29 September 2009 - Stellenbosch, South Africa

Dear All,

Apologies if the spelling in this post is rather worse than usual. Duncan and I have just returned from a wine tour of the Stellenbosch winelands, taking in four wineries, a cheese tasting, and a rather super lunch. We left Hermanus a day earlier than planned, having seen lots of whales (although they refused to pose for Duncan’s camera).

From Hermanus, we drove to Betty’s Bay, a Cape Town holiday resort in the same model of tasteless architecture we have seen throughout the Cape and named after the developer’s daughter. Far more interesting, however, was the colony of African, or Jackass, Penguins that live and breed on Stony Point, the sight of a former whaling station. Like the puffins of the Farne Islands, these birds surprised me on two counts: they burrow and, at around two feet tall, are a little smaller than I expected. I think this is because most pictures one sees of penguins contain only ice, snow and… other penguins, making scale a bit of an issue. However, their rather petite appearance did not detract from the enormous hilarity of these flightless birds – I was nearly as excited about them as I was about the ostriches. Duncan restrained me from any attempts at riding them.

Stony Point, it turns out, is also home to another burrowing creature – the rock hyrax, a giant guinea pig like animal which in fact is no rodent but, bizarrely, one of the closest living relatives of elephants. They have immense rock climbing prowess and are closely related to another amusing furball – the tree hyrax. They grow to a podgy two and a bit feet long and – Dad will like this – live in herds of about 70 all over Africa, notably, atop Table Mountain. The combination of dwarf of penguins and giant guinea pigs was too much for me, as much to Duncan’s embarrassment, I dissolved into fits of giggle every time a penguin waddled down the boardwalk, tried to go for a swim (but got splashed by waves and reconsidered), or jostled for position. I was far more excited than the tribes of children whose parents obviously thought they wanted to see the penguins.

Having visited the penguins, we wound our way along the coast, turning away from Walker Bay and its whales to False Bay, which is bordered on its western side by the Cape Peninsula. It was a fabulously clear sky, so across the vibrant blue and green water, we could make out the peninsula and the Cape of Good Hope. An absolutely stunning drive, equally as good as our Garden Route jaunts, brought us back to the N2 briefly before turning further north towards Stellenbosch. We wound our way through a mix of lush, green farmland and middle class suburbia for the remainder of the approach, the large number of townships of the Transkei now firmly behind us.

Stellenbosch, like so many of the towns we have come through, is a very pleasant and highly agreeable place to potter round, the pavements heaving with the umbrellas of pavement cafes and brightly coloured wares of curio stalls. Like Grahamstown, to which it feels a little similar, it is home to a large university, housed in a serious of immaculate, elegant white buildings near the town centre. I’m shocked by the sheer size of Stellenbosch University, which is home to some 22,000 students in a town less than half the size of York (just 90,000 before students).

Stellenbosch is also the centre of South Africa’s original wine route, something the ‘Stumble Inn’, the hostel in town, capitalises on with its ‘Easy Rider’ wine tours. A minibus ferried us between four farms and to Franschhoek, the culinary capital of South Africa, for lunch – the big draw of course being the sheer convenience, as even with our own transport, wine and driving don’t mix! My favourite was Fairview, a vineyard with an awful lot of goats. Consequently, they make some rather good cheese, the labels of which all bear a tower – the farm has a tower, which the goats climb up. They make some lovely wine too, which they serve up in a lovely tasting room, so I was in a very merry (lovely?) place with a glass of sticky-sweet red desert wine in one hand and a creamy blue cheese speared on a toothpick in the other. A thoroughly, thoroughly enjoyable day. Hic.

Tomorrow – the Mother City. Cape Town here we come. We’re nearly there. We give the car back the day after tomorrow and fly home in just eight days. It will be an odd feeling to arrive in Cape Town tomorrow.

Love to All xxx

27 September 2009 - Hermanus, South Africa

Dear All,

From the Ostrich Capital of the World to Hermanus, the Whale Capital of at least South Africa. We have just arrived in Hermanus, and discovered that quite apart from the driving rain, the entire town has ground to a halt due to a whale festival. We got whale-laid by closed roads and heavy traffic and were thoroughly fed up by the whole whale thing by the time we got to the hostel. Hopefully tomorrow it won’t be raining and we can have a whale of a time.

After our ostrich riding exploits, we took things at a calmer pace and made for the Cango Caves, home of the biggest stalagtite formations in the world, tenth most popular tourist attraction in South Africa, and during the sixties, host to live music concerts, multi-coloured lighting and piped music. Part of me wishes it was still like that. Having decided it would be a good idea to visit on Heritage Day, we were herded into the caves with five hundred school children. Having opted to do the ‘adventure tour’, we thankfully split from the vast numbers of children and continued on our way with just twenty odd people in our group, ready to undertake ‘the only caving adventure in the world that requires on equiptment’. Having dispensed with the school children, we wiggled through some quite tight tunnels, tiger crawled under low ceilings, and clambered up chimneys. We discovered that in place of the school children, we had several young British and American guys, who were being big girls. They had to take their flip flops off (why are you wearing flip flops in the first place, fools?) and consequently complained about the ‘dirty water’ they were standing in and the small holes they had to squeeze through. Come on boys, really. I can do this, and I’m probably bigger than you and have appendages. Man up.

The Caves themselves were really very impressive, with massive, massive chambers, one of which could hold 2,000 people seated, back in the days that concerts were held there. The flow stone and stalagtite/mite formations were indeed bigger than any I have seen in the very many caves that Geography field trips have lead me down, and we were shown some formations I have never even heard of, let alone seen in caves – so unusual were they that I have clean forgotten their name.

Having wriggled free of the caves, I couldn’t find any walks to take Duncan on so I thought it would be a good idea to take him for a very long drive down a dirt road that amounted to a boulder field to tiny Calitzdorp, so that we could visit a vineyard. We drove into the carpark of one, found ourselves to be the only visitors, took a look at our scruffy attire (it’s done us since Nairobi…) and promptly drove away. We did stop for a drink (there were no ice creams to be found, a shame as we were in the middle of the roasting hot, arid Karoo), but our little excursion was essentially ‘fruitless’. Boom boom.

From Oudtshoorn we drove to Montagu along Route 62, an inland, less touristy ‘Garden Route’ that took us through (more) breathtaking scenery first to Barrydale, a pretty Little Karoo dorp nestled in a green bowl amongst dry, yellow hills, and followed signs to The Blue Cow cafe, where we enjoyed superb milkshakes made from fresh milk from the farm. Better still, the owner saw us watching the ducks and their large brood of ducklings, and presented us with a slice of bread with which to feed them. Brilliant.

Montagu, like Barrydale and the countless other charming small towns Route 62 meanders its way through, is a pretty, Afrikaans dominated town, stuffed with farm stalls, cafes and restaurants all vying to serve you an array of deliciously fattening foods and local wine. We spent two nights at De Bos Guest Farm, a working farm run by climbers with camping, dorms and rooms. Although thankfully not an old gaol, this dorm also had a twist – it was housed in the former stable. Except that it still was a stable, really… in that it had pens with stable doors in, each pen containing two beds. There were ponies in the padock, a flock of guinea fowl running around, a very fat labrador, and, best of all – three ostriches. A throughly relaxing two nights followed, with pretty drives through valleys and mountain passes to Robertson and the tiny village of McGregor, home to McGregor wines.

We drove a circuitous route to Hermanus today, so that we could take in Cape Agulhas, the southernmost tip of the African continent, en route. This was the closest we have come to ‘tick box tourism’ – but I like to think that it is more than allowed, as we have come an awful long way over land to get here. The sky was as dramatically grey as one might hope for such a famed ship wreck point, and neither the Atlantic nor the Indian Ocean looked particularly happy to be meeting each other. As is to be expected, the place was crawling with tourists, so we took our photos and were on our way just as the first rain drops fell.

Tomorrow, we will be exploring the Whale Coast, looking for whales (I might be feeling a little kinder towards them tomorrow), and hopefully, sampling beer at a local microbrewery and tasting cheese and a nearby cheese farm. Whales, cheese, and beer.

Love to All xxx

23 September 2009 - Oudtshoorn, Ostrich Capital of the World, South Africa

Dear All,

Success!! I have stood on an ostrich egg and succesfully sat on and ridden an ostrich. Duncan has done all of these things too, with slightly less enthusiasm than me (not difficult).

Nearly as soon as the Garden Route began, it was over – we have turned off the N2 at George and headed into the Little Karoo, to Oudtshoorn, the Ostrich Capital of the World. We drove through Wilderness, with the intention of stopping at the beach – we soon passed through finding that far from its name, Wilderness is a collection of Western Cape ugly houses either side of the N2, and a beautiful beach they charge you R10 to get onto. We hurried on to see the ostriches. Well, we hurried on for me to see the ostriches.

I saw the first signs for ostrich show farms and my excitement mounted. I searched the dusty middle distance for a glimpse of a two metre tall bird, soaking up the wild-west feel of the arid karoo’s scrub backed by silhouetted mountains, and wandering if some of the darker bushes were ostriches in cunning disguise. As we got closer, a field of bushes turned out to be the first field of ostriches, and the final 20kms into Oudsthoorn were an ostrich-fancier’s dream.

We made it to our hostel by midday, having sped through Wilderness (no more walks for Duncan today). We were in luck – we could visit an ostrich farm in the afternoon. I clap my hands in glee and Duncan looks a little suspicious. He sighs and agrees to go. As we pull into Safari Ostrich Farm’s car park, Duncan claps eyes on a large coach.
“You see the kind of place you’ve brought me to Trish, this is the kind of place coaches come”
True enough, the wonderfully tacky gift shop, full of multicoloured ostrich feathers, highly decorated ostrich eggs and a rainbow of ostrich leather products, was equally full of elderly tourists in safari suits buying said products. The tour began.

We were shown a short, informative video. We were told about the free range breeding on the farm, and that male ostriches build nests in the shade, but if the female doesn’t like it, he has to build another one. We were shown an entire tanned ostrich hide.  We got to stand on ostrich eggs and saw other species of large birds – emus and Zimbabwean ostriches, that grow up to 2.7m tall. Finally – the moment arrived. The riding of the ostriches. Our guide asked if we both wanted to ride. Oh yes, I certainly did. Duncan hesitated, so I answered for him. Duncan of course wanted to ride an ostrich. We fill in indemnity forms, having learnt earlier that due to their 7cm long nails, a kick from an ostrich can tear your chest open.

I clamber on. In case you’re wandering, you have to wrap your legs round the bird’s chest, with it’s wings over your legs, and hold on to its wings, whilst leaning back. The bird then runs around the enclosure at what certainly felt like break neck speed (ostriches can reach 80km an hour and sustain it for several kms). I loved it. I apparently shrieked for the entire ride. You would too if you were clinging to the back of a two metre bird. Better was still to come – it was Duncan’s turn. Duncan is still suspicious. My bird had been going rather fast. He is helped on and told to lean back more – a difficult thing to do when you are very far from relaxed. Duncan’s bird didn’t follow the usual route round the edge of the enclosure. Duncan’s face was a picture and I couldn’t stop laughing, particularly when he half fell, half climbed off the thing. Tears were rolling down my cheeks as his legs were shaking from the adrenaline. Don’t worry Helen, Keith, Gill, Steve, Joe, Alex, Jack… I have pictures of Duncan and the ostrich.

Better still, we got certificates to say we had ridden an ostrich. I’m going to frame mine.

Love to All xxx

22 September 2009 - Knysna (Again!), South Africa

Dear All,

Phew! As you might guess, this being my second post of the day, South Africa is keeping me very busy! Today has been wonderfully exhausting, between marching through forest, leaning over cliffs and browsing bookshops. I write this on my bed ‘recovering’ from both the day’s activities and an excellent meal; just to make a good day better, Duncan took me out for dinner at a superb restaurant on the waterfront, and I am stuffed full of camembert, sun dried tomatoes and South African wine!!

Our forest walk was a little more strenuous than yesterday’s (and perhaps a little more than either of us were expecting…). We dawdled over the first few kilometres (downhill) and stormed the remainder (uphill), all over thick, damp and slippy leaf litter that carpets the dense woodland. We had been told to follow Route 2 on the map for the ‘White Elephant’ walk, so I assigned Duncan the map and sauntered off in the direction of the white elephant sign. Suddenly, the signs begin to point in the opposite direction and Duncan looks at the map, confused. The sheer density of the forest limits any views and is surprisingly disorientating. We decide to walk the route in reverse. We happen accross a road; it is nowhere to be found on Route 2. Duncan begins to get frustrated with the map. We cross a river – again, no sign. Duncan gets angry with the map.  I keep following the white elephant. In his frustration, Duncan picks up the pace. A lot. I am practically jogging as we climb to the carpark, national parks office and tea room. The tea room is shut. There will be no ice cream. It is 2om and Duncan has been misled by a map, walked a rather long way, and deprived of an ice cream. We return to town promptly. We later discovered that white elephants mark route 3, not 2. Silly park ranger.

My legs twinged as I climbed out the car and began to wander round town. Walking through forest is seemingly a different matter to hills and roads, as I can still feel the effects of a tiddling 9km!

Knysna is a lovely small town, a posh sea side resort (it’s knys, na?) with an attractive waterfront lined with restaurants, small shops (stripey clothing ahoy!), and an adjoining marina, full of big catamarans. Sadly, the islands in the lagoon have been filled with more enormous, ugly houses – mock castles with turrets and mediterranean villas, painted everything from beige to terracotta, with worse in between. Fortunatley, the houses did not detract too much from the impressive view from the head – back over the lagoon and town, over to the western head, down a long way to black rocks and surf, and out to dolphins frolicking in the Indian Ocean.

Dinner, at 34 South on the waterfront, was really something special. A cafe-cum-restaurant-cum-shop-cum-fishmonger-cum-bar-cum-deli-sort-of, you can order goodies like olives, tabbouleh, and dolmades by the 100grms from the deli, which are served tapas-style with homemade bread, salad and oil + vinegar. Everything is either homemade or locally sourced, and their range of fresh fish, oysters and other seafood quite something. Our hot camembert on sundried tomatoes and rye bread with avocado was rich and delicious, and the attractive decor (nautical stripes and bench seats) and excellent service made the whole evening really splendid. A wonderful finish to the day.

Tomorrow – Oudtshoorn! Ostriches! Feather Barons!

Love to All xxx

22 September 2009 - Knysna, South Africa

Dear All,

The Garden Route has begun in earnest. Not taken with Jeffrey’s Bay’s hideous collection of ugly houses and banal urban sprawl, we packed up and headed for Knysna, not 200km down the coast. The map has exploded into a rash of red triangles marking tourist attractions, bordered by the green blocks of national parks and nature reserves, and the broad open spaces of the Eastern Cape has disappeared; forests and plantations now hem either side of the 2 as we strike into the Western Cape and onto the Garden Route.

For this drive more than any other (thus far), I am very glad we have the car, as we took all day over the drive, taking long stops whenever we fancied. The Rough Guide is indeed correct – you need your own transport to get the most out of the Garden Route; being hemmed in by forests, you see very little from the main road. Thatsaaid, the first of our leisurely stops was bang on the main road, at what I am quite ready to believe is South Africa’s most beautifully situated service station. The Total services sit atop the western side of an enourmous gorge, which drops dramatically down steep slopes thick with glossy green vegetation to Storms River, which rushes under an attractive 1950s arch bridge that spans the gorge. Not content with having just driven over the bridge, we parked up and walked to the middle, from where we could see the river, tiny, hundreds of feet below us, gurgling towards the sea. My legs turned to jelly a little bit.

Further on, we turned off the N2 towards Nature’s Valley, a tiny village and nature reserve inside Tsitsikamma National Park, where sevral rivers meet the sea. Distracting Duncan with an ice cream, I bought a map and enquired about short walks. We pottered along the boardwalk to the stunningly beautiful beach and set off on an hour-and-a-half’s walk. It had somehow ’slipped’ my mind to tell Duncan how long the walk was.

The path turned off the beach into dune woodland, where the dappled light and hanging branches were such that I expected to happen accross a troop of nymphs or a few wandering fairies. The path turned and went up a few steps. It turned again and went up a few more. Several times. Another turn and a lot of steps come into view. I begin to regret running up the first few and Duncan suggests we’re on the wrong path. I assure him it’s an adventure and, half-convinced, we continue. A pause to take in panoramic views of the rocky headland, beach and village refreshes us and the remainder of the stiff climb seems easier. We skip down the descent and find ourselves standing on the riverbed of Salt River, right at its mouth. There is a slight problem – the tide is nearly in and our route back along the shore obscured. Much clambering ensues and we are glad to arrive back on the beach, exhilerated and pleseantly tired. I see from my watch we have been walking for an hour and a half and break it to Duncan that I had been anticipating this.

He rejects my offer of another ice cream.

We continued along the coast and stopped at Plettenberg Bay to buy groceries and oggle some more hideous houses. The weather closes in as we drove the final kilometres to Knysna, the road lined with curio stalls, potteries, and farm shops, interspersed with brown ‘attraction’ signs at regular intervals. The road to Knysna was perhaps the most beaten path yet!

I am taking Duncan on another walk today – 9kms through Knysna forest, dense indiginous woodland that is reputedly home to Knysna’s last remaining elephants – all 3 of them. This afternoon, we plan on pottering round town and driving to the eastern head – Knysna is built around a lagoon behind a breach in the cliff shoreline, the two heads providing views. We move on to Oudsthorn tomorrow, where I plan to ride an ostrich.

Love to All xxx

20 September 2009 - Jeffrey’s Bay, South Africa

Dear All,

I’m sure you will be pleased to hear that Duncan and I have escaped both the hippy commune in Port St Johns and a Grahamstown gaol. We have fled hundreds of miles through the Eastern Cape, past East London and Port Elizabeth, and landed in Jeffrey’s Bay, the start of the Sunshine Coast, a nudge away from the Garden Route. The landscape along the way has been uniformly jaw dropping, as we follow the now very familiar N2 through arid bush, down lush green hillsides, and over wonderfully named rivers – the ‘Great Fish’ is a personal favourite. It is fed by a tributary: the ‘Little Fish’.

Between driving through gorgeous, rolling countryside around Port St Johns, exploring the beach, and avoiding hippies, I took it upon myself to direct Duncan up to the airstrip. Atop a cliff (one of the Gates of St John), I had read that it affords magnificent views over the river, town and sea. Due to a bizarre one way systen combined with roads leading nowhere, we were on gravel before I’d even directed Duncan up the steep, steep paved road.
“We’re looking for a turning to the right coming up…”
“Are you sure? Seeing as turning right would mean turning off the cliff
“Mrmm. I think it must turn away from the edge in a minute…”
Our right turn was a dirt path. We followed it for someway before turning, as Duncan’s palms were sweating and some Ministry of Works employees (also atop the cliff) were looking at us funny. Although we never quite made it to the airstrip (I think the map is lying), we did get some fabulous views of Port St Johns, the nearby lagoon, and the frilly white surf of the Indian Ocean breaking onto the rocky beach.

Beautiful South Africa continued to unfold beneath us as we drove to Grahamstown yesterday; the empty road and 360 degree vistas made us feel like the only two people in the world surveying our kingdom. You will be pleased to hear that our escape from gaol is totally unrelated to law-breaking or the police, but in fact the hostel we stayed in last night – Grahamstown is perhaps the only town to have a backpackers hostel housed in a former gaol. We slept in a cell covered in etched graffiti (some original… bible verses and the like…) with a great thick heavy door that you padlocked closed. It was freezing and I had to bend double to get through the doors. Duncan got a bit spooked; the creepy feeling of the place wasn’t really helped by the fact that we appeared to be the only ones staying. Cafe-style tables in a courtyard ain’t gonna hide the 12ft walls around it.

Apart from our accomodation, Grahamstown is a very, very pretty town stuffed with posh coffee shops, nice restaurants, and students (it is home to Rhodes University). We passed a very pleseant morning pottering around the quiet streets to the sound of Sunday-morning church bells, stopping for coffee and muffins before climbing back into the trusty Chico to head to J-Bay.

As today’s drive was much shorter, we stopped off en route at a wild flower reserve, with lovely grassy picnic sites surrounded by a plethora of plants. With the exception of a king protea and a few others, we had sadly arrived a little early – Spring is only just upon South Africa so the flowers weren’t in bloom.

We are in J-Bay for two nights, before moving on to Knysna on Tuesday.

Love to All xxx

17 September 2009 - Port St Johns, South Africa

Dear All,

Duncan and I appear to have landed ourselves in the middle of a hippy commune.

Like our posh safari in Liwonde, I’m not entirely sure how it happened. Whilst the guidebook did warn that the hostel runs free yoga lessons, nothing could have prepared us for the sheer range of multicoloured knitwear being sported by the collective of stoned, balding hippies (still clinging to dreadlocks) that are currently gently swaying round the bar grasping drums. Brightly coloured chalk murals on the wall assure me that “More Rain” means “More Rainbows” (some comfort, as it’s tipping it down), but I’m not so sure about “Fire, Light, Love, Faith” and “Sparkles”…

The big novelty today was having our own wheels. Our chariot is a VW ‘Chico’ – the body of an old school golf with the poshed up features and interior of a modern car. Much to Duncan’s disgust, it’s in a rather attractive shade of nail varnish blue. The roads are very good, even if livestock in the mist make you glad of good tyres and brakes. The cows here have rather large horns.

We are in Port St Johns, our first stop in the Eastern Cape, having left Durban and KwaZulu-Natal this morning. The is the ‘Wild Coast’, the former Transkei, the poorest area of the poorest region of South Africa. This was evident as soon as we turned off the N2 and began to meander our way back towards the coast, as the high-rise holiday developments of KwaZulu-Natal’s ‘Hibiscus Coast’ gave way to terraced hillsides dotted with the brightly coloured, tin-roofed houses of townships; I was quite taken with a pastel-pink and sky-blue church. Sadly, we might as well have flown here – in that our ears popped and we spent a lot of time in cloud.

The glimpes we did get, however, hinted at a raw and rugged landscape beneath the superficial layer of habitation, agriculture, and KFCs. The final winding section of road, as we at last descended from the cloud, provided us with a spectacular view of the Gates of St John, the twin flat-topped peaks that funnel the town into the Indian Ocean. Once again, the sheer scale of the landscape was impressive in itself, made all the more moodily magnificent by the dark cloud hanging just above the peaks.

We will move on in two days’ time after exploring the area a little; exploring, and avoiding tie-dyed hippies.

Peace and Love to All xxx

16 September 2009 - Durban, South Africa

Dear All,

Seeing as I blogged only yesterday, we are unsurprisingly, still in Durban. I have been on the internet four times in two days and rung home once. As you may be able to tell, I am relishing first world living.

That said, Durban managed to feel a little bit more like an ‘African city’ as we explored the centre today. We pottered up to Victoria St Market, in the Indian area of town, although the street it’s on has amusingly had it’s name changed to something less British. The map tells me it’s next to the biggest mosque in the Southern Hemisphere, which I somehow managed to not notice. The market was nice to wander round, if not what I’d expected – quiet, clean, well organised shops manned by friendly and polite shopkeepers with rather cultured accents selling all manner of beaded curios and carvings. There were spice bars here and there with their attractive powdered wares piled high and amusingly labelled; ‘Nando’s Chicken Spice’ nestled between ‘Mother-in-Law Chilli’ and ‘Gunpowder’. The smell was fabulous and I happily paused a while to exchange a few words with the shopkeeper I had just bought from:

“You just steam the biriyani rice as you would normal rice, place it over your curry and there, you have biriyani. What kind of curry are you making?”
“We’re vegetarian…”
“Mixed vegetable, that’s great, take this medium spice… you know how to make a vegetable curry? What vegetables are you using?”
“I don’t know yet…”
“Just go to the supermarket and say you want to make mixed vegetable curry”
“Ok…”
“You know how to make mixed vegetable curry?”
“Yep”
“Where are you from?”
“England”
“Lots of Asians in England. Is this your husband?”
“Yes…”
“He is very young. You are both very young. He has put the ring on your finger?”
“Yes, but my ring is at home. We’ve come from Nairobi, I didn’t want to loose it. Through Tanzania, Malawi, Mozambique.”
“Lots of Asians in Nairobi. And Mozambique? You liked Mozambique? Lots of Asians in Mozambique. You had no trouble?” … and so on. I wonder if he has a comprehensive list of those countries with ‘lots of Asians’.

A pink on red sign lured us to ‘Patel’s Vegetarian Refreshment Room’ which served ‘bunnies’ for r12 (1GBP). The smell was, again, fabulous, and the canteens of bubbling veggie curry under the glass in front of us looked hugely appealing. The smiling man behind the counter asked if we were visitors. When I replied in the affirmative, he looked slightly surprised and asked if anyone had sent us – given the quality of the food and the excellent service, they certainly deserve to come recommended by guidebooks…

The nice man bagged us up a mixture of ‘chilli bites’, a cape cuisine favourite, (to have with our mixed vegetable biriyani dinner, of course…) and we shared a ‘bunny chow’, a specifically Durban cape cuisine specialty (although we did get a hint from The Bread Shack in Tofo, Mozambique…). A half or quarter soft white loaf hollowed out and filled with possibly the best curry I’ve ever had, it’s thought the name comes from caddies at Durban Gold Course, who were known as ‘bunnies’. They didn’t have time to get to the Indian area of town for a curry at lunch, so the theory goes, so their friends brought them curry in a loaf, as there those plastic takeaway boxes were still yet to be invented. I’m not sure if this accounts for the plethora of bunny chow stalls in Durban (Bunny King is a personal favourite), but it seems as good as explanation as any.

This afternoon, between buying the mixed vegetables for the mixed vegetable curry and a road atlas (we pick up the car tomorrow), we walked down to the port, which stretches off into the distance further than the eye can see. The huge number of docked yachts is dwarfed by the shiny Port of Durban tugs that bumble about in front of rows and rows of cranes servicing the miles of huge container ships stretching out to the grey horizon. The customs and excise building is a very attractive Art Deco number, small red bricks with what I imagine is original white, rounded lettering on the facade spelling out its purpose. We had come to the waterfront to visit the BAT Centre, a collection of art studios, shops and a cafe in its own brightly coloured enclave in the port – as interesting and well done as it was, however, it paled into insignificance next to the sheer size of the port. That said, it provided a nicely raised platform from which to enjoy a drink and look out over the hundreds of ships.

This evening, I am making mixed vegetable curry, would you believe. Tomorrow, road map in hand, we head for Port St John, via Mthatha, where we will hopefully visit the Nelson Mandela Museum. Port St John will be our base for the next few days, from where we hope to visit Coffee Bay and Hole in the Wall. Duncan has also pointed out to me that the World’s Biggest Pineapple is not too far off our route, near East London, which has made me very excited. Apparently you can buy pineapple jam inside and learn a lot about pineapples.

Love to All xxx

15 September 2009 - Durban, South Africa

Dear All,

Greetings from (quite) sunny Durban, with it’s ‘golden mile’ of ‘butter coloured’ beaches – clearly nobody has told the marketeers that gold and butter are, in fact, different colours. We are actually in Durban for the second time – we arrived in South Africa several days ago and spent a night in Durban before heading north to Pietermaritzburg for risotto even better than I make it and other such phenomenal hospitality.

The minibus from Swaziland was a dream. It filled up quickly, left before being over full, and got us to Durban in brilliant time. We bombed along South Africa’s excellent roads through KwaZulu Natal and the breathtaking scenary of Zululand. Even compared to damp Swaziland, South Africa looked indesently green; the landscape had suddenly changed from the wild and rugged vistas we have come to expect to manicured fields, dotted with agricultural machinary, the road itself broken by glossy service stations.

The only hitch, regards the minibus – it arrived by the railway station, which Lonely Planet helpfully informed was ‘unsafe’ and surrounded by townships and informal settlements. Just what my nerves needed to know. We disembarked and waited for the usual mob. We weren’t mobbed. For the first time in my travels I was actually disappointed that there wasn’t a crowd of people clammering round me asking me “Where to??”. It dawned on me that this was South Africa, and the colour of my skin didn’t immediately mark me out as a foreigner. A fellow passenger took pity on us and directed us to the taxis. Sadly, the inside of the station is a mass of scaffolding and tauparlin, Durban being in the middle of a major facelift in preparation for the 2010 World Cup (to that end, we passed a fabulous new stadium right by the sea on our way into town, which is a very beautiful building). Consequently, his instructions were less than easy to follow and Duncan had to manouever me through the construction site maze making soothing comments. Here I was, arrived in a South African city (in the middle of a township, as far as I know), and I couldn’t find a taxi. Nightmare.

Thankfully, Duncan found a taxi and put me in it. I couldn’t see hide, hare nor rabbit of an informal settlement in the vicinity – Lonely Planet, being two years out of date, fails to take account of the city’s facelift. I rather suspect there are very few townships left in the eyeline of a football fan – the railway station being the centre of the transport network, those surrounding it were probably the first to go. Crisis averted. However, the panic was a valuble introduction to South African public transport; most affluent South Africans have cars, meaning the trusty minibuses that have ferried us about from Nairobi down serve only poorer South Africans. They thus leave from and arrive in less affluent areas – townships and informal settlements. Something to avoid in future.

The hostel proved slightly less helpful than we might have hoped:
“What’s the best way to get to Pietermaritzburg from here?”
“Well, I normally drive.”
“By public transport?”
“Ermm… you could get a shuttle?”
“Where do they leave from?”
“They’ll pick you up here.”
She showed me a price list. R350. Each. That’s close to 30GBP per person – an insane amount of money considering our daily budget is just 15-20GBP. I smiled politely and wandered off to make alternative arrangements.

We got a minibus to Pietermartizburg and terrified the Becks in the process. Minibuses here have wonderful tarmaced roads to drive on, meaning they can get up quite a speed (painfully slow journeys in Mozambique spring to mind), whilst traffic is a lot heavier than other countries we have have been in. The accident record is horrific as a result. More reasons to avoid South African minibuses. That said, they are far better maintained than others we have caught and don’t cram quite as many people in – Duncan didn’t end up with a Mama on each knee.

The Becks were truly wonderful hosts – hospitality itself. Clean clothes, soft beds, hot water, yummy food and good company would have made for a knock-out combination, even before a chauffered tour of the area and loan of a vehicle (!!) were factored into the equation.  The world is ammusingly small – Simon Beck, my second cousin once removed with whom we were staying (come on, keep up…) is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Pietermaritzburg and knows semingly half the York department (including Duncan’s Philosophy of Mind lecturer…), having visited York 10 years ago.  I had no idea of the Philosophy ‘connection’ until Simon was driving us past the university pointing out the Philosophy deparment. “Well, we’re studying….”

We visited Howick Falls and were taken aback by the sheer scale of the landscape before soaking up the view from World’s View, looking out over Pietermaritzburg, nestled in its insulating bowl, to the Valley of 1000 Hills and, in the very hazy distance, the Drakensburg. We even borrowed the Becks’ car and drove ourselves down the Valley of 1000 Hills one afternoon, stopping to take in more fabulous Zululand scenary. I got lots of lovely views whilst Duncan negotiated the  winding Route 103 that took us up hill and down dale. There are advantages to leaving your driving license at home.

The Becks were so horrified by our mode of arrival (and so endlessly kind…) Simon drove us right to the door of our hostel here in Durban. On their suggestion, we have made arrangement to hire a car to take us the rest of the way to Cape Town. We are terribley excited by the prospect of buying a road atlas tomorrow, and pick the car up on Thursday for a fortnight. Having our own ‘wheels’ will be highly convenient – self catering will be easier, and we can get off the Baz Bus route and visit the Karoo, Montagu, a town with a name I can’t pronounce that is the ‘Ostrich Feather Capital of the World’ (full of ‘feather palaces’ built by ‘feather barons’), and I can become a thoroughly, thoroughly lazy backpacker. ‘Win’, as my Dad would say.

We have been away ten weeks tomorrow – we’ll be home in just over three!!

Love to All xxx

10 September 2009 - Manzini, Swaziland

Dear All,

We crossed the border into Swaziland today and in many ways, into a different world. Partly, this feeling is down to the weather – we pulled on our jumpers at the border, surprised by drizzle, and watched the stunning hills and plateaus of Swaziland timidly reveal themselves from beneath a thick, grey cape of low, dense cloud over the 70 odd kilometres to Manzini.

This border crossing felt further from Zobue, where we left Malawi, than even the many miles we have covered since would suggest. With no forms to fill in, we simply handed our passports to an official in civilian clothing who, despite being interrupted in the middle of a tense solitaire game on his computer, greeted us (in a slightly bemused fashion – British passports are rarely seen at this border), stamped our passports and wished us a nice stay. Coming out of the toilet, I discovered the minibus, Duncan (and my passport!!) where not where I left them. Of course, this was the point an official appeared, wanting to see my passport.

“My passport is with my ‘husband’! He was here with the bus, but…” I indicated the now empty stretch of tarmac.
“Oh!” said the offical, “Never mind, you can go”
“Thank you!” I breathe, relieved.
“Where are you from?”
“England”
“OK, it doesn’t matter.”

Top tips for would be illegal immigrants to Swaziland – ‘lose’ a ‘husband’ and tell them you’re British.

A little further down the road, we are pulled over at an army roadblock. Gone is the pomp of Mozambican uniforms, as we disembark the minibus a form a line in front of a group of soldiers in smart DPM S94, DMS combat boots (with trousers bloused) and, at last, berets in a mute navy (as opposed to fire-engine red as favoured further north), moulded British-style, with the silly ribbon bits snipped off the back. At least half the group, by now searching the Mozambicans’ bags, were wearing Grandpa-style moustaches. I hand my passport over.

“Patricia. Patricia Hazel” the soldier says, taking particular care over the C.
“Yes…”
“A lovely name” he smiles, handing the passport back and not searching my bag.
“Thank you” I respond, happily bemused, as another soldier enquires how I enjoyed my stay in Mozambique, and welcomes me to Swaziland, a “peaceful” country. Although this, I’m sure, was a Swazi dig at Mozambique, Lonely Planet makes a fair point. The King of Swaziland has 13 wives and over 200 siblings (bigger even than Duncan’s family!), meaning remaining ‘peaceful’ is the national interest – in tiny Swaziland those figures must make everyone royalty.

Swaziland Backpackers is also a far cry from even the swisher hostels of further north. So close to South Africa, hot water is not only de rigeur but isn’t heated by a wood fire under the tank, whilst the very well appointed guest kitchen is furnished with an electric kettle and toaster. I am trying my hardest to resist the bright-red plastic bathroom’s decadent lure; it contains a bath, the first thing I have promised myself on my return home.

We pottered into town to gather to necessary avacado-sandwich-making components for breakfast and found ourselves amazed by the vast array of brightly coloured tupperware for sale in Shoprite, a large South African chain. In spite of such kitchen luxuries, Manzini bears a striking resemblence to Kettering or Wrexham, with slightly more pineapples, slightly fewer tracksuits, but around the same number of KFCs. As disparaging as I sound, however, Manzini presents quite a culture shock – the level of development is startling, even in comparison to Maputo’s ‘bright lights’.

Sadly there were people in the hostel on our return. The culture shock became total. Swaziland Backpackers is a ‘Baz Bus’ stop – a hop on, hop off bus service that ferries backpackers from one hostel to another round South Africa. It sounds brilliant in theory, ploughing along routes difficult to reach by public transport. Worse luck, then, that it appears to be populated by Round-the-World ticket holders that are only vaguely aware what country they’re in. I may be being snobby, but having picked my jaw up off the floor I tried my hardest to listen earnestly to the heartfelt complaints of a Liverpudlian with bright red hair who, having meant to be “going through some mountains” (the Drakensberg…) had got off in the wrong place and found herself in Swaziland. Here, she was having to pay for all her own quad-biking, so was seeking a refund for the whole ticket from her travel agent. Worse still, she and her friend might need a taxi to get them back to Jo’burg, as they hadn’t paid for a the Swaziland section of the ticket. I bit my tongue and didn’t mention public transport.

Tomorrow, we leave Swaziland – moving on hastily to take up a fabulous offer of a ‘real Sunday lunch’ from the Becks, my Mum’s second cousin and family, in Pietermaritzburg. From there we will consider our transport ‘options’… hopefully avoiding red-haired Liverpuddlians on quad bikes.

Love to All xxx

PS – to reassure all parties, Duncan and I haven’t eloped; Duncan is my ‘husband’ and not my husband. The inverted commas are silent in speech, however.