Musicians at Mpape Crushed Rock near Abuja, Nigeria
BBC August 18, 2020
An abandoned quarry in Nigeria has been become a tourist hotspot after images were posted on social media earlier this month.
The rocky cliffs climbing into a blue sky, a moss-lined footpath, small green hills and a lake that shimmers in the sun are quite breath-taking and a set of images shared on Twitter at the beginning of August has been liked more than a thousand times.
In a matter of days of the post, the site, known as Crushed Rock, in Mpape - a poor neighbourhood on the outskirts of the capital Abuja - was thronged.
There has been a DJ stand, food vendors, hundreds of sun-bathing selfie-takers - and even a band of classical musicians.
People at Mpape Crushed Rock near Abuja, Nigeria
Nigerians are not generally known to be outdoor lovers - the weather is very hot in the north and quite humid in the south.
However, there is a burgeoning community of hikers around Abuja inspired by the many expatriates living in the political capital.
The coronavirus pandemic has also had a part to play in encouraging these young middleclass Nigerians to explore the hills in the country's rocky central region.
The lockdown, which prevented people from travelling elsewhere, has meant that places closer to home are being explored.
The area around Mpape, which means "rock" in the local Gwari language, has supplied much of the stone used to transform Abuja from a small village in the 1980s into the country's capital city.
Tourists at Mpape Crushed Rock near Abuja, Nigeria
"The quarry has existed for more than 10 years," said Mpape resident Courage Ebenz, who is somewhat bemused by the sudden influx of city-dwellers.
Nigeria has an abundance of natural beauties, but this "man-made" location has its own appeal - with three main tiers that each give a stunning view of the water below.
The lake at Mpape Crushed Rock near Abuja, Nigeria
Sightseers can choose a small winding footpath to the top terrace, where the grass is an ideal picnic location.
The more adventurous can continue down the path that circles and snakes down to the water's edge.
Mpape Crushed Rock near Abuja, Nigeria
But a warning for the brave who might want to plunge into the water as the locals say it is full of abandoned machinery.
According to Abraham Adepelumi, a geo-physicist at Obafemi Awolowo university, the lake was formed as a result of the fracturing of an aquifer.
Two children look over Mpape Crushed Rock near Abuja, Nigeria
"Once the rock got fractured, the water within the rock was under pressure," he told the BBC.
"It is a natural phenomenon, Mpape is a fracture-prone area of Abuja and has experienced tremors as recent as 2018."
The local emergency agency has warned amateurs against hiking at Mpape Crushed Rock, but fun-seekers seem not to be deterred.
"I didn't know we had such a place in Nigeria and I wanted to see if it is real," Elizabeth Okute, who came with her friends after seeing pictures on Facebook, told the BBC.
"I am surprised such a place exists in Abuja and I love what I am seeing," said Ann Chukwuka.
Ann Chukwuka wanted to see the place for herself
Emeka Uko, who kept straying to the edge much to the chagrin of his friends, added: "I hope we put measures in place to preserve it."
This is exactly what some volunteers decided to do last Saturday, clearing up a trail of plastic waste around the quarry that has built up over the last few weeks.
Volunteer cleaners at Mpape Crushed Rock near Abuja, Nigeria
They split into two groups to compete to see who could collect the most rubbish - updating social media as they went.
"A lot of people felt it was their responsibility to clean up the place," Brandon Akume, whose group came second in the clean-up dash, told the BBC.
This was an alien concept to most Nigerians, he added.
Volunteer cleaners at Mpape Crushed Rock near Abuja, Nigeria
He moved from one group of picnickers to the other, handing out rubbish bags, instructing people to dispose of their litter.
"They want to poison this place, it seems I have my work cut out for me," he said.
Photos by Fatima Muhammad and words by the BBC's Nduka Orjinmo
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