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  • Africa,  Tanzania

    Is this paradise? – Nungwi, Zanzibar

    19/08/2019

    Disclaimer: the following article is full of clichés and might make you want to quit your job and move here. I do not take responsibility for your actions. A cliché of a paradise beach: the bedroom’s windows open to an ocean breeze, the pristine blue water is warm and yet refreshing.  The sunrise shadows the beach with coconut trees silhouettes and the sun sets slowly in the water while you sip on cocktails. Even the name of this beach is exotic, Nungwi [nung-gwee]. Tucked up in the north of Zanzibar, Nungwi is the perfect beach for a hotel resort kind of life.

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    03/12/2017
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    Watching the World go by…

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    Why did I visit a Tanzanian Prison?

    24/01/2018
  • Africa,  Tanzania

    Paje, Zanzibar – not an ordinary beach!

    28/07/2019

    I had been walking into the sea for 15 minutes, and the water level was still just under my knees! The tide of Paje’s beach, in the east coast of Zanzibar island, was at it’s lowest. The flowing water goes back so far away, I wondered where did it go?! It looked like a children’s infinite pool within the actual sea. But my walk so far had not been short on interesting discoveries. It was like a theatrical play. The characters: the locals, the sea life revealed by the shallow water, the tide, the wind, the sun and me. All brought together to unravel a story, the story of Paje’s…

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    Taking over the World in Livingstonia – Malawi

    15/10/2020

    YOU NEED TO KNOW THIS BEFORE YOU VOLUNTEER IN A SCHOOL IN AFRICA

    20/01/2018

    The biggest sun rises above Malawi

    28/03/2020
  • Africa,  Tanzania

    A DAY HUNTING WITH THE HADZA TRIBE

    30/06/2019

    During my time in Tanzania, I was lucky to be able to spend a day following one of the last remaining active hunter-gatherers indigenous tribe, the Hadzabe. They did put life, as I know it, into perspective. Evolution has always been what we, human beings, aim for. But this tribe has proven that despite living a primitive lifestyle, unchanged for thousands of years, they still have what we lost along the way for the so-called modernization. The basics, beyond the everyday fight for survival, it is all about the long-term balance with nature and within ourselves.  And as it turns out, their diet makes them one of the healthiest people…

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    24/01/2018

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  • Africa,  Tanzania

    Datoga Tribe – Beliefs about Marriage

    19/09/2018

    “If I like you, I will wait for you to be alone, maybe when you are herding the cattle. I will come for you, I will pick you up on my shoulders and take you with me, so you will marry me!” This was the answer from our Datoga guide to my question on how do the Datoga arrange a marriage. I think I must have frozen for a few seconds, terrified with the idea! It sounds like… well like kidnapping to me! However, it is a normal practice among this tribe in the north of Tanzania. Once I picked up my chin from the floor, I continue with my…

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    Woman selling Bananas Africa

    Bananas’ Town

    01/03/2018
  • Africa,  Tanzania

    Culture Shock – Driving in Africa Advice

    02/09/2018

    CULTURE SHOCK I never knew exactly what was it. I thought it would only happen to people who aren’t open-minded or don’t like travelling to remote areas. When I travel, it is the different ways of thinking and the unusual ways of living that excites me. But this one late evening, 3 weeks into my time in Tanzania, I found myself speechless, with my stomach turning when I found out that our other guide and driver hit a pedestrian and ran away. Our guide said he had to do it, “everybody does it”. I knew he wasn’t a bad guy but at first I couldn’t understand why this crimewas okay…

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    Riad: heaven in a chaotic city!

    24/02/2015

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    28/04/2015

    SAFARI, IS IT SAFE? – Part 2

    25/02/2018
  • Africa,  Tanzania

    9 Things to do in Stone Town

    25/07/2018

    Stone Town is the port of entry to the paradisiac island of Zanzibar, perhaps overshadowed by the idyllic palm trees on the beach of the east and north coast, most people tends to avoid it. However, with so many things to do in Stone Town, I would say stop here for a spoonful of cultural history embedded in spices, better appreciated sitting barefoot on a pillow of a rooftop with a sunset view. You certainly won’t regret it. You will want to spend at least one to two days exploring this charming old town, eat your way around and sail to a nearby island to feed giant turtles. ~ TO…

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    24/01/2018

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  • Old Man Stone Town, Zanzibar, Tanzania, África
    Africa,  Tanzania

    Watching the World go by…

    15/07/2018

    In the early warm hours of the day, the call-to-prayer wakes up the whole town. Once the so said prayers are over, the population of Stone Town occupy the labyrinth alleyways and carry on with their daily tasks: to sell, to buy, to sit chatting with the neighbours, to stand on the streets greeting tourists, to stand on the streets watching the world go by… A few times I wondered what these last ones were thinking. On one of my wandering hours, I noticed this old man was doing just that. Seated barefoot on

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    Paje, Zanzibar – not an ordinary beach!

    28/07/2019

    A Banana Beer Nip, A Coffee Sip and a Waterfall Dip

    09/02/2018

    Once upon a time, a Sultan…

    26/04/2015
  • Africa,  Tanzania

    A Dance with a Maasai Tribe

    20/03/2018

    The Dance They knew we were coming. On our arrival, they rushed to make us feel welcomed by placing a Shuka cloth over our shoulders and a flat large beaded necklace on our necks. They live waiting, existing underneath a tree or in the shadow of their mud house. If we didn’t come, probably someone else would, if not today, tomorrow or after. This is what the Maasai tribe in this village does; they open themselves to the tourism, allowing visitors to enter their houses and share their way of living in exchange, of course, for money. It is their business after all. The men were the first stepping out…

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    03/12/2017

    A DAY HUNTING WITH THE HADZA TRIBE

    30/06/2019

    Marrakech – we arrived! HELP!

    27/01/2015
  • Woman selling Bananas Africa
    Africa,  Tanzania

    Bananas’ Town

    01/03/2018

    8 hours on African roads and I was lightly swaying in and out of sleep when the frenetic rush at the back door of the truck made me turn around on my seat. We had stopped at the side of the road. Women were fighting their way to the truck, holding their goods high up in their hands, as if selling them to God. Sam, our guide stood firmly at the half-open door inside the truck, gesturing numbers to the women. They were really insistent. Still half dreaming, I didn’t quite understand straight away what was going on. I thought the women were going to get the best out of…

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    Streets of Marrakech

    28/04/2015

    Marrakech – Jemaa El Fna

    14/03/2015

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  • Africa,  Tanzania

    SAFARI, IS IT SAFE? – Part 2

    25/02/2018

    1 – How safe is it to camp without fence protection on a Safari? I am not going to lie, I was nervous. In a I’m-about-to-sleep-in-the-middle-of-lions kind of nervous. You know? As it turns out, I slept like a rock. In fact on my first night camping, I fell asleep to the sound of giggling hyenas, happily scrutinizing through our dinner’s left overs. I entered dreamland completely oblivious that about an hour later, lion’s roars were heard nearby the campsite. Probably trying to shush the hyenas away and claim back territory. But, no seriously, it is VERY SAFE! On my first day I bombed my guide with questions, questions, questions.…

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    Horse Riding in Lake Malawi

    19/01/2020

    YOU NEED TO KNOW THIS BEFORE YOU VOLUNTEER IN A SCHOOL IN AFRICA

    20/01/2018

    Why did I visit a Tanzanian Prison?

    24/01/2018
  • Africa,  Tanzania

    SAFARI, HOW TO PLAY THE GAME – Part 1

    25/02/2018

    Lions, 3 o’clock!!! It’s not a date. But orientation coordinates. The hunt has started and I don’t mean the predators kind of hunt. But us, a bunch of curious eyes, standing at the back of the jeep, feet on top of the seats, heads popping out of the lifted roof, camera in one hand, binoculars in the other, looking for wildlife in it’s purest forms, in Africa. During the 3 months I spent in Africa, I was lucky to go on different types of Safaris. My first one was

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    A Tanzanian Town and the Tanzanian People – from a Mzungo’s perspective

    03/12/2017

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    05/07/2015

    Souks, the Art of Bargaining

    03/03/2015
  • Africa,  Tanzania

    A Banana Beer Nip, A Coffee Sip and a Waterfall Dip

    09/02/2018

    A Coffe Tour in Tanzania This is probably the strangest title I have ever used on a travel article. The strangest combination and yet, this trio made for a perfect day out exploring the countryside in the southern slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro, a village called Materuni, where banana and coffee beans grow as neighbors to each other. I was on a coffee tour in Tanzania. BANANA BEER NIP Banana beer? Our guide asked, outstretching his arm to me with a 1 liter plastic green cup in his hand, shared by everyone. I don’t like beer but I like banana. Though I don’t need to please my taste buds to try…

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    The biggest sun rises above Malawi

    28/03/2020

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  • Africa,  Tanzania

    Why did I visit a Tanzanian Prison?

    24/01/2018

    “Your passport”. We looked at each other – we didn’t know we were supposed to bring it. We left it in our bags back at the school, together with our phones and cameras. None of it was allowed on a visit to a prison in Tanzania. I was volunteering at Magereza Nursery School, in Moshi. The school is located inside the Magereza prison quarters and it offers free classes to the children of guards and prisoners, as well as to the children that live in the village in front of the prison. One of the boys in my class, Joshua, lives with his jailed mum since he was born. In…

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    A DAY HUNTING WITH THE HADZA TRIBE

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    Is this paradise? – Nungwi, Zanzibar

    19/08/2019

    SAFARI, IS IT SAFE? – Part 2

    25/02/2018
  • Africa,  Tanzania

    YOU NEED TO KNOW THIS BEFORE YOU VOLUNTEER IN A SCHOOL IN AFRICA

    20/01/2018

    Chaos. 49 children, between 2 to 4 years old in one classroom. Only 6 are sitting down, the other 43 let their inner wild animal out. 4 are getting under the carpet while 2 are jumping on top of it. 3 are hanging out the windows; 1 of them is throwing chalk out to the garden. 5 are taking turns climbing the tables and jumping to the floor. One landed on a girl that started crying. 4 boys are moving the furniture against the wall, while 3 boys are fighting for a tennis ball. 2 boys are drawing lines across the board; another 2 are erasing what I had written.…

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  • Africa,  Tanzania

    MOSHI TRAIN STATION – Where Time Stopped

    28/12/2017

    “Moshi has a train station?! But there are no trains here!” 2 weeks into my time in Moshi, a town in the north of Tanzania, I found out about the existence of a train station. And as it has turned out, it became my favorite place in Moshi. With the sumptuous Kilimanjaro as a backdrop, it is a place to sit in peace, a place where time stopped and where

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    Streets of Marrakech

    28/04/2015

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    19/06/2015

    Marrakech – Jemaa El Fna

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Glasgow has some impressive street art, and this i Glasgow has some impressive street art, and this is probably one of my favourites!

🎨 Thumbs up if you would like a post with a list and a map of the locations of all these impressive paintings? 👍👍👍
//Liberdade • Freedom // The original name of t //Liberdade • Freedom // 
The original name of this bridge in Lisbon used to be Salazar, the name of the dictator that ruled in Portugal until 1974. After the beautiful Carnation Revolution that granted the Portuguese their freedom back, it was renamed 25 de Abril (25th of April).
It has been a little over a year since I moved out It has been a little over a year since I moved out of Belfast. A year since I used to hop from cafe to cafe, laptop under my arm, hydrating my inspiration with chai lattes and hot chocolates.

Today I am missing coming to this cafe, Curated Kitchen - they cook recipes from famous cookbooks, changing their menu every week and it was always amazing! Hope they are holding on during these times!
//Edinburgh// How I miss this city: the sound of //Edinburgh// 
How I miss this city: the sound of bagpipes, the smell of fresh rain on the stones of the Royal Mile, the rush of tourists lining up to visit the castle, the shop windows proudly showcasing whiskies and tartans, the warm invitation of the old pubs, where locals great you with the friendliest of smiles.
Edinburgh, 
a city where I am no tourist but I am no local either. A lover maybe, an old admirer for sure. ❤
I miss fallin' into those ocean eyes Those ocean I miss fallin' into those ocean eyes 
Those ocean eyes 💙
My previous photo got me here missing candyfloss, My previous photo got me here missing candyfloss, rides and all about those fairs... Christmas ones, summer ones, festival's ones! And I think it is so cool that cities like Sydney or Copenhagen have these fairs all year around. Put your hands up if you think every big city should have a permanent fair? 🙋 
Photos from the Sydney one last year 💫🍭🍬
Happy ho ho hope and all that jazz! ❤ (2019) Happy ho ho hope and all that jazz! ❤ (2019)
That's the thing about Edinburgh... it is still be That's the thing about Edinburgh... it is still beautiful in the rain. 💦💙
"When you just sit in silence the wind blows thro "When you just sit in silence 
the wind blows through you, 
the sun shines in you 
and you realize 
you are not your body, 
you are everything."
- Anita Krizan -
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