Off The Beaten Track In Kenya- Africa
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 12:06pm (GMT)
We are looking forward to visiting the light house at Lake Victoria
Safari Village at Mbita point. Spending a few days in it will be a new
experience. The landscape from Kisumu to Luanda Kotieno on the shores
of Asembo Bay, off the road to Bondo, is full of ancient features:
age-old Cambrian rocks fill the Hills along the tarmac road and Kit
Mikaye, the gigantic borders sitting atop each other. At Ndori we turn
left onto the dusty murrum road to Luanda Kotieno to catch the 11oclock
ferry to Mbita point. It runs like clock work so if you miss it you
have to wait for the next three hours for the next trip.
The Lake is calm, with water birds here and there and in a distance
a strange dust devil appears. It’s a whole cloud of the harmless minute
flies that breed in the water and sometimes in the swamp places.
Forty-five minutes later, we clock at Mbita point and soon we are
at the gate of Lake Victoria Safari Village. The sign on the entrance
promises relation at the beach, bird watching and excursions on the
Lake.
The light house stands stark white against the blue sky and the
blue waters of Lake Victoria, making a perfect picture for a post card.
The Islands of Rusinga, Mfa’ngano and the smaller twin’s one called
Mbasa sit calmly on the Lake. The local fishermen ‘colorful boats sail
on the roughening waves, there white sails at full mast. Finally we get
to Lake Victoria Safari Village, a creation of odd Bredo, engineer of
repute.
We are so excited about the white house that we waste no time
climbing up the stairs and into the room with a view. Its Bredo dream
house as he tells us about the building of the light house, which could
be the only light house on the Kenyan side of Lake Victoria with
justifiable pride.
“I build bridges,” says Bredo a Norwegian. He has worked in many
countries in Africa and it was during one such project that he landed
at Mbita point and met his wife Louise, and set up a new home on the
shores of the Lake. That was in 1990 in between building bridges,
Bredo’s busy working at Safari Village with the latest addition, the
lighthouse.
The lighthouse is stunning. It reminds of calendar from Greece,
with pictures of stark white houses surrounded by blue skies and
waters.
We climb up the stairs and onto the patio eagerly waiting for Bredo
to open the door to the light house. The white washed bedroom is
spacious with windows opening to the Lake’s blue waters. It’s a
beautiful roundavel with a four-poster bed facing the Lake, blue beaded
Maasai necklaces on the walls and a small blue table and two chairs by
the window. Blue is the traditional color of lighthouse decor. A
platform with a collection of stones that once belonged to his mother
forms an artistic showpiece of colors and shapes. There is nothing
ostentatious or expressive in the room but it is a place you would,
nevertheless, want to live in.
The platform conceals part of the staircase leading from the room
to the bathroom below. If ever there was a bathtub with a view these
has got to be it. Maya’s [my niece] audible expressions say it all. If
the wall wasn’t there, the bath tub would blend in with the Lake. No
wonder the lighthouse is the honeymooners dream hideaway.
After our guided trip around the lighthouse, and having unpacked
and lounged on the bed overlooking the sea. I mean, I’m a water person
so I’ am totally sold-we join Bredo in the garden for a cold beer. The
bird life is just awesome. Within a few minutes at the lighthouse, I
have seen a tiny malachite kingfisher flit past in resplendent hues of
blue and orange, pled kingfishers and the regal African kingfishers out
of the horizon from behind the lighthouse and sweep down to grab a fish
from the Lake.
The garden is filled with yellow weaver birds busy building nests
on the thorn trees and Maya is busy building sand castles on the beach.
“The lighthouse is a structure for guiding ships using sharp
lights,” Bredo explains,” but they are going out of fashion because of
the GPS [Global Positioning System].In the olden days light houses
where marked on maps. In those old days people lived in lighthouses to
take care of the lights and operate the fog horn to guide the ships.”
Growing up in Norway, Bredo spent many summer holidays in light
house which his father rented. It became a boyhood dream to build his
own one day.
“Now I have the time to build one,” says the jovial Scandinavian.
With a team of local artisans, he built the lighthouse in a year and
opened it in October 2005.
“A lighthouse needs a very solid foundation because it’s surrounded
by water and sand and built on a rocky peninsula. The walls are
reinforced with columns and slope inwards.”
The place is magical. Its sunset and Bredo has a table set on the
beach from where he wants to show us a perfect sunset. The sky turns
gold, orange and red, with the blue getting faint as it darkens. The
sun, a ball of gold, begin to slid in the dark waters bang in the
middle of the twin Islands of Mbasa.Its stunning, its surreal.
“The sun sets between Mbasa Islands from December 23. It then
begins to move true west,” he explains, pointing at Mfangano Island”
and you see the sun setting there on September 23.It keeps moving and
sets on the pointed peak[facing us]on Rusinga Island on June 23,after
which it shift back to true west by March 23 and back to the twin
Island by December 23.”
The world is fascinated but it takes special people like the
Bredons, the Fleur Ng’wenos and the Wangari Maathai’s to show that
surrealism in nature. It comes with an appreciation of it.
FACT FILE
It’s a beautiful lodge and very economical. Drive to Kisumu, take
the road to Mbondo and turn off at Ndori, drive on the murram road to
Luanda Kotieno.Its three hours from Kisumu. Alternatively drive via
Kisii.Full direction can be got from landmark safaris.com. These are
eight bandas and the lighthouse. Great for families or those who want
to get off the beaten truck you can visit Ruma National Park.
http://www.landmarksafaris.com/planner/
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