• Home
  • About
  • Privacy & Disclosure Policy
    • Cookie Policy (EU)
    • Product Reviews & Advertising
  • Blogroll
  • We Recommend…
  • Archives
  • Contact

Snapshot Chronicles Roadtrip

Family travel through a slightly twisted lens. Sense of humor required. Shoes optional.

You’re going to Africa? – Part 2: Planning

August 22, 2009 by Sandra Getgood

Doug started doing research on travel agencies that could help us plan an itinerary and arrange the details for us.  Susan, an experienced  traveler, took on the airlines and also found us a marvelous Fodor’s reference book on African safaris that went into incredible detail on what you should do before you go, what you should bring with you when you do go (note:  not too much!  And nothing too heavy!) and what to see and do when you get there.   Fodor’s also has a great website…no matter where in the world you are going, they have information for you.

And what did I do?  Well, once we had decided on our itinerary…Mashatu Game Reserve and Pete’s Pond in Botswana, Victoria Falls in Zambia, and MalaMala Game Reserve in South Africa…I started putting notebooks together for all of us, with information about each destination. Mashatu and MalaMala both have excellent websites, with pictures and information about the wildlife, the accommodations, what you can see and do while there, even videos.  I made copies of the basic information at each of their sites , and occasionally added updates to the books as they updated wildlife sightings…fun to get acquainted with the animals you might be seeing during your visit.

I also found a lot of information about Victoria Falls, from the history to maps of the area to the accommodations available, and made copies of the useful information I found there. It’s much easier to find Livingstone these days than back in the day when Stanley was searching for “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?”   Copies of our itinerary, airplane reservations and travel insurance information also went into the notebooks, along with anything else that seemed useful or interesting..

A site to check if you are going to unfamiliar areas is the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where you can get health information about the shots you may need, the diseases you could encounter, how to stay healthy.  Once you have that information, you can call your local Work/Travel Health Clinic to make an appointment.  Your doctor will know.  Or your local hospital.  Or Google will find one for you.  How did we manage before Google? [Note: see earlier post by Susan about visiting the clinic]

Another particularly useful site I found was African Safari Journals which posted lists of safari gear, safari supplies, what luggage and equipment you might need, documents you might need for the countries you are going to, even checklists.  Copies of those went right into our notebooks, and were tremendously useful in finding out which specific items we didn’t have and would need.

Next:  Clothing

Filed Under: Africa Tagged With: Mala Mala, Mashatu, Victoria Falls

You’re going to Africa? – Part 1

August 20, 2009 by Sandra Getgood

I enjoy watching animals, whether they are my cats (who are relatively goofy) or Susan’s Scottish Terriers, or the birds and squirrels and extremely fat chipmunk who hang out around our bird feeder in the back yard.  I also enjoy watching wildcams.   Although there are quite a few wildcams available on the internet, some of them are simply a stationary camera focused on a waterhole or eagles’ nest. My favorite wildcam quickly became  National Geographic’s WildCam Africa, which featured Pete’s Pond , located on the Mashatu Game Reserve in Botswana.  There was always something to see there, 24/7, and because there are no humans or vehicles to distract the animals, birds and reptiles, they interact with each other as they would anywhere else in the wild, offering a rare opportunity to see wild animals being themselves.

Also, there was Afke, the world’s best cam operator, who can always find something interesting to see, whether it’s a family of elephants dropping by with their babies to have a drink and play in the water, or wildebeest and zebra herds jockeying for position at their favorite drinking spot or, if there are no animals to watch at that moment, perhaps a close-up of ants and bees investigating a hibiscus blossom. If you would like to see what triggered my obsession and started us  planning this trip to Africa, here is the link to the wildcam.  (You’ll need Real Player.)  Warning:  this site is addictive.  :>D

There is also a forum, where folks watching the activity at Pete’s Pond could talk about sightings, ask and answer questions, share information, have conversations with each other and with Afke, and even post screen captures of the animals, birds, and reptiles who visited the Pond, to save the sightings for others who were sleeping or at work. You can find the forum on Facebook.

I knew I had become obsessed when I began waking up at 4 o’clock in the morning, so I would have time to spend a few hours at the Pond before it was time to get ready for work.  I had become a “Pondie.”

So when my daughter Susan and my son Doug mentioned that they had noticed my obsession (a very tactful way of putting it, I felt) and  that they were thinking the three of us should visit Africa,  I was astonished,.  Although I had often thought what fun it would be to visit the Pond in person, the idea that I actually would do it had really never occurred to me.  It seemed…and is!…so far away.  But the more we talked about it, the more it seemed something we could do.  The three of us have always enjoyed traveling together, and this sounded like a very exciting trip for all of us.

Next: Planning the trip

Filed Under: Africa Tagged With: Botswana, Mashatu, National Geographic

Gearing up: My list

August 14, 2009 by Douglas Getgood

I am something of a nut and have possibly gone overboard, but I have considered all the things I hope to do while in Africa and worked out a Plan for the trip and all my fancy junk. I have a Wenger padded computer backpack that will actually hold ALL of my stuff, and a few things for others.

My list of stuff:

  • HP Mini netbook and charger
  • Nikon D40 camera with batteries and 2 chargers (just in case!)
  • 70 to 300mm zoom lens
  • 18 to 55mm zoom lens
  • 35mm lens
  • Canon HD Video camera and charger (I may get a second battery)
  • 3 2gb SDHC media cards (Netbook, camera and video camera all use sd cards
  • 16gb SDHC media card
  • 32gb media card
  • 320gb external hard drive
  • usb smart media card reader
  • Apple iPod (Hey, its a LONG flight!)
  • Book(s) (To read)

I will also be carrying in that pack (for others):

  • HP Mini Netbook and charger
  • Sony HD video camera and charger
  • Canon digital snapshot camera
  • 2 pairs of binoculars

This will, of course, be my carry-on luggage for the air travel portion of the trip.

It will be quite full of course, but all of the stuff DOES fit securely and is not uncomfortable when worn as a backpack.

Two tripods will be in my other luggage going on the plane, but once there my tripod will often be attached to the pack as well.

I will be staying in lodges or hotels every night, so not exactly a “roughing it” trip, and this is apparent with choice of “stuff” I think. Other trips and locations may require other choices. For one, I am not bringing my cell phone or cell modem (incompatible service). Trips with less of a weight limitation for luggage might make a desktop replacement laptop a better choice than my netbook to edit and render photos and videos during the trip instead of archiving them and doing it all when at home!

A trip that is REALLY roughing it would probably mean just cameras and batteries (and maybe a charger for each battery type in case you do find power.) A few weeks in Land Rovers and sleeping in tents every night might make charging a laptop daily difficult.

Modern electronics can enhance a trip in many ways: music for long flights, maintaining contact with those at home (or elsewhere) and ever more durable and accurate records of vacation activities. But unless you are actually filming a documentary, don’t forget that the idea is to DO things, and try and get some records of it; seeing and doing things outside of the normal daily grind is the main point. Try not to get so bound up with taking pictures that you miss something you may only see on tv for the rest of your life.

Personally, I spent a good chunk of change on my video camera expressly for this trip, and if I can get 15 minutes of truly decent video out of it, I’ll be satisfied.

Filed Under: Africa, Electronics, Gear Tagged With: Apple, Canon, HP, Nikon, Sony

Africa Planning: the travel medicine clinic

August 5, 2009 by Susan Getgood

Kruger National Park Going on Safari is unlike any other vacation you will ever plan. Apart from the clothing recommendations and luggage restrictions, which we will most definitely cover in upcoming posts, there are the medical requirements. Because no matter where you go in Africa, you will be going to a developing nation. Even South Africa and Botswana in the South, which are prosperous nations and where we will be spending most of our time, are subject to diseases that do not widely  exist or have been mostly eradicated in the populous Western nations.

Which called for my first ever visit to the travel medicine clinic at my local hospital.Your primary care physician will not have the necessary information to help you or access to all the vaccinations you might need.  She will however be able to give you a referral to a travel medicine clinic. Tip: DO NOT forget to get the official referral if your health plan requires it. Some or all of your costs may be covered, but they will not be if you don’t get the referral in advance. You can also find travel medicine clinics  online, but I was quite happy with the clinic my doctor referred.

Men Sewing

Tip: Make sure you have your shot record and your itinerary with you when you go the the clinic. I remembered to ask my doctor about my last tetanus shot, saving me one pin prick, but couldn’t remember whether I’d had the measles as a child. So I had to call my mom from the doctor’s office.

Consensus was that I had indeed had the measles, and my bouts with chicken pox (legendary) and mumps were well remembered.

At the clinic, the doctor or nurse practitioner will review your itinerary against the Center for Disease Control recommendations for US citizens, and advise you given your age, susceptibility and general health. NOTHING is required by the US, although some vaccinations may be required by the country you are visiting. Most things are strongly recommended and a few, like rabies, are optional. I decided to do the optional rabies vaccination because we live in a fairly rural area and  I have the dogs. In some cases, the order in which you are visiting countries will be relevant, which is why the clinic needs the day by day itinerary, not just the list of countries you plan to visit.

This is serious shit, people.

Tip: You may need multiple visits to the clinic. Make your first appointment six weeks to a month before your trip.

On my first visit last week, I got  three shots — hepatitis A/B, meningitis and a polio booster. I was also prescribed an oral vaccine for typhoid (more about that in a minute) and had to make a series of appointments for the rabies vaccine (3 appointments exactly seven days apart) and a second hepatitis shot. I also got a prescription for malaria medicine to be taken before, during and after the trip and a precautionary antibiotic in case of diarrhea that doesn’t respond to OTC medicine like Imodium.

A word about the typhoid vaccine. There are two options, a shot or an oral live vaccine called Vivotif. I opted for the oral med, as it had a longer duration, lasting for about 5 years. This proved to be a mixed blessing. There are four pills, to be taken in the morning every other day at least a week before departure. THE PILLS MUST BE REFRIGERATED. So far so good. Except our fridge died, unbeknownst to us, and the pills were at about 60 degrees Fahrenheit for 24 hours.

Were the pills still good? I had taken the first one Thursday morning before we realized that the fridge had been on the fritz, possibly for a day or two. Why did it take so long to realize that the fridge was fraked? The freezer was fine and the fridge light still worked. The butter in the door was soft but we initially attributed that to folks not shutting the door firmly.

If you are doing the math, that meant I had 48 hours to figure out whether the pills were still active or even safe to take if inactive. There was no information in the product insert that answered this specific question.

Just in case they were still good, we stored them in our travel fridge and I called the travel clinic Thursday afternoon. Closed. Left a message. Didn’t get a call back on Friday morning. Called again after we got back from the vet. They told me that the call had been referred to the nurses’ line, and I should hear sometime that day.

I did. Shortly before 5pm, and the nurse did not know the answer. She suggested I contact the manufacturer directly. By the time I tracked down the number on the Internet — it was NOT printed on the insert — it was after 5pm and their offices were, you guessed it, closed. I sent an email just in case someone checked it one last time before the weekend, but no such luck.

By this time,  I knew I was SOL for getting a definitive answer before Monday, and had to make a decision about taking the pill on Saturday. The nurse had been a little leery about taking it, in case I had to retake the whole dose again. Would that be too much medicine, active or not, in my body? Would there be any harmful effects if the vaccine had gone bad? Too many unanswered questions, so I decided to stop the sequence and start over.

Naturally of course, I got a reply to my email first thing Monday morning:

Vivotif can be left out of the refrigerator for up to 24 hours as long as it out of direct sunlight and under 80 degrees.

In other words, my pills were still good, but it didn’t matter because they were useless to me. I replied, very nicely, to the gentleman at the company that it would have been nice if this information were in the insert or at least on the website, as I now would have to start over with a new package anyway.  I was irritated but not over the top angry because our fridge is under extended warranty, which pays up to $250 for spoiled food. We didn’t have much food, so I figured the cost of the replacement medicine would be covered.

Turns out the drug manufacturer has a free replacement program — I’m guessing this is not the first time something like this has happened. So all’s well that ends well. When I go get my first rabies vaccination next week, I’ll pick up the replacement Vivotif and start again. I’ve got time before I leave on September 11th.

Moral of this story? Don’t wait until the last minute to make your appointment at the travel clinic. You need time to get the necessary shots and handle any mishaps like mine with the Vivotif.

Oh, and I hope the manufacturer Crucell Berna reads this post and puts that additional information about Vivotif storage on the website or the insert. Sure, people will now be able to find it here, but I am not a doctor and don’t play one on the Internet. It’s much much better for the information to come directly from the company.

—

Added 11 August

Some additional precautions:

  • Drink only bottled, boiled or treated water.
  • Brush teeth with mouthwash or bottled water. Rinse toothbrush with same.
  • Use Purell or other antibacterial handwash. Carry a small bottle with you.
  • Use insect repellent with DEET. Apply sunscreen first, wait 20 minutes, then apply insect repellent.

Filed Under: Africa, Trip planning Tagged With: travel clinic

Africa

June 25, 2009 by Susan Getgood

In September, my mom, brother and I will be going to Southern Africa for 10 days. It’s not a place I ever imagined that I would travel to, but I am looking forward to it immensely.


Why are we going?

Long story short, a few years ago, my mom got really involved in watching the live activity on National Geographic’s webcam at Pete’s Pond. Pete’s Pond is a man-made reservoir in the Mashatu Game Reserve in Botswana that was created from an old irrigation system as an alternative to the Limpopo River and its poachers.

My brother Doug (not to be confused with my son Douglas) got the idea that we should go to Africa, and after crunching numbers, we decided to go for it. We also agreed that this was a trip for the three of us.  My son, at  nine years old, is really too young, and if he is to stay home, so must my husband. When we told Mum, she was flabbergasted, but quickly got into the planning.

We started with some very clear requirements:

  • Mashatu Game Reserve was a must
  • We couldn’t see going all that way and not seeing Victoria Falls
  • We expected some layovers in Johannesburg
  • Cape Town would be nice (but was eventually eliminated from itinerary due to both cost and time.)

My brother took on the job of sourcing travel and safari operators and I handled the airfare search.

First, the safari operators. Doug contact Rhino Africa, Go2Africa and Journeys of Distinction (the travel agency associated with Mashatu and Mala Mala in South Africa.) Everyone was responsive but we decided to go with Journeys of Distinction. Angela, the representative from Journeys, was very helpful in narrowing down the options for the trip and because she was the “house” agency for Mashatu and Mala Mala, was able to offer us a package deal for the two reserves.

We’ll be flying into Johannesburg, with a very small window of sightseeing time there. Our main destinations are Victoria Falls (staying in Zambia), and the two game reserves. The most likely time for Johannesburg sightseeing will be the Sunday we arrive, although we do have another afternoon there between Victoria Falls and the game reserves. We are bound to be tired… but I really don’t want to miss any MUST SEEs because odds of a return are slim. I don’t sleep much anyway.

So readers, please chime in with your thoughts for Johannesburg as well as any recommendations for Victoria Falls. We have two nights there, and one full day.

Airfare

Sometimes you need to be creative. When I searched Boston to Johannesburg, everything seemed to run through Europe, adding hours to the total trip. NY JFK however had direct flights to and from which were NOT available from Boston no matter how I sliced the am departure. I think it’s because the international flight requires a two-hour layover, and nothing from Boston on a Saturday morning qualified. Whatever.

So we’re flying down to JFK the day before our Johannesburg flight and staying in an airport hotel. On the return, we’re supposed to land in the morning, so I’ve booked an early afternoon flight from JFK to Boston. They are separate tickets, so we could always get screwed by time gods on the return, but we’ll deal with that if it happens.

Moral of the story: always look at alternate airports, other options for making the connection.

SAFARI

We’ll get into more detail about the nitty gritty of preparing for safari as the time draws nearer, but here are two books to whet your appetite:

  • Fodor’s The Complete African Safari Planner, 1st Edition: With Botswana, Kenya, Namibia, South Africa & Tanzania (Full-Color Gold Guides)
  • Whatever You Do, Don’t Run: True Tales of a Botswana Safari Guide by Peter Allison. Terrific book, even if you aren’t planning an Africa trip.

Filed Under: Africa, Safari, Transportation Tagged With: Journeys of Distinction, Mala Mala, Mashatu, Peter Allison, Victoria Falls

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Recent Posts

  • Notice
  • Cityscapes Philadelphia – What To Do, Science & History Geek Edition
  • Cityscapes Philadelphia – What To Do, Art Museum Edition
  • Cityscapes Philadelphia – Where to Eat
  • Cityscapes: San Jose

Search

Categories

Copyright 2009-2018. All Rights Reserved. Photos copyright Susan Getgood unless otherwise noted.

Copyright © 2025 · Lifestyle Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experience, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}