₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,329,558 members, 8,441,194 topics. Date: Wednesday, 08 July 2026 at 08:14 AM

Toggle theme

My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned - Travel (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralTravelMy Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned (35546 Views)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Reply (Go Down)

Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by DrTee1(m): 11:46pm On Aug 11, 2025
Bar1941:
My friend, the Ghana people read in the news is the real Ghana. The one you are talking about is not real but I pray you never see the real one.

Many Ghanians are unnecessarily bitter towards Nigerians and they are full of hypocrisy.
This is one of those times that Nairaland can mislead.

When I read the OP describe the treatment of Nigerians in Ghana, by Ghanaians as cozy, I was wondering if there was a different country from that which I was...
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by flexyrule(m): 11:50pm On Aug 11, 2025
PulaPower:
All these Cho cho cho cuz of Ghana?

E don too much..

You could have summarize..
Oh please zip it!

This is the type of thread that made this place feel like a second home before you intellectually lazy generation took over.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Nickymichy(m): 11:51pm On Aug 11, 2025
Ride on OP...I love stories like this
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Nnamdipapa(m): 11:59pm On Aug 11, 2025
africaBlogworld:
One of the biggest lessons that hit me on this journey?
Even when you hurry, destiny has its own timing.

Despite our early departure, we got caught in the lockdown at Ojodu Berger.
We could see Lagos the city was right in front of us but the border was sealed.
Police had already locked it down because of the elections.
There were vehicles ahead of us, everyone restless.
Some were cussing.
Some tried to squeeze their way in.
Then a warning shot pierced the air.

At that moment, I knew it was serious.

But as a Port Harcourt guy man, hearing a gunshot didn’t faze me. I jumped down from the bus and started asking questions.
Went straight to the frontline to see with my own eyes whether it was Temu or Alibaba we were dealing with 😂.
Don’t mind me.

I quickly made arrangements with the bus boy to carry my box to a nearby park.
I believed if I could just cross the border on foot, I'd find a vehicle or bike to take me to Mile 2.
I’d heard those “last-minute Lagos bikes” in the news this was my chance to meet one.

So I began trekking into Lagos.

Omoh...
No vehicle.
No bike.
Only sun, dust, and aching legs.

I considered going back.
But when I looked behind me, I’d come too far.
And when I looked ahead, all I saw was more Lagos.
To make it worse, my phone went off Google Map gone.

But life has a way of sending angels in human form.
While heading towards Ikeja, I met a good Samaritan who offered not just his company, but a power bank too.
At that point, it felt surreal but it was exactly what I needed:
A moment of hope,
A little motivation,
A reason to keep going.

Just when I was ready to give up the trek, that last-minute Lagos bike appeared.
It had a passenger already, and the price wasn’t smiling but I didn’t have any options.
I hopped on.

And with the wind on my face and hope in my chest, we zoomed off...

Heading to Mile 2. On the road to Maza Maza.

Stay tuned.

Drop a like to motivate this real-life tale of grit, grace, and Godspeed.
Nice story. You can always download your map on google so you have access to Google map offline. I do that when I go to a new location and not sure of connectivity.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Nnamdipapa(m): 12:03am On Aug 12, 2025
chudez0147:
If you like believe all he wrote up there. Ghana is just like Nigeria, the only difference is the currency and people. The roads are like 9ja too. Nothing special about Ghana. Oh sorry, I love my Ghana girls. grin
Op never said anything was special, he was only narrating his trip to Ghana.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by cookingsoul(m): 12:07am On Aug 12, 2025
I swear if u get d chance to go to Ghana u will Neva come bac to naija. D place sweet die
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:07am On Aug 12, 2025
chudez0147:
I can bet 200 cedis that his sister is in madina
Are you willing to risk 200 cedis?.

Because I may surprise you, but keep your 200 and use it to help the people around you who haven't eaten and you turned a blind eye to their needs just to do eye service here.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Konquest: 12:08am On Aug 12, 2025
africaBlogworld:
I booked a night bus ticket — the plan was simple: get to Lagos by morning.
YSG had already informed us that, due to the Local Government elections in Lagos on Saturday, the buses would leave early — around 5 PM — to beat the expected roadblocks and delays.

Our journey began from Port Harcourt, passing through Owerri, Onitsha, and Delta.
By God’s grace, the road was smooth.
A few moments of traffic tried to test our patience, but we kept moving.
Then came Edo State — the roads turned rough, the journey tested our endurance.
But we pushed through.
We weathered the eye of the storm.

Past the struggle, we entered Ore with the strength of overcomers.
And soon, we were cruising through Sagamu — hopeful, faithful, not knowing what lay ahead…
But still holding on to faith in God.

By 6:25 AM, we arrived at Ojodu Berger, Lagos.
And then...
It began.
The very thing we had tried to avoid.

But that’s a story for another page.

P.s: It was night bus so I took a night picture. Cheese!!!! grin grin grin cool cool cool

Stay tuned.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:08am On Aug 12, 2025
chudez0147:
If you like believe all he wrote up there. Ghana is just like Nigeria, the only difference is the currency and people. The roads are like 9ja too. Nothing special about Ghana. Oh sorry, I love my Ghana girls. grin
Ghana is Nigeria 2.0

Ghana there is constant light, what Nigeria light cannot do doesn't exist. grin
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Konquest: 12:09am On Aug 12, 2025
africaBlogworld:
One of the biggest lessons that hit me on this journey?
Even when you hurry, destiny has its own timing.

Despite our early departure, we got caught in the lockdown at Ojodu Berger.
We could see Lagos the city was right in front of us but the border was sealed.
Police had already locked it down because of the elections.
There were vehicles ahead of us, everyone restless.
Some were cussing.
Some tried to squeeze their way in.
Then a warning shot pierced the air.

At that moment, I knew it was serious.

But as a Port Harcourt guy man, hearing a gunshot didn’t faze me. I jumped down from the bus and started asking questions.
Went straight to the frontline to see with my own eyes whether it was Temu or Alibaba we were dealing with 😂.
Don’t mind me.

I quickly made arrangements with the bus boy to carry my box to a nearby park.
I believed if I could just cross the border on foot, I'd find a vehicle or bike to take me to Mile 2.
I’d heard those “last-minute Lagos bikes” in the news this was my chance to meet one.

So I began trekking into Lagos.

Omoh...
No vehicle.
No bike.
Only sun, dust, and aching legs.

I considered going back.
But when I looked behind me, I’d come too far.
And when I looked ahead, all I saw was more Lagos.
To make it worse, my phone went off Google Map gone.

But life has a way of sending angels in human form.
While heading towards Ikeja, I met a good Samaritan who offered not just his company, but a power bank too.
At that point, it felt surreal but it was exactly what I needed:
A moment of hope,
A little motivation,
A reason to keep going.

Just when I was ready to give up the trek, that last-minute Lagos bike appeared.
It had a passenger already, and the price wasn’t smiling but I didn’t have any options.
I hopped on.

And with the wind on my face and hope in my chest, we zoomed off...

Heading to Mile 2. On the road to Maza Maza.

Stay tuned.

Drop a like to motivate this real-life tale of grit, grace, and Godspeed.
Interesting insights.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by erai30(m): 12:09am On Aug 12, 2025
I really enjoyed the whole story more than Tinubu's government angry angry
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by chukswag(m): 12:10am On Aug 12, 2025
I stayed glued
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:10am On Aug 12, 2025
cookingsoul:
I swear if u get d chance to go to Ghana u will Neva come bac to naija. D place sweet die
Soulja man tell em
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:11am On Aug 12, 2025
chukswag:
I stayed glued
More to come. Thanks
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:11am On Aug 12, 2025
erai30:
I really enjoyed the whole story more than Tinubu's government angry angry
Thank you , God blessings
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:13am On Aug 12, 2025
Nnamdipapa:
Nice story. You can always download your map on google so you have access to Google map offline. I do that when I go to a new location and not sure of connectivity.
True, when I was about to do that , That was when my phone went off like Nepa light in Nigeria
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Konquest: 12:17am On Aug 12, 2025
DrTee1:
This is one of those times that Nairaland can mislead.

When I read the OP describe the treatment of Nigerians in Ghana, by Ghanaians as cozy, I was wondering if there was a different country from that which I was...
He was definitely describing the Ghana BEFORE the "Nigeria Must Go" protests in several Ghanaian cities over the crimes committed by people largely from a specific part of Nigeria based on the full names of those publish by the Ghana Police.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:18am On Aug 12, 2025
OllyDiamond:
Eiiiii, op so is it because of mere Ghana that you are this super excited and began the writeup by berating and denigrating Nigeria?

Sometimes, I honestly wonder the parts of Nigeria some of you stayed all your lives to find Ghana better than Nigeria.

Can you compare Accra whether the Abelenkpe, East Legon, Dzorwulu, Ridge and Cantonment or Transaco high-end areas to Ikoyi Lagos and Most City Parts of Abuja in any way apart from constant light, which is not constant as before in Accra anymore?

These days, there is light outs in Accra (though not as bad as in some areas in Nigeria). I had constant light in Wuse Zone 1 and some parts of Maitama when I stayed in Abuja and also in Gwarinpa (few weeks at Gwarinpa).

Road networks in Abuja is top notch unlike Accra that only one or two high ways without bye-passes is leading into Accra and out of Accra. In Abuja, you have bypasses in every 2-3 minutes drives with one of the best ornamental plants and lawns on culvets and at pedestrian sides unlike Accra that has grasses on the culvets in some parts.

Please, you Nigerian villagers should be ashamed a little whenever you want to berate Nigeria because it totally shows that most of you have been in ghettos simply by how excited they are about Ghana.
I have stayed in some best parts of Nigeria both in the North, Middle Belt, Abuja, East and in Lagos so I am yet to find anything in Ghana aside serenity that's so so fascinating.
Nigeria is still good, but hey we are entitled to our choices and opinions
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:21am On Aug 12, 2025
davies:
A good thread you have created here..
May you reap the reward of your journey broda
Amen, Blessings to us all
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:23am On Aug 12, 2025
Konquest:
Interesting insights.
Thanks, just to guide others who may want to thread the path to greatness.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by chudez0147(m): 12:26am On Aug 12, 2025
africaBlogworld:
Ghana is Nigeria 2.0

Ghana there is constant light, what Nigeria light cannot do doesn't exist. grin
What has the light done for them ?? Don’t just stay in Accra, try visit other regions.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Nnamdipapa(m): 12:26am On Aug 12, 2025
africaBlogworld:
True, when I was about to do that , That was when my phone went off like Nepa light in Nigeria
I hope to be in Ghana around December. Its a beautiful country and people are laid back
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:28am On Aug 12, 2025
Nnamdipapa:
I hope to be in Ghana around December. Its a beautiful country and people are laid back
I do hope we meet when you come for Detty December.

Hit me up Sir.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by kaltonga: 12:28am On Aug 12, 2025
Warmaterial:
Ghana you hear on the news is different from the Ghana you will see when you land.

Ghana is a very peaceful country, nobody will harass you in Ghana they are not like Nigerians that look for trouble unless you start misbehaving.

I have lived there before precisely Accra for good 2 years plus. To be sincere with you if you live in Ghana for one month you won't like to live in Nigeria again.

A lot of Nigerians are doing well there, majority of them married Ghanaians.

Even the ones that are into Cyber games can never think of relocating back to 9ja, because you can't compare Ghana police or immigration with Nigerian police.
This is a sane country runner without the Fulanis and the Yoruba who are only good at liquidating a country..I stayed in Ghana for seven years, some Nigerians there so well while some carry out criminal activities especially the Yorubas and the Igbos.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by chudez0147(m): 12:29am On Aug 12, 2025
africaBlogworld:
Are you willing to risk 200 cedis?.

Because I may surprise you, but keep your 200 and use it to help the people around you who haven't eaten and you turned a blind eye to their needs just to do eye service here.
You are very good in writing bro that doesn’t mean you know what you’re saying. My wife is a Ghanaian, I’ve lived in Ghana for 16years. Been to almost all regions . I know what am saying bro.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by chudez0147(m): 12:31am On Aug 12, 2025
Nnamdipapa:
Op never said anything was special, he was only narrating his trip to Ghana.
He said the roads are so good . Oga leave that thing. If you want to leave Nigeria to other African countries try Moroco , Egypt, South Africa or Mouricious
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by africaBlogworld(op): 12:33am On Aug 12, 2025
chudez0147:
You are very good in writing bro that doesn’t mean you know what you’re saying. My wife is a Ghanaian, I’ve lived in Ghana for 16years. Been to almost all regions . I know what am saying bro.
Make it 1000 cedis and I know your serious and willing to gamble.

People who want him to increase the stake like, and people who dont want him to share.

I still repeat are you ready because my Momo is ready for you unless your not a man of your word.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Mariangeles(f): 12:33am On Aug 12, 2025
Konquest:
He was definitely describing the Ghana BEFORE the "Nigeria Must Go" protests in several Ghanaian cities over the crimes committed by people largely from a specific part of Nigeria based on the full names of those publish by the Ghana Police.
You don't have to be tribalistic with your comments.
I've noticed that with most of your comments on here.
So off putting.
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by chudez0147(m): 12:35am On Aug 12, 2025
cookingsoul:
I swear if u get d chance to go to Ghana u will Neva come bac to naija. D place sweet die
Maybe you live in your village
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by chudez0147(m): 12:41am On Aug 12, 2025
africaBlogworld:
Make it 1000 cedis and I know your serious and willing to gamble.

People who want him to increase the stake like, and people who dont want him to share.

I still repeat are you ready because my Momo is ready for you unless you’re not a man of your word.
Oga be calming down. You won’t tell us when you run back to Nigeria. Lol

Up till now some Ghanaians wish to visit Nigeria and you are super excited because you traveled to Ghana by road. What would happen if you now visit South Africa? Not to worry very soon Ghanaians will start calling you kwasia
Re: My Journey To Ghana! Stay Tuned by Nnamdipapa(m): 12:47am On Aug 12, 2025
chudez0147:
He said the roads are so good . Oga leave that thing. If you want to leave Nigeria to other African countries try Moroco , Egypt, South Africa or Mouricious
I can never go to those countries you mentioned. I prefer countries where everyone is blacl like me and I prefer the west African countries like Ghana, Gambia or Senegal
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Reply

My Journey To The UKMy Journey To Hanoi, VietnamCost Of Road Trip To Ghana234

Twist In Regional Competition As New Airport Opens In AnambraWhat Lagos And Its Environs Looked Like In The 40's-60’s (photos)Akwa Ibom Government Acquires Two New Aircraft For Ibom Air