Friday, September 15, 2017

Kruger National Park, 1

Kruger NP is one of the world's great national parks and biological reserves. It contains hundreds of species of all sorts and is perhaps the oldest and most storied of Africa's reserves. We were three days there and took perhaps a thousand pix. The park has several campground/resorts (we stayed at Praetoriuskop and then Skukuzu), all behind high electrified fences and gates. The gates close at sunset and open at sunrise. One drives through the park on both paved and unpaved roads, staying inside one's vehicle on pain of severe fine or on pain of being eaten or trampled alive. Here and there are several rest areas where one can "alight" from one's vehicle to stretch or snack. After Blydepoort and the rest of Blyde Canyon, we entered Kruger through the Orpen gate and then proceeded south and west to our initial campsite at Praetoriuskop. As for the pix below and in the next several posts, we favor the larger animals and the more fearful predators, so there will be relatively few pix of impalas, kudus, wildebeestes and such. All this on August 29th.
Entering at the Orpen Gate...rules of the road...main rule: stay in
you vehicle

The terrain, as much of southern Africa: brush and small trees,
semi-arid; flat

Not a kilometer past the gate, the animals appear; in droves




























Impalas; of which we soon tired; they are the principal biomass;
snacks for lions, leopards, hyenas

Wildebeestes

Giraffes; yes! tons of giraffes, so graceful and majestic!

And then the big ones...we've seen hundreds now and will
always stop for more




Weird Gondwanaland fruit

Beautiful yellow-leaved trees (it's spring here)

More terrain

Street scene





























Back off, human!




























At a rest area














Beautiful pests

Crowd-sourced sightings boards at various stops

Thieves


African buffalo; one of the Big Five; also one of the Ugly Five

Another street scene

Southern Kruger is dotted with these large rocky out-crops...
croppies...somewhat similar to those in Joshua Tree NP in the US

A termite mound enveloping a tree

Elk-like animal--kudu?--to be identified in a later edit

Partridges in our campsite














Our camp at Praetoriuskop, after a very busy first day in the
park

Our South African Itinerary

Below is a photo of a page from our guidebook showing our itinerary. The numbers refer to pages in the guidebook, so disregard them. The blog narrative is in Blydepoort just now, at the beginning of the anti-clockwise itinerary. As I write, we are currently in Khorixas, Namibia, nearing the coastal town of Swakopmund, half way through our journey. It has been a busy tour so far. Long days of travel along blue roads or less (or much less) and then days of intense sightseeing, with hundreds of pix taken each day. So, together with weak or non-existent wifi, I am a bit behind. I hope to catch up a bit in Swakopmund. "We'll always have Swakopmund."

Heading East: Potholes And Blyde Canyon

After Praetoria we headed east for two days, initially on the excellent freeways, then off onto secondary roads to see the sights...the Sabie region, up and over the Drakensburg mountains, Dullstrom and South Africa's fly-fishing capital (introduced brown and rainbow trout), spending the night at a campground near Sabie town. From Praetoria, it's high dry plains, dotted with gigantic gold mine complexes and mountain-like tailings, powerplants, small towns, heavy industry. Then you climb into the mountains, the Drakensburgs not particularly high but pretty, Next day we drove on to Pilgrim's Rest (a restored mining town; we've seen lots of gold mining towns, in MT, the US West, New Zealand, etc.; so no pix), Long Tom Pass, Bourke's Luck Potholes, and then the impressive Blyde canyon. The cloud ceiling was quite low, so we skipped God's Window and the Pinnacle, other canyon sights, stopping at another campground near Blydespoort. All this occurred August 27th-28th.

Gradually we are getting used to the new camper, the routine, the campgrounds, the driving, our new companions. Jet lag continues to be an issue, but it will pass. [Drafted and posted (?!) September 15th.]
Among first of many interesting signs...the top says "no stopping," and the second
says "no road-side vendors"

Bourke's Luck Potholes are a small gorge; Bourke was a miner,
of course

The potholes; a few days later we'd see more than our share of other potholes,
as we drove out of South Africa north to Botswana

Also little waterfalls


Low clouds and a bit of Blyde Canyon, one of the world's largest, we read

Sort of like Grand Canyon, but with trees, as Vicki observed



At the campground in Blydepoort, the southern hemisphere flora beginning to show;
it's late winter/early spring here


Campground showers...the last ablution block I remember was outside a mosque
somewhere

More helpful signage

And more, the next day, of Blyde Canyon


Pano

The Hornbill, no respecter of signage...



Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Millenium Bobo And Initial Days...

On Saturday, August 26th, we picked up our new 2017 rental camper and met our tour companions and leaders.

The camper is on an Iveco 3500 truck chassis, the motorhome built by Worldwide Motorhomes of SA and rented to us by Bobo Campers of Joburg. We are still pondering possible names for it, including perhaps "Le Bobo," consistent with our current campers in North America and Europe, or "Millennium Bobo," consistent with our previous camper rental, in New Zealand, the Millennium Bongo, way back in 2008. We are open to suggestions until something sticks.

Anyhow, the vehicle is about 7 meters long, 3 meters high, 2.5l diesel, 8-speed automatic transmission, with a big overhead. It is overall the largest camper with which we have had experience. There are two dinettes, both making into beds, and altogether it can sleep six. We use the overhead for storing suitcases, etc., the middle dinette as the dinette, and the rear dinette made up as a permanent bed. There is a two-burner stove, microwave, an all-electric fridge, air conditioning, wet bath, running hot-and-cold, a small Thetford cassette toilet, table and chairs for outside, pretty much the usual amenities, except...there is no gray tank. In South Africa, the gray water (sinks and shower) just dribbles out onto the ground underneath the camper. This would be unthinkable in Europe or the US or New Zealand (especially!), and so we try not to think about it. So far it is arid, sandy country, mostly, so the water goes away pretty quickly. Interestingly, the bathroom light switch is more than 7 feet above the floor. The vent higher than that.

We have been in the camper 12 nights as I write and have found it adequate. A bigger fridge and more counter space would be nice, as well as a dry bath. On each of the first three nights' encampments there have been group meetings, and, ominously, the first was mostly about how to change tires. Call AAA? I asked. Unusually for us, all the nightly encampments have been at campgrounds, mostly with electricity and other amenities. Some have been very nice indeed. The 38 nights we will be on this tour are the longest stretch in recent years in which we have known where we are going and where we are laying our heads.

Our companions are six other couples, all from the UK except Don and Kay, from Perth, bloody Australia. Our tour leaders, "escorts" they are called, are Chris and Hilary, from near Birmingham. The most popular member of the group is Donnie, from Jobuurg, the Bobo mechanic who travels with us in a camper laden with spares.

A good group, admirably led and assisted.

These first 12 days have been an extended learning experience, about the camper, about driving, the traffic, the roads, the countries we are visiting, the flora and fauna. (Alas, we are driving on the left ("proper") side of the road, but this is no longer much of an issue with so much recent/previous experience.) The distances between sites on our itinerary are considerable. One day was 300 miles, others less than 200, still others quite short. (OK, 300 miles may not seem like much, but consider these are two lane roads, mostly well-paved, sometimes not so much).We were three nights in Kruger National Park but otherwise have been on the move to get through northeastern South Africa and now into Botswana. We are now 4 nights near the Chobi national park in Botswana, with an over night to Victoria Falls coming up.


Demands of travel, lack of strong, or any, wifi, and also electricity now and then, mean that I am more than a full week behind on the blog. I'll catch up as I can—there are already more than 2 thousand pix to view, select, edit, down-size, etc.--and our first scheduled "day at leisure" isn't until September 19th. At least we now have our circadian rhythms at the proper beat, being 12 full days and time zones out of San Francisco. And the tour, despite some minor hardships and mishaps, has been everything that we hoped for and much more. We are happy campers.
Our fleet; moving in day

Le Bobo; Millennium Bobo...

At our first night's encampment, at Monateng Safari Lodge, near
Praetoria ("we're driving to Praetoria, Praetoria, Praetoria"); note
electrified fence to keep bad critters out

At a group dinner some days later; a fun group

Some teasers of pix to come...




Monday, September 4, 2017

African Odyssey Genesis*

We arrived in Johannesburg Wednesday evening, August 23rd, and made our way to the Mercure hotel, across from the Eastgate Mall, well east of the enormous city. It was dark by 7PM, and temps were dropping into the 40s. No sign of Jungle Jim or Tarzan. 

Just for the record, the flight from Atlanta to Joburg is the second longest of all non-stop commercial flights, 13,582 miles; but it is the longest, #1, in terms of time, 15 hours, 55 minutes. The time zone of Joburg is the same as Barcelona, but, conjoined with the flight from San Francisco to Atlanta, 5 hours or so, we were tired puppies. More like tired zombies. It's Friday evening as I write, August 25th, and we are still moving very slowly. We summoned enough energy to see the Apartheid Museum this afternoon, and have visited the mall twice, but that's about it, apart from unpacking and trying to sleep. Tomorrow we pick up our camper. (Camper? you ask).

I had always wanted to visit Africa, especially if we could be back home in time for cocktails. We did precisely this in 2010 or so, taking the fast ferry from Tarifa, Spain, to Tangier, Morocco, returning to Tarifa by 5PM and a snifter of Soberano. I was pleased to cross off another continent, but cognizant I had not had the fullest of African experiences. Vicki had visited Egypt in the early 80s and certainly was ahead of me, but not by that much. Imagine our intrigue, however, when, in 2016, at a British RV show, we learned that the UK's Camping and Caravaning Club (the friendly one), of which we were members, conducts guided RV tours of southern Africa (as well as many other places). This through the firm of Worldwide Motorhome Holidays. They rent you an RV, provide a wagon-master/mistress, and, in the company of other RVers, you are off on a 4 or 5 week road tour of the southern bit of the continent. There is a set itinerary, and you camp together in the evenings, but you are otherwise independent. We were intrigued; the intrigue led to inquiries, which led to real interest, which led to a deposit...and now, 13 months later, here we are, in Joburg, moving into our RV tomorrow morning, ready to begin our African odyssey. So much by way of explanation.
August 22nd bon voyage with Penelope, who can pronounce
"bon voyage" properly

Over the Bay, The City to the left

Over the Sierras

Landing at Atlanta

On approach to Johannesburg


















































At the Apartheid Museum in Joburg; if you have any moral
sense, this is the one place in Joburg you have to visit

Entrance to the museum; so much of this happened during our
lifetimes...as a philosophy student, I remembered the murder of
Stephen Biko...and so much else; as a citizen of the US, whose
record is so appallingly much worse, it is difficult to be
critical...justice still has an appallingly high price in most of
the world...

The museum is extensive, graphic, sparing
little, and recounts the experiences of so many
people still alive; no photography is permitted;
understandably

Downtown Joburg from the museum
The most popular family restaurant in Joburg, and in what we
have seen already of South Africa, is Spur...Spur Steak Ranches;
good and reasonably-priced food, but an exercise in cognitive
dissonance...the name is cowboy, the decor is Native American
...who didn't use spurs so much, nor eat steak, nor have
anything to do with Africa; but it was here I discovered peri peri
sauce


Climbing wall in the Spur kiddie room

Exploring the Eastgate Mall and the impressive
Checkers supermercado; South Africa is a big-
time wine producer, but we'll get into that toward
the end of the trip






















































*Nice Hellenistic/Hebraic allusion, right? African Genesis is the title of the seminal work by Robert Ardrey, which I read c. 1963, and which was life-changing. Dogmatic slumbers, etc. Thank you, again, Mrs. Henry, my high school Latin teacher, who taught much else in addition to Latin. The Odyssey, by Team Homer, is another story, but still among the favorites for a multitude of reasons.

Friday, August 25, 2017

Tea For Three

Tea has been a thing for Vicki and P since toddlerhood, and Mama and Grandpa have often joined in the tea parties too. This summer our visit to California ended (apart from the usual packing, storing the RV, etc.) with a marvelous tea party for the girls Rebecca had arranged at Lovejoy's in Redwood City.