Site menu:

You’re the Best

Use these links and we benefit a little bit without cost to you. Expedia.co.uk Lastminute.com Amazon.co.uk
Thanks very much.

Sponsors

Subscribe for Free Updates

Site search

Zimbabwe Ireland Yoko Singapore Malaysia Funny Travel Botswana PoTW Cook Islands France Malawi Namibia Morocco Switzerland UK Italy UAE South Africa Zambia New Zealand Tanzania India Spain Thoughts Info Australia

-- Powered by Category Cloud

RSS Posts

Comments

Archives

Moshi to Mbeya: Two bad days on the bus

Posted by daveb on July 15th, 2008

We had been nearly a month in Tanzania and it was time to move on to countries new. Rather than take the seemingly direct road to get from Moshi in the north, to Mbeya in the South we were advised to dog-leg back via a place near Dar Es Salaam instead; because the apparently ‘straight’ road was anything but, the buses were guaranteed at least one lengthy breakdown en-route and the quality and quantity of the potholes would bring on a bout of piles.

We used the Hood bus company for the first leg from Moshi to Morogoro, under local advice. Lord knows what the other bus companies are like, because Hood was pretty rubbish: Take a old coach in reasonable condition, rip out the thirteen rows of 2+2 fabric seats and replace with fifteen rows of 3+2 vinyl seats (a 45% increase), disable the air conditioning, encourage your customers to throw rubbish on the floor (and out the windows), entertain them with VHS videos without properly adjusting the tracking, and you get the picture. Infuriatingly, the driver kept stopping at villages to take bribes from the locals to allow them to board the bus and flog their wares. This became very boring, very quickly. After seven hours of slipping around on vinyl seats at 120km/h (75mph) on rural roads we were quite glad to alight at Morogoro. The other passengers were glad too — we had hit something or someone a while back, and there were lots of shocked gasps, glances and heads shaking (I didn’t see what happened). We found a cheap hotel in which to put our heads down.

Next day we boarded a better quality Scandinavian company coach, which took us to Mbeya and worked quite well, except it started and thus finished an hour late. This made all the difference to us as it meant arriving in an unknown town after dark; something we try hard to avoid. Needless to say, Mbeya bus terminal was tout-o-rama and we had to push through a tight huddle of touts to even get off the bus, whilst their mates tried to ‘unload’ our bags from the luggage compartment into the car of a drunk taxi driver. Happily, as our fast-learning, self-appointed Chief of Security, I had padlocked our bags to the coach and so had a little fun watching the touts struggle to come to terms with why they couldn’t lift our bags.

After what seemed like too many nights in unclean, shared-bathroom, budget hotels, we had agreed to spend a night in the ‘midrange’ section of the Lonely Planet accommodation listings and got whisked into a dalla-dalla (mini, minibus) and taken to the supposedly upmarket Mbeya Peak Hotel. It was rotten. The room was awful, the bathroom was worse and the chef had been sent home early so we couldn’t eat there (meaning that we would have to go back out into the unknown darkness, or go hungry) and the price was twice that anything in which we had stayed before! It was all a bit much for us, Squiffy cried and I asked to speak the the manager, so I could share with him some things that were on my mind…

In all fairness to the guy–and quite unexpectedly–he immediately apologised and admitted that “not all hotels in Mbeya are like this” — although I reckon that something got lost in translation here! Apparently, the previous stuck-in-his-ways manager had passed-away just two months ago leaving him to pick up the pieces and try to rejuvenate the place. He offered to pay for a taxi to find a local restaurant to our liking, which we accepted. The first two places were closed, but we managed to pack into a plastic-tables Asian-cuisine restaurant.

Squiffy ordered vegetable fried rice and I ordered vegetable noodles with a couple of samousas. It took over an hour for anything to come out of the kitchen. I got vegetable noodles alone. When asked about the samousas, the waiter shrugged that they had none. Thanks for telling me earlier! “Chicken rice for you, the chef made a mistake”, as the plate came down in front of Squiffy. “Umm, but I ordered vegetable fried rice?”, she piped-up. “Yes, but you get chicken rice. I just told you that!”. So we both ate, samousaless and picking-out the chicken.

The bill came and the waiter had billed for chicken fried rice, not the cheaper vegetable option:

“Um, you’ve charged for chicken fried rice here, not vegetable”, I inquired.
“You had chicken rice”, he countered.
“Yes, but I asked for vegetable fried rice!”, chimed Squiffy.
“Yes, but you got chicken”, came the stern reply.
Sterner still, I offered “if you correct this bill to vegetable, then I’ll pay it.”

Another bad day, we were glad to see the back of it. We put our heads down in our grotty room (Squiffy slept in her silk sleeping-bag liner and used her own travel pillow, in preference to touching any hotel-owned nastiness.)

Comments

Comment from Nicola
Time: July 15, 2008, 11:29 am

Aww, i can picture the whole day and i would have cried too. Hope the next day is/was better.
Nicola
x

Comment from Andy
Time: July 15, 2008, 12:50 pm

most of the time i read these posts with a hint of envy but on this occasion -“rather you than me” springs to mind
I wonder what you would have received if you had order the Chicken? But look on the bright side, things can only get better. keep smiling!

Comment from Squiffy
Time: July 15, 2008, 2:01 pm

Andy, Nicola

Thanks guys, I appreciate your sympathy! I’m sorry to report, the next day was equally as bad (as you’ll read!) but am having a much more relaxing time at the moment. We do miss home sometimes!

Claire x

Comment from Naomi
Time: July 15, 2008, 6:46 pm

Ahhh missus! Sounds dreadful – I reckon that tops my bed bugs and a spider too big for the spider catching bowl ‘fancy’ hotel in Venzuela that left me standing on the toilet crying! What doesnt kill you makes you stronger apparently…. chin up matey ; )

Comment from Chloe
Time: July 15, 2008, 9:37 pm

Oh my… I don’t think I ever ended up in tears (well.. not quite). I do remember arriving 6 hours late at a place in India… 1am… and having to walk 20 mins (with a rucksack that had had paraffin spilled on it and my glasses had just broken), from the bus stop to a YHA we had the address of… to be let in by ‘someone’ who said we could only have a single bed and would have to be gone by 9am (hmmmm… before the manager arrived maybe?)… and it was a hot and sticky 25-30C… fan didn’t work and to keep inside the mozzy net yet not get ‘stuck to each other’ was a bit of a restless night!
Next morning’s view and breakfast in a nearby roadstop cafe made up for it.
PS in India, we found that if we ordered chicken curry, we got chicken bones, yet if we ordered chicken soup (1/4 the cost), we got soup containing chicken thigh and breast..?!!! Also on the menu were spog cheez and scimby iggs…

Am now looking fw to the ‘equally bad’ next day blog!! (Am smiling in sympathy… honest!) As you can tell from my posts… sometimes the really bad bits can actually become quite funny (with time… sometimes ***LOTS*** of time…)

Comment from H
Time: July 19, 2008, 9:43 pm

Sorry to hear about the chicken rice hun but you have to admit it was quite funny… I’ll pay you back for my amusement by treating you to a nice meal in Cape Town ! x

Comment from Leonor
Time: May 31, 2013, 1:19 pm

At this time it seems like Expression Engine is the preferred
blogging platform available right now. (from what I’ve read) Is that what you’re using on your blog?

Comment from laser tattoo removal letchworth
Time: July 9, 2013, 1:25 pm

Hi! Would you mind if I share your blog with my zynga group?
There’s a lot of folks that I think would really appreciate your content. Please let me know. Thanks

Write a comment