Ghana

Save

Introducing Ghana

In Ghana life is public. People evacuate their homes and apartments every day to escape the stifling heat. And much like the kente cloth worn by market women, the disparate parts and peoples somehow mix and weave together into a cohesive whole. Ghana is home to a number of diverse peoples and cultures, all finding ways to coexist in a rapidly modernising country. You’ll see men and women in traditional clothes text messaging friends and suited businessmen taking offerings to tribal chiefs.

Compared to other countries in the region, Ghana is stable and prosperous, but this valuation is in part founded on hopes for the future. The country is often labelled ‘Africa for beginners’, and while you’ll likely be welcomed by the people in a hot, sweaty clinch, the same way the sun grabs hold of you the second after you step outside, getting around is by no means easy.

Show full overview

Advertisement

Advertisement

Portrait of Eric outside his NYB Craft stall.
View gallery

Portrait of Eric outside his NYB Craft stall.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Orien Harvey
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Villager iin window of mud and thatch house, near Walawale.
  • Fisherman mending nets with boats and town in background.
  • Ghanaian school children visiting Cape Coast Castle
  • Popular Ghanaian food, Red Red (left) and fried plantains (right).
  • Fufu (mix of steamed plantains and cassava root) being pounded using a wooden bowl and long stick.
  • Drummers playing Kpalogo drums.
View gallery