

This gives good access to the Nile itself as well as whitewater rafting, kayaks, the Nile High bungee jump, and a great bar.


Jools wrote:So far not much new gear except a cool new Gorilla Torch Flare.




Yellow Fever, my second as they only last 10 years. Comes with a certificate that I need to travel with to prove I've been inoculated
Rabies, injected into left arm, £18. This one is a dog, really. My arm feels dull for a couple of days and the next day I feel hungover.

RickE wrote:Is this a must for Uganda, or only if you have been to a yellow fever area?
RickE wrote:We were advised a couple of years ago not to have rabies injections. Can't quite remember the reasoning, although I think it was something to do with the inoculations don't prevent, they only buy you time. Has that changed?

Into that bag also goes a towel (Douglas Adams was right)
Is this a must for Uganda, or only if you have been to a yellow fever area?



The most important thing of all, I need to double check with Shane that I don't need power converters and that Uganda uses 240V, 50 Hz plugs like this:

Shane wrote:It still baffles me from time to time that by the 21st Century mankind has still had not standardized electric plugs.

Jools wrote:iPhone, Blackberry, and USB modem all with global roaming.

wrote:I don't want to be in a battle but waiting on the edge of what I can't escape is even worse.


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