My visit To The Monkey Sanctuary ( Boabeng Fiema)

in #travel7 years ago

Life is for the living so live it. It was a cold morning and i set off to meet a group of fellow student doctors to tour the village of Fiema-Boabeng, a twin town. Our journey nearly got cancelled as our bus driver was tired and wanted to retire to bed due to a previous journey he embarked on. It finally became clear and the go ahead message was given as we had a new bus driver to take us to our destination. With chants and melodious music, we drove to Boabeng-Fiema to discover another batch of tourist( a group of teachers ). Now there was a competition as to which group was much more fun to be in. 

Obviously, my group was much fun as students always have something under their sleeves. The best photographer in the group, i started taking my shots on arrival as the rest of the students walked down from the bus. We met the caretaker of the monkey sanctuary whom gave us a tourist guide to lead us on our tour after  doing all due diligence. Our tourist fee was taken care of by the president of the Group Hon. Francis Appiah. 

We set off into the jungle as the tourist guide started to narrate the history of the jungle. Boabeng-Fiema monkey santuary is a 4.5 square kilometer forest reserve which houses over 2000 monkeys. The monkeys are of two different breeds. The white colobus which is quite unfriendly and never comes to the village and the yellow monas who love cooked food. Just as we entered the jungle, the yellow monas started coming around and we fed them with cooked groundnut.

It was really lovely to see these mammals in their natural habitat and still friendly. We interacted with the monkeys and we had the opportunity to video and take pictures with them. 

A Yellow Monas Taking Groundnut from A Tourist

History 

The monkeys are believed to be the custodians of the land as the citizens of the village migrated to meet them in 1826. When the first settlers settled in the land, they decided to go into the forest to find food and upon arrival saw a well carved wood. They took the wood home and the following day, the monkeys followed them into the land to claim the wood. This prompted for rituals and further oracle consultation. It was after consulting the oracle that the first settlers got to know that the monkeys are the real custodians of the land and should be treated as royals. Ever since then, they have lived in harmony with them. 

The monkeys actually have a human representative who is the Monkey priest. He is responsible for the burial service of any monkey who dies. A priestess must be a virgin before she can become one and must be from a certain family line. 

The reserve also has lots of other big trees like the "dadie" and the ficus tree. The ficus tree is a carnivorous tree that feeds and overtake an ongrowing tree. It always has a hole with it where the dead tree use to be. 

Behind me is the ficus tree. 


It was such a wonderful tour and would recommend to anyone who wants to tour around Ghana. Such a green, soothing nice environment to be in.

All Photo credits to @tj4real. Till next time, enjoy this piece. 

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Nice piece. I hope to witness this place of experience with monkeys 😄👍.upvoted

It was a great adventure. Hope you visit the place one day. You are going to love it

WOAH i am DEFINITELY esteeming and promoting this! AND WOW I thought I had a Focus Tree in my backyard! But I had NO IDEAit was carnivorous and fed on othr trees! I dont know if that makes it carnivorous, maybe its a Canibal, lol but if it feeds on a tree that still makes it an herbavore not a carnivore but let me look this up:

OPOOh it IS carnivorus the FIG tree it EATS WASPS wtf woah
Aug 27, 2014 - If the figs are not pollinated they will shrivel and fall from the tree. ... or a late-harvest San Pedro-type fig, you are eating a carnivorous fruit!

Here is my Ficus tree or what we THOUGHt was a ficus!


Just took these for your post! resteeming now and promoting with $0.50 SBD

The leaves if your ficus plant seems like mine but i think yours is a different variety. Thanks for the promotion of this post.

it must have been a blast. It is nice of you to share this experience with the community. keep on keeping on bro

Have Nice Trip Buddy ! Upvoted for your post :)

Nice trip...invite me next time bro...upped and reblogged..steem on

Yh indeed. I will invite you next time.

Congratulations! This post has been upvoted from the communal account, @minnowsupport, by tj4real from the Minnow Support Project. It's a witness project run by aggroed, ausbitbank, teamsteem, theprophet0, someguy123, neoxian, followbtcnews/crimsonclad, and netuoso. The goal is to help Steemit grow by supporting Minnows and creating a social network. Please find us in the Peace, Abundance, and Liberty Network (PALnet) Discord Channel. It's a completely public and open space to all members of the Steemit community who voluntarily choose to be there.

This post has received a 3.13 % upvote from @drotto thanks to: @banjo.

What a great tour!! Thank you. U&R

yeah, ghana we get a nice tourist site we better protect this tourist site than to let let spoil yeah here in ghana everything means nothing to individual especially when government owns but after all it is for ghana.
am for ghana but not so called government