I like your way of thinking, an OCS also told me the same thingHii ni Kenya...jipeleke beach...tafuta clande place, chota mchanga in sacks...beba pesa ya barabara....kazi kwisha
I like your way of thinking, an OCS also told me the same thingHii ni Kenya...jipeleke beach...tafuta clande place, chota mchanga in sacks...beba pesa ya barabara....kazi kwisha
Another suggestion, I find the coast sand particles quite small/dust like. There's a muhindi that crushes white rock somewhere in machakos and makes rock sand. It is very clean and white looks like white sugar. I am not sure of the location of his quarry though.Is it possible to hire a truck ikuje kwa beach ichote the white sand nilete upcountry without any government issue. For transport i know i may need some papers, but kuchota mchanga si ni free because it is in plenty huko?
Limestone.There's a muhindi that crushes white rock somewhere in machakos
Shoka.Limestone.
There are limestone quarries at Sultan Hamud and KMQ (Kenya Marble Quarries) in Kajiado.
Shoka.
Au sio
The issue is less of government red tape but of environmental concerns. As plentiful as beach sand may appears to you, it took thousands on years for the hand of time to create each individual grain of sand on the beach. If all of a sudden each one us found a need of 10g of beach sand today, all beach sand will be gone on the entire beachline of the Kenya by the end of the year. Thank God, beach sand has mostly been useful to humans as play sand in-situ. Beach sand plays a very important role on the coastal ecosystem and should be left where it is. If you want to play in the powdery white sand, go down to the coast, knock yourself out on the beach and very quickly head back to your red matopeni up country.Is it possible to hire a truck ikuje kwa beach ichote the white sand nilete upcountry without any government issue. For transport i know i may need some papers, but kuchota mchanga si ni free because it is in plenty huko?
The issue is less of government red tape but of environmental concerns. As plentiful as beach sand may appears to you, it took thousands on years for the hand of time to create each individual grain of sand on the beach. If all of a sudden each one us found a need of 10g of beach sand today, all beach sand will be gone on the entire beachline of the Kenya by the end of the year. Thank God, beach sand has mostly been useful to humans as play sand in-situ. Beach sand plays a very important role on the coastal ecosystem and should be left where it is. If you want to play in the powdery white sand, go down to the coast, knock yourself out on the beach and very quickly head back to your red matopeni up country.
Great, thanks for the ideaAnother suggestion, I find the coast sand particles quite small/dust like. There's a muhindi that crushes white rock somewhere in machakos and makes rock sand. It is very clean and white looks like white sugar. I am not sure of the location of his quarry though.
There are a lot of places nimeona wakiwa na that beach sand, the only issue is when i ask the guys there wanasema hawajui how the planning happened hadi ikafika hapoThe issue is less of government red tape but of environmental concerns. As plentiful as beach sand may appears to you, it took thousands on years for the hand of time to create each individual grain of sand on the beach. If all of a sudden each one us found a need of 10g of beach sand today, all beach sand will be gone on the entire beachline of the Kenya by the end of the year. Thank God, beach sand has mostly been useful to humans as play sand in-situ. Beach sand plays a very important role on the coastal ecosystem and should be left where it is. If you want to play in the powdery white sand, go down to the coast, knock yourself out on the beach and very quickly head back to your red matopeni up country.
You sir have a slightly higher IQ than our resident bipolar thingamajig...The issue is less of government red tape but of environmental concerns. As plentiful as beach sand may appears to you, it took thousands on years for the hand of time to create each individual grain of sand on the beach. If all of a sudden each one us found a need of 10g of beach sand today, all beach sand will be gone on the entire beachline of the Kenya by the end of the year. Thank God, beach sand has mostly been useful to humans as play sand in-situ. Beach sand plays a very important role on the coastal ecosystem and should be left where it is. If you want to play in the powdery white sand, go down to the coast, knock yourself out on the beach and very quickly head back to your red matopeni up country.