What do a Queen & a sports commentator have in common? Podcast now live
Apr 30, 24
1,288 views

Episode 1. Welcome to my world. On the forest trails at Sunbird Hill. The East Africa Travel Podcast by Charlotte Beauvoisin, Diary of a Muzungu

Yoo hoo! 🎉🎉

The East Africa Travel Podcast has been a labour of love… my biggest project in many a year… with many long nights… and a steep learning curve. If you’ve noticed I’ve been quiet for a while, now you know why!

Are you ready? It’s easy to listen to the Podcast section of Diary of a Muzungu – just click here 😉

The East Africa Travel Podcast is inspired by life on the edge of Uganda’s Kibale Forest 🦋 🌳 🦅 🐘 🐒 

It’s a National Park famous for chimpanzees, forest elephants & African grey parrots

Listen to the podcast for birdsong, travel advice, lively chats (& strictly positive vibes with a long list of brilliant conservationists in Africa and beyond, along with glowing endorsements from visitors from around the world).

The East Africa Travel Podcast launched in April 2024 with a Trailer and the first few episodes.

Where do I start? 🎧

The Muzungu has a request! 🙏🏻

I would LOVE you to:

  • Listen to the Trailer + at least one episode
  • Share the podcast with your friends and everyone interested in travel in / to East Africa
  • Leave a Review / Comment
  • Why? Reviews + ratings mean the East Africa Travel Podcast will be shown to a bigger audience. Help me tell more people about this fabulously beautiful corner of our world.

Got a Spotify subscription? Then click here + listen + Follow + rate 5 stars

 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Click to listen on Apple Podcasts and go to the Show description to write a review and we’ll be friends forever 😍

Thanks for all your comments and questions. I LOVE hearing from you!

The East Africa Travel Podcast is hosted by Charlotte Beauvoisin, AKA Nagawa author of Diary of a Muzungu

... If you love it ... share it! 😉

2 thoughts on “What do a Queen & a sports commentator have in common? Podcast now live”

  1. Lizziema says:

    Wonderful podcast, noises of the African night, the singing of the birds by day! All to be enjoyed, and even better to go there and see and hear for yourself. Africa still has a dawn chorus!

    1. the muzungu says:

      You’re right: Africa – or certainly the villages and the bush – does still have a life-affirming variety of dawn choruses.
      Here in Diani on Kenya’s Indian Ocean this week, I’m hearing rather different nocturnal noises: dwarf bushbabies!
      They woke me up three times last night. I keep reaching for my recorder, but haven’t managed to capture their sound yet… I will keep trying (just for you). x

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