01/09/2024 Bikepacking Sierra Leone Day 154 : Riding with Flames đ„
âHey Brahim!â said a man sitting on the steps in front of the store.
I had just pulled up to the Grocery where I took the coconut oil photo yesterday - the one where there are lights, and you walk around in peace with a little basket to carry the items you are going to buy at the front counter.
âHey! Hi!â
âOh crap!â I thought, âWhat was this guyâs name?â
âItâs me, Ibrahim,â he announced, seeing my perplexed face.
Still not ringing any bells.
He put his sunglasses back on. Suddenly, I recognized him! He was the friendly guy I sat on the steps with for a long time yesterdayâŠ
Then he asked, âDid you get your Ivory Coast visa?â
I was a little bit floored that he remembered all of this⊠and felt like a turd for forgetting his name. He was one of the few people from yesterday who I really liked - and I probably spoke with 30+ individuals yesterday.
We sat down on the steps again, and he showed me his broken sunglasses. I pulled out my superglue, and by the time I came back (had to go on a get-money hunt), the glue had set and they were fixed.
********
Todayâs objective was to ride with Tenesie Dixon, a Strava athlete. Iâve been in touch with him for a long while now. 8 months ago, I sought cyclists in the few place Iâd seen illuminated on the heat map in Africa. I messaged any local riders I could find asking, âIs there a bike shop near Freetown?â The answer to that question is âyes!â In fact, Tenesie works at the bike shop! But Iâve now confirmed my suspicion: there are not any parts for MY bike sitting on store shelves between Spain and (probably) South Africa. Thatâs why Iâve been carrying a tire that takes up half my seat bag, hydraulic lines, cables, freehub mech, a chain... every part (within reason) for my bike.
We met up on time and he brought along his teammate Souleymane. We began negotiating the complex maze of motorcycles, vans, trucks, and people. Iâm always curious how local cyclists handle the impetuous driving. Iâm non-confrontational in these foreign environments, but I learned from these guys that it is OK to grab onto a motorcycle rack for balance if they are squeezing you in. Itâs okay to bang your fist on a van if they cut you off, and okay to raise your hand to say, âwhat were you THINKING!?âwhen someone jumps in front of you.
âThey just care about money,â Tenesie said in reference to one of the vans with people stuffed everywhere. âThey donât care about safety.â
He was referring to how they stop wherever, whenever to pickup more people, running you off the road. This happened to me several dozen times yesterday alone.
This was to be a âzone 2â ride. If you know anything about how things unfold when 3 men get together on bicycles with the purported goal of zone 2⊠it is NEVER zone 2. Once we were free of the traffic, we were soon cruising at 26mph. Not a shabby pace considering how many molecules of air and water we were having to push aside.
Souleymane called out âflat!â I thought he had a puncture, but then he pointed at my rear tire.. the seat tube brown with muddy sealant. My second flat since leaving home (the other was on the day I found the puppies). We extricated the little wire and pumped it back up⊠maybe to 20 psi. From then on, I just relegated myself to âwheel suckerâ as these two took turns pulling at 24-30 mph. I apologized for not helping and thanked them profusely.
As I was pumping my tire, Tenesie pointed to Souleymane and said, âlet him do it.â Souleymane was already trying to grab my pump and do my work for me. This causes a whirlwind of conflict in my brain!
First, Iâm the only one who works on my bike. Period. But apart from that, there is âthis historical thing,â and I am hypersensitive about people doing work for âthe white man.â People on the street are always trying to do something to fix my bike and I blow them off and run away. But on this ride, we are equals (well, in the bike repair sense, not the fitness sense because it took everything I had to stay with them). What is the correct move? This I do not know.
Tenesie is 27 years old and part of the âFlamesâ cycling team in Freetown. They have 20 members, and they race internationally. He says Nigeria has a good team, and he has traveled to race in Ghana and Guinea. He wins races sometimes, but I had to drag that information out of him.
âHow do you get parts for your bike? You canât just order them, right?â I asked.
âIf we need something, we put it on our social media, and people will usually send it.â
I asked how that works and about the postal service. The postal service is non-functional⊠but DHL is reliable, he said.
âYou have to send me your social media page,â I mentioned a few times. (He never did - even when I messaged him later). I imagine he is too modest to ask for anything. Luckily I did some homework and was able to figure it out:
This page makes me happy. Posts dedicated to âWomenâs empowerment through cyclingâ⊠they even have a go fund me for bikes that were damaged in a car wreck.. (That one has ended, but Iâm sure future opportunities will arise). These are the good people.
We arrived at Kent, and of course there was a sprint for the town sign. At the beach, about 5 guys came up and started taking roughly; the typical harassment that I endure daily.. except now I had âbodyguardsâ who spoke Krio. Even though Krio sounds like cool-man-English, I didnât understand what they were saying, but the gist was that we needed to pay for being on this beach.
I asked Tenesie, âIs this a public beach?â
âYes.â
Would this be different if I werenât here?â
âYes.â
Tenesie and Souleymane were able to calm the guys down, and then they started speaking English to me only: âDo you want a trip to the Turtle Islands?â
The Turtle Islands are perhaps the single touristic destination in Sierra Leone - though I donât think they are quite as luxurious as other tropical destinations.
I told Tenesie, âI donât do those touristic thingsâ
He smiled at that, and told them in Krio.
That didnât stop them, though: âHey, my friend, whatâs your name?â I told them, and asked their names. One guy said he was âSouleymaneâ
âHey, you guys both have the same name,â I said, pointing towards âourâ Souleymane in an effort to divert the attention from hustling.
The guy laughed, âNo! Iâm Solomon. It is a Christian name. That guy is Souleymane, itâs a Muslim name.â
âHa! I learn something new every day! I never thought about that. Thank you for teaching me, Solomon!â I meant it too - that was a cool thing to learn, even though they were laughing at me.
âYou want to go,â asked Tenesie.
âYeah.â
Next Sunday, Tenesie invited me to a social ride (i.e. race) followed by a picnic. I would have loved to attend, but the prospect of another 5 nights in my mosquito infested room where the electricity keeps turning off for hours at a time seemed too much. I want to go back to elevations where Iâm not dependent on electricity for cooling.
The rest of the day was typical Sierra Leone. Running all over to get money (when people asked me for money I n the street, I could tell them, âif you have more than 100 Leones, you have more money than me right now!â
So far today, only a few power outages (it was off all day from 9AM until 6:30 PM yesterday). It still goes off for shorter 10 minute periods regularly, waking me up at night as the room warms.
I also canceled my flight from Benin, and made a new reservation from Ghana for the same date. It is still a bit of a stretch mileage-wise, but my favorite thing to do is ride all day long. The breeze generated keeps me cooler, and by riding, I can save my precious remaining insulin and still process the mostly-carbohydrate food available. A few more days in Sierra Leone, but excited to go back to Guinea now!
â
I had just pulled up to the Grocery where I took the coconut oil photo yesterday - the one where there are lights, and you walk around in peace with a little basket to carry the items you are going to buy at the front counter.
âHey! Hi!â
âOh crap!â I thought, âWhat was this guyâs name?â
âItâs me, Ibrahim,â he announced, seeing my perplexed face.
Still not ringing any bells.
He put his sunglasses back on. Suddenly, I recognized him! He was the friendly guy I sat on the steps with for a long time yesterdayâŠ
Then he asked, âDid you get your Ivory Coast visa?â
I was a little bit floored that he remembered all of this⊠and felt like a turd for forgetting his name. He was one of the few people from yesterday who I really liked - and I probably spoke with 30+ individuals yesterday.
We sat down on the steps again, and he showed me his broken sunglasses. I pulled out my superglue, and by the time I came back (had to go on a get-money hunt), the glue had set and they were fixed.
********
Todayâs objective was to ride with Tenesie Dixon, a Strava athlete. Iâve been in touch with him for a long while now. 8 months ago, I sought cyclists in the few place Iâd seen illuminated on the heat map in Africa. I messaged any local riders I could find asking, âIs there a bike shop near Freetown?â The answer to that question is âyes!â In fact, Tenesie works at the bike shop! But Iâve now confirmed my suspicion: there are not any parts for MY bike sitting on store shelves between Spain and (probably) South Africa. Thatâs why Iâve been carrying a tire that takes up half my seat bag, hydraulic lines, cables, freehub mech, a chain... every part (within reason) for my bike.
We met up on time and he brought along his teammate Souleymane. We began negotiating the complex maze of motorcycles, vans, trucks, and people. Iâm always curious how local cyclists handle the impetuous driving. Iâm non-confrontational in these foreign environments, but I learned from these guys that it is OK to grab onto a motorcycle rack for balance if they are squeezing you in. Itâs okay to bang your fist on a van if they cut you off, and okay to raise your hand to say, âwhat were you THINKING!?âwhen someone jumps in front of you.
âThey just care about money,â Tenesie said in reference to one of the vans with people stuffed everywhere. âThey donât care about safety.â
He was referring to how they stop wherever, whenever to pickup more people, running you off the road. This happened to me several dozen times yesterday alone.
This was to be a âzone 2â ride. If you know anything about how things unfold when 3 men get together on bicycles with the purported goal of zone 2⊠it is NEVER zone 2. Once we were free of the traffic, we were soon cruising at 26mph. Not a shabby pace considering how many molecules of air and water we were having to push aside.
Souleymane called out âflat!â I thought he had a puncture, but then he pointed at my rear tire.. the seat tube brown with muddy sealant. My second flat since leaving home (the other was on the day I found the puppies). We extricated the little wire and pumped it back up⊠maybe to 20 psi. From then on, I just relegated myself to âwheel suckerâ as these two took turns pulling at 24-30 mph. I apologized for not helping and thanked them profusely.
As I was pumping my tire, Tenesie pointed to Souleymane and said, âlet him do it.â Souleymane was already trying to grab my pump and do my work for me. This causes a whirlwind of conflict in my brain!
First, Iâm the only one who works on my bike. Period. But apart from that, there is âthis historical thing,â and I am hypersensitive about people doing work for âthe white man.â People on the street are always trying to do something to fix my bike and I blow them off and run away. But on this ride, we are equals (well, in the bike repair sense, not the fitness sense because it took everything I had to stay with them). What is the correct move? This I do not know.
Tenesie is 27 years old and part of the âFlamesâ cycling team in Freetown. They have 20 members, and they race internationally. He says Nigeria has a good team, and he has traveled to race in Ghana and Guinea. He wins races sometimes, but I had to drag that information out of him.
âHow do you get parts for your bike? You canât just order them, right?â I asked.
âIf we need something, we put it on our social media, and people will usually send it.â
I asked how that works and about the postal service. The postal service is non-functional⊠but DHL is reliable, he said.
âYou have to send me your social media page,â I mentioned a few times. (He never did - even when I messaged him later). I imagine he is too modest to ask for anything. Luckily I did some homework and was able to figure it out:
This page makes me happy. Posts dedicated to âWomenâs empowerment through cyclingâ⊠they even have a go fund me for bikes that were damaged in a car wreck.. (That one has ended, but Iâm sure future opportunities will arise). These are the good people.
We arrived at Kent, and of course there was a sprint for the town sign. At the beach, about 5 guys came up and started taking roughly; the typical harassment that I endure daily.. except now I had âbodyguardsâ who spoke Krio. Even though Krio sounds like cool-man-English, I didnât understand what they were saying, but the gist was that we needed to pay for being on this beach.
I asked Tenesie, âIs this a public beach?â
âYes.â
Would this be different if I werenât here?â
âYes.â
Tenesie and Souleymane were able to calm the guys down, and then they started speaking English to me only: âDo you want a trip to the Turtle Islands?â
The Turtle Islands are perhaps the single touristic destination in Sierra Leone - though I donât think they are quite as luxurious as other tropical destinations.
I told Tenesie, âI donât do those touristic thingsâ
He smiled at that, and told them in Krio.
That didnât stop them, though: âHey, my friend, whatâs your name?â I told them, and asked their names. One guy said he was âSouleymaneâ
âHey, you guys both have the same name,â I said, pointing towards âourâ Souleymane in an effort to divert the attention from hustling.
The guy laughed, âNo! Iâm Solomon. It is a Christian name. That guy is Souleymane, itâs a Muslim name.â
âHa! I learn something new every day! I never thought about that. Thank you for teaching me, Solomon!â I meant it too - that was a cool thing to learn, even though they were laughing at me.
âYou want to go,â asked Tenesie.
âYeah.â
Next Sunday, Tenesie invited me to a social ride (i.e. race) followed by a picnic. I would have loved to attend, but the prospect of another 5 nights in my mosquito infested room where the electricity keeps turning off for hours at a time seemed too much. I want to go back to elevations where Iâm not dependent on electricity for cooling.
The rest of the day was typical Sierra Leone. Running all over to get money (when people asked me for money I n the street, I could tell them, âif you have more than 100 Leones, you have more money than me right now!â
So far today, only a few power outages (it was off all day from 9AM until 6:30 PM yesterday). It still goes off for shorter 10 minute periods regularly, waking me up at night as the room warms.
I also canceled my flight from Benin, and made a new reservation from Ghana for the same date. It is still a bit of a stretch mileage-wise, but my favorite thing to do is ride all day long. The breeze generated keeps me cooler, and by riding, I can save my precious remaining insulin and still process the mostly-carbohydrate food available. A few more days in Sierra Leone, but excited to go back to Guinea now!
â
Photos:
That is Tenesie up front and Souleymane behind. Both of these guys worked together pulling me. I did a double take when I uploaded my Strava. We went that far in that little time!?!
â
About to re-enter the city. Souleymane said he liked Sepp Kuss. âMe too, he seems like such a good guy.â Souleymane agreed. I wonder how many aspiring athletes there are around the world who donât have access to opportunities to race at higher levels. One thing is for certain: If these guys have the technical skills to negotiate Freetown, darting around the mayhem, they could excel in a pro peloton. I felt safe riding centimeters from them, knowing of their lightning reflexes.
â
Photo credit: Tenesie Dixon.
â
This was a serious training ride.. so I didnât get a chance to take as many scenery photos.
â
So, about the power outages. There are only half a dozen cities in Sierra Leone with electricity. 80 percent of Sierra Leonâs electricity comes from this boat. What? Yes, Turkey (and maybe other countries) make these âgenerator boatsâ which sit in the harbor and connect to the grid. Unfortunately, Sierra Leone got several million $$ behind on their power bills, so Turkey started cutting the power. That might be why the power keeps going off. There may be other reasons too. I donât know, but people just take it for granted now. Only about 18% of people have access to any electricity in this country.
â
The money problem. So, Iâve never received money from an ATM my whole time in Sierra Leone. Yesterday I went to several and they were all declined. You can imagine my surprise this morning when I discovered that the money had been taken out anyway! So that is a project to reconcile.. but meanwhile, I donât want to put myself into a Turkey-Sierra Leone position.. so I ran all over town with some Euros and USD, trying to find someone who can change. So far, in SL, Iâve changed money with some kids, a customer at a bank, and today a guy at the gas station. Thank you people for keeping me going when the ATMs wonât.
â
Iâve never been lonely on this trip - even for a minute. I miss Janet, but that isnât loneliness; I miss HER. This morning, I decided to research what youâre âsupposed to seeâ in Sierra Leone. There is this island getaway called Turtle Islands, that you can reach by boat in 3 hours from Freetown. I imagined going there, and the thought momentarily filled me with deep loneliness. If Janet were on this trip, I think we would go there as a âvacation from the vacation.â But being solo, though, going to a relaxing place seems like it would be lonesome; make me miss Janet more.
I feel a little conflicted, even guilty: Iâm skipping everything that people come to Africa to see. But I need to be true to myself. Iâm happiest just riding long days and seeing the stuff that fills these pages with stories: Even if it is sometimes just nonsense.
â
Strava Comments:
DogMeat Q.
Great story B! I'd for sure be up for đą đ đ
Nancy T.
Sometimes I feel like Iâm right there with you reading your stories. And I I agree, I also just like to ride my bike when Iâm âon vacation â.
Ann L.
Bummer about the money, hope you can get it sorted out. I wonder why they are called the Turtle đą Islands? That is interesting that Souleymane is Muslim and Solomon is Christian while both are pronounced same?
Tony B.
Youâre getting so much more than a tourist gets from your travels! I find all of your stories fascinating! You are immersing yourself into the local culture and doing it all on a bike.
Mark G.
It was fun to check out the segments on that route.; some pretty fast riders there. I enjoyed checking out The Flames website. In your food search there doesn't seem to be much local meat - perhaps the animal's produced protein (eggs, milk, cheese) are more valued and precious.
Dean G.
What a quote: "My favorite thing is to ride all day long". What a champ, I think the same thing until 3 hours, then done.
Todd A.
Fun day for you, aside from the ATM. That generator boat supplying that percentage of power is fascinating.
Paula G.
We are so happy to listen to and read your 'nonsense' as you call it. It's that nonsense that actually makes more sense than anything. It's the little things that we can relate to.....or try to relate to since we are completely out of touch with Africa as you have seen it. We love your adventure!!
Jessica M.
So fun and what a great idea to meet up with local cyclists! They prob loved riding with you!!
Janet W.
I love the photo that Tenesie took of Souleymane and you drafting along and smiling! That's great the Flames racing team is having success building team support on their website, especially for thee women riders - and their all FAST! I remember the electrical power ship in ItchyBoots' Youtube video. It was off the coast of Guinea Bissau and funded by the World Bank.
David L.
Amazing that you could hang with those guys on a mountain bike.
Ride Stats:
Elapsed Time | Moving Time | Distance | Average Speed | Max Speed | Elevation Gain | Calories Burned |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
08:10:15
hours
|
03:42:09
hours
|
86.51
km
|
23.36
km/h
|
66.00
km/h
|
703.00
meters
|
1,968
kcal
|