Iceland review - 2015, Side 66

Iceland review - 2015, Side 66
64 ICELAND REVIEW in Iceland—the best new roads would be found in the constituency of whoever hap- pened to be minister for roads. The long- est-serving president in the world, Biya has been in office for almost 40 years. Iceland’s own Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson is number 17 on the list of the world’s longest-serving national leaders, flanked by Yahya Jammeh of The Gambia and Denis Sassou Nguesso of the Republic of Congo. We are in famil- iar territory. We reach the village of Ndop and people shout “white men” when we walk past the football field where Mile 27 Social Club plays Solidarity Social Club. The school- girls in this part of the country have regu- lation cropped hair. Having passed through Foumban, the home of the Sultan of Bamum whose fore- fathers founded their kingdom in 1394, we finally arrive in Bamenda. The Skyline Hotel is perched 200 meters above the town, and like most hotels in this part of the world it’s run-down. The only other guests are a middle-aged couple driving a Mercedes SUV. The woman is expensively dressed, with her finest jewels. The man looks unhappy. In the evening we see the most spectacular lightning show and wake at 5:30 the next morning to wit- ness the sun come up over the town below. Thick plumes of smoke from cooking fires rise from every house. The photographer had been so impressed with the show of thunder and lightning the night before that he went out to the balcony, leaving the door ajar and the lights in his room switched on. He paid for his carelessness with hundreds of insect bites and no sleep. Something about Bamenda feels right. I have spent a big chunk of my adult life in London, and bits of it in Amsterdam and Brussels, but now I feel like I have actually traveled somewhere, at last. The writer Paul Bowles said, “I’ve always wanted to get as far as possible from the place where I was born. Far both geographically and spiritually. To leave it behind …” We are the only white people in Bamenda. We spend the next couple of days explor- ing villages in the mountains around Bamenda. It’s Cameroon’s national holiday and celebrations are underway. Groups of the president’s supporters are march- ing in specially-made costumes with Biya’s photo and some slogans. Most of them are unemployed and are paid to show their support. On the outskirts of Bali, burned-down houses are guarded by men with Kalashnikovs, the aftermath of land disputes escalating out of control. They smile and wave us through. People dressed in their finest wait for bush-taxis to take them to celebrations in Santa. Most of the taxis are battered old Toyota Corollas. We count one of them carrying 16 people: four in the front, five in the back, four sitting on the roof and three on the back. We briefly entertain the idea of leaving our present lives behind and becoming bush-taxi driv- ers. EXPLORATION LONG GONE It’s a strange feeling being back in my car heading to a farm in South Iceland, my wife by my side, the children in the back seat. Everything is familiar but somehow different as well. I feel like a mini-Thesiger, there’s a bit of that Dufferin spirit in me. Drunk from my experiences of Africa I feel that I have traveled so much further afield than the people in this southern region of Iceland. For them, the world stretches per- haps from Höfn to Reykjavík. My wife is working on a project which brings young designers together with farm- ers to try to create new products from Icelandic farming. On this trip we are vis- iting farmers growing rhubarb just east of Selfoss. We’re invited in for coffee. It turns out that Dóra the farmer was born in Germany. She moved to Iceland as a young woman, mainly because of an interest in the Icelandic horse. She lived in Ísafjörður in the West Fjords, where she worked as a tourism representative, before relocating to the farm east of Selfoss to grow rhubarb. After chatting for a while she tells us that as a hobby she likes to dress up as a Viking, taking part in staged battles, together with her daughter. “How won- derful,” I remark. “Are these by any chance pieces of Viking jewelry that you are wear- ing?” “Yes,” she says, “they are exact replicas of Viking pieces that were unearthed by archaeologists in Denmark.” I wonder how these exquisite bronze rings and bracelets were made. “Oh, I travel to a place called Bamenda in northern Cameroon, they are experts at casting bronze using beeswax. I just returned from there a couple of months ago. We all wear these pieces to battle.” On the drive home I am quiet. I feel a connection to this woman, because we had both experienced the magic of northern Cameroon and I assume we both saw the world in the same light. But at the same time, I am disappointed. I don’t think Dufferin would have returned home to Clandeboye from his travels, only to run into someone who said: “Oh, back from Iceland, are you? I was there last week. Magical place.” The notion of being an explorer is dead; Wilfred Thesiger, Edmund Hillary and Lord Dufferin were the last of a kind. The whole world has been mapped, doc- umented and photographed. But nothing on Google could prepare you for the real experience of standing on the shore at Raufarhöfn, facing the northern gale on a late summer’s day, or hiding under a tree during an almighty downpour on the per- fect white beach in Kribi, looking at fisher- men bringing in their catch from the Gulf of Guinea. Besides, if Dufferin had arrived on the bus from Keflavík Airport in 2015, he would be discovering Reykjavík as if for the first time. * Halldór Lárusson has lived in four countries and traveled to many more. He has degrees in econom- ics, philosophy and history of science. TRAVEL In Bgambi village in northern Cameroon the children play football in the middle of the day when most people seek shelter from the heat.
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