Sunday Times

SPEND YOUR CASH ON EXPERIENCE­S, NOT THINGS

When it comes to travelling, actor-comedian Siv Ngesi is all about meeting locals, getting lost and not having a plan

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I travel weekly for work, but I wish I travelled more. I always make sure I have one big three-week travel adventure every year and that I extend my work trips to see a few destinatio­ns on the work’s dime. When I was a child, we always took trips to the Eastern Cape to see family during the holidays ... In those days, flying wasn’t cheap, so we drove for hours. I can still taste the food my mother used to pack and I can still remember the laughter and conversati­on in the car.

I first went abroad when I was six years old. I went to London to see my mother, who was studying there. I can remember flying and hoping I would see God above the clouds, but he was nowhere to be seen. My trust issues started there. But I saw snow for the first time, it was cold and I thought pap was falling from the sky. New York owns my soul, but Cuba is my number one travel destinatio­n, there’s nothing like it, it’s another world. Cuba is what travelling is all about. When I landed there, I felt like I was in another time in history ... I dream about it often and hopefully I can return soon and salsa the days away. My best piece of travel advice is not to waste money on possession­s. Spend it on experience­s; travel to find yourself. I don’t ever find destinatio­ns difficult ... I travel to learn and to be challenged or culture shocked.

When it comes to choosing luxury or roughing it, I’ve done both, and roughing it always wins. There’s something about it — if you have never roughed it, you’ve never truly travelled. I’m all about “off the beaten track” , meeting locals, getting lost, not having a plan, putting on a backpack and exploring the unknown. My strangest travel experience was watching a person be cremated in Nepal next to a tributary of the Ganges River. It sounds weird, but it was one of the most incredible things ever.

The other one was while I was travelling with Kingsley Holgate around Kenya. The warriors made me drink blood from the neck of a goat. It hadn’t rained in a long time in the area and they were losing livestock. As I started drinking the warm blood, the heavens opened and it rained for hours — they treated me like I’d brought the rains after that.

It’s hard to choose one place I want to see ... I want to see everywhere, at least I want to die trying. But if I had to pick, I would say Bora Bora, Morocco or Croatia.

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