Winner! Guide competition and Ko-Sa Beach Resort, Ampenyi, near Elmina, Ghana

We have a winner for the find the song title in the Ghana guide competition. Our winner hails from Canada and is arriving in Ghana shortly to visit family and friends and enjoy a stay at Ko-sa Beach Resort on us! I'm hanging out for photos from her stay. I shall post the winning song titles and her extraordinary list shortly so you can see (and stop wondering about oddly worded phrases in the guide).


For those readers near Cape Coast, Elmina or Takoradi this Easter Break, you may wish to pop in to Ko-sa Beach Resort in Ampenyi to experience drumming and dancing performances over the Easter weekend by groups from the region. You can call them to find out exactly what times the performances will be held on + 233 (0)244 375432. I believe they may be fully booked so if you wanted to stay, please also call ahead to check for room availability.


It's a fantastic location to spend the day swimming and sampling their excellent menu. We recommend lobster in tomato and garlic sauce and yam balls with stew! It's all fantastic though. (Godwin sitting next to me just said: "Mmm yam balls!")

All photos are courtesy of Ko-Sa Beach Resort. Go check out their site to see more.


Download a Ghana guide and see inside the guide before buying.

Ghana housing project: design and construct sustainable home

As the site says: Open Source House (OS-House) is a non-profit organization that aims to provide better, more sustainable housing in low-income countries.

Designers, architects and those interested in modular and sustainable housing may be interested in this design competition at Open Source House.

The design competition starts on January 15th, 2010 and is open for team or individual participation. The challenge is to design a sustainable, flexible and locally embedded family house for a specific location in Ghana. The modular construction should be suitable for local implementation and affordable for its future owners. The winning design(s) will be built in Ghana. All information regarding the competition will be published on our website on January 15th.





4. Deadline and submission format.


May 17th, 2010. Before this date all designs must be submitted digitally. The design case, which will be published on the 15th of January, describes the format and drawings to be delivered. Contestants are asked to deliver designs considering all house components -foundation, structure, floor, facade, roof- and its set of connections



5. Pilot


The winning design(s) will be built in a pilot project in Ghana, to test the technical and economic feasibility as well as the social perception. Joining the competition is your chance to establish your name as an architect while witnessing your design being built and used by its new residents.

 
6. The Open Source phase


To generate content for the OS-House platform we start with the Ghana design competition. However the aim of OS-House is to provide knowledge and choice. Therefore all submitted designs are published on the OS-House platform after the competition.


After this first competition and pilot project OS-House will continue to promote the implementation of more OS-Houses, challenge platform members to improve available designs, organize new competitions and stimulate local parties to take designs and adapt them to their local conditions. Our goal is to realize a 100.000 OS-Houses before the year 2020.






Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the travel guide before buying.

Announcement: Ghana travel guide

Travelers, expats, volunteers all...

Akwaaba, which means "welcome"! Many readers and new blog visitors have purchased the Insider's Guide to Ghana since it was launched mid-February: thank you! And we have received very positive feedback, overall. You can read some of the comments on the sidebar to the right at this blog. 

Our introductory price period in which we tested a price range for the guide is about to come to an end. As of 1 April, the price of the Insider's Guide to Ghana will be the full, final price of US$21.00. Those organisations that requested bulk discounts for their clients/volunteers/visitors will continue to receive the bulk discount.

If you want to buy the guide for the current price of US$8.15 you have 4 more days to do so! It's not scary. It's not difficult. It's definitely not as scary or difficult as what this guy is about to do. Woo!


This image is courtesy of Irene Tong at Flickr.

Which reminds me: over Easter there is a paragliding festival at the Kwahu Plateau behind Nkawkaw which is on the main highway between Kumasi and Accra. I have never been, unfortunately, but those who have reported very good things. Many Accra and Kumasi expats and travelers head here for the Easter weekend. Make sure you bring loads of water and snacks. Jumping off cliffs with parachutes. Experienced instructors from South Africa. You can read about paragliding in Ghana here.


This image is courtesy of flickr: by Santosh Dawara. It's not Ghana, I think it's somewhere in the USA. The image below is from the Ghana Paragliding festival site.


This looks like it's going to be a smooth landing. I'm envious of anyone who gets to go this year!

Our guide will let you land like this when you arrive in Ghana too.

Here's what you get:

278 page Easy Read version formatted for screen reading
Easy Print version formatted for printing and carrying 
which can be uploaded and read on your iPhone
MP3 8 minute Twi daily phrases lesson
MP3 8 minute Hausa daily phrases lesson
MP3 How to "haggle" a taxi driver
MP3 How to "haggle" buying food on the streetside
MP3 introduction, thank you and exclusive competition for purchasers
Free updates--full guides and separate pages showing updates--for 12 months from the date of purchase.



It's easy. It's pretty quick. And it's still US$8.15 ! For 4 more days anyway.

Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.

I have a confession: I have no sense of direction!

You may be thinking, guide book writer eh? No sense of direction eh? What gives?!

Before you jump to conclusions, not that you necessarily would, but just in case, you can read the whole story here at Pocket Cultures. The story is called The Bumblebee and the Windswept Seed and explains how this directionally-challenged writer got up the nerve to give others directions on how to get from A to B when she almost always misses B herself, the first time around, anyway.

Here is an excerpt:

"I probably shouldn’t tell you this, but I have absolutely no sense of direction. I mean, not a single cell in my body has any idea where it is once I turn a few corners, least of all my brain cells. As a collective, my brain cells throw their arms up and go on strike if I travel further than right, left, and right again. Game over.

So, I can only ever write a guide book for a country I have spent nearly four years traversing because it takes me this long to work out where I am and where I’m going—but when I work it out, I really work it out. 

The only way I know how to get anywhere in Ghana now is because I learnt the way by heart, slowly, like one memorises algebraic equations. 

Upon arriving in circular, hilly Cape Coast the first time I almost turned around and fled. (Of course, had I actually attempted to run home, I would have landed in South America, not Australia, such is my directional aptitude.) Navigating that town is like dropping you in advanced algebra before you’ve learnt to add one and one."

Keep reading at Pocket Cultures here. Read to the end to find out why I could, after all, author a guide book and give others directions around a small African country. That's me in Bolgatanga where you can't go too far wrong in the directional stakes.

Oh, and that tree behind me is what remains of Godwin's first primary school. Yep, sitting on stones under those now overgrown tree branches is how he completed primary school in the outlying villages of Bolgatanga. He'll be writing a post on Pocket Cultures about the role of Ghanaian men in the home and how his family turned out differently: they are five boys!

Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.

Godwin talks: 6 Ghanaian Obsessions

We have a new site www.g-lish.org where you can read all articles from This is Ghana in a much more organised fashion. Read Godwin talks: 6 Ghanaian Obsessions there.

I have created a new column called "Godwin talks" to provide a Ghanaian point-of-view on Ghanaian issues. Godwin will be sharing his thoughts on all sorts of topics from cross-cultural relationships, to life as a young Ghanaian, to positive and negative aspects of culture in Ghana.

So, in Godwin's words, here are the top 6 things that Ghanaians obsess over. (Feel free to add your comments--whether you agree or disagree!)

Number 1. Football (aka. soccer): Ghanaians will abandon everything—including dates with girlfriends or boyfriends and important work appointments—to watch a football match, especially if it’s the national team: The Blackstars. Almost every political speech contains a football analogy. When the President did his appointment of ministers, there was a feeling within the NDC that certain bigwigs whom people were expecting to be nominated for ministerial appointments were being excluded. In an attempt to explain the decision, Presidential spokesperson, Mahama Ayariga, said that President Mills, as the coach of team Ghana, decides “which player plays at what time. And since this is the first half, they should give the President leeway to bring the set of players he wants to play this first half.” He said that it’s possible that those who others think should be appointed in the first half will come in the second half. “The game has just begun.” So, I have to say next…

2. Politics: You find Ghanaians passionately discussing politics all day and night long—from the family sitting rooms to trotro stations and on trotro buses.

3. Funerals: When someone is alive and needs assistance to buy food, no family or friends come to help, but when the person dies the same people will find money to organize a grand funeral for the person. It might sound negative, but that’s the truth, to the extent that we have a booming business in funeral contractors. But these people take time from their work and also spend their life savings on funerals. How are we, as a nation, to develop if our people spend everything they have on funerals?

4. Music: Every Ghanaian young and old, literate or illiterate, loves music. You will find Ghanaians jumping to the least sound that resembles music—in the street to the church or even funerals, which are supposed to be solemn.

5. Religion: Almost every Ghanaian belongs to the three main religions in Ghana: Christianity, Islam and traditional religions. Ghanaians are passionate about their individual faiths. On Sundays you have Christians flocking to church in their numbers and on Fridays you have Muslims flocking to the Mosque even during work hours to observe Friday prayers. For the traditional believers, who are mostly in rural areas, every now and then they perform ritual activities especially during festive periods and funerals. We clearly understand that there is a freedom of worship where even in the family you could have three family members belonging to the three different religions. We haven’t reached that fanaticism level where the father will say, “You are either a Muslim or an Infidel”, with no middle ground. No, you have parents being Muslims and the children being Christians. Or one brother being Muslim and admiring his Christian pastor brother for succeeding. We have almost no religious conflict in Ghana.

6. Patriotism: Ghanaians are very patriotic in the sense that we ourselves first as Ghanaians before anything else—I think this is because Kwame Nkrumah united Ghana when he became the first President. He himself was Nzema but he saw himself as Ghanaian and he was able to rally everyone as Ghanaians. Though we come from different ethnic groups, the word “Ghana” is something we are easily identified with, so our tribal groups are less important when it comes to national issues. We have this common Ghanaian expression: “We are first and foremost Ghanaian, then Ashantis and Fraras, and so on, and then Christian or Muslim...” So we see our affiliation to various ethnic groups or religious associations and political parties as an expression of that “Ghanaianness”—celebrating the diversity of the Ghanaian society—which is a reflection of who a Ghanaian is.

Godwin is the Programmes Director of Young People We Care—www.ypwc.org—and a passionate believer that we can change our circumstances if we believe we can. He grew up in Bolgatanga and Bawku—the poorest regions and towns in Ghana—to illiterate parents who believed he deserved the education that they were denied. He completed his studies in population at the University of Cape Coast. His obsession is tea drinking. Oh, and football and politics and music and, fortunately, not funerals.

You can download a sample of our Travel guide to Ghana (good for expats too) at www.g-lish.org/ghanaguide. 

The brilliant football stadium image is courtesy of manbeastextraordinaire at Flicker. The excellent image with the buttocks above is also from manbeastextraordinaire. Thanks for sharing!

Another great blog and photos for those heading north

I stumbled across "Tim in Tamale" , the blog of a former VSO volunteer when hunting around online. He has some fantastic photos of Ghana across the country at this post "goodbye trip photos - 4" and you'll see another excellent set under "goodbye trip photos - 3" and other sets there. There's also some helpful tips for travel with reference to Tamale, which is his specialty. It's really an enlightening blog and has me hooked, even though he finished his VSO experience last year. We hope you like this blog tip! If you know some good Ghana blogs, let me know.


Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.


A few more peeps inside our Ghana travel guide

Here are some new screen shots to give you a taste of what to expect in the Insider's Travel & Living Guide to Ghana. We've even included a "toilet tour" of Ghana since you're going to do it whether you like it or not. We have listed toilets right across the country. We have also included journey maps showing a dozen potential journeys across Ghana by theme. But the killer content are the bus timetables. You cannot get these anywhere else online or in person in Ghana. You get timetables across the country, with multiple options for each city so no more traipsing back and forth across crowded cities in hope of a bus only to find it leaves tomorrow and traipsing back across to stay somewhere for the night and back in the morning...no, get our timetables in the full guide to Ghana. And get loads more up to date and honest advice about travel, life, health, costs and even sex in Ghana. You can check out customers comments on the right.

Immediately below is an image from the Easy Print version which is all black and white and designed to be printable. And the images further down are from the Easy Read version which is designed to be read on a screen.

In addition, you receive 5 audio MP3 files. There are two language learning files: one for Twi and one for Hausa. And there are two "haggling" files in which Godwin and I role play street scenes. That is, he's the taxi driver and I'm negotiating the taxi in one file so you can see what to expect and practice yourself. In the other I'm attempting to buy pineapple on the street. You can listen to a typical exchange with a market trader and how to handle the sometimes thorny issue of not being too ripped off as a visitor. We also have a welcome audio file which tells you a little more about us, the guide and also a small competition we're running for guide purchasers exclusively.















Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.




















Cape Coast, Ghana, a photo journey

This is an old favourite from last year. If you're traveling to Cape Coast or Elmina, check this out. By the way, that's an STC bus in the picture directly below and this picture shows the corner of Hotel Junction off which Elimax's place lies.

When these women carrying beams of timber on their head passed me this morning I decided to chronicle the journey to work in pictures--it takes about 20 minutes in a share taxi (when it doesn't break down, take a detour, or get pulled over by police at barriers)--so join me in 20 minutes in the life...


...of my journey from home to work that starts here, on the side of the highway, where I flag down a share taxi and still catch myself awed...

...by the women (it's mostly women--and they usually have a baby wrapped on their back to boot) who carry heavy loads on their heads because there's no other way for them to get it from A to B: these women have Pure Grace, the slogan emblazoned on the mini bus's rear windscreen, as they are on almost every vehicle in the country that...

...stops to set down passengers who need a break...


...and almost exclusively have windscreens that look like cystallized spider's webs...


...with side mirrors to match...



...so it's best to gaze out the side windows to see the fishermen carrying nets for mending....

...where piles of Gari--ground cassava--sit in neat stacks on tables across the highway from the Ewe fishing villages...


...and fishermen's pirogues (for fishing is a male domain) sit awaiting their next dip into the ocean and nets sit stretched for mending...


...for several kilometres along the highway...


...and children sell "pure water" from aluminium basins on their heads by the highway where the Atlantic waves pound the beach...

...and billboards advertise the ubiquitous game...

...before you come upon the village where pirogues set the scene...


...and lone fishermen take stock...


...and communities of fishermen participate in a communal hand-over-fist dance to haul in the nets...


...before coming upon the lagoon at Bakaano where a thin strop of sand separates the lake from the sea...

...and you shortly find yourself entering Cape Coast proper where you can buy a timber bed frame on the side of the road...


...and avoid falling in the open sewage trenches...


...and buy an onion from a street hawker and mind the firewood that will soon become charcoal that most people use to fuel their small coal braziers over which they cook almost everything, including...


...pancakes that will soon be sold from that little green shed by a lady who piles them up in a glass case and wanders along the road until they're "finished"...


...and do a spot of chair shopping before the day gets going...


...and make a call for 25 cents from the yellow umbrella stand...

...and stop at the blue painted shop that sells stales like milk, of course, and sugar, rice, single tea bags, and other food stuffs in small portions from 5 cent sizes to $1 or more...

...and a bite of wakye (wah-chy), a dish of rice and red beans and sold in those large silver bowls along streets all over Ghana...

...so you can fill your stomach for a day at the office!

That was a 20 minutes in the life from Elmina to Cape Coast...


Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.


Are you MaD: All about fair trade!

This week's Are you MaD post focuses on fair trade. There is so much happening in that field, Are you MaD: Fair Trade. Click and check out the full post at www.g-lish.org. You'll see reviews of four excellent organisations and experience a relity check about the chocolate you're tasting too. You can read about one Ghanaian's terrible trip to the Ivory Coast in Facing up to an Ivorian gun runner to get a sense of how children and youth end up slaving on cocoa farms today.

This image which shows fair trade coffee is courtesy of william.neuheisel at Flickr.

This image on the left is of a Chinese/Mandarin language poster advocating fair trade by Oxfam. That's certainly one of the markets to target as far as lobbying for better working and trading conditions is concerned.

To read what four excellent orgnisations are doing, go to Are you MaD: Fair Trade.

Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.

Trotro mate for a day: Photo


This slogan speaks to my directional decisions. That's me in the sunnies outside my old house in Elmina and my friend and former volunteer buddy. We were trying out being mates for a day, even though we weren't going too far in that old rust bucket. Kind of like many a trotro trip...!

Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.

Win! Competition! Ghana travel guide giveaway!

We're giving 6 readers a chance to win our Insider's Travel and Living Guide to Ghana. Also great for expats!

One reader from each of the USA, UK, Canada, Netherlands and Ghana will win. We also want someone from another random country who can use Paypal. So, if you're not in one of those "Competition 5", but still want a chance to participate, email and we'll choose someone from outside of those 5 countries too.

There are two steps to this. 

This sounds counter intuitive or downright dodgy, but it's not.

We have updated our payment processor and we're testing it in different parts of the world to make sure it works as we've had emails from customers trying to buy, but not being able to for some technical reason. So, we're seeking testers in different parts of the world to ensure things are working properly. For your efforts, you get the guide free.

We're seeking one person in the UK, one in the Netherlands, one in the USA, one in Canada, one already in Ghana and one somewhere else altogether to go through the purchasing process and let us know if you had any problems in the process. After the purchase is complete we'll refund your purchase amount--this is simple. We promise. We have a very good rapport with current customers and, indeed, just updated our guide and those existing customers are getting the updates as we write. You'll get all that, including the new language lesson MP3s included in the package. Free!

To be in the running, first, email us at gaylepescud@gmail.com and let us know where you are. We'll pick winners randomly.

We'll then ask you to test the payment facility and then refund the purchase price back to you once it pops into our account. You get to keep the guide package, but we'd like your feedback by email of how the process went and any glitches you may have encountered. We particularly want to know if there was anything preventing your purchase.  If so, at what stage, how? What happened?

So, your chance to own one of our guides! Email away! The sooner we receive emails from all five locations, the better as we want to jump in and test ASAP.

This is the feedback I received about 5 minutes ago from one reader responding to the update link:
"Thankyou for your wonderful guide, it is making my trip much easier and much more rewarding, as I am visiting places I might have otherwise missed. I have your guide on my iPhone and recently was able to help some backpackers who couldn't find the info they needed in the Bradt guide."
Seriously high praise. We didn't make it up. We're getting similar comments from others almost daily.

If you don't make the competition 5, you can buy the guide for the new low price of US$8.15. NOW!

Stay tuned.

That stunning picture of Elmina Castle by night is by  Aluka Digital Library.
If you want to see inside the Castle, check this out.  The dungeons in Elmina Castle are among the most harrowing of places to experience in Ghana. I visited here in my very first week of arriving in 2005, as I used to live within walking distance along the main road of Elmina (I could swim to the castle!) and my first visit burnt itself into my memory.

Don't forget the competition though.
Looking forward to your emails.

AIDS is looking for you on this highway in Ghana

An image along the highway on the outskirts of Bolgatanga. There was a political logo in the centre that I decided to remove since it just doesn't look too crash hot. Ghana has a serious dose of the funny signs, although there are very few in Bolga--this was my first. Incidentally, we don't believe AIDS is funny. The sign, however...

"Only in Ghana" as Mr KSM would say!


Hey, you've been warned!


Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.

Food and vitamin supplements for life and travel in Ghana


Supplements can really help your energy levels and boost your immune system when traveling in developing countries. Here are a few of recommendations based on my experience. Let us know if you have some favourite strategy for keeping healthy on the road and which products or supplements you prefer.

Acidophilus powder.
This is “good bacteria” for your digestive system. It is excellent to prevent upset stomachs whether traveling or during normal life. You can buy it by the bottle as loose powder to be taken by the spoonful or in capsule form. Some require refrigeration is it’s a live culture but others have been formulated so as not to need refrigeration. It can also be found in some yoghurts, but my naturopath in Sydney explained that the powder form is way more effective than yoghurt from the supermarket (and she wasn’t selling the powder). In my experience, those designed to be chilled are more effective. I carried mine wrapped inside a freezer bag (like you use to chill beer) when I first came to Ghana and this kept the bottle chilled for a good 40 hours between home and my final destination.

Protein powder.
This helps ensure you get enough protein each day to support travel-weary muscles. Unlike acidophilus powder, this doesn’t need refrigeration, but it’s still important to get a good brand. Protein powder has little taste and you can add the recommended spoonfuls to plain water or juice or to oatmeal or a shake. Protein bars are also popular alternatives.

Liquid iron.
Iron gives you energy. When you don’t get enough of it in the diet you can really begin to feel tired. If you get malaria, your iron levels will drop even more.
Fortunately, you can buy liquid iron in pharmacies in Ghana for between 2-9 Cedis. It’s called “blood tonic” and the more expensive, I noticed, the more effective. One good brand is called “Feroglobin”.

Chewable Vitamin C
If you take these in combination with liquid iron, the iron is more easily absorbed into your bloodstream. Incidentally, calcium inhibits the absorption of iron into the blood so don’t drink dairy before taking iron supplements (which is why I thought it was weird to see milk with iron supplements added to it—as a selling point!) You can also buy these in pharmacies for about 20 pesewas a strip or bring your own.

Top quality multi-vitamins
If you can get hold of a good all-round multi-vitamin you will also strengthen your immune system for the down times and maybe even avoid serious illness. I advise women to get tablets especially formulated for women to help during the monthly cycle.

I’ve been out of the developed world loop for several years now and would love to hear of any new health products for improving well being while traveling. Thanks in advance.



Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.


Upgraded Guide to Ghana with MP3 files

In addition to the Easy Print and Easy Read versions of our guide, as of this very minute you get 5 audio MP3 files too. 

This includes two language learning files--one for Twi and one for Hausa--which are both around 8 minutes in duration and include basic greetings, how to state your name and where you're going, and also how to haggle in the market. It's Godwin speaking by the way!

And there are two "haggling" files in which Godwin and I role play street scenes.

That is, in one he's the taxi driver and I'm negotiating the taxi so you can hear what to expect and practice yourself.

In the other I'm attempting to buy pineapple on the street! Easy you say! Hah! Listen to this hustling trader and see for yourself. This is a typical exchange with a market trader and shows how to handle the sometimes thorny issue of not being too ripped off as a visitor. Stand your ground!

We also have a welcome audio file which tells you a little more about us, the guide and also a small competition we're running for guide purchasers exclusively.

We have loads in our fabulous, up to date and honest guide. There's a map showing journeys across Ghana. We include about 13 of these maps to help you work out how A and B (and C and D and E) connects to make your planning so much easier and save you loads of valuable travel time and money! You can see what readers are saying in the comments on the right. We look forward to hearing from you, too!

We hope you like the new cover too. It's a collection of photos from across Ghana and a mug shot of yours truly.

Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.

Photos: Volta, Akosombo, Beads, Ghana

These brilliant photographs are courtesy of Raysto at Flickr. He has developed a brilliant folder of Ghana photos taken this year.

The transparent blue and blue-green beads in these photos are made from recycled glass bottles which are first pounded, then melted and set in moulds. The colourful, dot beads are individually hand-painted by beadmakers too. This tradition is focused in the Eastern Region between Accra, Koforidua and Kpong in a kind of triangle. You can visit bead makers and watch them at work. We have a lot of information about this in our post Ghana Highlights Part II: Eastern and Volta Region



This is a stunning photo of Lake Volta from around, I think, Akosombo Bridge or somewhere high in that vicinity. If you stay at Aylo's Bay you will be privvy to this amazing landscape and you can also paddle a canoe along the river for a few hours if you wish!



I want to say thank you to Raysto for making his photos available to share. If you want to sneak a peek at something brilliant, but a little naughty, check out this very African lady.

Download a free sample of our Travel Guide to Ghana see inside the guide before buying.