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	<title>Side of Africa</title>
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	<link>http://www.sidafrica.org</link>
	<description>It is all about Africa. Africa is the beautiful continent of wildlife.It is a great place for adventure lovers as well.</description>
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		<title>Rattan Furniture Ensure Comfort and Durability for You</title>
		<link>http://www.sidafrica.org/rattan-furniture-ensure-comfort-and-durability-for-you/</link>
		<comments>http://www.sidafrica.org/rattan-furniture-ensure-comfort-and-durability-for-you/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Jan 2012 10:10:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Side of Africa]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sidafrica.org/?p=103</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Rattan is superficially similar with bamboo. Rattan stems are solid and rattan is used as home appliances such as chair, table, lounge seat, rack, storage and so on. Rattan is strong and last longer. It is light weight and has high quality.
Rattan can give natural, elegant and beautiful look. You can buy rattan furniture for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Rattan is superficially similar with bamboo. Rattan stems are solid and rattan is used as home appliances such as chair, table, lounge seat, rack, storage and so on. Rattan is strong and last longer. It is light weight and has high quality.</p>
<p>Rattan can give natural, elegant and beautiful look. You can buy rattan furniture for your living room, bedroom, kitchen, patio and so on. At ratanland.com, you will find lots of different style of rattan furniture. <a href="http://www.rattanland.com"><strong>Modern rattan furniture</strong></a> is good choice if you live in urban house. Most of the urban houses are small and narrower than other places. So the items should be fit in narrow space in urban house.</p>
<p><span id="more-103"></span></p>
<p>Do you like tropical scene? <a href="http://www.rattanland.com"><strong>Classic rattan furniture</strong></a> is the one. This type of furniture is perfect if you have tropical scene in your mind. You can decorate your house with your own taste. And moreover, the artisan had paid fully attention to the detail to create tropical rattan furniture theme. This style gives tropical, warmth and relaxes feeling.<br />
If you do not want to think too much about how to arrange your house, you can choose <a href="http://www.rattanland.com"><strong>vintage rattan furniture</strong></a>. It is simple, easy and will only add the visual of the house.</p>
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		<title>Down and Dirty in Africa &#8211; Cairo to Cape Town Part 1</title>
		<link>http://www.sidafrica.org/down-and-dirty-in-africa-cairo-to-cape-town-part-1/</link>
		<comments>http://www.sidafrica.org/down-and-dirty-in-africa-cairo-to-cape-town-part-1/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Aug 2011 07:08:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Side of Africa]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sidafrica.org/?p=100</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Anyone who travels overland through the African continent has to be a  little crazy. To do it several times &#8211; totally mad. Then again I am  from Adelaide, Australia &#8230;. Maybe that says something. But to anyone  who has ever traveled Africa will understand the old saying &#8220;you can  take a (wo)man out of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anyone who travels overland through the<strong> African continent</strong> has to be a  little crazy. To do it several times &#8211; totally mad. Then again I am  from Adelaide, Australia &#8230;. Maybe that says something. But to anyone  who has ever traveled Africa will understand the old saying &#8220;you can  take a (wo)man out of Africa, but you can never take Africa out of the  (wo)man&#8221;. With all its bad press, reputation for danger, death and  poverty there is a side to Africa most never see nor experience &#8211; the  wild diversity of terrains from unforgiving deserts to tropical  rainforest to intimidating mountain ranges. The people, languages, dress  and customs is a melting pot making this continent one of the most  unique places on earth to travel overland.</p>
<p>With 5 expedition Land  Rovers, 3 Aussies, 5 Kiwis and 1 German we set out on a 4 month  expedition from top to bottom of the Africa continent. We were on our  way.</p>
<p><span id="more-100"></span></p>
<p>We started in Jordan due to its so-called ease in shipping  vehicles. Ones definition of ease totally depends on ones threshold; the  ship was 10 days late, the paperwork rivaled Mt Kilimanjaro in height;  port opening and closing times appeared random &#8211; possibly dependent on  the weather!</p>
<p>While in Jordan we took the opportunity to explore the Lost City of  Petra, the desert of Wadi Rum (Lawrence of Arabia&#8217;s hideout) and soak in  the salty waters of the Dead Sea. But it was the <em>African continent</em> we  were itching to reach.</p>
<p>The adventure started in trying to board the ferry from Aqaba to the  port town Nuewiba, Egypt just over the Red Sea. The best way to  describe the ferry port is chaotic. There are no signs (not even in  Arabic) and no indication of process. The only rule is not to board the  ferry until vehicle papers and passports are stamped. A random desk  indicating immigration simply by the amount of people pushing and  elbowing trying to squeeze passports through a small circular hole in  the window manned by a gentleman in official uniform.</p>
<p>The ferry, an old Danish channel ferry, transported us to Egypt but  not without a 3 hour delay left sitting on the docks while semi-trailers  with turn table trailers expertly reversed onto the ramp and through  the seemingly narrow cargo hole. 4 hours later we set foot on the  <a href="http://www.sidafrica.org/search/down-and-dirty-in-africa-cairo-to-cape-town-part-1">African continent</a>.</p>
<p>Egypt is not really Africa; it is merely positioned on the Continent  but is still classified as an Arab nation. Nonetheless Egypt is a warm  and welcoming country, the Egyptians are masterful at making you believe  you have received a bargain of the century only to walk away and  realize that same item costs half the price at home.</p>
<p>Our first challenge was to complete the mountains of paperwork  simply to get our vehicles into the country. Egypt has strict rules and  regulations; if anyone knows exactly what they are I would love to  know! It is not as simple as just having the Carnet de Passage (vehicle  passport) stamped, Egyptian customs is like a maze; a local driving  permit, local insurance, Egyptian number plates, hundreds of photocopies  and a lot of backsheesh (bribes) finally saw the formalities complete  and us on our way to the shores of the Red Sea.</p>
<p>Egypt is dry, with the exception of the Nile at the very north near  the Delta. The landscape is mostly flat and rocky, a dull sandy color  sweeps the landscape with the occasional brilliant grey rocky outcrop  breaking the mundane color scheme.</p>
<p>Driving through Egypt is a unique experience to say the  least. Drivers on their horn during the day, yet at night they drive  without head lights although still reaching speeds of 120km per hour!  The road system is overall pretty good and not much traffic with the  exception of Cairo (which resembles the driving skills of hundreds of  thousands of drunk drivers &#8230; only they are sober!) Horns, accelerator,  brakes are all you need, the odd fist out the window is also a handy  driving skill to become accustomed too, not a rude gesture by any means,  it merely means I am first.</p>
<p>Travel in Egypt is restricted. There are few roads tourists can  travel and most have police escorted convoys. Leaving times are secret &#8211;  for our &#8220;protection&#8221; &#8211; so secret it is only the day before the convoy  leaves exact departure times are known. Our first convoy from Safaga to  Luxor departed at 7am, 320kms under police escort with over 100 tourist  buses, taxis, and a hand full of independent travelers. Anyone who is  not familiar with convoy etiquette quickly becomes accustomed to the  chaos; convoy quickly turns into a race between coaches and drivers.</p>
<p>We took the time to visit the key tourist attractions, the Great  Pyramids, famous Egyptian museum, vibrant markets of Cairo, very  relaxing felucca cruise up the Nile, explored the tombs of the great  pharaohs in Valley of the Kings and Queens, spotted hieroglyphics at  Karnak and Luxor temples to name a few.</p>
<p>While in Cairo we needed our Sudan and Ethiopian Visas. Not a  difficult process, if the paperwork is all in order. The most wonderful  thing about the Sudanese Embassy in Cairo is it does not look like an  Embassy. The Sudanese have taken a very different approach, there is a  sad looking flag out the front of the old, well-worn, un-maintained  building, two open entrances taking you into the heart of the Embassy  and hub of activity without books to fill, ID to show, no metal  detectors, no searches, no passes to apply for. What you face when  entering are about 70 people crammed into a small space with a few staff  placed in semi-random places.</p>
<p>After completing mountains of paperwork, countless photocopies and  several department stamps covering the application forms our visas were  approved in less than 24 hours.</p>
<p>After a bit of overload of history it was time to move on.   Our  next destination; Sudan, here we enter real Africa; as all overland  routes are closed we must ship the vehicles on a barge while we take a  regular passenger ferry service to the small port town of Wadi Halfa  across Lake Nasser.</p>
<p>Entering Egypt in your own vehicle is an adventure in itself;  however it is nothing on actually trying to leave this ancient  world. There are stamps on bits of pieces of paper required from  different police departments, mountains of paperwork to complete, ferry  tickets to collect, lengthy customs process, police clearance,  surrendering number plates and local license, and finally loading the  vehicles&#8230; the maze is thick, process confusing, and everything is done  on Egyptian time over many cups of sweet black tea.</p>
<p>Loading the vehicles onto the well-used platform is an artform; 50  well-meaning Egyptians simultaneously yelling directions on how best to  load; forward, backward, to the left, to the right&#8230; it was not long  before we stepped in and took control of the loading process.</p>
<p>The vehicles left 1 day before us; normally it takes 3 days for the  barge to cross and about 24 hours for the passenger ferry &#8211; the Captain  assured us although the vehicles left a day later than scheduled he  would be in Wadi Halfa before us.</p>
<p>As we were about to step onto the passenger ferry a small local  Egyptian politely asked if he could pass &#8230;. I swiftly moved aside as  he shuffled by. He was carrying a full size household fridge neatly  packed in its original box on his back! As we pushed and shoved our way  onto the ferry dodging hundreds of sacks of onions, TVs, stereos, boxes  of fruit and veg, furniture and of course hundreds of people; we were  relieved to finally drop our bags in our cabins.</p>
<p>We woke in the morning to the familiar Middle East call to prayer  crackling over the ferry speaker. After a tasty breakfast of beans,  flatbread, lentils, fruit and cheese we gathered on deck as we gently  sailed past the famous temple of Abu Simbel and into Sudanese  territory.</p>
<p>A few hours later we caught our first glimpse of Wadi Halfa; we were  relieved to see, in the distance, the cargo barge with our vehicles  waiting patiently for our arrival. The Captain was true to his word;  arrived before us and guarded the vehicles over night &#8211; of course now he  was waiting for his generous &#8220;bagsheesh&#8221; we had promised prior to  leaving Aswan.</p>
<p>Once again entering a country like Sudan requires mountains of  paperwork, stamps, more stamps, and 3 officials in different offices  also needing to stamp the stamped paperwork. The vehicles need to be  checked, searched for illegal items, and engine and chassis numbers  clarified against the Carnets and of course a stamp to say this was  done! After a quick search of the vehicles we were finally ready to exit  the customs compound.</p>
<p>What people do not see nor hear about Sudan are the kind-hearted,  ever willing to assist, smiley faced friendly people. &#8221;Welcome to Sudan&#8221;  echoes everywhere, horns hooting, random people stopping to greet us  and kids on the side of the road waving their tiny hands while  exhibiting large toothless smiles. We felt nothing but safety and  security; a genuine feel local people wanted tourists in their  country. Sudan is in a terrible state; but like all war torn countries  there are millions of people living a normal life trying to survive in  uncertain times; it is these people that make a country.</p>
<p>Northern Sudan is like a breath of fresh air compared to the hustle  and bustle of Egypt. The north is desert and we chose to take the  off-road route to Khartoum, over 700kms of which 340kms off-road through  the Nubian Desert.</p>
<p>The desert is deceptive; the ground looks flat &#8211; but it is not; in  the distance the sun reflects giving the impression of watering-holes  (mirages) but there is nothing but sand; the colors change minute by  minute as the sun reflects &#8211; one minute the distance is a pale cream  color; 10 minutes later is deep orange; at night the sky comes alive  with millions of stars as dozens of shooting stars dart across the sky  line. The moon light ignites the sand and even in the middle of the  night you think it is twilight. The desert is its own world; with its  own rules and speaks a language only a few ever master. It is no wonder  travelers often find themselves lost, confused and scared in such a vast  hostile nothingness.</p>
<p>With the windows down and sand blowing in our hair we took off into  the desert. The rules were simple &#8211; drive with your eyes, and look out  for each other and if you get lost head for the railway line. We spread  out but never completely lost sight of one another with the lead vehicle  leading the way. The most wonderful thing about desert crossings are  even with 7 vehicles (2 independent vehicles asked to join us) it felt  like we were all alone.</p>
<p>It took 3 days (and only four bogging) to reach a brand new tar seal  road near the town of Abu Hamed, 300 or so kms from the capital  Khartoum. We pumped up the tyres and continued on our way.</p>
<p>We stopped at the ancient pyramids of Meroe, where we camped up for  the night behind one of the many imposing sand dunes.   The following  morning there was no wind, the desert oozed it&#8217;s eerie silence when from  out of nowhere the first &#8220;camel&#8221; man arrived, followed by more &#8220;camel&#8221;  men, and &#8220;donkey&#8221; men and tens of kids on foot. The souvenir shops had  come to us and as we unzipped our tents and opened our eyes to see a  bright new day we were greeted with a toothless smile and a hearty  &#8220;welcome to Sudan, come and look at my shop&#8221;. Before long over 20 locals  had come to greet us and offer to sell everything from jewellery, clay  pots, hand-woven mats, old coins and camel rides to the Pyramids.</p>
<p>After rummaging through the souvenirs we departed for a look at the  Pyramids. It was not long before the sun was beating down and it was  time to make our final 250kms or so to the Capital, Khartoum.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Giraffe Prints &#8211; The Gentle Side of Africa</title>
		<link>http://www.sidafrica.org/giraffe-prints-the-gentle-side-of-africa/</link>
		<comments>http://www.sidafrica.org/giraffe-prints-the-gentle-side-of-africa/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Aug 2011 07:05:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Side of Africa]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sidafrica.org/?p=97</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Giraffe prints can express your inner peacefulness and  serenity&#8211;more so than that of predators. The beautiful spots of  giraffes speak to a sensitivity that belongs outside the herd.
The  giraffe, originally and currently found in Africa, traveled the Ancient  World. In Medieval times, the Persians and Arabs thought it an animal  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="article-content">
<p><strong>Giraffe prints</strong> can express your inner peacefulness and  serenity&#8211;more so than that of predators. The beautiful spots of  giraffes speak to a sensitivity that belongs outside the herd.</p>
<p>The  giraffe, originally and currently found in Africa, traveled the Ancient  World. In Medieval times, the Persians and Arabs thought it an animal  bred through the mixture of the camel, the hyena, and the wild ox.  Chinese of the Ming Dynasty thought it the incarnation of the mythical  creature the ki&#8217;lin, known for its gentleness, goodness, and  benevolence. The appearance of the Ki&#8217;lin was supposed to mark the  appearing of a good leader-in this case, Confucius!</p>
<p><span id="more-97"></span></p>
<p>Were you aware  that there are different species of giraffes? The pattern you probably  know best is the less exotic Somali giraffe, the one most seen in zoos.  Somalis have large polygonal-shaped spots on a background of bright  white. But another species of giraffe, that ranges in Kenya, has jagged,  star-like or vine-shaped leaf shapes on a chocolate or yellowish  background. Add these patterns to the variety of <em>giraffe print</em> products  available and you have a plethora of gift choices!</p>
<p>For instance, a  giraffe safari print on your bedroom comforter is an inviting yet tame  alternative to a lion or tiger print&#8211;and lends a warm feel to your  settling down for the evening. You will awake toasty warm and refreshed.  For a taste of a genuine side of Africa without adorning your home or  your body with the predator print, giraffes give you that animal warmth  without the edge.</p>
<p>The shoe industry offers quality footwear with  giraffe prints, especially all kinds of sandals and slide shoes. Popular  varieties include Dr. Scholl&#8217;s brand and green-spotted ones by the  designer Kate Spade of Italy. These brands cushion your feet all day  long while giving you a look of high style that your friends will envy.  From the basic thong to slide shoes or rain boots for those rainy days  in the city, you can find the shoe that sports a giraffe design. Couple  these with a tote bag from Boutique, and you have a unique look that  will carry you through a profession work day to a relaxing time on  Saturday.</p>
<p>You&#8217;ve heard of zebra print luggage, but have you heard  of luggage adorned by a giraffe pattern? International Traveller leads  the way, making theirs in polycarbonate material, the lightest material  available. Pulling that smart looking <a href="http://www.sidafrica.org/search/giraffe-prints-the-gentle-side-of-africa">giraffe print</a> around the airport  will never be a drag!</p>
<p>Giraffe print have been aimed successfully  at children too. From the logo of one of the most famous toy stores in  the world, to receiving blankets, to the famous print &#8220;First Kiss&#8221; by  Ron D&#8217;Raines, print giraffes have always been a favorite of the young,  and the young at heart.</p>
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