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Africa Benin Côte d'Ivoire Ghana Guinea Guinea-Bissau Liberia Senegal Sierra Leone The Gambia Togo West Africa Road Trip

Reflections on West Africa

I’ve been posting about West Africa for 11 weeks, and the trip itself was wrapped up in a little over three weeks. My memories of it have benefited from going through the photos and writing about it here – it was amazing, even in the moment, but it was also full of long days and not enough sleep and terrible roads and swimming in a pool where crickets jumped in my hair.

There are reasons that West Africa is not the most touristy region out there. One of the ones I haven’t talked about much is the visas. As an American, 9 of the 10 countries required me to have a visa to enter.

  1. Only Senegal was visa-free, which was nice since that was the one where I entered and exited twice.
  2. I went to the embassy for The Gambia, where I paid $200 to get the stamp in my passport.
  3. We applied for Guinea-Bissau at the embassy in southern Senegal, as there is no Guinea-Bissau embassy in the US – it closed in 2007.
  4. Guinea was an e-visa. It was pretty fast for me, although others in my group had trouble.
  5. Sierra Leone was an e-visa, and was one of the smoothest ones.
  6. For Liberia, I paid Wander Expeditions to handle it, because their fee for helping wasn’t that much more than the embassy was going to charge me and I wanted to take something off my plate.
  7. Côte d’Ivoire had an online form to get a pre-approval, and then we finalized the visa at the airport when we landed in Abidjan. They took an absolutely terrible photo of me that now lives in my passport with an otherwise cool visa that has an elephant on it.
  8. I applied for Ghana at the consulate in DC. Theirs was annoying because they require you to not only have a hotel booking, but you need a letter from the hotel confirming that you’ve booked, which felt like a lot of work for something that I already had provided documentation on.
  9. Togo was the worst for me. This seemed to be an outlier opinion – most people in my group had a smooth time with the e-visa. Unfortunately, the website didn’t work very well for me. After SO many communications with their IT support team on the chat that didn’t seem to solve anything, one of the other travelers recommended I try it with a fully new phone number and email, which ultimately did work. Still, I only ended up getting my visa approved a few days before we were actually meant to enter the country. It was super stressful.
  10. Benin was the best – they were an e-visa as well, and I got their approval on the same day I applied.

It was an absolute marathon of visa applications. I do not intend to do anything like this again, to be honest, but as someone who does actually make my living in helping others with visa paperwork, it was a nice test of my skills. I had a color-coded Google doc that I was using to keep track of what documents I was waiting on or needed to gather, and what applications were pending and who had my passport.

The American passport is generally pretty strong. I’ve needed visas before, but nothing like this, and it is such a stark reminder of passport privilege. I understand why they’re doing it, for reciprocity, and I can’t be mad about it. I’ve helped people fill out the business visitor visas to enter the US, as well as the UK and Schengen ones, and they’re awful. They’re so intrusive, they need details that seem entirely irrelevant to a short visit, and I can’t begrudge a country for making us do something similar to enter their own borders. Still, it was both expensive and challenging for this trip.

After reading that, it does beg the question of whether that all was worth it. It probably isn’t, for everyone. There are certainly travelers who I’ve spoken to for whom this is their least favorite region because of the visas and other logistical challenges. But for me, I love seeing the places where other travelers don’t. It was not the easiest trip I’ve ever taken, but I did love the payoff of going to the villages and seeing the cultural practices and learning about places that aren’t as widely discussed on an international stage.

If you are interested in the region but aren’t quite as willing to be without creature comforts, there are options. Senegal and Ghana have probably the most tourist development and I would highly recommend either country, although out of those two I preferred Senegal. Côte d’Ivoire had some very modern places as well and some of our nicer hotels across the board, although it felt like you had to search a bit harder to get to the places that made it cool and unique. Benin did not have quite the same level of hotels, but was an amazing payoff that I think was worth a couple nights without air conditioning or a great shower.

I loved my time in West Africa. It was exhausting, but worth it. That said, I moved apartments immediately after I got back and that was the worst experience ever – I definitely wished I’d had proper recovery time afterwards to sleep in and veg for a weekend instead of immediately having to move all my possessions. So, you know…. plan better than I did!

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Africa Sierra Leone West Africa Road Trip

The Sights of Sierra Leone

From a tourism perspective, Sierra Leone has an optics problem. Namely, the 2006 movie Blood Diamond, featuring a young Leonardo DiCaprio and set during the 1990s civil war. I remember seeing the movie and quite liking it. Unfortunately for Sierra Leone, so did a lot of people, and they’re having a hard time shaking the reputation of being in an active civil war, even though it’s been over two decades since the conflict ended.

I had recently read an article about their push to get more tourists to see beyond their history, and I was excited to visit! First impressions were of a gorgeous, lush countryside. Sorry not sorry for the many photos out the car window.

Most of our time was spent in Freetown, which is their capital. Freetown, like its neighbor Liberia, was founded by freed African Americans and African Canadians, which led to interesting tensions between those founders, the local West African tribes, and the British, who were colonizing it at the time.

I liked Freetown. I found it very interesting. We started by exploring the city center and went to a lot of the historical sites, like the original Fouray Bay College building and the Cotton Tree. We visited a market and then went to the Kroo Bay slum, which is one of the poorer areas of the city. It’s sometimes strange to visit an area where everyone is working, and it’s not designed for tourists – I felt as though I was constantly in the way while we were there, and it’s hard not to feel as though we were gawking, just a little. As an outsider there to observe the local culture, sometimes our presence alone is enough to be uncomfortable for the locals. Nonetheless, I’m glad we did get a chance to see that area as well, and hopefully we weren’t too disruptive to the people who live there.

Freetown is surrounded by hills, which made for a very cool viewpoint to look at the landscape over the city. It was quite a trek up to get to that view.

After exploring the city, we spent a lovely afternoon at the beach! We were at River Number Two Beach, which is genuinely one of the funniest names for a beach that I’ve ever heard. After several very long days in the car, it was amazing to have a nice, chill time, and the beach was great. Beautiful, with drinks and food available, and we had it mostly to ourselves.

Fun fact about their currency – the denominations are quite small relative to the price of items, so every time we had to pay anywhere, it was huge stacks of bills. I watched a woman count the money from our dinner for easily five minutes.

The next morning, we headed east from Freetown. As might be obvious from the Blood Diamond reference, Sierra Leone is known for their diamond mining. They are still one of the top ten producers of diamonds worldwide, and the situation is much better now that the diamonds being produced aren’t “blood diamonds,” or conflict diamonds. We had a chance to visit a diamond mine on the drive between Freetown and the Liberian border, which was a really interesting experience.

What I didn’t expect was how much it looked like panning for gold!

After we left the diamond mine, we promptly got a flat tire. It was a little scary, actually – I’d never been in a car when it got a flat before, and the noise is pretty alarming. We stopped on the side of the road as the driver tried to fix it, but we ended up giving up and loping along on the flat, because the border with Liberia isn’t open that late and we didn’t want to get stuck on the Sierra Leone side.

Sierra Leone also wins for my favorite signs of the whole trip. Across the board, West Africa has great signs – names of shops often are many words long, resembling full sentences and referencing God or Obama or other famous people. The PSAs and the ads are all so different from what I’m used to. I had so much fun spotting the interesting types of billboards and store names out the car window throughout the road trip.

Luckily, after our flat tire situation, we did manage to get to the Liberian border before it closed, and we ended that day in Monrovia, Liberia. We got to the hotel very late, if I remember correctly. Honestly, that’s a safe bet for most of the trip.

I had a very pleasant visit in Sierra Leone. I’m looking forward to seeing how they develop their tourism as they gain more distance from the war and from the public’s perception of them as a war-torn place!