There I was... Out of water and on foot. Truck stuck in the mud...
I unload the entire truck and put anything of value in my backpack. Passports, money, anything I need to travel, and anything I cant replace (the duck from the dashboard also goes in. I'd never leave Helge Meyer behind). I'm also carrying things for my old teammates. They were counting on me to get them their stuff back when I returned to Europe, and I still intend to deliver (it's not their fault I'm stubborn and stupid). I grab that stuff as well. I call Sarah on the satellite phone and completely melt down.
The truck wasn't just supposed to get Christmas to children in Dnipro. The truck was supposed to get handed down to my youngest when he was old enough. I was supposed to take care of it, and it's abandoned now because I was too stubborn to turn around when I realized this was a stupid thing to do. I was so focused on getting to the border before it closed, it never dawned on me that it wouldn't do me any good if I never got there at all.
and that's how I left it. Everything loaded back in it (I didn't want to litter any more than I already have). Closed up, keys in it, and on foot. I had room in my bag for exactly 2-changes of clothes.
I pass one person a few kilometers down the road and continue with nothing more than an "assalamualaikum".
Shortly thereafter, I ditch one of the heavier bags in the bushes. It's too hot and I'm too exhausted to carry everything. Sorry guys, I tried. I make a note of what's being left, and decide I'll purchase replacements for my teammates at Decathlon when I get back.
A few more km's down the road, I see cattle being herded by two men who look to be in their 20s.
"assalamualaikum" says I as I approach from behind
(One of them replies in Arabic, but I'm too exhausted to even try to understand)
"Minfadluka habibi, enna Ameriki" (Please my friend, I'm American)
"Oh, so you speak English then!" He says.
"yes, but why do you?"
"I'm an English teacher, and you look lost. Or broken"
I explain that I'm both. I'm part of the rally, but I had to ditch my truck. It's beyond help, and I need to figure out how I'm going to get back to Europe. I can fly if I can get to an airport, or I have some friends at a camp nearby called "Zebrabar", but either way I need a hotel.
We talk a bit more about the truck, why it's important, why I'm alone, how the St. Louis airport has been out of commission for some time, how I'll need to cab it to Dakar (we know how well that place worked for Bananas!), and eventually he takes me to the Imam's place where he draws me water from the well.
(I drink it without my filter bottle. I don't want to be insulting)
"I think I can help you. Why don't you come back to my house, bathe, eat... and while you do that I can call a friend with a tractor. We can pull your truck out"
I'm seriously (and I mean SERIOUSLY) doubtful, but I recognize a crossroad when I see one. If I stay to pull the truck out, I lose my ride possibility with the guys who are still staying at Zebrabar. If I stay, there's still a chance we wont be able to recover the truck... No decision I've made this trip has gone well, but what do I have to lose at this point? I figure the absolute worst case, I can always catch a cab to Dakar and fly from there. With that, I decide to stay.
We go back to his place and they give me more water. His name is Ousseye, and I get to meet his family. His father, his wife, his baby boy, his brothers, his sisters, and even his grandmother. It's a lot to take in. Eventually he gets his friend with the tractor on the phone, and we agree that for 50k of the local currency, he'll pull me out.
I'm still doubtful, but I accept. I mean it's going to take a BIG tractor to do this...
Around 8:30pm we get a cab and drive to the other end of the road I'm stuck on. We walk in from there. The first thing I realize, is there was no way I was ever getting through this road. I got stuck in the easy bit, what was further ahead would have absolutely destroyed the truck (and no, there were no opportunities to turn around).
The tractor gets in around 9:30 and before then I was able to walk back down my path and pick up everything I had left behind. I had also left the key on in the truck's ignition and the battery was almost completely dead (I wanted to leave it with the key, in case someone rescued it in the future then they would be able to drive it). Thank god the engine fired off when it did, because I don't think the starter had another turn left in it...
When the tractor driver arrives, we all hop onboard. About 5 of us in total, with him occupying the only seat. The tractor driver doesn't even bother with the trail. He just plops his GIGANTIC New Holland T6050 tractor down into the mud and drives parallel to the road with all of us onboard until we get to the truck. The darn thing doesn't even care what the terrain looks like, it just drives like it's its job.
We arrive at the truck, and Ousseye looks at my front bumper.
"um..... No big worm?"
No man. No winch.
There's giant mud puddle between where the tractor has to stop and where my truck is. Easily 7 or 8 paces across, and the driver doesn't want to dip his tractor in. I have an inertia rope, and a tow rope and it takes both tied end to end to give us the length we needed to tie the two vehicles together.
Once hooked up though, the tractor tugs me out like I wasn't even there. The mud turned out to be an easier obstacle than I had previously predicted. Once free of the water hole I fell into, I can drive just fine in 4wd behind the tractor and eventually we clear everything.
From there we all celebrate. The guys were all happy to help, and I am absolutely ecstatic to have my truck back in my life. I pay the tractor drive 75k, the taxi driver 10k, and each worker 10k. Everyone is happy.
Ousseye invites me back to his place again and that's where I spend the night. We buy some "pizza" on the way home (triangle looking pastry with pickles, some sort of meat, and ketchup in it), and that's what we have for dinner. I take a bath in a bucket in a bathroom that's the "hole in the ground" type and update my notes about all that's transpired before bed (I sleep on a mattress under a mosquito net).
by 5am the next day we get up and it's time for me to be off (5am was also his prayer time). The truck is still hurt, but she'll make the run. I can fix things when I get back.
I have a survival bracelet on my left wrist that I take off and give to Ousseye. It's the paracord variety with the whistle and little button compass where it clicks together. My eldest son bought it for me as a Christmas present in case it would save me on my adventure. I figure since Ousseye saved me, maybe he could use the bracelet in case he ever gets "stuck". We exchange numbers and we're still in touch on whatsapp and telegram
Anyhoo, I don't know who in the universe put a cattle herding Senegalese English teacher, some umpteen kilometers north of St. Louis, Senegal on a dirt road that had no landmarks or destinations on the other side, who also just happened to have a friend with a GIANT New Holland 6050 tractor on speed dial... but damn I'm sure glad they did.
Cheers, guys. I'm going to leave it there for the week.