Sights and Sounds
Discover Ghana’s Basket Weaving Tradition in Accra
The first thing you notice is the rhythm—the soft rustle of dried straw bending under careful fingers, the quiet concentration in the room, and the occasional laughter as a beginner’s weave goes slightly off pattern.
In this workshop space in Accra, time slows down. Seated on low stools, visitors lean into a centuries-old craft, guided by skilled artisans from northern Ghana who make the process look effortless.
This is Bolgatanga basket weaving, a tradition that originates from the Upper East Region of Ghana. Here in the capital, it becomes more than a demonstration—it’s an invitation to participate.
The Workshop Experience
The session begins with a story. Artisans share how these baskets, known globally for their durability and intricate designs, are handwoven from elephant grass in Bolgatanga.
For generations, weaving has been both an art form and a livelihood, passed down through families and communities.
Then, it’s your turn.
You’re handed a bundle of straw—firm, slightly coarse, and surprisingly fragrant. Under guidance, you begin shaping the base, folding and pulling the strands into place. It’s not easy. The weave demands patience, precision, and a steady hand. But that’s part of the appeal.
As the hours pass, your fingers adjust to the motion. The chaos of loose strands slowly transforms into structure.

Around you, others are immersed in the same quiet challenge—travelers, creatives, and curious locals, all connected by the shared act of making something tangible.
Between weaving, there’s time to soak in the atmosphere. Some workshops incorporate music, storytelling, or even light refreshments, creating a relaxed, communal feel. You’re not just learning a skill; you’re stepping into a living tradition.
More Than a Souvenir
By the end of the session, what sits in your hands is more than a basket. It’s slightly imperfect, perhaps uneven at the edges—but entirely yours. And that’s the magic of it.
For travelers, the experience offers a deeper connection to Ghanaian culture beyond markets and museums.
Read Also: Exploring Traditional Bead Making in Ghana’s Eastern Region
It brings context to the colorful Bolga baskets often seen in shops, turning them from decorative items into stories of craftsmanship and heritage.
In a city as fast-paced as Accra, this workshop provides a rare pause—a chance to create, to listen, and to understand.
You leave not just with a handmade piece, but with a new appreciation for the skill and history woven into every strand.
Sights and Sounds
Exploring Traditional Bead Making in Ghana’s Eastern Region
The road into Ghana’s Eastern Region rolls past thick green hills, roadside fruit stalls, and villages alive with colour.
Then comes the unmistakable sound: glass cracking softly beneath stone. In the bead-making communities around Krobo land, broken bottles are not waste. They are raw material for one of Ghana’s oldest artistic traditions.
Inside a warm clay workshop, women sort fragments of blue, green, amber, and clear glass into small bowls while smoke curls gently from nearby kilns.
A craftsman carefully fills handmade moulds with powdered glass before sliding them into a fire-blackened oven. Hours later, the pieces emerge transformed — shimmering beads streaked with colour, each one carrying centuries of cultural memory.
For the Krobo people of the Eastern Region, beads are far more than decoration. They mark birth, puberty, marriage, spirituality, and status.
During festivals and traditional ceremonies, layers of beads rest proudly around waists, wrists, and necks, turning the human body into a living archive of heritage.
Walking Through Ghana’s Living Bead Culture
Visitors to bead-making centres such as Odumase-Krobo quickly realise the experience is wonderfully hands-on.
Travellers can watch every stage of production: crushing recycled glass into powder, painting intricate patterns with cassava-stem tools, firing the beads in clay kilns, and polishing the finished pieces by hand.
The atmosphere feels deeply personal rather than staged for tourists. Children weave through courtyards carrying trays of beads while elders explain the meanings behind colours and patterns. Bright reds may symbolise strength or spiritual energy; blues often evoke peace, harmony, and love.
Many tours allow guests to create their own beads, an experience that slows time in the best possible way.
Beyond the workshops, the Eastern Region offers plenty to explore — from the forest canopy walk at Aburi Botanical Gardens to mountain views around the Akuapem Ridge and lively local markets filled with handmade crafts and fresh palm wine.
Why the Journey Stays With You
Traditional bead making offers something many modern travel experiences struggle to provide: a genuine human connection.
Travellers do not simply observe culture here; they sit beside it, touch it, and carry part of it home.
Long after leaving the Eastern Region, many visitors remember the glow of kiln fires at dusk and the quiet patience behind every handcrafted bead — small objects carrying stories far older than the roads leading to them.
Sights and Sounds
From Rejection to Reinvention: How Ghana Made Wax Print Its Identity
It hangs in wardrobes, dominates celebrations, and wraps generations in colour and meaning. Yet the story of African wax print begins far from the continent it now so powerfully represents.
In the 19th century, Dutch merchants stationed in present-day Indonesia encountered batik, a traditional wax-resist dyeing technique painstakingly crafted by local artisans.
Intrigued by its beauty, they attempted to industrialise it—producing machine-made imitations intended for the Indonesian market. But the plan faltered.
The fabrics lacked something intangible. The Indonesians rejected them, sensing the absence of authenticity, of craft, of what many would simply call “soul.”
Faced with failure, the Dutch turned elsewhere. Their trade routes already stretched along the West African coast, and it was there—almost by accident—that wax print found a new home.
In what is now Ghana, the reception was entirely different.
Unlike in Indonesia, where tradition guarded the integrity of batik, West African traders and consumers approached the fabric with openness—and imagination. The prints were adopted, but not passively. Instead, they were reinterpreted, reshaped, and ultimately transformed into something entirely new.
At the heart of this transformation were Ghanaian market women, particularly those trading in bustling commercial hubs like Makola Market in Accra. While European manufacturers assigned the fabrics nothing more than reference numbers, these women gave them names—names that carried stories, social commentary, humour, and cultural wisdom.
A pattern was no longer just a design; it became a message.
Through this act of naming, the cloth evolved. Colours took on symbolic meaning. Patterns began to reflect proverbs, relationships, aspirations, and even subtle forms of communication within communities. Over time, what began as a foreign product was infused with local identity, turning wax print into a cultural language in its own right.
This organic process of cultural ownership blurred the fabric’s origins. What mattered was not where it came from, but what it had become.
Today, wax print is synonymous with African identity on the global stage. It is worn at weddings, funerals, naming ceremonies, and increasingly on international runways. For many, it represents heritage, pride, and continuity. Yet beneath its vibrant surface lies a layered history of trade, rejection, adaptation, and reinvention.
Ghana’s role in that journey is both pivotal and profound.
The country did not invent wax print. It did something arguably more powerful—it gave it meaning. By embedding stories into fabric, Ghanaian traders and consumers transformed a commercial product into a cultural emblem.
In the end, wax print is not just about where it started. It is about who claimed it, shaped it, and brought it to life.
Sights and Sounds
Dust Trails and Wild Horizons: Quad Biking Through Ghana’s Shai Hills
The first thing you notice at Shai Hills Resource Reserve is the silence — not the empty kind, but the living hush of open savannah broken by rustling grass, bird calls, and the distant rumble of quad bike engines climbing rocky terrain. Then the dust rises.
A rider speeds across a winding trail, weaving between ancient boulders and acacia trees as the late morning sun casts gold across the plains.
Less than two hours from Accra, Shai Hills offers one of Ghana’s most thrilling outdoor experiences, where wildlife, history, and adrenaline collide.
Quad biking has quickly become one of the reserve’s biggest attractions, drawing everyone from weekend adventurers and couples to international travelers searching for something beyond the beach resorts and city nightlife.
Riding Through History and Wilderness
The landscape feels cinematic. Wide grasslands stretch toward rugged hills dotted with caves once inhabited by the Shai people before colonial-era displacement in the late nineteenth century.
Along the trails, riders pass towering rock formations, grazing antelope, and the occasional troop of baboons perched watchfully along the roadside.
Quad biking here is not simply about speed. It is about immersion. The bikes carry visitors through dusty tracks scented with dry earth and wild shrubs while warm wind rushes against the skin.
Some trails snake through flatter terrain suited for beginners, while steeper rocky paths offer experienced riders a more demanding ride.
Guides often pause at scenic viewpoints overlooking the reserve, where visitors can spot zebras moving quietly through the grasslands or admire the dramatic outline of the hills against Ghana’s expansive sky.
Many tours also include visits to the famous caves, hiking stops, and photo breaks that have made Shai Hills a favourite for travel photographers and content creators.
@_amirah.x_ Will you try quad biking? 😁 #fyp ♬ original sound – ᴀᴍɪʀᴀ👑❤️ | ᴅɪɢɪᴛᴀʟ ᴄʀᴇᴀᴛᴏʀ
The reserve’s location also makes it easy to combine with nearby attractions such as the Akosombo Dam or a relaxed riverside escape along the Volta Lake area.
Why Travelers Keep Returning
What makes quad biking at Shai Hills memorable is the contrast. One moment feels intensely wild — engines roaring through dusty wilderness — and the next is unexpectedly peaceful, with only the sound of wind moving through tall grass beneath a vast African sky.
For Ghanaians, it offers a fresh way to reconnect with landscapes often overlooked in everyday life. For international visitors, it reveals a side of Ghana rarely captured in travel brochures: adventurous, untamed, and deeply tied to history.
By the time the ride ends, riders are usually coated in dust, grinning widely, and already planning a return trip.
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