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16 Dec 2012
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thanks itchyfeet for that info, I will try to get what visas I can before I leave and get the rest as I go .the bike has a standard tank 15lts good for about 180mls in your opinion is this big enough with mabey 5lts in a jerry can should do 240mls .don't want to spend £300 on large tank if not necessary money better going to the school .the route through Libya along the coast to Cairo south to Aswan Dongola Khartoum cross into Ethiopia at Metema to Gondor Addis Abeba cross into Kenya at Moyale south through Marsabit to Nairobi cross at Namaga to Tanzania then south to Arusha Dodoma Mbeya cross to Malawi south to Lilongwe then east into Zambia to Lusaka.
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16 Dec 2012
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As I understand it the trouble with getting visas before you set out is that most are only valid a short period of time ie they will expire before you reach the border. But you'll need to check with the individual embassies. I can't help re the fuel question as we were in a Land Rover and carried 120L ... There will be bikers on here who can tho.
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16 Dec 2012
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You can get all the visas in advance - if you use a good agency like Travcour that will whistle round the embassies with their bikers it wont take long - some visas last three months, some last six months - if you give Malawi a miss you will save on a visa. You need to be in top condition for that trek to Marsabit as the road is non-existent in places and hellish rough. On the recce for the London to Cape Town rally we met a Toyota which had suffered 17 punctures.
Will be coming up that route from the other direction in early Feb, setting out from Cape Town on Feb lst, look out for a white Panda.
Philip Young
www.africarecordrun.com
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16 Dec 2012
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Unless it has changed TIP is used in Zambia instead of CDP.
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16 Dec 2012
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Endurorally
if you give Malawi a miss you will save on a visa.
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They used to be free on entry to Brits, this might have changed though.
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16 Dec 2012
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Malawi still free entry for Brits. Ditto Rwanda, SA, Namibia, Botswana. Most others in southern/eastern africa are $50USD. Can't recall what Ethiopian visa cost in London. Sudanese was c $50USD in Nairobi. Egypt $15 USD (and you can buy on the ferry going north).
By all means get them in advance but for those you can get at the border you won't really save any time. You stand in the same queue to buy the visa as you do to get the entry stamp on the visa. However, you will definitely save a day and some hassle getting Ethiopia/Sudan in advance (and you will need to sort Libya out anyway) but otherwise nothing much to gain IMO.
Importing the vehicle is usually the more time consuming part of crossing African borders in my experience. Some countries require a carnet eg Kenya/RSA, others don't recognise a carnet and insist on a TIP eg Ethiopia and some will either accept a carnet or issue a TIP eg Zamiba/Malawi.
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21 Dec 2012
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[QUOTE=itchyfeet38;404278]Some countries require a carnet eg Kenya/RSA, others don't recognise a carnet and insist on a TIP eg Ethiopia"
Yikes - Ethipia doesn't recognise the carnet? I didn't realise that. I'm planning on driving into Ethiopia from Kenya. What is the TIP you mention?
Thanks
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21 Dec 2012
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It's not a problem John. All it means is that they'll give you a bit of paper (TIP) on entry an then ask to see it on exit. We never got one coming from the south as we came in via Turkana and there were no customs. It will either be free or a pretty nominal sum.
TIP just means temporary import permit.
They will probably stamp your carnet if you want them to but only get it stamped if you are planning on exiting at Moyale - if you go via Turkana you will have a stamp in and not out which isn't ideal.
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