Advertisement
Published: July 24th 2010
Edit Blog Post
Rwanda is a beautiful country, the roads are fantastic and the people are really friendly, the children wave and call out “how are you?”. The best day we have had on the whole trip was in the rainforest of the Parc National Des Volcans where we went gorilla trekking. With thick rainforest blocking our way, the tracker used a machete to cut down the forest to make a path, while we walked up to our knees in undergrowth and stinging nettle.
We were lucky to be visiting the Susa group, the largest and most famous of the seven habituated groups. What made our visit even more special is that this group is usually the hardest to reach, normally you need to trek for 3-4 hours up the slopes of Karisimbi at an altitude of more than 3000m. This group was habituated by the famous Dian Fossey. At one stage they were a group of 45 until they split and the group that we visited was around 28, this group included the first twins to survive as well. The gorillas are extremely important to Rwandan tourism, it makes up around 40% of the government's revenue so they are well protected from
poachers, although poaching does still occur.
It was the most incredible wildlife viewing experience and well worth the extortionate US$500 fee. The similarity to humans is hard not to notice. We spotted three massive silverbacks which came pounding through the undergrowth. The silverbacks weigh about 200kg and eat 30kg a day. On some occasions we got to within 1m of these majestic creatures. They surrounded us while they ate while the twin babies played and swung from the vines, doing back flips and kicking each other in the head. To be so close was nothing short of amazing and the maximum one hour viewing time went far too fast.
After our wonderful day we then headed to Kigali to visit the Kigali Memorial Centre, a harrowing museum exhibiting the horrific genocide that occurred here in 1994 where one million Tutsis and moderate Hutus men, women and children were massacred, butchered and raped in 100 days while the international community turned a blind eye. The last section of the museum was particularly difficult, with large photographs of children detailing their age, character, last words they spoke, favourite food and how they died - butchered, set on fire, stabbed through
the eyes and smashed against a wall. A powerful message to all those who leave the museum with images that will never leave us.
Following this we then jumped on a boda boda and went to Hotel de Milles Colline of “Hotel Rwanda” fame, a luxurious hotel where we had a drink and reflected on the events that happened there. Considering the horror that occurred here only 16 years ago, the country seems to be progressing and the wounds healing, although it is still evident with huge mass graves continuing to be discovered. The Rwandans capacity for forgiveness could teach us all a lesson.
Advertisement
Tot: 0.183s; Tpl: 0.012s; cc: 23; qc: 96; dbt: 0.1015s; 1; m:domysql w:travelblog (10.17.0.13); sld: 1;
; mem: 1.3mb