We left at 3am on Friday morning on a trip to Northern Ghana. We booked with a tour company called MOFEG tours. It was great and I was really happy with our decision. The guy who owns the company, Moses, is a really great guy. We took an air conditioned bus and there were nine of us, all international students.
We made it to Mole National Park to spend the night around 6pm on Friday-- Yepp that's right, it took us 15 hours. It was about 13 hours in a the car, two rest stops, and lunch. It was pretty horrible, I'm not going to sugar coat it at all. The roads in Ghana aren't the greatest, and there are speed bumps everywhere! Of the 13 hours, we spent 3 of them on a dirt road and that was the worst part. But, the scenery along the way was great.
I will say Mole National Park was worth it though. We got up early at did a safari. We tracked down an elephant with our tour guide. We got about 15 ft away! It was so great. We also saw antelope, monkeys, and warthogs.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi901RSNlwOtGgM2Ae4jR3LxfXC_bK6KsBNn7Dmp-X5dZvYmG9XVaxcFR83XtzEq4TA5aaKFsxs1Bx6RMMaC6LvQHrWOYRT4iE5D1ZU7oMWGjpag6mhEQzU7RbUOT56QbO2cVyWoDO4WhKC/s320/DSCN2082.JPG) |
Those are elephant tracks! |
We also saw the Larabanga Mosque and Mystic Stone, which is on the cover of my Lonely Planet West Africa book. It was neat, but I don't think it deserved to be on the cover of Lonely Planet.. I would have put the elephants on the cover, they were defiantly more exciting.
We spent the next two nights in Tamale, the capital of the Northern Region of Ghana. The north defiantly has a different feel than the Greater Accra area. There is a large Muslim influence in the North, so there were lots of women wearing head wraps and lots of Mosques. Also, there was motorcycles everywhere, just like in Benin. There was lots of cows, donkeys, sheep, and goats. I got a nice lesson from Emma in the difference between and sheep and a goat. There were large trucks everywhere, piled high. And sometimes on top was a couple of Ghanaians.
On Sunday, we drove to Paga, a border town. We stopped at a Crocodile Pond on the way and I got to touch another crocodile. We also got the opportunity to walk across the border into Burkina Faso, which was pretty great. I can say I've been to four West African Countries; Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Burkina Faso.
On Monday we drove all the way back to Accra. We spent the full day on the bus, and I was so happy to be home. Overall we spent 40 hours on the bus over the weekend, it was quite the trip. I am going to appreciate the smooth highways across the U.S. a lot more now.