The Tranquilo Traveler
The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.
Our Man in Mwanza: Smiling Softly

Back on our own, no more luxury lodges or guides or vehicle, we must cross Africa’s largest lake to get to Uganda (via Bukoba), where we will meet up with Tay’s long-lost Great Aunt Linda, granddaughter of the esteemed Dr. Stewart, development worker with the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, and one of Tay’s inspirations for continued work abroad, even though they have only met once.
But first, Lake Victoria, notorious for ferry sinkings (the latest disaster happened a few weeks ago), although in reality, only cargo boats are dangerous; we’ll be in a first-class cabin on the M/V Victoria, an overnight passenger ship, but only if we can book a cabin and find out what day the boat leaves.
Upon arrival in Mwanza, with no helpful information in our guidebook (our Insight Guide to Tanzania, the only one available in the bookstore in Colombo, has pretty pictures, detailed maps, and intelligent writing, but is crap for nuts-and-bolts practical data, the main reason we use guidebooks) and not sure what to do, I step into a barber shop and call the local Peace Corps Volunteer (PCV), whose blog I discovered quite by accident the morning we departed Moshi and whose number I quickly scrawled into my journal.
Andrew suggests a few hotels, all of which are booked, and our choice is to either settle for a spartan $3 cell with dubious security, or throw down for an overpriced $40 room across town. Spoiled rotten from our safari, we blow our budget and check into an “executive suite” at Hotel La Kairo. The next day, we meet Andrew at the Post Office Internet Café, and he takes us for a walk along the lakeshore to a Chinese restaurant with a beautiful view.

PCVs are good for local knowledge, language tips, expat gossip, and good conversation over a cheap beer (or three). I usually try to look them up during my travels, especially when researching a book or an article, as they also are a source of invaluable local contacts; it is amazing that in a year of travel, Andrew is the first active volunteer we’ve met on the road.
Andrew is nine months into his two-and-a-half-year service, a recent engineering graduate from North Carolina whose assignment is teaching math at the Nsumba Boys’ School, half-hour outside Mwanza. There are a few other volunteers in the area, all health and education workers, but out of Tanzania’s 110 PCVs, the lake volunteers are the most isolated, more than a 30-hour bus ride from the capital (they must travel via Nairobi, Kenya). Andrew will be making this trip next month, for a training with his fellow volunteers where he will compete in the 2006 Peace Corps Tanzania Mullet-Fest—thus the shaggy ‘do and beard (click here if you are unsure what a mullet is). I think Andrew’s plan of complimenting his mullet with a handlebar mustache, cut-off tee, and Carolina twang, makes him a strong contender.
We spend a little more than 48 hours in Mwanza, including an afternoon trip to Andrew’s site, where we admire the largest PCV library we’ve ever seen (this collection of books has been passed down over numerous volunteers) and that night, we board the Victoria at 10 pm, keeping in mind the last point of advice from our hotel door:
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6 Responses to “Our Man in Mwanza: Smiling Softly”
You might want to take a boat to an island called Ukerewe… really interesting and different… Theres a hotel called Gallu Beach… and it’s cheap…
Thanks for the nice words about Andrew. We’ll be there next month and plan a trek along your safari route. All the best. Andrew’s family in North Carolina.
In 1964 there was another Andrew Clark PCV in Tanzania, namely me. I’m a veterinarian and worked primarily in Masai District.
We are having a 45 year reunion in September and have a website in which we are getting caught up with each other. One of our guys found mention of PCV Andrew Clark in Mwanza and thought it might be me and posted this address.
My wife, another PCV in 1964, and I are both now retired and have applied to PC again and are awaiting posting. Fun to close the circle from our first jobs - PCVs - through our careers to our last (hopefully) last jobs - PCVs.
I went to school in mwanza. My parents moved from Arusha in 1961.I have lost touch with almost all my friends and ones I went to school with.Shamshad and I keep in touch as she lives in Hayes,Middlesex and I live Salisbury, Wiltshire. Salisbury is near Stonehendge, 20 minutes from where I live. I am planing to visit Mwanza in Oct\Nov of 207 and will be staying for 6months!! as I still have my brothers there (Lake Engreeing Works).I need to get in touch with Yasmin and Shiraz, Batul and Pombe,I can go on and on. If any one remembers me or knows of me,please get in touch with me,Recently there was a get together in London, almost everyone was there from Mwanza I missed out, I don’t want to miss out again. I only found out because I bumped into Shamshad on Holidays,she was visiting to where I live.
Parveen.
Parveen.mza@hotmail.co.uk
Thanks to Andrew Clark, his name caught my eye.
Interesting story about Mwanza and your Safari as first time in the region.
More details about the place or friends intend to go, use this guys Mwanza Guide Online they are informed about the place.(fellow know Joseph)
www.mwanza-guide.com
Regards
Joe
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Very superb pictures but I am missing the one: of killimanjaro.