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You are here: Home : Destination Guide : Africa : Cameroon And Gabon : Locations

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Cameroon and Gabon: Locations

 

Limbe

The coastal resort town of Limbe is a wonderfully relaxed place to acclimatise to Cameroon. Founded in the mid-nineteenth century as a colony for freed slaves, something of the town's happy role in the ending of the slave trade lingers in the air. Fishing is the lifeblood of Limbe; one of the best things to do here is simply to hang out and watch the fishing boats and fishermen at work, and soak up the atmosphere. End the day at the Xplanade Restaurant on Down Beach where the daily catch is barbequed right in front of your eyes and served with fried plantains or cassava.

Limbe also benefits from endless stretches of chocolate-coloured-sandy beaches where you can relax after a long day sight-seeing. The sea can be quite treacherous, so venture into the sea with caution.

Amongst those in the know, Limbe Wildlife Centre, otherwise known as the Limbe Primate Sanctuary, is renowned as one of the leading centres of wildlife conservation in West Africa. Replacing a former zoo on this spot, for the last ten years or so this place has been a vital refuge and breeding centre for apes and other primates rescued from Cameroon's bushmeat trade. You will be able to get very close to some of the most endangered monkeys and apes species in West Africa including mandrills, lowland gorillas, drills, and chimpanzees.

Mount Cameroon

Towering above Limbe, Mount Cameroon, the closest African mountain to any sea coast, is West Africa's highest mountain at over 4000 metres (13,5000 feet). Recent lava flows make it very clear that Mount Cameroon is still an active volcano. The mountain is sacred to the local Bakweri people who live on its slopes, and call it Mongo-mo-Ndemi - the Mountain of Thunder. Remarkably, it's also the site of one of the world's toughest sporting events, the Race of Hope, a marathon up to the summit and back which takes place every year in January or February.

A more relaxed way of reaching the summit is to trek up the different trails. You access Mount Cameroon though the town of Buea, a busier and cooler town than Limbe. Head straight to the Mount Cameroon Ecotourism Organisation, an NGO that will organise a mountain trek for you for a modest fee.

Yaounde

Yaounde, known locally as the "City of Seven Hills," is attractively situated in the central highlands of Cameroon. There's really no specific sights as such for the traveller to see here but as the capital city Yaounde offers great nightlife and entertainment. You can start your evening by tasting one of the most popular foods in town: freshly cooked pork which is so tasty and juicy that you'll find it difficult not to gorge even more. It goes down well with Guinness and Coke - a peculiarly Cameroonian popular drink. This will prepare you for a great night of dancing on Makossa and Bikutsi rhythms, some of Cameroon's best popular music.

Djoum

Djoum has the feel of a frontier town. Situated right in the middle of the lush rainforest, it was set up by the Germans as a base for many deforestation projects that are still going on today. You reach Djoum through a red piste, badly maintained and practically unusable during the rainy seasons. Once in Djoum, you'll discover many derelict buildings, now pale souvenir of the colonisation era. But there's more to Djoum than meets the eye: around this small village and its dirt track road, around 50,000 pygmies still live today. The original inhabitants of most of the country, they were driven into the forest a couple of thousand years ago by various aggressive, taller Bantu tribes, and have made it their home ever since.

Overnight Train Journey: Yaounde to Ngaoundere

The sixteen-carriage train on the route north to Ngaoundere is huge compared to any other train in Cameroon. The reason apparently is that the roads through the centre of the country linking the south to the north are absolutely terrible, so everybody who is going to the far north travels to Ngaoundere by train and then continues their journey by road from there.

You can buy a first class ticket, with couchette, for under $60. If you're travelling on your own, it's pot luck who you share with. And you will be sharing, because this train is said to be absolutely packed every day - so make sure you book your couchette well in advance or you won't get one.

The night journey takes between 12 and 16 hours and you'll easily go to sleep with the gentle rocking motion of the carriages. The train passes through dense rainforest and bush-like landscapes, home to the Gbaya people who collect honey from natural and manmade hives and sell it at all the stations where the train stops.

Extreme North (Sahel)

The isolated north, as you travel towards Sahel, is generally much drier than the south and is characterised by a parched, monotonous sand-colored landscape. This is especially so during the dry season when harmattan, wind blowing south from the Sahara Desert, can blot out the sky with sand for days. Here you'll see mushroom-shaped termite mounds and cone-shaped thatched-roof houses which are typical of the northern territories.

Garoua

The wide Benoue River, which flows past the town of Garoua, is the last large free-flowing river before you hit the extremely dry Sahel landscape of the extreme north. It's also home to a locally renowned colony of hippopotamuses. For years this particular group of hippos has lived here just on the edge of town, finding it a pleasant place to be as they are fed by the locals and watched by the tourists. Hippos are feared as amongst the most dangerous and unpredictable animals in Africa, responsible over the years for killing many people who've been foolish enough to get too close. Indeed, two local fishermen were killed by hippos in Garoua just last year. If you do decide to watch the feeding of these might mammals, make sure you stay a safe distance away.

Tourou

The off-the-beaten-track town of Tourou is situated on the Nigerian border deep in the Mandaran Mountains, accessible via Mokolo. It takes a great deal of effort to get here by public transport, across appalling quality roads, and you'll have to share a battered pick-up with the locals and drive for hours under a parching hot sun. But when you arrive you will discover an authentic and ancient animist culture.

Every Thursday is market day and traders come to buy and sell from remote mountain villages all across the surrounding area, usually having walked for hours to get there. Here you will see all sorts of strange foods, traditional medicines and Kirdi women who wear helmet-shaped headgear which denotes their marital status.

Rhumsiki

As you approach Rhumsiki, the landscape really becomes dramatic; weird volcanic rock skyscrapers tower overhead wherever you look. The Mandaran Mountains are home to a hotchpotch of traditional animist peoples, known as Kirdi or 'pagans' by the Muslim majority of the plains below whose ancestors drove the Kirdi up into these mountains centuries ago. Rhumsiki is locally renowned for its tourist-friendly sorcerer who, for a small fee, will tell your fortune using a crab as his diviner!

Oudjilla

The small village of Oudjilla is half an hour's ride by motorbike taxi up the hillside from the town of Mora. Millet and virtually nothing else is grown on the terraces up the hillside. Not only is millet used for food and to make beer; the cone-shaped roofs of the houses are thatched with millet straw. Every part of the crop is used and the locals are know throughout Cameroon as 'millet people'. The chief of Oudjilla is used to receiving occasional travellers and tourists at his compound. People come here because of the beautiful location and attractive traditional architecture, but most importantly because of his remarkable polygamy - the chief here has 50 wives and 112 children!


Waza National Park

Waza is just flat savannah and not much else, yet it's home to some of the best wildlife in Cameroon despite suffering from huge poaching problems. People come from all over the world to get bitten by Waza's safari bug. Situated 80 miles north of Maroua, Waza National Park is the most famous and most spectacular wildlife reserve in Cameroon. Set up in 1934, it covers an area of 170,000 hectares. Wildlife to spot includes lions, elephants, hyenas, antelopes, ostriches, and dozens of bird species. The best time of year to visit is during the dry season when the wildlife gathers around the remaining waterholes for shade and water.

     
 

By Emma Jones

   
 
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