While at Amphitheatre we chose to do a hike in the Mountain Kingdom of Lesotho. Most people have never heard of Lesotho and my kids were in that tally. I had spent 10 days in Lesotho before – 6 of which were on horseback and it is a beautiful place with lovely people. It is often ranked as one of the 30 poorest countries. The moment we arrived in Lesotho, the lovely paved South African roads were gone and it was crazy, rutted mud/dirt paths. You knew you were in a very different place.
The people are famous for conical hats with a very intricate design on the point (which adorns their flag) and wearing a blanket as an article of clothing. The blanket has a cool history – https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basotho_blanket Lesotho is the highest country in the world – Its lowest point of 1,400 metres is thus the highest in the world. Over 80 percent of the country lies above 1,800 metres. Lesotho is also the southernmost landlocked country in the world and is entirely surrounded by South Africa.
Tours like this are made or broken by the guide…and our guide was phenomenal. Adrian the Alien was a crazy, off-the-wall, passionate madman! He and I got along very well! Turns out we had both been at an eclipse festival in 2001 in Zambia….small world! He was super engaging, informative and so keen to show us the Lesotho he had come to know. The people we met loved him and he loved them. In one word – amazing! If you are ever in the area check him at http://www.alienadventures.co.za/AboutUs.html. We were also lucky to have a small group who got along really well – our five plus a lovely Belgian couple and 2 great German girls.
The kids learned about the history of Lesotho, met a local healer or sangoma, got to see a school and interact with kid of all ages, and check out some old petroglyphs. Adrian made it come alive and the kids followed him like he was the pied piper. The kids fed off his mad energy and he fed off theirs. If more teachers were like this we would not have an education crisis…..