Nancy and Doug Trips
“The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.”
Our lifelong travel bug has given us our most prized ‘possessions’ - the many memories from business and especially family trips.
 “Take only memories, leave only footprints.”
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🇨🇦British Columbia
  • Balule Reserve Sunrise Game Drive

    18 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ 🌙 10 °C

    Coffee -- instant :( -- served at 5:30, then in the truck with guide Andy at 05:45 for a sunrise game drive. Right away we saw a giraffe against the sunrise. They sleep sitting down, but never lay their heads down as they would be too vulnerable to attack by lions. They only sleep in little naps at that.

    We got very close to a group of elephants that had knocked over a tree and were eating the leaves and twigs for breakfast. A recurring comment from the guides was about how destructive elephants are. They just tear down the trees and eat everything in sight. You see areas that look like clear-cut forest. They eat over 200kg of food a day, because their digestive system is actually inefficient and most gets pooped out -- and there is elephant poop absolutely everywhere in Kruger! This game reserve is over populated with elephants, and in about two decades, this will not be bushveld, but open grassland.

    We then saw a nice white rhino, and were then incredibly lucky to see a black rhino. There are only a few hundred left in Kruger due to poaching. Actually our guide was very skillful to track it down. He spotted some dung as he was driving and got out to show us it had leaves and branches and had been kicked around to mark his territory. This was the sign of a black rhino. He noted the direction the tracks went and in a few minutes we caught up to it, It was a well-known male named Zulu.. Black and white rhinos are actually both grey. Whites are flat mouthed and graze on grass, and blacks are hook lipped and eat leaves and branches.

    Back to the lodge for breakfast at 9:00
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  • Balule Night Drive and Bush Supper

    17 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    We left the lodge at 5 for a sunset and night drive through the Balule private game reserve led by Head Guide Luke. Within two minutes, we started seeing game. A beautiful sunset and we used lights to continue looking.

    We saw elephants, zebras, giraffes, white rhinos, hyenas, and various antelopes,

    We stopped under a Marula tree, revered by the locals for a bush dinner cooked over a wood fire.. Chicken and boerwurst sausage with pap (mashed maize) and slaw and was very tasty
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  • Transfer to Tremisana Lodge (Kruger)

    17 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    So a full day today transferring from JoBurg to the lodge for my Kruger safari. The van driver from Viva Safaris was right on time at 0800, and then we had to make two other pickups before getting on the road. Six and a half hours to get there with two pit stops and lunch. One stop at a highway service centre was unique with a game farm behind it -- only in Africa! Scenery along the way started out as endless prairie with grain farms and also much unused land. Then, foothills and valleys with vast orchards of oranges, and mandarins all fully laden and ready for picking. It's very scenic. Also, mangos and macadamia nuts. Then through a mountain range.

    Tremisana lodge is quite lovely with 15 cottages set in landscaped grounds with a pool and a couple of "lapas" (outdoor lounge/dining areas). We even have our own resident elephants.

    We got in after 4 and were back out at 5pm for our first game drive.
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  • Origins Centre Museum

    16 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    Just going to do one activity today.

    The introductory hall has some recap of the evolution of humans with a neat display of several drawers you can open and pickup and examine replica skulls of many hominid species --- paranthropus, australopitihicus and homo species. The focus of the introduction is on the development of technology such as tools and the importance of the development of symbolic thought, culminating in art (earliest of which is rock painting) at which time we truly became human. South Africa is home to the oldest rock art and the most number of sites.

    This was all by way of introduction to the bulk of the exhibition, which is on the art and rituals of the San people of the Kalahari. There was much on the rock art of these people. The whole theme really helps tie together and finalize all the things I saw at the Cradle on the physical evolution of humans.

    In addition, it was nice to see these excellent exhibits about the San, as the rock art and visit with the San was something I missed out on due to cancelling the first two weeks of the holiday.
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  • Maropeng Cradle of Humankind Centre

    15 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    The final stop on the tour was to the Visitor Centre for the Cradle of Humankind.

    The exhibits were very dramatic and high quality explanation of all of history from the formation of the Earth itself to the emergence of humans. The level of explanation was basic, but very nicely done.
    There was an interesting timeline as you walked into the main hall.

    A boat ride purporting to be about the four elements of water, air, fire and earth was a bit hokey, but fun in a way.

    It was slightly rushed as we arrived only at 3 in time for a guided tour of the upper introductory hall, and left at 4:30 for the drive back, arriving home after 5:30.

    All in all, a fantastic day!
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  • Lesedi Cultural Village

    15 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    We drove a half hour from the Caves to arrive at this site. It has recreations of five different tribal villages from around South Africa. There was first a fun little presentation of drumming with audience participation in the form of drumming lessons.
    We were then taken on a tour of four of the villages - Zulu, Xhosa, Besotho and Pedi with some interesting set of anecdotes about each, including the price of brides for each!
    There was then a singing and dancing show which was quite energetic.
    Finally, we had a buffet lunch
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  • Sterkfontein Caves

    15 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

    I arranged this tour with Moja Africa Tours to two sites in the Cradle of Humankind and a Cultural Village. Driver was right on time at 07:40. It was a great day with my driver Marvin, who proved to be an enthusiastic and great source of information about all of the past and present of South Africa.

    Our first stop was the Caves. I was only able to go down a few steps as the passageway was steep, slippery and low enough to require going on all fours and not suitable for a man on crutches. The caves have been the source of the largest number of hominid fossils anywhere in the world.

    However, there were excellent exhibits on human evolution and a full skeleton replica of Little Foot. It was really an excellent museum.
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  • Constitution Hill

    14 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The only stop I got off the Hop On bus on day 2 was at Constitution Hill, site of the old fort, a notorious prison and now the highest court in South Africa.
    The original prison was built in 1892, then the Old Fort built around it in 1896 by Paul Kruger to defend the City in the Boer War before reverting to full time prison use. It housed criminals as well as political prisoners including Gandhi and Mandela and many others. Conditions were horrific right into the 1980s before it was finally closed.Leia mais

  • Hop On Bus Tours

    14 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    I got a two day bus tour package that included Soweto loop, so this was the transport method to Soweto, the Apartheid Museum and Constitution Hill. I didn't get off at any other stops, but got some good views of the city, doing the complete loop twice.
    Joburg is a young city, only being settled in 1886 with the discovery of gold and the world's largest gold rush. It has grown to an urban size of about 15 million.
    It is a city of contrasts with fantastic wealth and extreme poverty all mixed together, both of which are well seen from the top deck of this tour.
    Melrose Arch is a luxury city within a city with Rolls Royce and Mclaren dealers. The northern suburbs, including the tony district of Houghton was home to three of four of the presidents since 1994 and also exclusive private schools. All the homes and townhouses, whether middle class or mansions are surrounded by high walls and barbed wire or electric fences.
    Going into the Central Business District, it is hard to tell if this is a city on its way up or down. Many building have been bricked up or taken over by squatters, but the grand Late Victorian office and bank buildings are apparently being renovated and put back on the market.
    Street life is certainly vibrant in many places with the usual busy shopfronts and sidewalk vendors scratching out a living.
    To the south are the industrial areas and working class areas such as Booysens and then Soweto. Here also is the redeveloped area called Gold Reef City with a Casino, hotel, and theme park.
    The western suburbs are again very upscale with some amazing mansions and beautiful tree-lined streets.
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  • Apartheid Museum

    13 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    The next stop on the bus tour was the Apartheid Museum, so I spent over two hours in this place. It took you through the origins of the policy with racial classification, details on the hundreds of laws passed to deny basic rights to the majority population. Much attention is paid to the resistance and leadership of such men as Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Steve Biko and others.

    Almost half the museum, though, is about the negotiations, Mandela's release, the end of the regime and first democratic elections leading to the new constitution and ends hoping that the 'rainbow nation' will succeed in putting the past behind.

    Photography is not allowed inside.
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  • Soweto

    13 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☀️ 13 °C

    Day one of my stay in Joburg started ay 9 catching the City Sightseeing bus around to the south to catch their Soweto tour.

    The SOuth WEstern TOwnships were created in the 1930's after the Urban Areas Act of 1923 and the Pass Laws prevented blacks from living in Joburg proper. The population swelled to over a million, mostly in slum conditions. Soweto became world (in)famous in 1976 after days of riots sparked when junior and high school students marched against new laws requiring instruction in Afrikaans, a language which most did not speak at all. The police opened fire and several students killed, sparking days of riots in which at least 575 were killed. The event was one of the defining events in the struggle against apartheid.

    We were taken in a minivan with commentary by a very amusing and expert young man, a resident of the township himself, to get a quick flavour over two hours of the history and current life. We stopped briefly (although had the opportunity to linger and catch the next circuit of the bus in each case) at the Hector Pieterson monument to the 12 year-old boy who was one of the victims on the first day, and the street where both Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu lived at various points -- the only street in the world to be home to two Nobel Peace Prize winners.
    After democracy, the lives of some residents were allowed to improve, but the economic situation in South Africa remains so poor that many residents still live in poverty, and even as some native South Africans move out, they are replaced by recant immigrants to the country. other residents stay and improve their homes, so you get nice looking homes next to shacks, and there are squatter camps by the roads. Crime is a problem, and our guide did not sugar coat the problem of gangs and drugs, revealing that he himself had been treated for a knife wound in the hospital (the largest in Africa and the leading centre for trauma treatment) the previous week.
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  • Victoria Falls Park

    11 de julho, Zimbábue ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    After getting settled in, I headed out and walked to the Victoria Falls Visitor Centre and entrance to the park. Got in about 13:30 and did about half of the viewpoints or a third of the total trail length. All I can say about these falls is WOW! The largest waterfall in the world at over 1700m wide and 100m tall (twice as wide and high as Niagara) and 1 MILLION gallons of water PER SECOND flows over it (vs 700K for Niagara)!

    I started with the viewpoints 2, backtracking to 1, then making it past #8 before taking the trail to the exit as the path was starting to get wet.
    I went across to the craft market across the highway and haggled for a taxi to take me to the 3 Monkeys Restaurant next to my hotel for my main meal

    Walked over 5 miles today and feel very good.

    The next day, I booked the transfer to VFA airport with the driver from my trip from the border and flew SA Airlines to JoBurg. All smooth and on time and the Uber pickup zone was well organized for my transfer into the Holiday Inn Rosebank. Very modern, super convenient and safe location, with good internet and a nice desk to work at.
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  • Crossing over to Victoria Falls Zimbabwe

    11 de julho, Zimbábue ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    The hotel has a free shuttle to and from the airport and the Zimbabwe border. He can only go as far as the Zambian post and you then need a driver with a special permit to drive the 'no-man's land between the posts over the bridge itself, then a driver on the other side to go to your destination. He dropped me at the Zambia post where a driver quickly finds me to agree on a package deal for the next two stages, and a porter takes my bag and leads me into the passport control building and 'assertively' pushes to the front of the long line and to an immigration officer, before gong back to the taxi. Well worth the $1 tip!!

    The bridge is an ancient 1-lane alternating structure carrying all the international semi-trailer (only one allowed on the bridge at a time) trade between these countries as well as residents and tourists on bus, car, foot and bike. The latter are quite interesting. There a a thriving free trade entrepreneurship. Men go from Zambia with up to 100kg of goods such as sweet potatoes or corn meal etc. which are cheaper in Zambia. They sell it to Zimbabwe shop keepers in Zim dollars. They then buy cooking oil or washing soap etc. which are cheaper in Zim, paying in US dollars as the black market rate for USD is good in Zim. They then ride their heavily laden bikes back to Zambia to sell to shopkeepers there. They do this trip two or even three times in a day How no tariff free markets work!

    A lot of people walk over the bridge to enjoy the views of the falls and just catch a taxi on the other side. I was planning to, but changed my plans of course.

    Dropped at my hotel at 12:00 and amazed they had a ground floor room available, so got checked in early. The hotel is in a very nice leafy enclave of hotels, eateries, craft shops and art galleries.
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  • Victoria Falls at Moonrise

    10 de julho, Zâmbia ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    The driver we took to the border for the Chobe tour was very nice and a safe driver, so I booked him to take me out the next evening. My driver went by a couple of the interesting places to visit on a 'future' trip before dropping me off at the park gates where I paid the admission and walked to the viewing points. The first couple to the left showed my my first glimpse of the amazing power of the falls. I kept going towards the Knife Edge Bridge, but soon the trail got very wet and started down a series of steep staircases a bit past spot 19 on the map. It was too dangerous for me to proceed with a crutch, only to just get a soaking at the end anyway, so I turned back. Then I went right from the entrance past the lunar viewing point at spot 17 down the Rainbow Trail to an area of the rapids just above the Eastern Cataract, Amazing fast flowing river, then I see a man walking from rock to rock or knee deep in the river with a fishing dip net in each hand scooping in the water for fish. Incredibly dangerous looking and I would be amazed there would be many fish to catch and from I could see, he did not have any success.

    I made my way back to the viewing pint at 6:30 and was the only person there, but I had been told the moonbow looks good after 7pm. Soon enough, the sun was completely down and this misty, delicate rainbow appears in front of the falls. I had a prime position at a stone pillar to support my camera, and when I looked back, noticed I had been joined by 30 or more sightseers.

    Quite a unique sight that only happens at a few places in the world.
    Got back to the driver and my hotel and a dinner comped by the manager!

    The 5 miles I covered for the day left me a bit sore and tired, but I was quite recovered even by bedtime, and the exercise aids in my healing.
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  • Livingstone Museum

    10 de julho, Zâmbia ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    After the flight, they took me right back to my hotel where I just chilled until lunch when I headed down the main drag, stopping for lunch at a nice restaurant along the way to what is considered Zambia's best museum.

    It had galleries covering just about every topic, from early hominids to stone age tools to village tribal life and the complete history of Zambia to modern politics. The natural history gallery had a pretty complete set of nice dioramas of just about all aspects of animal and plant life.

    Finally there as a room devoted to David Livingstone with many of his own possessions and a collection of his letters. An interesting life and he is actually still admired by the Zambian people today.

    The museum is quite old and the style of the displays old school, but the descriptive text is very complete. The main issue was the lighting was poor and half of the text placards were too dark to read.

    Walked all the way back to the hotel, and just had 20 minutes before getting picked up by a driver I booked to take me to the falls national park entrance.

    No photos allowed inside, so just the Penguins footprint here.
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  • Microlight flight over the Falls

    10 de julho, Zâmbia ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    I had had this booked as a great way to truly see one of the seven wonders of the world, and it requires no physical risks to my broken limbs, so I kept it.

    They picked me up at my hotel at 8:30am and I was quickly booked in and climbed aboard.

    We did two circles over the Falls, seeing both sides and different angles. We also flew over the game reserve where some of the last white rhinos in the world live. I had booked a walking safari to see them, but had to cancel, so was delighted to see the rhinos, albeit from 300 feet. There were also two 1 day old newborns with their mother that was special to see.
    Short flight and a lot of fun.

    Was not allowed to take photos as they take a video plus stills they send via download link. Hope the video shows what I saw from my seat.
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  • Chobe's Elephants

    9 de julho, Botsuana ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    Chobe is famous for the large number of elephants, so I will make a dedicated entry on these majestic creatures. We saw several groups of elephants, both by the river and inland. Probably saw 75 or so in aggregate.

    With these elephants and other species as I was to learn throughout the various game drives, it is more than a matter of "OK I have seen that species, we can go home now". Each sighting is different -- you get to see the same species of animal, but in a different environment (water / grassland / bush), and different activities (eating / socializing / nursing / fighting / hunting), and see them at all stages of life from pregnant females, to babies to seniors.
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  • Chobe Game Drive

    9 de julho, Botsuana ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

    So back at the lodge, we had a fantastic buffet lunch before hopping on the 4x4's at 1:45 for a game drive into Chobe. Although we knew at the outset that mid-afternoon expectations for sightings are lower, this was very good with a fairly good number of sightings including a lion family hiding under some trees. Incredible numbers of antelope, especially impala, also kudu, bushbuck, zebra, giraffe, and several groupings of elephants, including a large group of thirty that crossed the road 3m in front of us on their evening move from the river to the bush for the night. I can't remember all the birds we saw, but there were eagles, pretty rollers, and tons of water birds cranes, spoonbills, hornbills, etc.

    Our driver/guide had incredible eyesight and told us lots of information about the park and its inhabitants. He drove us back to the border to meet our Zambian driver who had waited there the whole day and I got back at 6:30, so a very full day.
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  • Chobe Game Cruise

    9 de julho, Botsuana ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The end of my canceled Namibia to Falls safari was in Chobe Park, famous for the wildlife along the river, including hippos, crocs and Africa's largest population of elephants. My stay in Livingstone was to include a hike in the rhino preserve, but I can't do that, so I booked an all day trip to Chobe.

    Pickup at 7 and joined two young Germans who were doing a year volunteering as teachers in northern Namibia and now is their 2 week holiday.

    Drive about an hour on the highway to the four country meeting point of Zambia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Namibia with multiple border crossings between each and then the crossing to Botswana on the new bridge after the various immigration formalities and a disinfection of our shoes against hoof and mouth.

    At 9am got to the meeting point at a very posh Lodge, where my bad luck reappeared. After waiting a long while, it turned out a large group who were to cruise with us were stuck in long queues at the border, so finally at 10:30, we were off on a smaller boat. It is 20 minutes up the river to where the National Park actually begins, but after 10 minutes, our motor conks out, the driver managed to get going at a slower speed, but at our first wildlife sighting -- two hippos in the distance, our motor once again died as we tried to push through thick weeds to get closer. After an hour and an attempted rescue by another boat, we finally got going, but now had little time to get into the best places. Sigh. I am not known for being a boat lover, and the whole point of this was to get to areas of high animal concentration inaccessible by land.

    However, today we saw Cape buffalo, hippos, a couple of elephants, crocs, and lots of birds. And it was an interesting and scenic ecosystem., which in most contexts of lower expectations, would have been a great outing.

    We returned to the lodge at 1pm
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  • Going to Zambia

    8 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    At 7pm. last night, Kenya Airlines texted me they were canceling my flight today and booking me for 2 days from now. Didn't like that, so I went online to book the only alternative, an early flight on Airlink. So here I am at an empty Cape Town airport waiting for 4am and check-in to open.

    However, good breakfast in the lounge, smooth 2.5 hours to Joburg, a 2.5 hour layover, and another good flight to Livingstone. Airlink is a very good airline. Hotel picked me up, and I was in by 1:40 for a quick rest before heading out to explore the main shopping street, get some local cash and a SIM ($2.26 for 1.5gb). Livingstone is a laid back market and tourist town with lots of activity and a pretty craft market along the main street.

    Back to enjoy an iconic $1.60 Mosi lager by the pool. Hotel a blast from the past but clean, comfy, and like all of Africa so far, extremely friendly.
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  • Cape of Good Hope and Cape Point

    6 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ 🌬 13 °C

    We drove into the Cape National Park and stopped at the actual Cape of Good Hope. The original name given by the Portuguese in 1488 was Cape of Storms, but they wanted to promote this route as the best way to the East Indies, so changed its name for marketing reasons. The two minutes I was able to last in the wind and rain fit the earlier name better.

    We drove to Cape Point and took the funicular up to near the lighthouse from which we could see the Cape down below.

    It is neat to think you are standing at the end of a continent with nothing but Australia far far to the East, Brazil far far to the west and Antarctica far far to the South.

    We then drove back into the city. The area is all very scenic, sometimes spectacularly so, and roads and development is all very nice. We did not go into any townships, of course. Got back to my hotel about 1:30, so a nice length to the day.
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  • Boulders Beach Penguin Colony

    6 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    The drive from Chapman's Peak soon ends in Simon's Town, which we didn't stop at, but is nicely developed with colourful period buildings, cafes, etc. around a harbour next to the SA Naval Base. Simon's Town would be a very nice base for an extended stay in the Cape.

    At the outskirts of town lies Boulders Beach Park, home to a colony of the endangered African penguin. Such cute critters!
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  • Tour and Chapman's Peak

    6 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ 🌧 12 °C

    Yesterday evening, it looked like today's weather forecast would not be a complete washout, so I booked a last minute tour through Viator. Chose a condensed half-day tour. Got picked up by my guide Bizo, then added two young Brazilian women and we headed up the coast.

    Hout's Bay is a fishing and commercial harbour and also the departure point for tours to a seal sanctuary.

    The highway along Chapman's Peak was spectacular despite wind and rain (which really doesn't show up in the photos!)
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  • Castle of Good Hope

    5 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    It was not a very long walk to the Castle to catch the early history of the Dutch colony. While the Portuguese were the first Europeans to arrive at the Cape in 1488, there was little European contact until the Dutch East India Company (VOC). a commercial operation but with the mandate, reach and military power of a nation, established a halfway supply station in 1652. As trade grew and the Dutch began to import workers from Malaysia and settlers arrived, the VOC built this castle from 1666 to 1679, and it is the oldest building in South Africa.

    The VOC was not able to support their empire, and after the English captured the Cape in 1795 when the Dutch were allies of France, it was returned to the Dutch government after peace, but fell to the English yet again in 1805 when the Dutch were again allies of Napoleon. So, it is a nice strong looking fort but did not prevent conquest in the end.,

    Today, it has been well restored with some late 17th century rooms on display and a small museum of the military history,

    It was then a reasonable walk back home where I arrived at 13h30 having had over 5 hours which is quite enough time on my feet for one day,
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  • District Six Museum

    5 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    Woke up to a threatening day, as I hit the road at 0800 and sure enough it started to rain just as I arrived after the 500m walk to the other hotel for breakfast, after which I caught an Uber to the District Six museum. This exhibit tells the story of one of the most notorious episodes in South Africa in the context of the background of the entire apartheid system. In 1966, the regime forcibly evicted 60,000 residents of this historic neighbourhood to outlying townships far from the city and razed the buildings to the ground to create a new whites only residential area under the Group Areas Act.

    The displays are extremely detailed with loads of small print and photos and memorabilia of the personal stories of the displaced.
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  • Penguin Gallery at Aquarium

    4 de julho, África do Sul ⋅ 🌧 14 °C

    The day I went to Emergency, I missed my tour to the Cape with a stop at the Boulders penguin colony. This large exhibit had a lot of information about these cute creatures.

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