Road Trip Chronicles From Nigeria🇳🇬 To Cameroon🇨🇲 Through The Ikom Ekok Bridge|| Elomo Carol

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Elomo Carol TV

Joined: Dec 2024
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Road Trip Chronicles From Nigeria🇳🇬 To Cameroon🇨🇲 Through The Ikom Ekok Bridge|| Elomo Carol


Join Elomo Carol on an epic adventure as she journeys back to her home country of Cameroon by road! This vlog is your chance to ditch the plane and experience the ride alongside Elomo. See the beautiful (and maybe chaotic) sights of West Africa as she navigates bustling cities, charming towns, and everything in between.

Was it really cheaper…

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47 Comments

  1. Is ist safe to travel to travel the N8 to Buea ? I read a lot of bad stories about road blocks etc. Thanks for your info. I want to travel from Nigeria to Cameroon with my own car as a tourist from Europe.

  2. Thank you dear. I have learned a lot from your video and i think it will help me. I'm planning embarking on a journey to lagos as well by road. Ive never been there before. Your video has been very instructive. Thanks

  3. Ciao bella, watching from Italy, that feeling you are talking about for me is when I cross the Moungo bridge and srart seeing the palm and feeling the Tiko brees. And later on the Mutengene energy. I can relate

  4. You guys are strong! I can't travel anywhere by night in Nigeria. After 7pm, I don't leave the house or stay wherever I find myself. Also, noticed people are so trusting in Nigeria. I can't sleep in a stranger's house or welcome one in my house. Just saying..

  5. My Cameroon sisters, any Nigerian that said he/she can't here you is a thief, A YAHOO YAHOO THIEF. They just want to scam you. In Nigeria today morality is absolute zero. I am a Nigerian that's why I know. They have tried it with me whenever I visit home. In Nigeria you have to shine your eyes.

  6. Point of correction please the Mamfe people don't relate with Akwa Ibom people but Cross River state people. Even in Calabar you started your journey from we speak same language i.e (Ejagham) and share same culture with the Mamfe people. In Calabar we speak Ejagham or Qua, Efik and Efut. Ejagham and Efut people migrated from the Central Africa. You would have done a little research about the people here in Nigeria before publishing the information. Most Cameroonian from this area you mentioned share same language, name with Calabar people, Ikom, Etung, Boki and Yala people all in Cross River state, Nigeria. We share same history but I'm not going to write on that coz it's a long history. Thank you

  7. Who told you that bushfallers don’t feel at home when they arrive in Cameroon from the west? We do 100%, yes the Douala airport is terrible and it is very hot but you still get that feeling. Home is still home.
    No matter where you live out of the country, you will always have that feeling that you are not home and you will get reminded in western societies that you are a stranger. The police, public services and groups that don’t like foreigners will always try to make you feel that way from time.
    So don’t get fooled, anyone who grown up in Cameroon will always have that feeling when they set foot in Cameroon.

  8. Just stumbled across this video and i was so happy. A road i used to frequent last year from Douala to Abuja. I really wanted to document my experiences, but laziness got to me. This was an excellent narration. Thanks for this journey down memory lane.

  9. Next time when going to cameroon from Nigeria or Cameron to Nigeria, the short road is when you reach Ikom take ogoja then eboyi state to Lagos is shorter, than going through calabar that's a long journey