Just recently my dad and I went on a super cool
experience which every Cameroonian has done—sleeping in the wild. Of course, most Americans know it as, simply,
camping.
I was allowed to miss school on an exam day to meet
with some of my favorite missionaries in Cameroon—the Schilinski’s. My two
friends Josh and Seth were there with their dad. We were joined by another missionary from
Sierra Leone (Phillip) and his two sons.
This was a pure man expedition.
Only fathers and sons were coming.
From the “Ski’s” house we took an hour drive to the
Mbingo Rest House. We immediately saw
horses standing and waiting for us. They
were being controlled by two Muslim Cameroonians. These people were our guides. We played around the Mbingo Rest House for a
bit and then got ready for our long ride into the wilderness.
Just to let you know, reader, I got a camera for
Christmas! All the pictures you see here
are from my camera. So I took so many
pictures on the way that my battery was too low to take any more! I only managed to quickly turn the camera on,
press the take-a-picture button, and hope that the picture would turn out O.K.
Anyway, we found a great place and started to set up
camp. While Josh and Seth broke off some
pieces of wood, I started to make a fire.
I gathered some of the wood and put it together in a teepee type
way. Then I curled up a piece of paper
like a small pipe. I lit a match and
held it underneath the paper.
Immediately, the paper caught on fire.
I put it inside a small hole in my stick teepee and put in more
paper. (This is how I usually build
fires.) The flame rapidly spread up the
teepee, and we soon had a small fire.
But small wasn’t good enough. We
put more and more wood until the fire was so hot that it was challenging to sit
by it. It was a good fire.
While the fire was burning as brightly as ever, my
friends and I explored around. We
quickly noticed that there were cow bones all over. We collected these bones and assembled a
skeleton of a cow. It was like a real
cow. (Well, it was once!)
Soon it was dark, and Phillip (my dad calls him
Samson) did something random and awesome.
He pulled down a tree! You might
think Oh, more firewood! right? Yes, in a way it was. But not around the fire I made. We burned the whole tree. It was blazing before we knew it and I got a
few pics. The fire was about three
meters high, nine feet. It was a highlight of the night.
We cooked some beans, potatoes, and tea-water in
some hot embers and we were all full.
Some slept in the tent, but Seth and I were smart. We slept by the fire. At around four in the
morning, Seth and I were freezing cold. We
then started the fire back up and warmed our bodies. We slept very well.
In the morning, I woke up to see a blazing fire. We ate, and then went down to a stream to get drinking water. “What! Unfiltered?” you might ask? Nope. Jake brought a hand-pump filter and we filtered the water directly from the stream. It was so cold and fresh. Yum!
In the morning, I woke up to see a blazing fire. We ate, and then went down to a stream to get drinking water. “What! Unfiltered?” you might ask? Nope. Jake brought a hand-pump filter and we filtered the water directly from the stream. It was so cold and fresh. Yum!
Finally, we packed up camp. We rode the horses back to the Mbingo Rest
House and then drove home. Reader,
you’re lucky we didn’t stay another day—I might have written another hundred
words! So wow! What an experience here in Cameroon! Thank God everyone is safe and healthy. It was super fun, but it sure feels good to
have my nice warm bed!
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