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Sweat, Salt, and Shutter Clicks: My Messy Week in Cotonou

@Grace Miller3/2/2026blog
Sweat, Salt, and Shutter Clicks: My Messy Week in Cotonou

i'm crouched under a leaking tarp in cotonou market, camera fogging up like my brain after three hours of sleep. the air is thick enough to chew, you can taste salt and diesel and grilled plantains all at once. i just checked my phone and the weather app screams 28.9 degrees celsius but feels like a brutal 35.11 - yep, my shirt is already plastered to my back and the humidity gauge says 83 percent. my 35mm lens is fogging like a drunk’s breath, and i’m pretty sure my sensor has a permanent watermark now.

somewhere between the piles of secondhand jeans and the piles of yams, i lifted my camera and shot a few frames of a woman in a lime green boubou, her smile cutting through the heat haze. i’m trying to capture the rhythm of this place: the call to prayer from the big white mosque near the port mixing with the blare of delivery trucks, the constant shuffle of feet on dust. i heard someone whisper, ā€˜the light here at five o’clock is magic, it turns the whole city golden.’ i’m still hunting that.

i dropped my camera strap and fumbled with my map - seriously, who uses paper maps? - before remembering i could just embed google right here. hold on, let’s get oriented:


yeah, that’s the spot. the map shows the lagoon, the road to the airport, and the maze of neighborhoods that look like spilled ink from above. i love how from up high the city looks like a circuit board, all tangled wires and blinking lights.

the weather, man. it’s not just hot, it’s oppressive. i’m from the pacific northwest where ā€˜humid’ means a light drizzle. here, the air presses down like a wet blanket. i read a local weather blog that said the pressure is 1008 hpa, ground level 1006 - i have no idea what that means but it sounds important. i just know that every time i step outside my skin becomes a slip-n-slide for sweat. someone told me that the ā€˜harmattan’ winds will blow in december and cut through the mugginess, but right now it’s like living in a sauna with a view of the atlantic.

if the city’s chaos starts to feel too much, a short drive can land you somewhere completely different. i’m thinking of porto-novo, the capital, maybe thirty minutes east, with its colonial buildings and the bizarre ouvriƧo museum. or ouidah, the slave-trade town, with its python temple and voodoo shrines - i heard a rumor that there’s a ceremony every full moon that even tourists can watch if you bring enough respect (and cash). and if you cross the border into togo, lomé’s beach bars are a whole other vibe. the point is, you’re not stuck.

i’ve been trying to find decent food that won’t send me running for the bathroom. i scrolled through yelp and saw a place called ā€˜le nappier’ with a 4.5 rating - probably because they have air conditioning and ceviche. i also read a tripadvisor thread where someone swore by the ā€˜agollo grill’ for the best grilled fish, but warned that the line starts at 4 pm and you need to be ready to fight for a stool. the local advice i got from a taxi driver was: ā€˜if you see a crowd, it’s good; if it’s empty, run.’ i guess that applies to food as well as nightlife.

speaking of crowds, i walked through the dantokpa market again and eventually found myself in front of a tiny stall selling refurbished film cameras. the guy, alain, had a leica m3 in decent shape for 150 dollars - i almost bought it but my bank account screamed treason. i did get a few shots with my phone though, trying to capture the colors without drawing too much attention. i’m not sure i succeeded; a kid pointed at my lens and laughed, then asked for money. i gave him a few coins and he ran off shouting ā€˜white man with money!’ - i guess that’s my nickname now.

let me drop a couple of photos from the street. this first one is a typical row of buildings, laundry hanging, motos parked haphazardly:

a row of buildings on the side of a street


and this aerial shot (someone posted it on a local facebook group) shows how the city sprawls under a leaden sky:

aerial view of city buildings under cloudy sky during daytime


finally, this portrait i stumbled upon while wandering near the port - a man in a crisp green and yellow shirt standing by a wooden house, looking like he owns the whole neighborhood:

man in green and yellow dress shirt standing near brown wooden house during daytime


all these images scream ā€˜cotton colors’, as my friend would say. the palette is rust, ochre, deep blue, the occasional burst of neon from a sign. i’m trying to edit them later, but my laptop battery died twice already because the power outlet in my guesthouse is as reliable as a politician’s promise.

i guess i should wrap this up before my eyes close on their own. i’m still not sure what i’m doing here, but i’m glad i came. if you ever get the chance to wander the streets of cotonou with a camera (or just your eyes), do it. just bring extra deodorant, a hat, and maybe a backup battery. the city will reward you with moments that feel stolen from a dream - gritty, raw, and oddly beautiful.

before i forget, here are a few links that helped me navigate the madness: TripAdvisor’s Cotonou forum for real-time gossip, Yelp’s guide to Cotonou eats - stomachs beware, and Cotonou Connect - the local digital hangout.

if you need more, just ask the guy selling phone credits at the corner; he knows everything.

that’s it for now. i’m off to chase that five‑o’clock light before the rain hits.


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About the author: Grace Miller

Student of life, taking notes for everyone else.

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