Christine Carrillo Anyone up for gorilla trekking...
Christine Carrillo
Anyone up for gorilla trekking in Uganda?
Well, four avid travelers from Corona del Mar and Newport Beach
certainly were. Sylvia Burnette, Ev Parrella, Gayle Jones and
Theodora “Teddy” Pike couldn’t resist the offer to travel to the
Bwindi Impenetrable Forest with armed guards by their side and guides
with machetes hacking paths for them through the dense vegetation in
the hopes of seeing a black gorilla up close.
In fact, that was their primary worry -- that they wouldn’t get to
see the gorilla that they traveled to an entirely different continent
to find.
Since only six people per gorilla group are allowed in the forest
per day and three of the four women only had two-day passes, the
women, all of whom are in their 50s and 60s, were determined to do
whatever it took to summon the gorillas from hiding.
After they held hands and chanted for the gorillas to show
themselves, the endangered animals quickly appeared.
“It’s so moving to look into their eyes; it’s so touching,” said
Burnette, who had a three-day pass. “It’s almost like you have an
understanding. You really feel connected to them.”
Developing a relationship with the habituated animals was an
experience that touched each of their hearts and made their two-week
trip in August an opportunity of a lifetime.
After reading about Uganda in a New York Times article, Jones
brought the trip to the attention of her traveling companions a year
ago and the planning began.
“Our families think we’re crazy for doing this,” Pike said.
But none of the women, all of whom had traveled to Africa before,
felt that way.
“When girls travel together they just want to have fun,” Burnette
said. “We have fun, but we play hard.”
And their Uganda trip certainly had its challenges. Hiking through
gorges in search of chimpanzees and not knowing what was in the
bushes surrounding them, visiting caves inhabited by two million bats
and a dozen python waiting to devour them, the ladies, who left
behind their worried families, truly tested their moxie with the
seemingly endless treks but couldn’t have imagined a more rewarding
trip.
“You have to have adventure in your blood and be well-traveled to
go there,” Jones said. “There were truthfully a lot of dangers. We
truly were lucky.”
The women and their families did have an underlying concern about
their welfare due to the political situation in the neighboring
countries of Rwanda and Sudan, but that wasn’t enough to dissuade any
of them from their gorilla seeking mission.
“The guards were there to protect the gorillas from poachers, not
to protect us,” said Parrella, who added that Benjamin Musisi, their
primary guide, served as their protector.
“It’s hard to find them; it’s hard to get to them and once you get
to them it’s one of the most rewarding experiences of your life.”
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to TRAVEL TALES,
330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail christine.carrillo@
latimes.com; or fax to (949) 646-4170.
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