A Visit to Mali

There are no buses between Guinea-Bissau and Mali, so I made the journey in several stages. Late in the afternoon of my first travel day, I crossed the border to Ziguinchor, Senegal, a four hour ride. I spent the night in the charming Hotel le Flamboyant. I ate an excellent dinner along the Casamance River as the sun went down. I hope the mosquitoes enjoyed their meal too.

The next day I was up early for another sept-place journey to Tambacounda in eastern Senegal, the jumping off point for the border to Mali. This all-day car ride proved to be the most uncomfortable of the entire trip. We arrived in Tambacounda well after dark, and I slept a few restless hours in a hotel with no electricity before going back to the bus station. Another sept-place brought me to the border. I was thankful that my bus to Bamako would be larger and more comfortable.
I walked across the Falémé River from Senegal to Mali. Downstream it becomes the Senegal River and empties into the sea at Saint Louis, where I had been two weeks before.
A bus from the border brought me to Kayes, the second largest city in Mali, where I waited at the station to get the next bus to Bamako. We pulled out just before sunset.
I think this is a statue of a poop emoji. Spotted in Kayes. 
After sleeping through most of the overnight bus ride, I arrived in Bamako at dawn, nearly three days after leaving Bissau. I went straight to the Sleeping Camel, a restaurant and hotel run by expats with a long history in Mali. The manager, Phil, was always helpful in answering my questions about travel and life in Mali. The Toukassou, a wedding dish from northern Mali, is excellent. 
BCEAO Tower, the tallest building in Mali at twenty stories
I spent a good deal of time in Bamako, trying to make plans for my remaining time in Africa. I was strongly advised against going north of Ségou and I heeded this advice, though I later heard from a half-dozen parties who made the journey as far as Mopti in subsequent months. No one was going as far as Timbuktu, where fighting was more common.
The Peace Monument (Monument de la Paix) commemorates the end of the rebellions in northern Mali in the 1990s. Today the country is once again at war.
Bamako’s National Museum is among the better museums I have visited in Africa. Set on a large parcel in the city center, it incorporates a large park with nature trails and scale models of famous buildings in Mali. The museum buildings themselves trace Mali’s human history from the prehistoric era through the present. 
Mannequins in a model bush taxi exhibit at the National Museum. The number of people and bags are not too far from reality. 
I was the only tourist in Bamako at the time, though I heard reports of a few others traveling through the country. Often they stay at the Sleeping Camel, a hotel/hostel/restaurant on the southern side of the Niger River. It’s a common gathering place for the expats in Mali, most of whom work for NGOs, security contractors, embassies. Because of my long stay (prolonged by a Malaria scare detailed below), I had a chance to meet some of these people and get a glimpse of their life as residents of Mali.
A sudden thunderstorm at the Sleeping Camel
I had a brief Malaria scare in Mali. After feeling ill and experiencing a low fever, I decided to go to a nearby clinic. They conducted a battery of tests, some of which were necessary, that concluded I did not have anything as serious as Malaria. A few days later, my symptoms cleared up and I was fine for the rest of the journey. 
An x-ray of my chest – no Tuberculosis!
I had plenty of opportunities to explore Bamako, including the market in the old colonial quarter. There is also an interesting French-built cathedral on one of the main avenues. 
Bamako’s central cathedral, built by the French
From Bamako, I made a short trip to Segou. I timed my visit to coincide with market day in the town, when many traders from outlying villages would travel by boat and car to buy and sell. I wasn’t disappointed, and was able to purchase both indigo dye and Gum Arabic for artist friends back home. 
Market day near the main dock in Segou
Boats full of passengers and goods passed back and forth along the Niger River
I spent the night at an Airbnb run by a French-Tuareg couple. While their English and my French were limited, they proved to be helpful and charming hosts. When I wasn’t shopping in the market, I was writing postcards to friends and family back home.
A delicious pizza, a large bottle of beer, and a fantastic view of the Niger. 
The restaurant where I ate lunch proved to be a nice place to watch the chaotic hubbub of the market. Traders carried cases of Coca-Cola to nearby pirogues (motorized canoes) for sale to small villages and towns along the river. 
A case of soda is loaded onto a pirogue at Segou
After I returned to Bamako from Segou, I made quick arrangements to travel to Burkina Faso before returning to Bamako one last time to catch my flight. I left on a bus for Bobo-Dioulasso the next day.

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