So my West/Central Africa trip starts in
a week and I was supposed to be leaving in 4 days to travel to Ghana to obtain
a few visas before the truck arrives.
This unfortunately will not be happening as I had to make the decision
at the end of November 2014, whether I would be travelling at all, not solely
based on Ebola, but the closure of certain borders, being the main reason
behind the cancellation.
I had never thought about cancelling my
trip based on Ebola. After having
travelled West Africa last year, the contact we have with local people is
minimal, our food was mainly tinned meat and whatever vegetables we could find
along the way, which were always washed and cooked. I was also not joining the truck till Ghana,
so I wasn’t passing through any of the infected areas this trip and there was a
23 day window from the truck leaving Guinea, the last infected country, to
getting to Ghana, so I figured that I would be okay based on the Ebola issue. I think people travelling the same route from
Senegal to Ghana via Guinea and Sierra Leone will have a different experience
to what we had last year. I picture less
people around, less people being friendly as they would be scared and the
possibility of seeing temparory Ebola hospitals/tents/units.
It is sad to see that there are now over
20,000 people infected with this virus and with over 5,000 people that have
died, that it seems that the issue is now out of the news as the disease is
still spreading and there has been a spike in Sierra Leone the last 4 weeks of
over 180 deaths. There seems to be more
news on the UK nurse at the moment that contracted Ebola during the week, and
is currently in a critical condition in a London hospital, than the here and
now of the current situation. I applaude
the health care workers for their time and their courage to enter a country
with a virus that is as vicious and unrelenting in its spread and without international
aide and their workers this disease would have gone unharnessed and I don’t
even want to think about the implications if the world was to turn its back on
these countries in need. I also want to
point out that as sad as it is that so many people have dies, but I think there
are a population of people that are being forgotten, the family members of the
deceased. I watched a documentary that
interviewed some people and a woman had lost 2 children, her husband and her
mother and there was a child of 10 who had lost his mum, dad and sister and his
simple question was ‘what happens to me now’?
The knock on effect of the disease is that people are shunned if they
had a family member die of Ebola, there are fields of food that are not being
harvested or also shunned, new planting are not happening and come next season,
there is going to be a lack of food and another catastrophe will be on our
hands.
But as the virus seems to be under some
form of control, if you believe what is being reported, Nigeria has been
declared Ebola free and the few cases in the Congo Republic, the travel
warnings and restrictions are starting to open back up again to the countries
that I was actually travelling to. The
Australian Government has kept a close eye on the growing concern and have
started to issue a travel bulletin just for the Ebola outbreak. I have signed up to these updates and they
seem to come through every 15 days or so at the moment and this is what started
me second thinking my trip. Up until
then, I was still in like Flynn.
The biggest concern for me was I have
done 5 of the 11 countries already. The
Australian Government had summarized what other Africa countries were doing to
try and stop the Ebola virus spreading and this is what is currently having an
impact on my tour. It is more the border
closures than the virus itself and if the borders are closed then we are going
to have to fly over countries. If we
have to fly over the countries I HAVEN’T been to and I am going to travel
through countries I HAVE been to, it just doesn’t make any sense and to be
honest it will be a waste of money.
There was the final payment of the trip, the cost of the visas and the
airfare to and from tour, not taking into account additional airfares should we
have to fly unexpectedly, and knowing African airfares, they are not
cheap. Add all that up and it just seemed
a waste of money. The countries will
still be there next year, or the year after and I decided it was best to cancel
off. It was very disappointing that I did
it, as it was to be my ‘last’ trip for a while, but I think it would be even
more disappointing being on the trip and being turned away from a border and
having to skip what I actually came on the trip to do. I am also not sure if I would have enjoyed my
trip 100%, at the back of mind thinking about the killer disease and the damage
it is doing around us.
I was impressed with Oasis’s reply after
I had sent them an email asking them to cancel my spot on the trip. I knew my deposit was non-refundable but
there were a few options which they hoped that I still look forward to another
overlanding trip. I was offered to transfer on to the same trip next year, and I
had to pay a £50 transfer fee, moving my booking over to the 2016 departure
date – that way I wouldn’t lose my deposit, it would just go towards my trip
next year. Or, they offered me 10% off
the trip cost of the same trip or similar if I booked within the year (so by
the 4th November 2015). At least it wasn’t a big fat no, which by
their terms and conditions they could of easily have done, so thankyou to Oasis
and I am still to decide what I will do at this point.
So I wanted to wish my fellow travellers
a safe journey from Ghana on the 14th January. I have just this week completed my photobook
of my West Africa from last year, and it stirred up the travel bug and for a
moment made me think if I had done the right thing. But I do know deep down it was the right
decision for me, and I will get another chance at another time to travel this
section of Africa.

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