Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Buchu Bushcamp - South Africa - August 15, 2007

Danger- Wrong Side Driver

















Rafe at the Whale Spotting Beach
Pink Knees for the Ladies
Pink Knees for the Ladies
Buchu Hobbit Hut Cottages-Stick and Fibre Construction
















Interior of the Hobbit Cottage - Where's Frodo?
This is the second part of last years adventure tour of S. Africa. In the last episode I was cage diving with great white sharks (See Shark Bait - August 13th, 2007). Now for the real scary part - my first time driving on the left side of the highway.
AUGUST 14TH – Off to the Bush

At 9 AM the rental agent delivers our vehicle to the hotel. It’s a Toyota Corolla with automatic transmission! Rena, Rafe, Colleen and I are off to the bush. That is if I can quickly adapt to driving on the wrong side of the road.
I carefully edge into the left land and proceed straight ahead. The car performs erratically at first. Or perhaps it’s the driver. One left, another left, then a right. This is too easy! Oops – almost hit the curb. Gotta go easy on the right side hubcaps. Wrong way rotaries are especially hard to get used to. Luckily, South African drivers are among the most polite, helpful and tolerant in the world. I only heard a horn sound once in three days of driving and I think she was a tourist from New Jersey. When a South African driver sees you overtaking, he pulls off onto the shoulder to let you pass. Sweet!

As we drive East on the N2, Capetown gives way to suburbs and farms. We leave the highway at West Somerset and hug the coastal route past vistas of sheer cliffs and small fishing villages. Back on the N2 then off again at Caledon, we motor through fields of green wheat and yellow rape. Fruit trees are starting to bloom.

We make frequent stops for photos and to allow Colleen to talk to the animals. She speaks to sheep, cows and ostriches. Male ostriches are black and females are dull gray. The male’s kneecaps and calves are bright pink. Later we are told that this only happens during mating season.

Carrying on through Napier we reach Bredasdorp – site of the shipwreck museum and the world’s southernmost Marathon. We turn onto a dirt road and 40 km later we arrive at the DeHoop Nature Reserve ( pronounced do-wop with the accent on the wop). DeHoop is famous for flowers and whales. The Buchu Bushcamp is a bed-and-breakfast just before the Park entrance. We arrive at sunset.

AUGUST 15TH – BUCHU BUSHCAMP

Buchu is definitely a low crime area. There are only 7 guests at the B&B. The four of us, a British birdwatcher and a Spanish couple who took a wrong turn and wound up at the reserve by mistake. Lucky them! This is a wonderful find. It looks like the hobbit village in Lord of the Rings. Our cottage is one big room with a loft for Rafe. The roof is thatch and we sit on tree stumps outside to watch the sun go down.

We dine in the big house on ostrich steaks and butterfish fillets with a central fire-pit for warmth and lanterns for light. The only power after dark is just what’s stored in batteries from the solar panels. There is no moon tonight and the Milky Way is spectacular. In the Southern hemisphere, you look directly toward the galactic core. What a view.

We fall asleep to the sound of peepers- just like spring at home. Also to the sound of energetic young Spanish tourists mating in the nearby cottage. “Are his knees bright pink?” I wonder drowsily. “Will this mating season never end?”

In the morning, sunbeams and showers alternate. The bush here is called ‘fynbos’ which means ‘fine bush’. When the sun is out there are multitudes of brightly colored flowers as if the rainbows are painting the landscape. ‘Fine bush’ indeed!

Our guide for the day is Jonti, the wildlife manager for the reserve. The staff at Buchu packs us a picnic basket and we follow Jonti into the park. Jonti has a bad stutter but his eyes are keen enough. As we drive to the park he points out two bontebok antelope and many elands. There are rare Cape zebras in the park, but since it’s the mating season we don’t see them. “They like to m-m-m-mate in private,” says Jonti. I think to myself, “They must be the only ones!”
Inside the park, Jonti warns us to lock the car doors. “Crime,” we whisper knowingly. “Not crime,” says Jonti. “B-b-b-baboons. They know how to open car doors.”

We take a 5 km nature walk with Jonti who is happy to point out birds, flowers and even the various varieties of ‘scat’. Scat are animal poops – baboon, antelope, ostrich and even porcupine poops.

Back in the car, we meet up with the baboons. Despite their bad rep, these primates are on their best behavior. Mama baboons are nursing. The baby baboons are playing. Even Dad is peacefully picking his fleabites.

We drive to a parking lot and hike over the dunes to a small cottage on the beach where we open our picnic baskets and have lunch. From here you can see whales – lots of whales. They are female Southern Right Whales and their pups – the latter are about 20 feet long. The pups are playing – jumping straight up, waving their tales and flipping their flippers. Rena and I walk the beach but don’t find any shells. A brief shower drives us back to the car, laughing.

Later, Rafe takes over the bar at base-camp and makes caipirinha for the waitstaff. Caipirinha, a concoction of cane liquor, lemons, sugar and ice, is the national cocktail of Brazil. This we enjoy with babooti the national dish of South Africa (ground beef with spices). After dinner Rafe does magic tricks for the staff.

We have a quiet night until Rafe discovers a bat in his bedroom. The sound of Portuguese cursing drifts faintly over the fynbos.
Daktari

Friday, November 30, 2007

Shark Bait - Gans Bae, S. Africa - Aug 13, 2007

Bye, Bye Tuna - Hello Jaws
Survived the Dive!

Hi everyone,
No travel this week. Stayed home and finished the turkey instead. I thought from time to time it might be fun to re-cycle some past travel yarns. Here's one from South Africa last summer (their winter).
DAKTARI
FEAR FACTOR PART II: SHARK BAIT!
The largest predators in Africa are not the lions of the Serengeti. They’re the great white sharks of Gans Bay, South Africa. Rafe from Rio, Colleen from Newburyport and I are shivering with cold and anticipation as we wait to be picked up at 5:30 AM to go cage-diving with the Great Whites. Nobody slept very well last night. What am I doing this for? Just nuts is all I can figure.
Klara from the Big Apple and spouse Rena will get up late and take their “shark money” and go shopping. Sure sounds good to me!
The White Shark Adventure van pulls up. This is it. We drive to Shark HQ where a hot breakfast awaits. I hope the sharks are having a good breakfast too. Maybe they won’t show up today! This must be how gentlemen of the last century felt while waiting in the morning mist for a duel to begin. It’s early, it’s surreal and it’s scary.
We embark on “The White Pointer” – a 55 foot specially outfitted shark hunting boat. It’s a 45 minute ride through rough seas to the set-up point. The cage is lowered into the water. Tuna heads are attached to ropes as we attempt to imitate a smelly dead seal. Six of us suit up and clamber one at a time down into the cage. “It’s a tourist six pack,” I think to myself. We wait for the sharks. In addition to the wetsuit, I’m wearing a weight belt and a snorkel mask.
“Here he comes,” the dive master announces. I let the weights drag me under and breathe through my snorkel. The biggest creature I’ve ever seen cruises slowly by. Gotta be less than a yard away! It’s big, it’s toothy and it’s grinning right at me. “Do prey pray?” I wonder. Philosophy is interrupted as a wave swamps my snorkel and my left lung exchanges a bubble of air for a mouthful of water. Gagging and coughing I claw my way to the surface. But the lure of the great white is on me – I submerge again. In twenty minutes I see two more great whites. The last is bigger than our dive cage. I decide to call it quits.
I stagger out of the cage, grinning and high-fiving. Suddenly it’s too much – I jump to the rail for a quick puke over the side. I don’t feel nauseated or seasick. Just way too much adrenaline. Afterward I’m cold shivers all over and my knees shake.
Rafe goes in group #2 and stays in the longest- about 45 minutes. Colleen suits up but after seeing me grinning and puking simultaneously, she decides to unzip. I must be a scary sight! Only 9 out of 17 adventurers actually make it into the cage. And nobody wants seconds!
The wind picks up and the boat ride back is incredibly rough. One particular giant wave bounces Rafe off his seat and onto the deck. Ouch! A hot spaghetti dinner is waiting for us at Shark Headquarters. Surprisingly I’m starving and eat everything in sight. The van takes us back while the monkeys get married (in South Africa they say that whenever sun is followed by rain and a nice rainbow – in Brazil they say the widows are getting married. Same weather but different nuptials.) Tomorrow an even scarier challenge awaits – driving a rental car on the left hand side. Are we having fun yet?