Mount Suswa and the Mathare slums
Mount Suswa is indeed a beautiful place. A volcanic crater within a crater with a lofty peak where you can gaze down in wonder and imagine the creation of this beautiful landscape. Suswa is the sister crater to Longonot, a crater I'd hiked earlier and hope to hike again given the tranquility, fresh air and green bits everywhere. This was an overnight trip with us camping on the crater ridge and bar-b-queing a nice fresh goat...mmmmm nuuuuuuumy!
As the Maasai guides gave the crew of about 20 instructions for the hike, I only half-listened knowing the drill after a number of hikes. The park it home to all the animals of the region so you have to be on the look out for cats...big ones. And when it was time to start, I gave little thought to the gear I would need for the 5 hour hike on this hot sunny day........
All went well until we reached the peak 3 hours later, I huddled under an umbrella with a hike-mate shivering from the cold and wet. No coat, not fleece, no long pants...and in fact a cotton top and shorts. The lesson of being prepared had been taught to me by my father long ago. Many many times my father and I would drive into the woods where inevitably we would become stranded with a mechanical breakdown or stuck somewhere. On may of these outings and subsequent delays my father would repeat the phrase "Fuck!"... we don't have a (fill in the blank with jacket, car jack, can opener, gas, spare tire, matches, screwdriver, map, hairdryer, prayer.......) This is how I learned the importance of being prepared...Thank you father for these important life lessons :)
The sky lit with lightening and the thunder sounded and then the hail..in chunks. There was nowhere to go to get out of the hail and ensuing rainstorm that got heavier with each passing minute. The 2 hour hike out would be a cold wet and uncomfortable time...but then - Ha!!!! - a flash flood and wind to make things more interesting. Water rushed down the mountain finding our trail the most attractive way back down. Water began to surge over my ankles and then up to my knees at points. The trail became unusable at some point and we scrambled along after our Maasai guide. The group had become separated and I remember thinking it unlikely we would get back safely as darkness started to fall.
In the end the only casualties were electronic devices...and fortunately not mine. Cameras and phone are not built for a rain storm... nothing money and copious amounts of alcohol can't solve.
As the Maasai guides gave the crew of about 20 instructions for the hike, I only half-listened knowing the drill after a number of hikes. The park it home to all the animals of the region so you have to be on the look out for cats...big ones. And when it was time to start, I gave little thought to the gear I would need for the 5 hour hike on this hot sunny day........
All went well until we reached the peak 3 hours later, I huddled under an umbrella with a hike-mate shivering from the cold and wet. No coat, not fleece, no long pants...and in fact a cotton top and shorts. The lesson of being prepared had been taught to me by my father long ago. Many many times my father and I would drive into the woods where inevitably we would become stranded with a mechanical breakdown or stuck somewhere. On may of these outings and subsequent delays my father would repeat the phrase "Fuck!"... we don't have a (fill in the blank with jacket, car jack, can opener, gas, spare tire, matches, screwdriver, map, hairdryer, prayer.......) This is how I learned the importance of being prepared...Thank you father for these important life lessons :)
The sky lit with lightening and the thunder sounded and then the hail..in chunks. There was nowhere to go to get out of the hail and ensuing rainstorm that got heavier with each passing minute. The 2 hour hike out would be a cold wet and uncomfortable time...but then - Ha!!!! - a flash flood and wind to make things more interesting. Water rushed down the mountain finding our trail the most attractive way back down. Water began to surge over my ankles and then up to my knees at points. The trail became unusable at some point and we scrambled along after our Maasai guide. The group had become separated and I remember thinking it unlikely we would get back safely as darkness started to fall.
In the end the only casualties were electronic devices...and fortunately not mine. Cameras and phone are not built for a rain storm... nothing money and copious amounts of alcohol can't solve.
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Making our way to Mount Suswa in a 10 ton overland vehicle. Surprisingly capable off-road. |

Later a group ventured overland to the caves at the base of Mount Suswa. We trekked over the land shared by the pastoralist Maasai, baboons, zebra and all other manner of assorted African wildlife.
The caves are interesting. Baboon parliament as it's called, is straight out of an Indiana Jones movie. A hundred meters into the 2 kilometer tunnel you find a pile of rocks 3 meters high in a big cavern that reminded me of a high school gym though the baboon poo was less smelly than the sweat I remember from those days.
Directly above the rock pile is an opening where the sun lights the pile like a stage. All around are rocks forming a theatre of sorts where the Baboon gather ever night...the leader taking the top of the rock pile and the others arranging themselves to listen and share. Later the baboons find shelves high in the cave to protect them from the prowling leopards that visit on a regular basis hoping for a lazy and delicious baboon.. Deeper in the tunnel were the bats.......
It was the edge of my tolerance for physical discomfort and general creepiness. Hot...overwhelmingly reeking of ammonia, walking over 3 feet of dried guano which is puffy like dry snow but doesn't pack down. It's dusty, catching in your throat. And filled with flies....thousands and thousands all over you....in your eyes and ears and mouth.... panic rises and subsides with each step. At times you have to crawl a bit using your hands covered in the Guano and while dry. it's impossible not to fixate on.... and then of course the actual bats. Looking up with your headlights they are a mass moving and peeping loudly together hanging within reach ...... it seems like there are millions and maybe there are.... all moving and shifting uncomfortable with the intrusion. It's an overwhelming physical experience. Can't wait to do it again :)
The caves were also reportedly home to the Mau Mau as they fought for their independence from 1952 through to 1960 when the message was finally made clear that Africans had had enough of the colonial power. Central to that struggle was the freedom fighter, or depending on your perspective, rebel leader Dedan Kimathi. A true hero of the times immortalized in a beautiful statue in the center of Nairobi. His leadership and outrage propelled many to fight for an independence that should have been been an inalienable birth right and beyond the destructive and oppressive actions of the Europeans at the time.
His capture and death in 1957 signaled the end of the Mau Mau uprising.....
Walking the caves I thought of what it must have been like for him.....what would he think of how far this beautiful country has come in such a short time. His death was not in vain, it is an inspiration for all who want the best for this country and her people.
A visit to Mathare
There is nothing pleasant about Mathare other than the unassailable smiles of those who survive in this slum. It's the second largest in Nairobi and together with Eastleigh and the dump-site, provide a place to call home for around 2 million people. MSF started 10 years ago with HIV and TB programs which have since been successfully taken up by the Kenya Ministry of health. Our team now provides programs for drug and multi-drug resistant TB. The programs are hard on staff given the meticulous protocol required to keep everyone safe from this disease. Of course it's much much worse with those stricken with the resistant strains of the disease. The drug regime, in a word, brutal.
The program has been in place for just over 2 years now and while not busy in the early days becomes increasingly and unfortunately more busy as the population comes to trust and reach out for our help. The stories shared are in hushed voices with clenched fists and a helplessness that accompanies horrific circumstances with no obvious and immediate solutions. Always at the heart of it innocence lost and bonds of trust with family, community, society and any others damaged forever beyond repair. I am proud to be associated with those who do this work each day.
Thank you for reading....Layno
Mathare