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Kingdom Of The Ashanti

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Kingdom Of The Ashanti

1-Join tour Accra
Join your tour in Accra today. Depending on the schedule of your flights, you may be able to explore the city independently before meeting the rest of the group, who
will arrive from London on day 2 in the early morning.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

2-AM at rest, sightseeing in Accra
This morning we will have some free time to recover from the flight. In the afternoon we will head into Accra for some sightseeing. Although records of Accra date back to the 15th century, the capital of Ghana is a modern city with independence monuments and countless back streets. We’ll take a tour later today to see the Kwame Nkrumah Circle and Kwame Nkrumah Mausoleum. We’ll drive through James Town, an area of colonial architecture topped by a 30m lighthouse, and pause at Fort Ussher where Kwame Nkrumah was imprisoned. Independence Square is a pseudo-Soviet worth seeing. There may be time this afternoon to visit the National Museum and the National Craft Centre.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

3-Drive to Kumasi; sightseeing in the city
This morning we will drive to Kumasi, and in the afternoon we will have time to explore the city. We first head to Besease, a traditional Ashanti shrine. Still in active use, it is believed to date back at least 300 years although the current structure is thought to date back to around 1850. Most famously Yaa Asantewaa consulted the spirits here before leading the attack on the British fort in Kumasi. Later we arrive in Kumasi itself. Founded in 1695, Kumasi is the capital of the Ashanti Kingdom. In the 18th century it was the terminus for the slave trading routes but in the 19th century hostilities between the British colonists and Ashanti culminated in the city being burnt. Now it is Ghana’s second largest city. This afternoon we should have time to visit Manhyia Palace and the Jubilee Museum. Here we see replicas of the Golden Stool, a sacred object to the Ashanti, for the original stool contains the sumsum, or spirit of the entire Ashanti kingdom. Stools are an important part of Ghana’s culture and are considered as an extension of an individual both in life and in death.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

4-To Techiman
This morning is free to explore more of Kumasi including the National Cultural Centre, or perhaps head to Kejetia, the largest open air market in West Africa. Here some 10,000 traders haggle and barter amongst the hectic array of exotic herbs and spices, colourful pots and utensils and unusual foods, such as giant snails (sold either alive or roasted!). Later today we head north to our overnight stop at Techiman.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

5-To Mole National Park via Boabeng-Fiema
Our drive today takes us first to Boabeng-Fiema village and monkey sanctuary, home to several families of Colobus and Mona monkeys, considered sacred in Ghana. Close by are the 25m high Kintampo Falls, an area also home to a variety of birds, butterflies, indigenous flowers and trees. Before finally reaching Mole National Park we will also stop to visit the Larabanga mosque which is reputedly the oldest building in Ghana, but no-one can quite agree on its age! Some sources date it to the 13th century, which is highly improbable since Islam had barely reached the region at that time. The origins of the mosque relate to a traveller who found a mystic stone, threw his spear and then slept on it. He dreamt about a mosque and when he awoke, the foundations had mysteriously been laid around him. Whatever its origins, it is a striking mud/stick building, with minarets and painted walls. We finally enter Mole National Park, the largest park in Ghana. Established in 1958, Mole National Park is mostly flat savannah broken by a high escarpment. Its 4840 square km are home to over 90 species of mammals and 300 species of birds.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

6-Foot safaris in Mole National Park
A highlight of our trip – we make foot safaris with National Park rangers in both the morning and afternoon in search of some of the wildlife which lives here. Species commonly seen include elephant, several kinds of antelope, and monkey (including the Green Vervet and Red Patas monkeys). Up to 150 migratory bird species may also be seen in the Park, depending on the time of our visit.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

7-Exploring the Bolgatanga region
Heading north via Gondja and Dagomba villages we reach Ghana’s far north, close to the border with Burkina Faso. Close by our route is Tongo, its nearby hills venerated for their many sacred ancestral shrines, and we should have time to visit a local oracle.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

8-Exploring the Bolgatanga region
We spend a full day in the Bolgatanga region, visiting the town’s vibrant market, nearby Gurunsi communities with their unique architecture, and the sacred crocodile ponds at Paga.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

9-Exploring Wa region
Our exploration continues as we turn west toward Wa, capital of the Upper West region. Our journey takes us through the rustic town of Navrongo. In an otherwise mostly Muslim area, Navrongo’s predominantly Christian feel reflects its claim as the home of Catholicism in northern Ghana. We will visit the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows, a traditionally constructed building notable for its frescos and Gurunsi paintings. We will also pass through Dagarti villages on our route.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

10-Exploring Wa region
We spend much of today exploring Lobi villages. The Lobi comprise a number of ethnic groups in both Ghana and Burkina Faso whose name translates as Children of the Forest. Naturally shy and mistrustful, for years the Lobi had to endure constant attacks from the Guiriko and Kenedougou, as well as the less than sympathetic attentions of the French. Fiercely independent, they still adhere to many of their traditional customs and animist practices, worshipping distinctive wooden fetishes and continuing to uphold their age-old beliefs in the spirit world. Residing in fortified mudbrick compounds in family groups, much like their Dagarti neighbours, the men still carry bows as their ancestors have for generations: the Lobi still have a fearsome reputation as hunters and warriors.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

11-To Techiman
Our drive today takes us south through remote areas of Ghana’s far west through the small settlements of Mawule, Banda Nkwanta, and then to Bole where we will pause to see the beautiful mud and stick mosque.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

12-To Lake Bosomtwi; boat trip
Continuing south back through Kumasi, we reach the crater Lake Bosumtwi. Ghana’s largest natural fresh-water body was created as a result of a meteorite impact. The lake is held sacred by Ashanti traditionalists and the Bosumtwi people. There is a taboo on the use of traditional pirogues (small flat-bottomed fishing boats) which local fishermen get round by lying on planks known as padua and using their hands as paddles. Surrounded by ragged mountains and thickly vegetated crater walls reaching a height of more than 600m, the lake is a stunning spectacle and we will spend this afternoon on a boat trip exploring its hidden corners.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

13-Visit Elmina Castle
Continuing south we finally arrive back on the Atlantic coast at Elmina. The castles here were built along the entire Ghana coast by the colonial powers of the 15th century to protect merchants and their vested interests, and to create safe anchorages for their ships from the ferocity of the Atlantic Ocean. The castles were also used for ‘storing’ slaves before they were shipped abroad and so in effect were dungeons as well. Built on the profits of the then lucrative gold and slave trade, the castles became important symbols of European power in the region. With the eventual abolition of the slave trade emphasis changed to the more accepted forms of commerce – coffee, wood and spices. Here we’ll visit Elmina Castle.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

14-Visit St. Jago Fort
Today we’ll visit St. Jago Fort as well as the old Dutch Cemetery, fishing harbour and Catholic Mission, and see the traditional method of salt production. Later we continue to our overnight stop at Anomabu.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

15-Free time in Anomabu; drive to Accra
Leaving the coast we head inland today to visit Kakum National Park. Here the rainforest is one of the most extensive in Ghana, and for those with a good head for heights, there is a canopy walkway some 40m high (optional). This walkway is unique in Africa and offers a rare opportunity to see the forest at the canopy level. Later this afternoon there is an optional tour of Cape Coast castle to learn more about the history of the area.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

16-Tour ends
This morning you will have some free time to enjoy our location by the beach and this afternoon we will return to Accra where the tour ends.

Tour includes:

15 Breakfast
Transport:
Bus, Boat
Accommodation:
15 nights Standard Hotel
Tour Staff:
Driver(s), Explore Tour Leader
Group Size:
Generally 10 – 16

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