As a few of you are keen to see some more pictures from Chad, here is a small photo dump of some that I quite liked....
On the shores of Lake Chad near Bol, people washing, cooking and chewing fat at the shore. Most people were far too busy to even notice two foreigners walking around taking a few photos. The police on the other hand, were a different story altogether. The police at Lake Chad were the most difficult people to deal with that we encountered during the entire trip. Eventually, we were allowed to take a rented pirogue out to visit some of the islands (with an escort of course). They were initially unbothered with us, and tried to fob us off with 1. it is illegal to go there (which is not so) and 2. horror stories such as "Boko Haram are hiding in these islands, they will kidnap and execute you"... Far fetched for all sorts of reasons, and completely contrary to recent previous overland trips across all of Northern Nigeria and Cameroon (including Lake Chad from the other side) - we insisted, the eventually agreed, with escorts (for payment, naturally).
Approaching one of many small islands on Lake Chad. The amount of rubbish accumulated was unpleasant, but not altogether surprising.
Camels on the outskirts of Bol, near to Lake Chad.
A typical roadside store in Chad. In this case, somewhere not too far north of Ndjamena (formerly Fort Lamy).
Arriving into Faya-Largeau
Artisanal goldmining is big business in northern Chad, oftentimes we came across pickups full of migrant workers in search of riches. Here, in Faya, is one of many gold buying stores. Most of the other shops here are set up for supplying this new gold rush, just as with California, the Yukon and Alaska in times gone by. The frontier feel of town was very obvious.
Not in want of gold extraction tools, I opted for a local headscarf (very convenient in the desert) from this haberdasher.