit meeting on the side road, all part of an elaborate ruse to have me bump into an ex-Mozambique spitting cobra which Alistair had humped on his bike for the last 20 kilometers, waiting for his moment. I didn’t disappoint and screamed like a girl. I screamed like two girls and fled when he threw me with the disgusting serpent.
We hit the bitch of a hill named Grace at 90 kilometers and started the long slow climb up and out of the Zambezi Valley.
The border runs right along side the road for a few kilometers at the top of Grace with Moz one side, and Malawi the other. Brian, Alastair and I hopped across to Malawi for a quick photo and a look see. First impressions, Malawi is very similar to Mozambique.
It was as hot as hell on the road today but thankfully a refreshing head wind blew up to cool us down. You will notice that both head and wind are 4 letter words.
After the Milk of Magnesia catastrophe, I didn’t dare fart all day, not without first deploying the toilet seat and plenty of toilet paper, for just in case. On my last emergency stop in a mealie field I was sure to have confounded some herdboys who snuck up to spy on me from afar by rushing into the mealies to set up my throne and pull my pants down in a hurry just to have a fart.
I would not have made it to Mwanza, but for Alistair and Rafe herding me like a sheep. I think Rafe must have been a sheep dog in a previous life, one of those giant Anatolian shepherds, because he spends the entire ride circling the peloton, from front to back, looking for strugglers and stragglers. On some days he must ride an extra 20%. I think I am going to pay him to tow me to Zanzibar.
Leaving Mozambique is easier than entering, and we cleared the border in minutes. The security guard was kind enough to whip a kid tout with sjambok for showing too much interest in the bikes. Once we’d cleared the border we rode through 3 kilometers of heavily populated no-man’s land, complete with thriving markets thronged with people, and even a police station. It was hectic. But nothing as compared to the Malawian border town of Mwanza.
Mwanza is about the size of Karoi but with maybe 10 times the people on the street. It boasts one decent hotel. Luckily we made bookings 8 weeks earlier. Unluckily, our bookings were cancelled the day before. Jenny and Vicky were tasked with finding alternative accommodation whilst the riders took refuge in a roadside pub waiting for the last 2 vehicles to clear.
Very long story short, Jenny and Vicky pulled rabbits out of the hat and somehow found beds enough for everyone in 2 separate guest lodges, apart from 3 unlucky buggers who had to sleep on mattresses on the floor. Both lodges were charming with loud blaring music, and even a fist fight in the street. Welcome to the warm heart of Africa.
Until my next blog from Balaka, have fun, do good and do epic if you can – Eric Chicken Legs de Jong
* Names and images may have been changed for privacy reasons
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31 May 2023 – Day Five of the Old Legs Zanzibar Tour – Mwanza to Balaka.
Distance – 117 kilometers
Total ascent – 1100 meters.
Time – 6 hours 14 minutes
Av heart rate – 129 bpm
Max heart rate – 155 bpm
Max Speed 62 kph
Max temp – 35 degrees a.k.a. bloody hot.
With regards the ride stats above, please don’t be thinking they are an indication of any return to form. Unfortunately they’re not mine. The stats belong to Angus Melrose. Jenny and I took the day off to get my eye pressure tested in Blantyre. Back to the stats, I think Angus’s heart rate monitor is busted and under reading. And looking at his max speed, small wonder his mom Geraldine has grey hair.
It was a good day to bunk out. Al Watermeyer is our route master. He softened the riders up with 10 kilometers of gentle descent to start and then sucker punched with a 100 kilometers of harsh unrelenting uptulations in brutal 36 degree heat. N.B. Uptulations are like undulations, just more harsh with no noticeable downhill bits. Like I say it was a good day to slack off in the car, but I suffered extreme FOMO nonetheless.
Jenny and I had to go to Blantyre to have the pressure in my bad eye tested. You will remember I had a major pressure wobble a few days before the Tour started, and we had no idea if my current regime of eye drops was doing the job or not.
The plan was we would rush into Blantyre, get my pressure tested, and then rush to rejoin the riders on the road to Balaka, having bought Kentucky Fried for lunch. Alas. The girl on Google Maps put paid to that plan by quickly getting us lost. Clearly, she has never been to Malawi since her life. On the upside, she was able to give us a grand tour of Blantyre. It looks to be a nice city, clean and tidy and well laid out.
Blantyre was hit hard by Cyclone Freddy just a few months back and hundreds of people lost their lives in the floods. The damage to infrastructure was massive but from what we could see, that looks to have all been sorted.
When eventually we blundered our way to the optician, my eye pressure tested just fine, which was a massive relief. Jenny and I bought 2 big buckets of KFC and rushed to rejoin the peloton on the road to Balaka before lunch. Unfortunately we rushed on the wrong road, again thanks to the chick on Google Maps.
We broke the bad news to the riders that lunch would only be served after they arrived in Balaka. Thankfully Al Watermeyer is one of the best foragers in the buisness, and he was able to rustle up delicious racquets of rats as a substitute lunch.
If anyone is looking for an affordable holiday destination, I can highly recommend Balaka. It is a crazy busy market town, absolutely teeming with people. Al was able to magic up styling accommodation for us at the UpTown Lodge, although he and George had to sleep top-to-tail in their slightly smaller than double bed. Even though we got ripped off on the exchange rate, 8 double rooms times and dinner for 16 cost us US $637.
We’ve only been in Malawi one day, but so far, so good. It is a happy country full of happy, friendly people. Small wonder Malawi is called the warm heart of Africa.
It is just as well Malawians are a happy people, because the country is absolutely full of them. There are Malawians everywhere you look- big ones, small ones, but especially small ones. Clearly the Malawian idea of child spacing is one kid every 5 meters.
When we stop for breakfast, we quickly attract crowds of onlookers within seconds, despite Pete’s table manners. The audience watch our every move, allowing us to feel like Kardashians.
There are almost as many NGO’s in Malawi as Malawians, all with big staff and bigger budgets. They spend a lot of money on signage proudly announcing their projects. According to the signage, the current flavor of the month is teaching Malawians how to be resilient.
I am sure the NGO’s do their utmost to uplift poor Malawians, but there is little sign of any success on the ground that I could see. Despite billions in aid every year for the last 40 years, rural Malawi remains a bottomless pit. The most that most kids can hope for is that Madonna gets some of her buddies to also adopt. Alas.
Until my next blog from Lake Malawi, have fun, do good and do epic if you can – Eric Chicken Legs de Jong.
* Names and images may have been changed for privacy reasons
If you are already a ZANE donor, we thank you from the bottom of our hearts. If you are not a donor but would like to be, please follow the link below and know that every donation, however big or small, goes directly to where it is most needed. If you would like to help but can’t donate, please join the ZANE family and ‘like’ or ‘share’ our posts or write us a Google review – every positive step helps spread the word about the life changing work ZANE does.
Thank you – Nicky Passaportis ZANE Australia
Please donate to support pensioners struggling to survive in Zimbabwe
Any assistance is greatly appreciated and goes a long way to giving our pensioners a better quality of life and lift the pressure of money worries which is very debilitating emotionally.
(Donations made to ZANE in Australia, are tax-deductible)