Dumela borra le bomma,
I
firstly want to wish a late Merry Christmas and happy new year to everyone who
still checks here every now and then. I hope you all had a really wonderful
time over the holidays. I can’t quite believe it has all been and gone,
probably because my holiday period was far from the norm but here is 2016 and
let’s have a great year!
Before I go into my experiences over the
holidays I just want to quickly mention something about post. I am so thankful
to everyone who takes time and money to write and send things out to me in
Botswana. I appreciate it hugely! My only concern is I don’t want people
thinking that I am ignoring them. Here is why I say this… To start post can
take up to 3 weeks, sometimes more, just to reach our private bag in Shakawe.
Then the post itself can sit there for a long time, as Shakawe is a small town
that is on the other side of the river to my school, meaning we don’t often
make the 40km dirt road trip and cross the ferry (which can have a long queue,
my longest wait being 3 hours to cross but some waiting 6!) to get to the post
office. Last but not least, once I actually receive a letter I then often have
to wait a while to make it back to Shakawe to post my reply home. I hope this
makes sense and explains why a letter you may have sent in October will get its
reply months later. For example on the way back to school we checked the
private bag for the first time in a couple of months, on the 5th
January and I received a letter sent from the UK on the 30th October.
I am in no way saying to stop sending letters, if anything I would say the more
letters the better, but I only want to ensure those who may be waiting on a
response that I am responding as quickly as I can to all letters I receive
(which I hope is all the letters that are sent but that may not always be the
case unfortunately as this is Africa). Thank you again to everyone who writes
and please keep it up, ke a leboga.
Right, now into what I want to write about.
On the 19th November 2015 term 3 ended at Bana ba Metsi, meaning we
took all the boys down to Maun to meet with their social workers and our long
Christmas holidays began. What a holiday it was!
With Tilmann and Nick the two German
volunteers heading north to Zambia and Malawi, Archie and I planned to head
south to South Africa and Swaziland, with lots of plans to meet and stay with
other Project Trust volunteers for the beginning of our travels. I think to
save huge paragraphs of me rambling on about what an amazing time we had I will
make a list of the places we went to, the people we met there and some of the
things we did.
- · Johannesburg
We met Ann Botha, our (not quite) in
country representative who we were kindly allowed to stay with. For one day we
were proper ‘tourists’ and went on a big, red, double decker, open top, city
sightseeing bus, getting burnt and seeing the popular sights. This included
going up the Carlton Centre which at 220 metres is the tallest building in
Africa. We ventured the same day into the far less touristy areas and got to
see more of the real city which is always fun and very different than being on
the bus where you are advised not to walk alone. I am not saying there aren’t
dangers by any means, but thankfully we never had troubles even in areas which
by what people say sound very notorious. Being in a big city we got to go to
the cinema which was great and I also realised I definitely didn’t miss walking
around shopping centres!
- · Manzini (Swaziland)
In Manzini we met with all the Swaziland
volunteers, Johnny and Matthew who kindly put us up in their house as well as
Ali, Tara, Freya, Lauren, Joanna and Milly. This was our longest stay with
other volunteers and the time flew by in the blink of an eye! I loved being
able to see other projects up and running or at least the children and young
adults that the volunteers work with, it truly is amazing how much positivity
they often give out. With the Swazi Trails company we all went white water
rafting for half a day in the north of Swaziland which was so much fun. It was
strange but beautiful being somewhere with a more hilly terrain than our
lovely, but very flat Botswana. The rafting was a great day and with only one
scare when Lauren fell out her and Ali’s boat on the worst rapid, we all
survived in one piece. Finishing off the day with a 14 metre cliff jump
followed by some Swaziland brewed beer on the bus home was a perfect end to an
amazing day. We also went to a waterfall in a nature reserve called Mantenga
Falls, which we wouldn’t have found without the volunteers insider knowledge
and which was so beautiful. I definitely have a new found love for waterfalls!
On our last day we went on a hike organised by the volunteers to a place where
they were going to camp for the weekend, which was such a lovely end to our visit.
- · Tongaat
Visiting the four great guys, Donald,
Celyn, Matt and George, who work with boys similar to the boys at Bana ba Metsi
was a great stay. We actually helped out a little with manual work, trying our
best to earn our keep. The now pretty infamous Beach Bums bar was also a great
night out and walking onto the sand from the bar made me feel like being back
at the Watering Hole on Perranporth. It even rained that evening to fit the
bill. Archie and I also ventured for the first time into the Indian Ocean and
being back in crashing waves, well only up to waist depth in fear of sharks,
was also a reminder of Cornwall and how I had missed the sea. For those that
know I love food, they also got a weekly delivery from Woolworths (the SA
equivalent of Marks & Spencer) of huge palettes of food that have just gone
out of date and we were lucky enough to take part in the feast that follows
that evening.
- · Durban
Here was our first stay without a Project
Trust connection but we ended up meeting up with four volunteers, who turned
out to be in Durban at the same time which was a lovely coincidence and
surprise. Our main stop in Durban was uShaka marine world and water park which
boasts the tallest water slide in Africa (maybe even in the Southern
Hemisphere) which was a full day of us running around between rides like kids,
charging up the stairs in an attempt to shorten the wait for the next slide.
- · Underberg
With talk of hills in Swaziland, Underberg
being the gateway to the Southern Drakensburg is a step up with mountains
exceeding 3000 metres high so as you can imagine the views were spectacular.
The exciting combi ride there, with the views distracting from the drivers
tailgating and interesting times to overtake on roads with pretty sheer drops
brought us to meet Claire, Ffion, Heather and Rebecca. We were taken to so many
braiis (BBQs) that it made up for missing such good food up at school. Archie
and I created quite a habit of bringing rain with us wherever we went, not
quite the South African summer I expected. So when a thunderstorm put a stop to
our plans on going hiking up the Sani Pass into Lesotho, in an area which is
suffering with a drought, we didn’t think luck was on our side. Just one reason
to visit this place again at some point. This did allow us to snuggle up inside
and watch a Christmas film to get into the festive mood a little more, nothing
like less heat and more rain to make you feel more like being in the UK.
- · Zithulele
Although our stay in Zithulele was the
shortest stay we had with volunteers we still managed to squeeze so much in
with Emily and Hannah taking us to Hole in the Wall which was so fun to hike to
and swim at. Anything with the water and I’m happy! Like with many of our stops
we also got to meet some new, fun people. There are two more volunteers at
Zithulele, Dainelle and Emma who had started their holidays, so we had just
missed them but kindly we got their beds instead of the floor. The project was
also so different to those we had seen as it is in a hospital, which is far from
most people’s projects.
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Such a fun day at Hole in the Wall |
- · Port St Johns
Port St Johns was the start of our holiday
away from staying with other volunteers and therefore the start of us paying
for accommodation, eish (we aren’t as tight as it sounds, promise)! With 2nd
beach being right on our front doorstep we couldn’t wait to get in the sea, so
it was only a slight bummer when we found out it is one of the most dangerous
beaches for shark attacks in the world. Sticking to a natural rock pool for
cooling off it was, a reminder we are on the east coast of South Africa.
Meeting a cool guide we went on a forest hike to a waterfall where there were
several rock jumps, again waterfalls just being awesome we had a great time and
I even trekked back a second time before leaving. There was a Christmas quiz
arranged at our backpackers so we took part in a team with two medical students
we had met at Zithulele and with it being a fairly young scene the questions
must have reflected as we somehow managed to win. The extra bonus points from
hulla hooping and air guitar helped too.
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A beautiful view from a sunset trip |
- · Coffee Bay
It was getting close to Christmas day when
we arrived in the beautiful and remote Coffee Bay. This was the stop I was most
looking forward to as it was a real meeting point for lots of volunteers from
South Africa and Swaziland and it did not disappoint! Seeing people we had seen
earlier in our travels and then new volunteers was awesome, through our
experiences there is so much to talk about and everyone just gets on so well
it’s great. With free pool in the bar and some pretty stringent bar drinking
rules the stay was set to be good fun. We did more rock jumping, anyone spot
the pattern between my enjoyment of water and jumping off things yet? With a
hike to a naturally formed “Jacuzzi” (that was actually pretty cold) on
Christmas Eve we built an appetite for our Christmas dinner that evening.
Celebrating with food a day earlier wasn’t complained about as we ate a plate
full of different meats and sides that wouldn’t normally be on my Christmas plate
but that were equally as delicious. Still got some Christmas pudding and brandy
butter among other deserts so I was a very happy bunny. On Christmas day some
of us made our way to the beach and after making sand men rather than snow men
I enjoyed being in the water for ages without the need for a wetsuit. Saying
goodbye to everyone wasn’t so bad because apart from a few volunteers who were
at their project over the New Year we would see everyone again and more in Cape
Town!
- · Storms River
On our way to Cape Town and between two
overnight buses we stopped in Storms River, mainly so we could tick of the
Bloukrans bridge bungee jump, the highest off a bridge in the world at 216
metres. To say the least, I loved the bungee! It was such an adrenalin rush I can
see why people get hooked on such activities. Meeting with the Swazi crew again
at the bungee with Ali and Lauren jumping an hour before Archie and I, as well
as the volunteers we had met in Durban being at our backpackers it was great
always being with other volunteers. The other side note to our stay, not
surprisingly food related, is that we got free pancake breakfast at the
backpackers with raw honey, maple syrup etc. It was an exciting and delicious
brief stay.
![]() |
The jump! |
- · Cape Town
The last stop on our long journey had us
ending up in Cape Town. I am not usually a city person but from what I saw of
this city, I loved it. We didn’t have time to do everything so we crammed in as
much as possible. First we headed off in the Swazi’s rental cars, they had for
the last day, to Simon’s town going past Boulders beach to see the penguins. With
it being very busy we turned back from the idea of going to the Cape of Good
Hope and instead cruised around back to Simon’s town for a lovely lunch and
then to a relax on Clifton 3rd beach. The water there was freezing,
even colder than Cornish waters in the UK summer which you don’t expect when it
is 30+ degrees outside. My favourite thing in Cape Town and one of my favourite
on the whole trip was climbing up Table Mountain. It was hard work but so worth
it for the
views at the end, plus Table Mountain has a café on top so the ice
cream was well deserved. It took us much longer back down, than it did us
getting up, but we got down just before dark had properly set in. Time to
venture into the city in search for food and watch a brief bit of a carnival.
New Year’s Eve was obviously a great time in Cape Town with most of us being at
a street party to see 2016 in.
The whole holiday has been amazing and I
loved every second, even when cramped so tight with our bags in a small minibus
taxi for hours. On the 1st at 10am Archie and I boarded a 22 hour
bus to Windhoek in Namibia, which I slept 19 hours of, catching up on a real
lack of sleep from the amount of fun we all had. Then to get taxis and hitch
hike back to Maun in Botswana where we arrived on the evening of the 2nd
January. Giving us some time to get prepared for heading back to Bana ba Metsi
on the 5th for the start of term 1. It is almost funny being home
and in my own bed every night now and I am very excited for this term at
school, with a whole new standard 5 class to meet!
Well, my plan to not ramble on didn’t quite
work but I hope someone enjoys reading through nevertheless. I hope to put some
pictures on here too, but with school internet that may be a challenge. I will
also try and link some blogs from the people I have mentioned here for anyone
who is interested in reading about some other projects.
P.s. almost all the pictures on my blog are taken and edited by Archie (I'm not great at carrying my camera with me at all), so all credit to him :) Also I have to really reduce the quality to be able to upload them at school so hopefully they aren't too bad :)
http://donaldinsouthafrica.blogspot.com/
P.s. almost all the pictures on my blog are taken and edited by Archie (I'm not great at carrying my camera with me at all), so all credit to him :) Also I have to really reduce the quality to be able to upload them at school so hopefully they aren't too bad :)
http://donaldinsouthafrica.blogspot.com/
I shall leave it there for now.
Go siame.
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