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Buses run daily between Lome and Kara (about 7 hours). Contact Rakieta. Buses leave at 7am from each site daily.
thumbnail|The tatas in Nadoba The Tatas in Koutammakou. About two hours north of Kara is a small village, Nadoba. Here villagers have constructed unique houses made of clay and straw. Built to fend off slave traders, the houses now serve as home to farm animals and various materials. Villagers still kill chickens on sacrificial altars outside of the houses and fill the first room with a range of fetishes. Check out the Chief Canton's Tata, but be prepared to pay a mille or two for the privilege. This is Togo's only UNESCO World Heritage Site and its best tourist attraction - though don't expect any amenities. The easiest way to get there is by rented taxi or shared taxi to Kante and then bike 25km to Nadoba.
Parc Sarakawa Wildlife resort with animals that have been almost wiped out in Togo. A guided tour on a pickup will cost you CFA 5000 per person plus 4000 for the vehicul. No elephants, but crocodiles, antelopes, water buffels and a big turtle.
At Maroc's. Owned by a German expat, the restaurant serves European and Togolese dishes at reasonable prices (~$5 per meal with a beer).
Chez Navide is also recommended if you are interested in trying the local food. Located opposite the market, dishes are served for approximately $1 per meal. Check out the degue ladies opposite the taxi station if you want to try cold yogurt with couscous.
Gites chez Noël. A modern, in nature gites with a backpackers vibe. Bit of a "European" feel with European and African meals. Triple room from 19,000 CFA, meals between 3,000 and 7,000.
Benin: When going to Benin (and crossing at Boukombé) you have so sort out your own visa stamp. There is no customs at the border. Go to the nearest police station to get your passport stamped. You also need a "laissez faire"for a vehicle, which needs to be acquired at the Duane (Ministry of Finance in Boukombé).
Travel guide from Wikivoyage (CC BY-SA 4.0)
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Kara is a city in northern Togo, situated in Kara Region, 413 km north of the capital Lomé. Kara is the capital of the Kara Region and, according to the 2010 census, had a population of 94,878. The Kara River flows through the city and is its main resource of water. The city developed from the 1970s onwards from the village originally known as Lama-Kara. Its growth was largely due to the influence of the previous Togolese head of state Gnassingbé Eyadéma; he was born in the nearby village of Pya and understood Kara's strategic position at a crossroads of two trade routes.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).