Ghana Adventures Of Wapipi Jay Esewani Part 2 Direct
Beneath the murky green water, Wapipi Jay Esewani saw it: the top of a mud-and-stick church steeple, still intact. Then, a baobab tree stump, petrified, its branches reaching up from twenty feet below as if begging for air.
If you thought the first chapter of Wapipi Jay Esewani’s journey through the heartbeat of West Africa was thrilling, hold onto your kente cloth. In Part 1, we left our intrepid explorer navigating the chaotic charm of Makola Market and learning to surf the rolling waves of Busua. Now, in the highly anticipated "Ghana Adventures of Wapipi Jay Esewani Part 2," the stakes are higher, the paths are dustier, and the spirits of the ancients are whispering.* The morning sun rose like a golden cedi coin over the eastern horizon. Wapipi Jay Esewani, having traded his snorkel for a pair of rugged hiking boots, found himself standing on the banks of the world’s largest man-made lake: Lake Volta. ghana adventures of wapipi jay esewani part 2
Emerging from the shadows was a figure cloaked in woven raffia, wearing a mask of dark wood with slits for eyes and cowrie shells for teeth. The Gorovodu dancer moved with inhuman speed, spinning a machete in one hand and a torch in the other. Beneath the murky green water, Wapipi Jay Esewani