
Cameroon is a country of about 20 million people, apparently almost all quite friendly based on my sample. In the 1800s it was a German colony that was later
administered by the French (and partially by the English) prior to independence in 1960.
Cameroon shares the frustrating profile of many African countries: remarkable natural resources (e.g., petroleum, cocoa, minerals); economic development hindered by red tape, corruption, and high taxes; and one-party or one-man pseudo-democracy. Also, like many, it has a mix of strong and nominal Christians (of various denominations), plus residual if not intense elements of animism and
some Muslims mainly in the north.
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Early in the morning we went by canoe up the lush, peaceful river, managed to get through a thick tropical forest, and... |
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... visited a pygmy village that receives visitors from time to time. |
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After a plantain, avocado, mango, seafood lunch, we walked along a long lovely beach. Above: Local boys practicing their flips. |
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A rare waterfall that empties directly into the ocean. |
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A celebratory wedding drive around town. |
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North of Kribi is Limbe, another of Cameroon's key coastal towns. Limbe is flanked by the highest mountains on the west side of Africa. |
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As has been true everywhere we've been so far on this trip, people in Cameroon were exceedingly warm and friendly. |
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At the Limbe botanical gardens, we saw a series of wonderful traditional dances performed by social groups whose members migrated from rural areas to the city but get together to continue their traditions. |
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The Limbe Wildlife Center works to conserve endangered species, especially those threatened by, among other things, the popularity of "bush meat." Included were chimpanzees, gorillas, and certain types of monkeys. |
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My favorites were the gorillas, but I also had an interesting face-to-face
encounter with this baboon who had slipped out of the habitat.
Here he was coming swiftly toward me, but I successfully
waved him away, and then made a strategic retreat. |