TRANS-AFRICA IN THE EIGHTIES
This is the fifth in a series of stories of an independent trans-Africa journey, undertaken in 1986/87 at the height of apartheid, by Peter and Mandi Middleton.SA was invading the frontline states during this period, and any journey north of Malawi was considered suicidal from South Africa. These stories reveal the not always strictly ‘legal’ lengths taken to break through these antagonistic borders. For 42 000 kilometres they travelled alone, with very little money, at a time when there was no Internet, no cell/sat phones, and contact home was via unreliable ‘poste restante’ addresses in major towns, and the occasional call made from public phone offices. They survived with driving skill, scant mechanical knowledge, determination, a simple compass, unreliable maps, minimal tools and spares, and a…