Another week, another Longonot ride and hike. This time, I was feeling relatively fit and set off at a nice pace up the flank of the crater. At the crater’s rim a guy that was still putting on his shoes in the parking lot when I left passed me at a breathless jog. Insulting as that was for my ego, it gave me a motivational boost and I jogged the crater rim as well, properly knackering my middle-aged ***. Honestly, if you want to feel out of shape and inferior, go running with some Kenyans.
Above: Paraphernalia at the Longonot gate and yours truly at the summit mid-jog… kind of looks like I’m gonna die…
But getting to the bottom I found I still had the energy to go hit the dirt, so I donned my riding kit and stowed my sweaty hiking stuff and blasted out, taking a small track I’d never seen before that linked two of the main roads in the valley. Take that, Mr. Fitness, and enjoy driving home in your cage!
Above: Less than a decade ago there would be no power lines in this pic. Kenya’s developing fast and the Kedong valley is taking the brunt of it with a new tar road, power lines, the SGR and all the charcoal burning, garbage tossing muppets that come with it.
Above: My Piggie at a dead-end
Merry Christmas everyone, and merry Christmas to my Piggie who finally got a new handlebar after possibly years of the old one being bent. You can suffer for ages with something like that, but it doesn’t make any sense to do so. Straight bars are so much nicer!
Above: New Pro Taper Pastrana high bar to replace the old, bent one
For New Years, my wife and kids took off to the beach without me. I needed to be home to be close to work. It’s one of those things where you absolutely have to be there half day each day or the whole thing breaks, so I was stuck. Fortunately, a couple of neighbours that Covid have brought closer (they were our bubble this year) were keen for an idea I hatched: Let’s set up a camp on Mt. Suswa! I’d ride up there after work and then commute back and forth through the valley each day while they went on hikes and chilled around the camp. Perfect compromise!
Above: Me ready for a 2-night camping trip up to Mt. Suswa… LOL, JK, etc…
Actually, I did pack all that stuff including a real pillow and a proper foam safari bed roll, but I let the neighbours carry it up for me in their Defender! That way I could be lean and mean and ride like a *******, which I did. First, up to work for the afternoon in the tea fields of Tigoni, a bite in the little shop on the road and then a quick tar rip to the nearest valley descent.
Above: Tea fields are always nice. Really great to be working in this area instead of being stuck in Nairobi behind a computer screen... One day I’ll bring a proper camera and zoom into the dip in the valley where the Nairobi city skyline is framed perfectly.
Above: At the petrol-station fruit shop. They serve up a pretty decent samosa for $0.50 and have ice cubes for your Coke. Now that’s service!
At the descent, which I last did many years ago and which used to be in a total state of disrepair, Mt. Suswa awaits in the distance. I’d received a message that the crew was already installed at the campsite and the beers were chilled, so I glued the throttle back and crashed my way over there, hammering over the stones.
Above: Follow the arrow for the campsite and cold beers. This pic shows you a good cross-section of the changes that have happened in the last 10 years in the Kedong. You can see the huge earthworks supporting the new railroad, in the distance the dust coming up is for a new tar road soon to be complete, and the road I’m on used to be little more than a goat path.
Above: Turn your shoulder a bit to the right, past the Euphorbia in bloom and you can see Mt. Longonot peaking out of the valley in the distance. All of this is my playground.
Above: Ok, let’s go.
The ride is great. Starts out in rocks, rocks and more rocks, descending the escarpment. At the SGR, I stopped to chat with the armed guys guarding the railway line - who ogled the bike with appropriate reverence - before speeding on through some sandy washes and goat paths until I crapped out onto the new tar road. Construction zones are always insane in Africa… you have to ride through clouds of dust through loose and rocky side-paths without being run over by a dump truck or motorpatrol. At last, it kicked me out at the feshy end of the construction zone, right at the turnoff to Suswa. From there it was a volcanic blast all the way to the inner crater rim and the cold beer waiting. Took under an hour from the viewpoint shots above.
Above: I arrived and created a huge fesh storm
Above: Dust devils are a regular feature down here. Love ‘em.
Above: Inside the outer rim of the crater on the way to the inner edge and campsite.
Above: Arrival! After a camp shower, I grabbed a cold beer from the cooler and sat on my big *** camp chair with my friends. Brilliant!
Above: The camp. My little tent and red bike accompanied by the huge Defender with roof tent and coolers of food and equipment. Unusual for me to have a support crew but I didn’t mind at all!
Above: Such a fantastic place…
Digging around in the boxes, I discovered the ladies had brought not only beers but also Flor de Cana rum. I’ve grown quite fond of that tasty beverage after being introduced to it by my friend Colobus up in the North several years ago (even if he was a bit stingy with the portions!) and then through reintroduction during this long 2020 Covid nightmare around fires in back gardens all year long. Good times indeed.
Above: Starting to feel like a party!
Above: The ladies whipped up a wicked meal and we all settled in by a roaring fire on the crater’s edge to watch the moon rise.
Above: Amateur night cellphone photography
Following morning I was a bit rough around the edges. The rum is tasty, very tasty, but also has a bite! While the ladies prepared to go for a hike up to the crater rim peak, I packed up my things and began my commute down the volcano, through the construction, back up the goat paths and rocky tracks and into the tea again.
Above: My red girl on the way off Suswa with Longonot in the distance and a beautiful clear sky above
Above: Stopped in Brackenhurst in Tigoni for a coffee to clear my head… I rode up there in a bit of a fog if I’m honest…
So half way through my day, I get a call from my friends on the mountain… there’s been an accident. One of them slipped and hurt their leg badly. Can’t walk, etc. and they’re still high on the mountain wondering what to do. I finish up and start racing back up to see how I can help out. Messages coming through indicate a helicopter might be on its way, which was good news but there was rain on the horizon…
Above: Almost back to the camp, seeing some rain out there which might complicate rescue a bit
Back at the camp, I get a message to pack up the Land Rover’s roof tent. A guy on a boda boda pitched up with the key and directed me to where he’d left the party. Sure enough as we were arriving, here comes the chopper. It was a bit comical and surreal… huge crowd of onlookers, phones out recording, no sense of personal space etc… on the floor is my friend being tended to by a very serious AMREF responder who whacks an IV in my friend’s arm and proceeds to strap her into one of those full-body immobility stretchers as if she’d broken her back (so many straps!), and then recruits 6 Masai guys to lug her in a flurry of vowels and normally incongruous syllables over to the helicopter. Then before you knew it, she was airborne and we were on our way back to the camp.
Above: Like something out of an action movie
Above: Masaai in their shukas, but also on smart phones… mzungu on the ground with a chopper in the distance… you know, the usual.
Above: So pleased to see that crazy looking woman and her “Can’t Ban THESE Guns” T-shirt in amongst the throng
Above: Driving back at golden hour after a little rain… Africa is fantastic
Above: Making sure everything’s okay with the patient, having a few drinks before calling it a night.
December 31, 2020. The last day of the longest year I can remember. It sure has had its share of ups and downs, highs and lows. Still, I am optimistic heading into the new year. Rain on the horizon meant I’d get wet, but the valley would be greener soon… I think that’s a metaphor. Things are still happening. Friendships this year have grown. Family’s healthy. Bike’s as beautiful as ever. I’ll probably be too busy to ride as much as I have in the past years, but I’m looking forward to 2021 with optimism!
Above: Looking into 2021
So ride on, bikers and see you next year!
:snorting: