– By Ian Sandler

From the moment I step foot in the Ouagadougou train station, my senses are overwhelmed. Mustard yellow headscarves and bright floral fabrics soak the scene in vibrant color, a stark contrast to the metallic behemoth rolling gently towards me.

Sure, a bush taxi would take a comfortable seven hours less time, but who picks wheels over the desert express?

The landscape turns green as the train cuts through the fertile southwest.

The train leaves Burkina Faso’s colorfully named capital city every day on a epic journey that takes passengers through the country’s arid savannah to the lush, palm-filled beaches of Abidjan in Côte d’Ivoire. I, on the other hand, am only attempting to reach the cultural mecca of Bobo-Dioulasso, and could not be in less of a rush.

I take in the sights and smells of a truly foreign landscape for 12 contemplative hours as the train barrels through fields of mint and groves of cashew trees. When we glide past the mud houses of the Mossi, children run toward the train to greet us. Every so often the speck of a boy, far younger than myself, appears on the horizon herding emaciated cattle towards what seems like nowhere.

But the serenity of the journey quickly gives way to chaos at each stopover. As we roll to a halt, hawkers storm the tracks, peddling local delicacies and fighting for the sale. Mangoes the size of bowling balls and bundles of deep maroon grapes are up for offer, but I opt for a whole guinea fowl sprinkled with seasoning and greasy to the touch.

Hawkers vie to sell their wares to passengers in the sweltering heat.

This is a far cry from the T in my hometown of Boston. Maybe it’s the sweltering tin can I inhabit, or the French-speaking Burkinabé mothers I am sandwiched between who sit nursing their sons without any self-consciousness.

But as we travel through the heart of Burkina Faso, I keep coming to the same conclusion — one I feel my African companions may have reached long ago: there is a lot to discover in these desert plains, so sit back, drink an ice-cold bissap, and enjoy the ride.

Ian Sandler is an editorial research intern at National Geographic Traveler and recently completed a semester abroad at the University of Ghana in Accra. Follow Ian’s story on Twitter @Ian_Sandler.

All photographs by Matt Hebert

Comments

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  2. con mccoynie
    hemet ca
    August 6, 2012, 2:30 pm

    verey nice articlke i envy you i have always wanted to go to africa sounds so exciting and so exotic enjoy your time there

  3. connie mccoy
    hemet ca
    August 6, 2012, 2:34 pm

    what a wonderful article the coming up to the train witth their wares sounds very exciting riuding on the traIn sounds so interesting you wrote a very colorful interesting

  4. Matthew Hebert
    Canada
    August 11, 2012, 3:56 pm

    Brilliant!

  5. Nikole Fairview - ExploringLifesMysteries.Com
    Washington, DC
    August 12, 2012, 11:07 pm

    I find it funny that the bright colors stunned you so much. It is also interesting to me. As an African American young woman, my community has always been filled with people wearing bright colors every day. I’ve always felt that we seem to inherently carry some things in our genes without even trying. I’ve even noticed it when we have some traits and not others.

    One time, when I was in school, my friends and I were watching a movie about Africa. And a group of African women were sitting down talking. They were laughing and musing and speaking a completely different language, but the funny thing is how much they reminded my friends and I of us and how we related to one another. Their behavior was very similar to ours and how we laughed and chatted outside of classes and on our dorm stoops.

    Burkina Faso is a place I would have never thought to visit. I am grateful that you did visit because you paint a picture quite well here. I feel like I know exactly what the trip would be like.

  6. Sean McKillop
    Leeds, UK
    September 10, 2012, 7:37 pm

    An excellent piece!! I really wish I’d been able to do this journey when I was there! Edd and I missed the train by a matter of hours…gutted. Really enjoyed reading this though. Thank you.

  7. Pro photographer
    New York
    September 10, 2012, 7:41 pm

    best part of this: the photos!