Skip to content
staging
  • Home
  • Destinations
    • Africa
      • Botswana
      • Cape Verde
      • Gambia
      • Kenya
      • Namibia
      • Senegal
      • Tanzania
      • Zimbabwe
    • Americas
      • Belize
      • Chile
        • Rapa Nui
      • Ecuador
        • Galapagos Islands
      • Guatemala
      • Jamaica
      • USA
        • New Mexico
        • New York City
        • Washington State
    • Asia
      • Cambodia
      • DPRK
      • India
        • Kerala
        • Rajasthan
      • Japan
      • Laos
      • Oman
      • Syria
      • Vietnam
    • Europe
      • Austria
      • Bulgaria
      • England
        • London
      • Estonia
      • Germany
      • Iceland
      • Italy
      • Liechtenstein
      • Norway
      • Switzerland
      • Ukraine
  • Themes
    • Architecture
    • Art
      • Street art
    • Colour
    • Dark tourism
    • Eco-tourism
    • Food & drink
    • Gardens
    • History
      • Ruins
      • War
    • Landscape
      • Coast & seascapes
      • Deserts
    • People
      • Culture & tradition
      • Street photography
    • Wildlife and nature
      • Animals
      • Birds
      • Flowers
  • My photography
    • Travel galleries
    • Themed galleries
    • Photography challenges
      • Bird Weekly
      • Bright Squares
      • CFFC
      • Challenge Your Camera
      • Friendly Friday
      • Friday’s Foods of the World
      • Just One Person From Around the World
      • Lens-Artists
      • Monday walks
      • Sunday Stills
      • Ten photos
      • Thursday Doors
    • Photographic techniques
    • My photography journey: more than fifty years of images
    • Video
  • About me
    • Contact me
    • My love of travel: some special moments
  • Archive
  • Search Icon

staging

Travel snapshots from Toonsarah

Group of men sitting among fishing boats on a beach
Gallery: a traditional fishing village in Bakau

Gallery: a traditional fishing village in Bakau

April 10, 2021

The catch was brought in hours ago. But the fishing quay in Bakau, in northern Gambia, is nevertheless a hive of activity.

Many of the colourful pirogues are pulled up on the beach. Others are floating offshore, as the fishermen check and mend their nets and other equipment. Those that have finished their work sit chatting or try to make a few extra delasi by showing tourists around.

Group of men sitting among fishing boats on a beach
Time for a chat
Two men on a jetty by the sea
On the jetty
Group of men in two small boats at sea
Tidying up
Two men by the sea
By the jetty
Man carrying large fish past boats
Bringing in the catch
Group of men in two small boats at sea
Tidying up
Two men dragging a small boat through the water
Hauling in a pirogue
Two men in a boat mending nets
Mending nets
Two boats on a beach
Pirogues

Stand firm – you don’t need a guide to wander around here and take some photos, though you should of course be discreet when taking ones of individuals. You could of course ask permission; but getting it could mean a tip and that could prove expensive if you want lots of photos!

Man standing by a house
Young boy with his father
Fisherman and son
Man in white cap
Man sitting among boats near a house
Man sitting among boats on the beach

Fish caught here include barracuda, captain fish and lady fish, all of which you find on hotel and restaurant menus. There are also smaller fish which tend to be eaten only by locals because of the large number of bones they contain.

Some of the fish is processed here before being sold, so there are smoking houses. Some stalls cook and sell the fish too.

Stalls of corrugated iron near the sea
Fish market
Woman cleaning fish
Preparing fish
Four small fish frying in a pan
Fish cooking
Three large fish on a table
Fish for sale

And of course, as anywhere where fish are caught, there are plenty of small cats and large birds (here mostly egrets) hoping for a bite too.

Two large white birds by the sea
Egrets
Ginger and white cat
Waiting for scraps
Three large white birds by the sea
Egrets

All along this coast you’ll see these same colourful fishing boats at work offshore. I watched them a lot from the gardens and beach at our hotel in Fajara, Ngala Lodge, and made a little video of some of the fishermen at work. It’s a bit shaky as I had to use a long zoom, but it shows the fishing method well. The nets are left out overnight, marked by buoys and flags; the fishermen go out first thing to haul them in with, hopefully, some fish caught inside. Once the fish are offloaded at the quay the nets are checked, repaired if necessary and then taken back out to sea ready for the next night’s catch.

From the cliffs at Ngala Lodge

The fishing village in Bakau offers a wonderful opportunity to see something of Gambian life outside the tourist hotels. It’s more than worth running the gauntlet of the would-be guides and so-called bumsters to visit this decidedly fishy place, my Something Fishy offering for the Friendly Friday challenge.

I visited Bakau in 2014

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • More
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

You may also like ...


Coast & seascapes, Friendly Friday, Gambia, People
africa, boats, fishing, friendly_friday, gambia, people, sea

Post navigation

PREVIOUS
Gallery: discovering birdlife in Bushy Park
NEXT
Gallery: April in Ealing

18 thoughts on “Gallery: a traditional fishing village in Bakau”

  1. SandyL says:
    April 12, 2021 at 01:07

    Your photos give a great sense of the activity on the beach. It reminds me of the fishermen in Bali – a collective effort to bring the boats in, excitement to see the catch to market and followed by a relaxed caretaking of the nets.

    Loading...
    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      April 12, 2021 at 09:19

      Thank you Sandy 😀 I think fishing communities must be the same the world over as we saw similar in Kerala too (see my post https://toonsarah-travels.blog/staging/the-fishermen-of-chowara-beach-in-kerala/ if you’re interested) and in Oman 🙂

      Loading...
  2. wetanddustyroads says:
    April 11, 2021 at 15:06

    Beautiful photo’s Sarah! So colourful and lively … I can almost feel the vibe of the people on the beach and in their boats 🌸.

    Loading...
    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      April 11, 2021 at 15:47

      Thanks so much, I’m glad you enjoyed the atmosphere here!

      Loading...
  3. margaret21 says:
    April 11, 2021 at 08:06

    Fabulous studies. That would have kept you going in ‘One person from around the World’ for weeks and weeks!

    Loading...
    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      April 11, 2021 at 08:37

      Very true 🙂 Maybe I’ll tag this retrospectively if ever I’m stuck for ideas for that challenge, but I have plenty lined up at present 😆

      Loading...
  4. thehungrytravellers.blog says:
    April 11, 2021 at 08:05

    Great photos Sarah. We love people shots too and if you are lucky you can catch some real emotion in those faces. Colourful fishing village, haven’t been to that particular village but saw a similar vibrant village in Gambia which was wonderful. Would certainly visit Gambia again.

    Loading...
    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      April 11, 2021 at 08:37

      Thank you 🙂 Was it Tanji you visited? That’s a bigger and more famous fishing village, in the southern part of the country. We were due to go one day but I was ill overnight (too much sun I believe) and didn’t feel up to it. We’ll go for sure if we go back to the Gambia 🙂

      Loading...
      1. thehungrytravellers.blog says:
        April 11, 2021 at 08:47

        No it wasn’t Tanji, was further South. Stayed in an eco lodge near Kartong and the fishing village was Gunjur just a bit north of there

        Loading...
        1. Sarah Wilkie says:
          April 11, 2021 at 08:50

          Sounds good – I love a good eco-lodge 🙂

          Loading...
  5. Graham says:
    April 11, 2021 at 05:31

    Very vibrant and colorful photos. Interesting that they eat barracuda. As an apex predator here, we’re warned off them because they can accumulate toxins from their prey.

    Loading...
    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      April 11, 2021 at 08:34

      Thank you Graham 🙂 That’s interesting about the barracuda. I suspect that the locals wouldn’t have the luxury of turning it down for that reason but I think I remember seeing it on the menu in tourist restaurants too, where you might think it would be more of a concern.

      Loading...
  6. Jane Lurie says:
    April 11, 2021 at 00:18

    A wonderful, dynamic and vibrant shot, Sarah. An image that tells a story.

    Loading...
    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      April 11, 2021 at 08:26

      Thank you Jane – I really appreciate that compliment from an excellent photographer like yourself 🙂

      Loading...
  7. slfinnell says:
    April 10, 2021 at 16:54

    Taking people pictures is my favorite. But most of mine are of children so must be cautious these days since they are ones in my care 🙂 Someday they’ll be adults tho and watch out!!!! haha

    Loading...
    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      April 10, 2021 at 17:21

      I’m the same, I love to take people photos and that includes kids. I quite often take them when I travel but I try to make sure their parents are aware I’m doing so and could stop me if they didn’t like it.

      Loading...
  8. maristravels says:
    April 10, 2021 at 16:48

    You’ve captured a very colourful scene here in your many photographs. Quite a noisy experience too, I should imagine, not to mention smelly!

    Loading...
    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      April 10, 2021 at 17:19

      Thanks Mari – yes, pretty smelly as I remember, although I enjoy a lively fish market enough to ‘tune out’ the smells 😆

      Loading...

Comments are closed.

Comments are closed.

Follow me

Follow Travel with me on WordPress.com

Some topics I’ve touched on

africa architecture around_the_world_in_ten_photos art beliefs birds boats buildings bulgaria cffc chile churches cities customs deserts dprk ealing england friendly_friday gambia history india italy japan just_one_person_from_around_the_world landscape laos lens_artists_challenge london monuments museum new_mexico north_korea people photography photo_effects rivers ruins street_art street_photography sunday_stills usa village war wildlife

Some favourite photos

Man in a turban with fishing nets
Fisherman in Fort Kochi, Kerala
Two elephants in long grass
Okavango elephants
Blue glacier edge
Glacier Grey, Torres del Paine, Chile
Elderly woman in black hat and sunglasses
In Santiago, Chile
Very large statues of North Korean Leaders
Statues of the Great Leaders on Mansudae Hill, Pyongyang
Water reflecting the sky with clouds and low sun
Approaching sunset in the Okavango Delta
Feet of huge metal sculpture, with man standing beside
The feet of the Angel
Large moai with row of more behind
The ‘travelling moai’ and Ahu Tongariki
Black and white photo of elderly lady
On the streets of old Hanoi
Mountain reflected in a lake
On the road to Dyrholaey
Squirrel with a conker in his mouth
Silhouette of a man in a gateway
Looking out from Bundi Palace
Wet street and two people with bright pink umbrella
Street in Lucca, rainy day – edited
Blue and pink bird on a dead tree
Lilac-breasted Roller, Chobe NP, Botswana
Man sleeping in a tuk tuk by a carved stone wall
Tuk tuk driver by the Terrace of the Leper King
Close up of flamingo with head tucked under
Flamingo (Jersey Zoo)
Lady with baskets of fruit sitting by a canal
In Hoi An, Vietnam
Buddhist monk in orange robes with mobile phone
Monk at Wat Nong Sikhounmuang, Luang Prabang
Small fishing boat with a man in it, on a large lake
Lake Atitlan
Large tree trunks on a beach and foggy offshore islets
Rialto Beach

What are people talking about?

  • thehungrytravellers.blog on Kippers and castles: a walk from Craster to Dunstanburgh
  • Sarah Wilkie on My love of travel: some special moments
  • Sarah Wilkie on Gallery: April in Ealing
  • gaiainaction on My love of travel: some special moments
  • gaiainaction on Gallery: April in Ealing
  • Sarah Wilkie on Kippers and castles: a walk from Craster to Dunstanburgh
  • margaret21 on Kippers and castles: a walk from Craster to Dunstanburgh

Follow me

Follow Travel with me on WordPress.com

Archive

  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
© 2025   Copyright Sarah Wilkie - all rights reserved
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d