Zanzibar Spice Tour 
  
  
    
      
 Without a guide, you'll never find nutmeg sitting on the forest floor or think to peel the bark off of a cinnamon tree but these are some of the fun things to do on Spice tour.   
    
    
      
        
          
            
              
                
                  
                    Almost like a big Easter egg hunt, visitors go from plantation to    plantation and from plant to plant trying to find the spice within. A   guide may  use a knife to carve off a root or branch or bark and then   ask you to smell or  taste it to guess what it is. Use caution with the   bright colored ones because  turmeric can leave a stain on clothes that   will last a lifetime. Nutmeg grows  on a tree and is sort of the pit of a   fruit that looks somewhat like an apple.  The nutmeg trees are huge and   the under-forest is dark. Vanilla is a vine that  grows on large trees   and cardamom seeds grow at the base of large,  ginger-cousin light green   plant that has shoots or runners from which the seeds  are picked.   Cinnamon leaves are good for chewing and pepper is hot, green and  fresh   tasting before it is dried and ground to become black pepper. The   guides  may offer you a green coconut while you're on the tour and   they're very good.  Don't expect a Pina Colada, green coconuts don't   have sweet milk – it's more  like subtly flavored water – and the meat   is delicious. All along the tour  there are kiosks where tourists can   buy packaged spices including the  following: turmeric, tandoori,   vanilla beans and extract, masala, hot chilies,  black pepper (ground or   whole), cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon sticks or powder,  saffron (not   locally grown but affordable), ginger, and others. Tours can be    expensive so shop around or ask a reputable hotel to set up the guide   and  driver.