TRAVEL TALES
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Young Chang
Ed Shoemaker opened up the paper Tuesday morning and felt closer to a
piece of international news.
“Dormitory Fire Kills 58 Teens in Kenya” the L.A. Times headline read.
Another story quoted anthropologist Dr. Louis Leakey. Shoemaker and his
wife Margaret had heard Leakey’s son Mike speak during their three week
trip to South Africa and other northern countries in Africa earlier this
month.
Their vacation, which included a four-day safari and a cruise aboard
the Pacific Princess, has helped the Corona del Mar couple better
visualize and understand the news they hear about far-away places on the
African continent.
“That’s very sad, when you see these little children just standing
around and it’s very hard to see the poverty and to know they have no
chance of education or bettering themselves or having a better place to
live in,” said Ed Shoemaker. “It’s hard, but it exists and you have to
see it.”
It was their first visit to Africa -- Margaret, 69, is a housewife;
Ed, 73, has retired from a company that makes sprinklers. The couple
visited Kenya, where they saw animals of all sorts of exotic natures, the
South African cities of East London, Nairobi, Durban, the island of Nosy
Be and the Comoros Islands.
At Nosy Komba, near Nosy Be, the Shoemakers saw plenty of furry
lemurs, a species of monkeys.
One of Maragaret Shoemaker’s favorite stops was the French
protectorate of Mayotte. The cruise group took a tour around the tropical
island, which was rife with coral reefs and lush greens.
And in Durban, the couple visited a Zulu village built during the
filming of the movie “Shaka Zulu.” They saw how the natives lived, how
they made their pots and dwelled in thatched huts while hunting animals
for food.
For clothes, the Durban natives wore leopard skins. Unmarried women
went topless and married ones covered up.
“That’s how you could tell,” Margaret Shoemaker said.
Cape Town was surprisingly modern.
“[Parts of] South Africa didn’t look too different from Santa Ana or
Costa Mesa,” Ed Shoemaker said. “But Africa is just a country of great
contrast. There is great beauty, and abject poverty right beside it.”
Of the poorer areas in the continent, he added that people live in mud
huts and walk around, “just doing nothing.”
“Kenya is not very prosperous,” he said. “And Mayotte -- people look
like they’re just kind of living their existence.”
The travelers didn’t get to know any natives, aside from their tour
guide. They mingled within their own tour group with other Americans,
Canadians and a couple from Ireland, but when it came to culinary
matters, they were more interactive.
In Nairobi, the Shoemakers sampled Zebra meat, which was tasty.
Antelope meat was almost undiscernable from regular beef, Margaret
Shoemaker said, and the food was enjoyable, though not at all gourmet.
When asked if they would return to Africa, the couple says there are
still other parts of the world they also need to see.
“But for anybody that hasn’t done it, I certainly recommend it,” Ed
Shoemaker said. “Africa’s just a very interesting continent, and [South
Africa’s] just a nice country.”
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to Travel Tales, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail [email protected]; or fax to
(949) 646-4170.
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