torsdag den 19. november 2015

Guideline for prices on markets in Nanyuki


All prices differs from size and quality of the goods.

Fruit and vegetables
  • Avocado 1 pcs. 30 ksh.
  • Tomato 6 pcs. 20-30 ksh.
  • Onion 4 pcs. 10-20 ksh.
  • Banana 4 pcs. 20-30 ksh.
  • Pineapple 1 pcs. 80-100 ksh.

Clothes
  • Shirt 50-100 ksh.
  • Trousers 100-500 ksh.
  • Sneakers 500 ksh.
  • Belts 250 ksh.
  • Underwear 50-100 ksh.
  • Purses 300-400 ksh.

Meat
  • 1 Chicken 600 ksh.
  • ½ kg Minced beef 250 ksh.
  • ½ kg Minced goat 250 ksh.


Street food
  • Smokey 20-30 ksh.
  • Egg with tomato salad 20-30 ksh.

Shopping groceries

When shopping for groceries in Nanyuki the easy solution is of course to go to the local mall and shop in the supermarket, but if you take your time to explore the town, you will experience that you can easily find better quality meat and vegetables at an even better price than in the supermarket. For example there are tons of great vegetable/fruit shops littered all over town, so you will not have to look for long. When looking for meat you should most certainly pay Impala Slaughter a visit, the meat is great quality and they're great at helping you pick out the piece of meat that you need. There are plenty of places to do your shopping other than in Nakumat, all you have to do is walk down the small streets and you will find all these great shops.




Bars in Nanyuki

If you are looking for a place to grab a beer, there are places that serve cheap and great ones, Home Pub and Checkers are examples of where many locals go out on a friday night. Both of these places have great atmospheres and nice people all over, and if you are looking for them on the streets, most people will be able to show you which way to go. Both places do also serve local food such as Kenyan BBQ and other side dishes including ugali. Even though these two local bars serve, famous beer brands like Tusker and Guinness their prices are up to 100 shillings cheaper than more western places like the casino. The two bars differs from the interior design, where Home Pub is filled with small booths in small huts outside in a courtyard, which makes it a nice place to go as a group for a warm up for going further into the nightlife of Nanyuki or just enjoy a afternoon break. On the other hand, Checkers is a more classic combination of a restaurant and a bar, where it is recommended to take a few beers after the nice Kenyan dinner. Be aware that the serving time for BBQ meat normally is an hour, but then the meat is freshly cut out and roasted in the simple marinade.

Shopping for clothing in Nanyuki


Mitumba Clothes Market
No matter what type of clothing you are looking for, you can almost certainly find it at Mitumba Market. The large second-hand market takes place every Wedneysday and Saturday.

Although all of the clothing is second-hand and some is not particularly good looking, with a bit of patience, it is still very possible to find some really nice, cheap clothes. The market also sells shoes, bags, belts and many other things.

Even if you're not all that interested in shopping for clothes, the market is still an interesting experience on its own. Heaps upon heaps of clothing lies on big tables all around the market place, and small stalls line some of the the brown dirt paths around the market. All around, the sellers are yelling out loudly, advertising the prices of their goods. Depending on the weather, the market is a busy place, both hectic and noisy, but it's definitely an experience you shouldn't miss out on if given the opportunity to go.

Mitumba market

Mitumba Market



Hellenanns Fashionhouse
If you have the time and the money, getting some clothes sewn at a tailor is a good idea.
This tailor shop is located in a colorful building advertising vegetable cooking oil, and it takes about two weeks to get your clothing sewn, depending on how busy the tailor is at the moment.

Usually, you should bring your own fabric. When you order your clothes, the tailor will take your measurements, which takes about ten minutes, and afterwards, you decide on a price and when to pick up your clothes. It is also a good idea to agree on a time to visit the shop when the clothes are almost done, so you can try it on and possibly request some changes.

Another good advice is to bring a piece of your own clothing to use as a template, if you wish to duplicate something you already own.


The front of Hellenanns Fashionhouse

Eating in Nanyuki

Nanyuki offers a rich variety of restaurants and fastfood shops, from the more luxurius, often western food to small, local kiosks with cheap traditional food.


Kungu Maito/Meat House
Kungu Maito, called Meat House by locals, is a somewhat large, but very local restaurant serving traditional Kenyan cuisine. The restaurant is placed outdoors, in a sort of yard behind a stone wall.

When you enter Meat Marked, one of the first things you notice is the large, open kitchen, fenced by black metal bars, where you can watch the many employees going about their daily work, preparing samosas, ugali and many other kinds of traditional food. The kitchen is noisy and filled with smoke from the many stoves and outside the kitchen, beside the tables, a group of hens cackle around in a small cage. Occasionally a rooster crows loudly across the yard.
If someone orders nyama choma(grilled meat, a favourite dish among many Kenyans), you might see an employee walking by with a freshly slaugthered goat held by the hooves in his hand.

The price range is low, with samosas costing around 50 shilling, chapati costing 30 and the price for a full meal with meat an ugali might be around 200-300 shilling.

Meat House, by the kitchen and the counter

The dining area at Meat House

Dish with ugali, chicken and sauce at Meat House


Checkers grill
This restaurant is also very local and additionally, turns into a bar at night. It's a halfway indoor, halfway outdoor restaurant located in a small, yellow house along one of the many small streets of Nanyuki. At the counter, a selection of fastfood like chapatis, samosas and other deepfried snacks lies in a display. Other traditional dishes like ugali, skumawiki and nyama choma is also available.

Prices are similar to Meat House, with a samosa costing 50 shilling.

Checker's seen from the outside



Springfield
Another good place to get a cheap, traditional meal. Four pointy, red roofs makes an easily recognisable house front, and inside the place is large with brown walls, grey tile floor and brown tables and chairs. Behind the counter, you catch a view of the smoky kitchen with large pots cooking on the stove, probably filled with ugali(traditional kenyan porridge made from maise flour), and many white-clad workers moving around in the smoke.

In you corner of the restaurant, you also find a butchers shop with fresh meat.
Aside from the typical traditional food, you can also get what is definitely Nanyuki's largest beef samosa for only 50 shilling. The price range is mostly the same as at Meat house and Checkers.

Springfield seen from the outside

Inside Springfield

Giant samosas at Springfield! Hand included for size comparison

Chapati at Springfield


Curry Pot
If you need a break from the traditional Kenyan food, Curry Pot offers a wide selection of very tasty Indian dishes. The restaurant is owned by a Kenyan Indian family and is a very small, but cosy place, located a few streets behind the large Nakumatt at the main street.
The place lies opposite a local bar named Home Pub and is not very noticeable from the outside. Inside, there is a few eating tables, a large tv on the wall often displaying news or dramatic Bollywood movies, and a small counter, where it is also possible to buy quick take-away snacks such as samosas, chips and spicy pieces of beef kebab.

The dishes are somewhat more expensive than at the traditional places. A warm dish with rice and naan bread usually costs between 700 and 1200 shilling. If you don't feel like eating out, Curry Pot also provides free delivery around town.

Curry Pot seen from the outside



Smokey stands
A smokey is the Kenyan version of a hotdog. As you stroll around town, you'll probably see this small wagons standing at street corners, outside Nakumatt or a the large food market by Mitumba.

The smokey is a smoked beef sausage that is cut open and filled with katchumbari, a spicy kenyan salad consisting of tomato, onion and chili for 30 shilling.
Aside from the smokeys, you can also buy a hard-boiled egg that is likewise filled with katchumbari for around 20-30 shilling.

While the street food at the smokey wagons might not always look so appetizing with the greasy sausages and eggs, that has been boiled until the yolk has a greyish hue, this is actually both a cheap and tasty snack to eat, and it's available almost everywhere around Kenya.

A typical smokey wagon

Boiled egg filled with katchumbari


Carolina's at Court Yard
There are many places to eat western food in Nanyuki, but since our guide mainly focuses on small, local places, we have decided not to include so many.

However, if you find yourself in need of western food, Carolina's at Court Yard, a restaurant owned by a local Kenyan woman, but definitely not very traditional, is a nice place to go. It's a small place inside Court Yard in Nanyuki, with the restaurant consisting of a group of dining tables placed under the shade. The menu contains many different dishes that are mostly western og western-inspired. The price range, as expected for a more western place, is somewhat higher than the previous mentioned restaurants, but still affordable.

Court Yard with Carolina's at the left



Introduction


The purpose of this blog is to highlight some of the smaller, local shop and restaurants in Nanyuki.
After staying in Nanyuki for several months, we have noticed a tendency for the foreigners in the area to shop mostly at big chain stores and eat out mostly at restaurant with expensive, western food rather than the cheap, local places.

While this is understandable, as it is always easier to do what you already know, our hope is that this guide can help travellers and foreigner staying in Nanyuki discover some places around town that is usually only visited by locals, and in that way, contribute to the community around town. The guide is inspired by the concept of eco tourism. Eco tourism is a form of tourism that both focuses on enviromental friendly tourism and also on empowering local communities. In this case, the latter is our main goal.

At the same time, by following this guide, you will get to experience places that are not usually visited by foreigners. This is a great way to learn about the local culture and way of life and to experience something new. Think about it this way – you can get a burger almost everywhere in the world, but there isn't many places to eat ugali, skumawiki and chapati outside of Africa.