well-traveled
columns
- The Mongolia Obsession
Bones are all that is left of the Mongolian empire.
Tim Wu
posted Sept. 26, 2008 - The Mongolia Obsession
Dispatches from the front lines of travel.
Tim Wu
posted Sept. 22, 2008 - Excerpts From State by State
Maine: The way life should be.
Mohammed Naseehu Ali
posted Sept. 12, 2008 - A Spontaneous Eco-Wander Through Germany
The sure-fire cure for ostalgia? A trip to the old East Germany.
William Powers
posted Aug. 29, 2008 - Eco-Touring in Honduras
What can we learn from the mysterious collapse of the Mayan civilization?
Elisabeth Eaves
posted June 6, 2008 - Search for more well-traveled articles
- Subscribe to the well-traveled RSS feed
- View our complete well-traveled archive
The Game Show
Posted Thursday, Sept. 19, 2002, at 1:26 PM ET

"Does the boat go to Europe, France?"
—Marilyn Monroe in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
When in 1871 James Gordon Bennett, owner of the New York Herald, sent Henry Morton Stanley to Africa to find the missing David Livingstone, who was suffering from that incurable disease wanderlust, a new type of serial travel journalism was born: the journey as journal. Stanley sent dispatches from the field that were received with great enthusiasm by readers, who got a rare glimpse into an unfolding adventure in a land far away and unfamiliar.
"Well-Traveled" brings the seed of Bennett's conceit to the 21st century, dispatching some of the world's finest writers to distill the spirits of places little known and pouring the concoction onto our digital pages. Today, thanks to satellite technologies and the Internet, we can stretch the bar of the imagination, break the tyranny of distance, and publish our correspondents' spontaneous musings, insights, images, and audio within hours. There is an honesty and rawness to this format not found in the well-tuned pages of travel magazines, and our hope is that we will inspire and illuminate travel in a uniquely satisfying way.
So, join us as we lace the boots, box the compass, and set sail for Europe, France, and ports betwixt and beyond, on the routes less-traveled by our well-traveled band.
And be sure to check out our trips to Kashmir, Zambia, and the Outlaw Trail.
—Richard Bangs, Producer

Scandinavia: Design and architecture.
Costa Rica: Exploring Eco-tourism with Natalie Angier.
"Mission to Galápagos": Ruffling feathers in paradise.
"The Blues Highway": Exploring the routes of the blues.
"The Outlaw Trail": tracking the robberies and roosts of Butch and Sundance from Wyoming to Mexico.
"Into the Heart of Africa": the source of the Congo, a journey through Zambia.
"The Road to Kashmir": a trundle through India's Ladakh region on the Tibetan plateau.

For our second "Well-Traveled" journey we venture into Africa to explore a rough country at the cultural and geographic crossroads of the continent: Zambia. An escarpment rises in the middle of the locked land, provoking the two greatest rivers in sub-Saharan Africa: the Congo flowing to the west and the Zambezi surging to the east. The quest will be to cross from one watershed to the other, reaching the source of the river made famous in Joseph Conrad's epic The Heart of Darkness and first traced by Henry Morton Stanley in his epic 999-day 19th-century expedition. The divide is also the rough line separating the two major branches of the Bantu peoples—matriarchal to the west, patriarchal to the east. We begin the journey at a primitive camp near the Luangwa River, the Zambezi tributary that may host more crocodiles and hippos than any other in the world, and will make a trek down its fabled gorge. Then we move to the South Luangwa and North Luangwa National Parks, the haunting grounds of one of the largest remaining elephant herds, where the concept of the walking safari was born. Finally, we cross the great divide and descend into the Bangwelu Swamps, rife with birdlife and bubbling with the first sketches of current that begin the River Congo.

Richard Bangs, our field journalist, led the first descent of the Zambezi River from the base of Victoria Falls in 1981, back when Robert Mugabe was considered an enlightened African leader. His 1999 book describes some of his African adventures.
Pasquale V. Scaturro, our field producer, is a geophysicist and expedition and communications specialist. He led the successful Mount Everest climb last year that saw blind climber Erik Weihenmeyer reach the summit. Some of his recent adventures are described on his Web site.
![]()
![]()
Today's audio update

LUANGWA GORGE, ZAMBIA—Several hours into the hike, I hear him struggling, panting behind me with every footfall. Dov Harel, who in repose looks like a twinkling Talmudic scholar, now has a swollen red face so sopped in sweat it looks coated in Mylar. His heart rate is up to 150 beats a minute. I offer to take his pack, but between rasps he declines. He refuses two other offers of help as well, so we do the right thing and stop for a swim … in the cool crocodiled waters of the Luangwa River.
The ancient Greeks called the beast kroko-drilo, "pebble worm"—a scaly thing that shuffled and lurked in low places. Here it's called "flatdog" or "mobile handbag." The most deadly existing reptile, the man-eating Nile crocodile has always been on man's worst enemies list. It evolved 170 million years ago from the primordial soup as an efficient killing machine. More people are killed in Africa each year by crocodiles than by all other animals combined. Their instinct is predation, to kill any meat that floats their way, be it fish, hippo, antelope, or human. And just upstream we had seen a 12-footer slip into the currents.
Crocs like to sneak up on their prey in water deep enough for them to hide in, so we find a spot in a rapid shallow enough to see approaching jaws or claws. Even then, Justin Seymour-Smith, who runs a private game park in Zimbabwe and with recent events has time on his hands to join our adventure, stands ready on shore with a Rigby .416, a rifle big enough to drop an elephant at 300 yards.

The dip cools and cleanses—a few of us even swim the rapids in the nude, our usually protected skin pale as crocodile bellies—and Dov is back to normal as we continue our trek, passing bushbuck, baboons, impala, and bloats of hippos. About 5 feet tall, weighing in at about 5 tons—about that same as two of our four-wheel-drive vehicles—hippos are proportionally the fattest animals on earth, but for short sprints they can run as fast as a horse. Though vegetarians, they are quite dangerous; they'll attack if they feel threatened, easily snapping a human body in two with their carrot-sized molars and steam-shovel jaws. And with an average of about 60 hippos per mile, the Luangwa is the most hippo-infested river in the world.
As we approach our goal, a twisting hot springs that spills into the river, another type of predator makes its appearance: the blood-hungry tsetse fly. It looks like a horsefly but stings like a bee—its rapierlike proboscis can penetrate khakis, jeans, even tennis shoes. And, like Michael Myers in a Halloween movie, whenever you think you've killed one of these buggers, it just keeps coming back. Chriss likes to tear off their wings and tell them to walk home. These tsetses, harmless to humans, carry nagana—bovine trypanosomiasis, a parasite that kills 3 million cattle, goats, and pigs a year in sub-Saharan Africa. For us they are merely a nuisance to be tolerated knowing they serve a larger purpose. The wildlife we see wouldn't exist without them. Without such an effective guardian, wilderness areas such as Mandevu would long ago have been tamed, the wild animals cleared for domesticated ones. When Norman Carr, Zambia's conservation pioneer, was given the MBE for his life's work, he suggested the award should really have gone to the tsetse fly. Where the tsetse flourishes, so does the great wildlife of body Africana.
Nicolas Kalembelembe, a 32-year-old former game-lodge waiter, is our local guide, interpreting the bush through which we pass. We learn that trees communicate here: When a beast is gnawing at the bark of the mopane tree, it emits a pheromone that telegraphs to surrounding trees to stimulate an increased level of tannin, making the bark unappetizing. We learn that virtually every abandoned termite mound hosts a tamarind tree, as baboons like to sit atop the mud castles and chew on the pods of the tree, dropping the seeds, which take root and sprout the tropical evergreen. The forest is a pharmacy here, and it seems half the plants are used for either back pain or erectile dysfunction, such as the bark of the balanite bush, a local Viagra. But the sausage tree, Nicolas informs, is for the women: They like to mix the seeds from the sausage into a lusty porridge and eat it just before a tryst, as it makes them "warm."
We walk down the canyon single file, African-style, and every now and then the front man, usually Justin, cries fowl, and the bush telephone sends word back one by one. But it never works right, and once when I was in the rear, a sighting up front of a white-crowned plover ended up a leopard sighting by the time it reached me.
At the end of our 6-mile hike we're picked up by Chriss, who has been literally fighting fires on the property all day. We climb into the Toyota Land Cruiser and head back to camp, Chriss wrestling the wheel like a captain in a typhoon. Along the way, a sinister bouquet of tsetses finds its way into the cab, and we all start swatting. Chriss winces as he plucks one off his cheek. Robert Bismuth picks up a roll of toilet paper and slams it mightily at one on the window, but all he does is affect some tissue damage, and the little buzzer flies away.
Check back tomorrow for the next dispatch from Zambia.
The Game Show
Posted Thursday, Sept. 19, 2002, at 1:26 PM ETfeedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Real Deals
- Southern France River Cruise, From $1,399
Fri, 10 Oct 2008 08:52:00 EDT - Caribbean Hotel Deals, From $96
Thu, 09 Oct 2008 08:20:00 EDT - Halloween-Themed Hotel Deals, From $59
Wed, 08 Oct 2008 09:04:00 EDT - » More from BudgetTravel
- Today's Headlines
- Historical Archives: To Be Sold - Carved Wooden Heads
Sat, 11 Oct 2008 00:00:00 -0400 - » More from the Onion
Over the LineHarold Ford Jr. | I know what it's like to be smeared by your opponent.
: The Positive in Negative Ads
- Robinson: A Little Worried About the Meltdown
- Khaled Hosseini: Sen. McCain, Am I a Pariah?
- Ombudsman: A Puff Piece About the Obamas?
- King: The Anatomy of an Assault
- Today's Headlines
- Can Pakistan Stay Afloat?
Fri, 10 Oct 2008 21:20:52 GMT - Florida: Will Palin Cost the GOP Jewish Voters?
Fri, 10 Oct 2008 21:07:56 GMT - Review: le Carre Novel Is Missing the Old Sparkle
Fri, 10 Oct 2008 20:41:29 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- An Obama-Palin Ticket
Thu, 9 October 2008 18:16:56 GMT - Love the Player, Hate the GM
Thu, 9 October 2008 21:10:07 GMT - Schooling McCain on the Man Code
Thu, 9 October 2008 20:03:04 GMT - » More from The Root

well-traveled













