Saint Louis, Senegal
We had some pretty special rain on Monday afternoon. The skies got darker and darker from about half-past three. At the same time I discovered that neither of the vehicles that usually offer me a ride home was on site. Normally this would send me scurrying to the taxi park to find a minibus heading my way…but getting out of Banjul this way involves pushing and fighting for a place and climbing onto moving vehicles, and I did not fancy doing this in a downpour. So I asked around and found a ride; this car was not going exactly the way I needed, but it got me out of Banjul at least. The rain lashed against the windscreen as we queued out of the capital and across Denton Bridge. We turned across the rice fields outside Bakau, and found that the road was awash. There is no real drainage system, and surface water has to find its own way to lower ground; in this case it was coursing towards us, a brown muddy river over the width of the road. And then, perhaps inevitably, one of the cars in the queue ahead of us broke down. A large lorry managed to get past the obstacle, but for cars this was not really an option, as it meant driving into deeper water on the sand at the side of the road. So we waited amidst the rising water, and watched as the occupants of the imperilled car opened their doors, removed their shoes, gingerly stepped outside and began to push the car upstream to a dryer position.
Meanwhile our windows misted up, and the occupants of my car had an argument about which settings to use on the air blower to clear the windscreen. Many hands pressed all kinds of knobs; the hazard warning lights, the interior light, the rear window heater, the radio, even the handbrake. Now, being from a cold wet country, I am familiar with demisting car windows, and I could have given these colleagues a little assistance to solve their problem. But they did not ask, so I let them get on with it. It is like this at work sometimes, too. I am realizing that people need to acknowledge their need for help first, otherwise the help that is offered may be unwelcome, or misunderstood, or even perceived as a threat.
A little while ago I took a week off and travelled to Saint Louis, a city in the desert environment of northern Senegal. Follow this link to see pictures and read more about my trip to Saint Louis.