



Before heading back to Accra--Shirley Mae had arranged for one more adventure for all of us---a dugout canoe ride through the Amansuri wetland to Lake Amansuri and the Nzulezu Stilt Village.

The only way to get to the Nzulezu Stilt Village is to travel 5km on the lake in a local dugout canoe.

The dugout canoe ride takes you through areas of marsh and open pools fringed with palm thickets and opens out into the vast expanse of the lake.

All 23 of us got into the dugout canoes and local guides paddled---

This is a local fish trap in the wetlands.... we canoed on by...


Then after about an hour long canoe ride, we came to the Village....

Nzulezu Stilt Village is an amazing community built entirely on stilts in the middle of Lake Amansuri. It is constructed out of wood and raffia with one central walkway and about two dozen houses on either side. Presently the village has a population of between 500 and 600 people.







then we walked back down the boardwalk on stilts and climbed into the canoes for a pleasant canoe ride back...

What an interesting trip you are having. I'm enjoying it too. I know you are liking being on the water. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWell, one can hope that one canoe ride in Africa is enough, right?!
ReplyDeleteI visited Nzulezu just over 2 weeks ago, but didn't have any pictures. I was happy to find your site so I can show others what it was like. Our canoe was filling with water shortly after we departed, so we had became stranded ashore for awhile until they got new canoes for us. It was a very unique place!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, so nice to be inspired by other free spirited vagabonds, as i am one too. I went to Ghana almost 13 yrs ago, specifically to an Ewe village ( Alavonyo Kpeme) to learn traditional drumming, and to a Ga and Dangbe village to volunteer with villagers on organic farms,learn language, visit potters, drum makers, markets, funerals, ceremonies, cook with women, pound foo foo, drum and danced into the night. Visited slave castles as well. Life was hard and i almost died (got malaria), but everything made sense there unlike in the states (call me a "white" afro-centrist if u will. I was only there 3 months but it changed my life..not a day goes by without thinking about it. Thank you for rekindling happy memories- Ya/Aku Cheryl
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