A poem dedicated to my fellow Kololo walkers, who have been like family through the long weeks of curfew and lock-down, and have made this strange time fun and full of friendship.
Kololo Walkers
Always that little thrill of meeting long-lost friends;
Though it is only hours since we last met,
At most a day.
Barking, wildly wagging hindquarters,
Dogs well express the cheerful anticipation –
Too every-day to mention, but no less notable for all that.
.
Downstairs group, we’re towed uphill by our eager hounds,
Rendezvous on grass across from the ‘beach bar’,
The one where there is always a South Sudanese car.
Meeting place,
We pause, sharing out dog leads, scraps of news,
Facemasks on wrists, before we take the usual path.
.
After Upper Kololo, green alley, slight slope, steep slope and the long down-hill,
Greeting all other strollers; the lady who walks her goats on leads,
Uncle Bob, with his square-rimmed glasses, jogger with a red Santa hat,
Dogs and their walkers,
Sprinters on the killer slope, taking a break for press-ups.
We stop, flushed, feel the breeze, pick a flower, admire the view.
.
Ther’re birds; plantain eaters drop-bombing into tree tops with self-satisfied chuckles,
Silky-winged Hadadas violently poking lawns burst skywards in indignant screams
If we come too near.
Glossy starlings, hornbills, red barbets, cat-calls from grey parrots,
A Coucal glimpsed in the bushes in a little sloping wilderness, and like a blessing
Flashes of scarlet when a pair of toracos take flight within dark treetops.
.
And the trees! Shade and framed views of neighboring suburbs,
Glimmering iron roofs from slums and mighty Victoria sparkling behind housed hills.
Along our route nature flourishes,
Layers on layer; lawns, flowering roadside herbs, bougainvillea and ancient cycads,
Glossy mangos, Jackfruit, jacaranda, neem trees, flamboyant flame trees,
and towering over it all, elegant palms, giant ficus trees and majestic mvule.
.
Night approaches softly, old Bella tugs down-hill, as eager to end as to start,
Outlines soften, gentle early-evening air, a dream-like atmosphere,
Tenderly, day’s sweetest moment passes.
We head home into the quiet of curfew night, with a golden glow on everything.
Good night, Kololo.
.
Kampala, June 2020