A TUSKER AT THE STANLEY
The Exchange Bar at the Stanley in Nairobi is arguably the most famous watering hole in Africa. Named after Sir Henry Morton Stanley (1841-1904), the Dark Continent's greatest explorer, the Stanley Hotel was built in 1902. Teddy Roosevelt drank here, Ernest Hemingway, Clark Gable, Ava Gardner, Errol Flynn, and a long long list of European "crowned heads."
It was a great place to find out what the Soviets were up to in Africa during the Cold War, so I hoisted many a Tusker Lager here years ago. And here I am again. With no intrigue going on, just a lot of folks ensconced in leather chairs engaged in friendly talk about safaris or business. I've got a mug of Tusker, of course, but I've also got a wireless Internet connection on my laptop. What would Hemingway have thought?
Yet what keeps coming to my mind is a picture I once took out in the bush not too far from here. It's of a palm tree:

You'd never think it was anything special until you realize that palm trees are not native to the East African bush. You're looking at real and awful history here. This is a slave palm.