Northern Ghana

The north of Ghana is really interesting looking. It’s dry, and there are large areas of baobab trees and scrub and huge oddly-shaped boulders strewn randomly. It was approaching the dry winter season when I was there, so everything was brown and dusty.

 

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Baobab tree, northern Ghana

 

I used Bolga as my base and visited three towns to the north, Paga right on the Burkina Faso border, and the whimsically named Bongo and Tongo.

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Rare glimpse of fearless western explorer, near Tongo

Paga is nothing much more than a collection of shops, cafes and industrial shacks dribbled alongside the road that runs to the border. I had a long chat with two Burkina border guards who invited me for tea at a little place a few hundred meters inside their country. “Do you want to see my passport?” I asked. “Non,” they said and cheerfully dragged me down the road for tea.

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Indifferent locals near Paga

Paga feels a little swashbuckling too, with all the border traffic and shifty looking truck drivers from Mali, Niger and Benin.

One day I made a long walk from Bongo, a little over four hours north of town in a big loop through incredible fields and landscapes of baobab and rock. It was very hot and there was nearly no one around which added to the weird atmosphere.

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The brown, scrubby country north of Bolga

 

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Luxury! Breakfast at a real (plastic) table and chair. Bolga cafe

The population in the north is more Muslim than in the south, most of the ubiquitous churches having been replaced with little mosques. I didn’t see any women in burka, or any women covered-up particularly. Quite a few men sported beards though, and wore Muslim skullcaps. “Welcome!” was something I heard all the time, and everyone was very friendly, though perhaps a little shyer than the outgoing Ghanaians I’d met farther south. As I mentioned earlier, Ghana doesn’t have a lot of tourists outside the southern beaches, and I got the idea very few independent travelers came this way.

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Any place is a good place to pray. Muslim in Bolga
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Street vendor setting up for the breakfast crowd

 

I had a fun meal the day I left Bongo. I found a small cafe (read: shack) where they offered me Jollof rice and chicken (Jollof rice is a spiced, hot rice). The chicken had to be killed, but it first had to be collected from a chicken seller a few hundred meters down the road. I went with the young girl to collect it and was even allowed to pick the one I wanted. I settled on a handsome dark-feathered bird clucking in the loose sand.

Bolga turned out to be an excellent and exciting base, and the parts of the north I saw were memorable and really interesting. I eventually left Bolga and headed back to Tamale, then farther south where the scenery changed again.

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Stay tuned!

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Lonely traveler out on the road, near Bongo, Ghana

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