CHINESE TREKER ENCHANTED BY DESERT WALKS WITH HIS CAMEL
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru
Lin Qi
believes he inherited the travel bug from his family.
“My
grandfather was a doctor who Mao [Tse Tung] sent to work in Somalia,” says the
37-year Chinese traveler who just got back from a trek up north to Lake Turkana
and back.
“My father
was in the military when Deng Xiaoping was in power and China briefly invaded
North Vietnam. And my mother was also a medical doctor who got stuck in Nepal
for three years during a civil war that blocked her passage home,” adds Lin who
has been in and out of Kenya since 2011.
“That makes
me the third generation in my family to be sent by my government to work
overseas,” the trained engineer says proudly.
Initially
arriving in Kenya to work for a Chinese government-backed aviation company, Lin
came to manage a special technical vocational training program, designed in
collaboration with Kenya’s Ministry of Education. It had involved training
teachers and installing electronic equipment (like 3D printers) in vocational
training centres across the country.
“That was
just the first phase of a three-part program,” says Lin. “But I resigned in
2015 to get married and follow my wife [a Japanese diplomat] to New York,” adds
the tallest Chinese person (1.93 metres) I have ever known.
Since
marrying Kazumi, Lin has moved from Nairobi to New York (several times), and
then to Gabon, Haiti, and currently back to Nairobi while his wife works at the
United Nations Somali Mission in Mogadishu.
But
migrating with his wife hasn’t quite satisfied his wanderlust. The travel bug
that he got from his family burst out in a big way in Japan on the island of
Shikoku where Kazumi was born and raised.
“I walked
around the whole island on what the Buddhists call their Shikoku Pilgrimage,”
says the tall, lanky Lin. “In 38 days, I walked 1,200 kilometres and visited 88
Buddhist temples,” he adds.
But since he
came back to Kenya in 2021, he’s been enchanted by the idea of traveling up
north with a camel and walking across the Chalbi Desert.
“Initially,
it started as a joke, but then when I found I could buy a camel, I went up to
Elementiata where Dr Piers [Simpkin] has a herd of 140 camels and bought one of
my own,” says Lin who discovered his affinity for deserts while hitchhiking
from Cairo to Khartoum in 2016.
His original
plan had been to travel from Mali through the Sahara, but he decided it was too
dangerous to risk. Then, his next idea was to walk from Rumuruti north to
Turkana. But since his camel came from Gilgil, he had to start his walk from
there.
“It took us
ten days to walk from Elementiata to Rumuruti,” Lin recalls. He was unphased by
the time lapse, especially as Piers and his Samburu herd manager, Prame, were
so helpful in charting out the best route for him to walk. Piers also provided Lin
with a Samburu assistant, Martin, who helped him take care of Kipesh, his new camel
given the Samburu name by Martin and Prame.
Lin was
clearly looking for an adventure and he got one once they’d reached Baragoi. “I
knew we were reaching a dangerous patch with the Samburu fighting Turkana, and
Samburu fighting among themselves. So, I hired two armed men to accompany
Martin and Kipesh while I led the way,” says Lin who met groups of raiders on
either side of their walk. But with his smiling, non-confrontational style, his
height, and his well-armed friends right behind him, Lin navigated his way
through that first potentially volatile situation.
But then,
when they reached Marsabit, Kazumi called and said he was urgently required to
complete paperwork in Nairobi.
“I had to
leave Martin with Kipesh and took four matatus to reach Nairobi. But two days
later, I got a call from Kenya police. Twelve men, four with guns had robbed
Martin of everything, including Kipesh!” says Lin who felt losing the tent, the
food, even the water, meant nothing compared to losing his camel.
But a few
hours later, he got another call. Kipesh had escaped! She was being kept by
villagers. The phone rang again after two hours with more news that the raiders
had returned, shot several people and grabbed the camel again.
But Kipesh
apparently had a mind of her own and escaped again. This time, Lin was able to
drive a pickup quickly to a KWS animal safe hold to collect his exhausted,
emaciated and slighted wounded camel and take her back to Piers.
“It was
miraculous,” says Lin who is thrilled his camel survived and his trip ended so
well. It didn’t fully satisfy his wanderlust however, and he’s already planning
his next adventure which is likely to involve another desert sojourn.
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