We woke up in the morning to heavy rain. We waited for it to ease up, slowly packed our soggy campsite into the Escudo and carefully made our way down the muddy roads to Muheza. We hung around Muheza for lunch and wandered around the market looking for fenesi; probably the strangest fruit I have ever seen in my life, but definitely the most delicious. Our friend, Eva, was on her way from Arusha by bus to join us for a weekend in Pangani. She hopped off the bus in Muheza just as we were finishing lunch, we found half of a fenesi in the market and headed for the coast!
Straight from Muheza, there is a shortcut to Pangani so that you don't have to go all the way into Tanga town and then down the coast. The road was lovely and sandy, taking us past tiny villages and sisal fields lined with palm trees. These roads that connect Tanga, Pangani and the surrounding towns are all rough roads dominated by men & boys carting supplies on bicycles. Most of the time, chores like fetching water, oil, or firewood are up to the children. There is nothing more humbling than seeing an 8 year old boy riding an oversized bicycle carrying 2 buckets of water, a jug of cooking oil and his sister on the back...here, kids have more responsibility by their 5th birthday than I do at 25... We continued down the sandy road, flying past groups of children yelling at us as we blew by in a cloud of dust.
Jacqui had visited a place called Peponi, (paradise) which had a great restaurant and campsites on the beach. Seafood, cheap campsites and lovely beaches were exactly what we were all looking for, so Peponi was an obvious choice! We arrived at dark (again) and set up our glorious campsite. My research tent was too tall to fit under the thatched banda, so we could only raise the center poles about 2/3 of the way up. Since our campsite was literally 50 feet from the beach, we had to tie every corner so it wouldn't blow away! Sitting inside the tent, with the double doors unzipped, facing the ocean, the breeze inflated the tent like a balloon and it reminded me of sitting under the parachute in gym class!
The next day we woke up and dove into the fenesi. One of the best things about Tanzania is the abundance of amazing, fresh fruit and especially because of the number of completely foreign fruits you would never see in the States. Fenesi, aka jackfruit is a monstrous, lumpy, spikey, watermelon-sized fruit that grows on trees, believe it or not, and gets up to around 20 kgs! We bought 1/2 a fenesi (for 3,000tsh / $1.50) and it hardly fit inside 2 plastic bags. You can't just cut a fenesi into pieces and serve it up, the only edible part is the bright yellow, sweet and juicy part around the seeds inside. To get to those parts, you have to dig through the stringy pulp and pull the seed pods out, but only after you have coated your hands in oil to avoid getting covered in the fenesi's tacky glue- like sap. It sounds like quite an ordeal, but it is completely worth it. The fruit it sweet like banana or a pineapple, but there is NOTHING to describe the texture. Its meaty but not tough, juicy, but you could still throw a few in your pocket without making a mess. It is by far the weirdest fruit I have had, but so far, the most amazing.After filling 3 bowls of fenesi, we got ready to go out on the dhow to snorkel around the coal reefs. We rented masks & flippers, ordered a packed lunch and waded out to the boat. We sailed maybe 2k offshore, strapped our masks and flippers on and waddled into the Indian ocean. Beautiful corals, angelfish, parrot fish and little ciclids were everywhere, with the occasional black spikey urchins and bright blue, lanky, 8 legged starfish. We swam around in the warm turquoise water, abandoning our snorkels and diving down to get closer looks at the reef. All of a sudden, one of the crewmen, Selemani, surfaced yelling "pweza!!" (octopus!!!!) I had one foot on the ladder of the boat, ready to take a little break, but when I heard PWEZA I screamed like a kid and dove right back in to see my first live octopus. I swam over as fast as I could, but he had already found a hole in the coral to hide in. From above, all you could see was bright red-orange squish and a couple white suckers on the ends of tentacles. Selemani went up to the dhow to retrieve a long, metal spear and dove back down to where the octopus was hiding. He hovered a few feet over the coral and shot the spear into the hole. A huge cloud of black ink burst from the coral as he went back up for a 2nd spear. He pulled the 1st spear out of the coral and used the 2nd one to secure the writhing octopus as he headed for the surface. Once we were all back on the boat, the octopus was plopped in a bucket, which quickly filled with ink. It was sad to watch such an amazing animal get speared through the head and then die in a bucket, but octopus are commercially fished on the Tanzanian coast and get a good price at the daily fish markets. (they are also delicious!) I tried searching for articles on octopus fishing in Tanzania, to see if it was regulated at all or if species were being threatened, this was the best article I found.After our exciting snorkeling trip, we ate our bacon & banana sandwiches (ohyes) in the boat anchored off the beach and then waded into shore for some cold drinks and look for someone to cook our octopus!That night we had a feast of fish and octopus, locally cooked by some mama in the village since the guys in the kitchen of Peponi wouldn't cook it for us! We ate blue fish cooked in coconut sauce, grilled octopus, fresh crispy salads, coconut rice, pineapple salsa and all sorts of delicious sauces on a picnic shuka outside our tent by kerosene lantern light.It was a lot more delicious than it looked!
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