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Osisiye Tafa: Ghana Has Everything…. But Jollof Rice

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Recently, I was in the land of the Black Star. A couple of things hit me. First was the trust. At the airport, I asked a guy where I could buy a SIM card. He offered to help me get it and left his Samsung Note 4 charging beside me. Shuo! In the cab too, I told the cab driver I needed to buy some aspirin! He stopped the cab in a neighbourhood, left his phone charging in the cab and went to help get it. Moral of the stories: Ghanaians don’t have trust issues. This also showed in their canteens where they serve jollof rice without stew.

Away from trusting people and jollof rice, here are some pictures from my trip that will make you want to see the real thing for yourself. Akwaaba!

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The entrance to Aburi Botanical Gardens

Aburi is a mountainous town which some refer to as the cradle of life. It has a biking trail with bicycles for rent. All beauty.

IMG_1841The cedar tree is sometimes the host for a parasitic tree. Here is a parasite tree that has fully killed its host, a process that took twentyseven years. Here, you’re virtually inside a tree.IMG_1850

The first cotton tree in Aburi. It is referred to as the ‘mother tree’. Its partitioned based was used as a living space by the slaves.IMG_1857

The ‘Tree of Life’ at Aburi. This carving shows how humans and animals are all in a race to the top.

The first helicopter in Ghana. In the words of our tour guide, Maxwell, ‘They took our gold and gave us this’

At the poolside, the waiters at the Movenpick Hotel deliver your orders on skates. Swoosh!

At the poolside, the waiters at the Movenpick Hotel deliver your orders on skates. Swoosh!

The breakfast menu is also Instagram-worthy.

At the Kakum National Park in Cape Coast, you open the door to seven bridges, one hundred and twenty feet high. Breathtaking view.

Breathtaking climb too!

And the art shops. I bought a Sankofa, this is a carving of a swan with its head distended backwards to touch its body, it means ‘Remember your roots’.

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I’ll like to go back again as I didn’t get to see awesome sites like the Slave Colony at Cape Town (they close at 5:30 p.m. and I got there too late), Labadi Beach Resort and touch the crocodiles in Cape Town.

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The jollof rice wasn’t great though.

Osisiye Tafa is a banker by day, and writer by night. He has been published on The Guardian, Kalahari Review, The Culture Trip, Arts & Africa, BusinessDay, Y-Naija among others. He writes faction - fictionalized telling of actual events - which he shares on his TinyLetter journal. His debut book, ‘Sixty Percent of a True Story’ is available on Amazon and Roving Heights

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