South Africa
Impendle

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    • Day 4

      Day 4 - Pt 2 : Foot off the gas...

      January 22 in South Africa ⋅ 🌫 15 °C

      We’re having a much deserved, lazy afternoon. The last few days have been pretty full-on, and some slower paced meandering is called for. We’ve a ‘relatively’ short drive down to Nottingham Road - about 2 hours all in. Back on the N3, despite it being a week-day/work day, the motorway is still blissfully quiet. We stop for a critically urgent Savanna at the Nottingham Road Hotel, then head down to our stop for the night, Rawdons, which is just a few minutes down the road. I remember coming here 20 years ago for a pit-stop beer while heading through the Kwazulu-Natal Midlands. It’s a very pretty country hotel, with a pub attached, serving beers from the Nottingham Road Brewery that’s located onsite. We have a quick snifter, get checked in, and then have a late lunch. The weather has turned decidedly cooler. Vicks is a little chilly sitting outside the pub having a drink. As we walk down to our cottage, there’s the faint hint of some rain. Not what we ordered at all. My early start catches up with me, and I have a deep, afternoon nap. We’re staying in a lovely cottage by the estate’s lake. As I wake from my nap, I open the curtains to a beautiful view, and the sound of Ibis calls.

      Our late lunch means we don’t need dinner, so we grab a bottle of wine from the bar, and spend an hour or two in the guest lounge. I think we’re amongst maybe 4-5 total guests? It’s certainly very quiet. This week is the first week back for school kids in SA after their long summer holiday. It’s a Monday. These things combine to mean that we very much have the run of the place. We decide to take the rest of the bottle back to our room to watch a movie. The pace of our day is exactly what we needed. We’re both looking forward to a good sleep, and are in bed shortly after 23:00…
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    • Day 21

      Premier Resort Sani Pass

      February 18, 2023 in South Africa

      Unser momentanes Hotel liegt am Fusse des Sani Passes und ist absolut nicht erwähnenswert. Trotzdem will ich ein bisschen was darüber erzählen…

      Das Essen ist naja, hatten gestern Buffet wobei die frittierten Jalapenos im Teigmantel gammlig gestunken haben als wären sie schon Wochen alt. Die Anlage ist riesig 120 Zimmer und sieht von aussen garnicht schlecht aus. Ist aber mehr Schein als sein. Es ist alles ziemlich heruntergekommen, der Tennisplatz sieht aus als hätte man ihn vor 30 Jahren zuletzt benutzt. Die Hotelzimmer sind ok, jedoch stinkt es aus dem Abfluss richtig übel nach Kanalisation und den Kamin in der Lobby zünden sie mit altem Platikabfall an.

      Das einzige was man hier als wirklich positiv bezeichnen kann ist die Aussicht auf die Drakensberge.

      Hier sind wir bestimmt das erste und das letzte mal.

      Wir freuen uns schon auf Morgen wenn wir den Sani Pass mit unserem Auto erklimmen können.
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    • Day 4

      Day 4- Pt 1: What time do you call this?

      January 22 in South Africa ⋅ 🌫 16 °C

      The 04:45 alarm is brutal - for one of us. Vicks has not slept well, and elects to stay in bed instead of going on our morning game drive. We’ve had a pretty full on few days, including transcontinental travel, and I think she’s just tuckered. I head out though, grabbing a quick coffee before heading into the park at 05:30. As I’m on my own, Lymon suggests I join another group going out. We’re still only 4 guests in the truck. My guide this morning is Noles - Umzolozolo’s chief ranger. She’s a pint-pot bundle of energy, and has the most amazing eyes for spotting game. At one point, she spots a rhino a couple of kilometres away from us. Even through my binoculars, I’m not 100% convinced it’s not a big boulder. Our game drive is pretty successful - lots of kudu, zebra and wildebeest. We see a huge male hippo having a snooze in a small lake. The sun rising over the savannah is beautiful. There’s a dewy mist in the air that the sun is desperately trying to burn through. It’s quite ethereal. We spend some time with a hunting black-backed jackal. It leaps around looking for its prey of small rodents. Utterly jaunty. We spot a small herd of Eland - one of the biggest antelopes on the planet. They’re skittish, so can ’t get too close for fear of spooking them. Around the corner, we come close to that rhino that Noles spotted earlier. He’s a big boy - recently imported into the park as part of efforts to continue to rebuild the population after decades of poaching. Poaching remains a critical threat to these majestic beasts, but the anti-poaching tactics *seem* to be working.

      We receive a radio call from another jeep that two of the park’s cheetahs have been spotted to the North West of us. There are also two lions sleeping with a kill nearby. We choose to head over to the cheetah spotting, and take off at pace. We stop to say hi to some giraffe, and after 15 minutes of being thrown around the back of the truck, arrive to find two cheetahs with very fat bellies snoozing after a kill. There’s still some blood around their mouths, so fresh is the kill. We spend 20 minutes with them, swapping between the naked eye, binoculars and the camera on my iPhone. They’re such stunning creatures - so graceful on the move. These two are going nowhere though. I flick through my photos, and the distance to the cheetahs is just too far for my phone to take decent pics. I shall draw a picture for Vicki so she doesn’t feel she’s missed out.

      We stop for a bush coffee - black coffee, with a glug (technical term) of Amarula cream. Delicious. The sun’s getting properly hot now it’s 08:00. We decide to head back to the lodge for breakfast. I check in on Vicki, who’s had another nearly 4 hours of sleep, and who feels much better for it. We have a quick breakfast, hear a large warthog butchering an orphaned baby warthog (circle of life etc etc), and get ourselves packed for the next phase of our journey.
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    • Day 18

      Drakensberg og Road trip

      April 1, 2017 in South Africa ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

      Vi stod op til den smukkeste udsigt i Drakensberg bjergene. Vi var ankommet efter mørkets frembrud dagen før, så vi vidste ikke helt, hvordan der så ud.
      Vi havde sovet fint i vores lille runde hytte, og nu var det tid til at få morgenmad og planlægge dagens vandretur. Vi ville gerne have været en tur til Lesotho, da vi var meget tæt på grænsen, men tur-operatøren planlagde kun hele dagsture, og så lang tid havde vi ikke. Det ville være umuligt at køre derop i vores lejebil, da de dårlige og stejle veje krævede en firehjulstrækker.
      Vi valgte i stedet at tage en 10 km vandretur i bjergene. Det er et virkelig smukt område og vi var heldige og se nogle aber i græsset. Tilbage på vandrehjemmet bookede vi næste nat, vi fik os et bad og så skulle vi køre over 500 km for at komme ud til kysten igen. Vi skulle overnatte i en by der hedder East London.
      Køreturen var dræbende lang og flere gange måtte vi stoppe for køer eller geder, selvom vi kørte på en hovedvej. Endelig efter 300 km mødte vi den første Mc Donald's og så havde den ikke engang iskaffe. Det var skuffende. Der var ellers ikke de store stop på turen, målet var bare at nå så langt som muligt.
      Generelt stod der mange blaffere i vejkanten. Udover at det er frarådet at tage dem op, havde vi heller ikke plads på bagsædet for vasketøj, vand, affald mm. Vi var fremme ved vores hotel ved 20-tiden.
      Dagen får 3 stjerner ud af 5.
      Road trip: 536 km på dagen - 2.779 km i alt.
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    • Day 11

      Sani Pass nach Lesotho

      April 8 in South Africa ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

      Abenteuer im 4x4 Jeep auf 2873 ü.n.N. lecker Pizza und Maisbier und Brot aus dem Dutch-Oven

    • Day 19

      Sani Pass

      May 7, 2018 in South Africa ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

      Sehr entspannt simmer hüt Morge uf dr Guest Farm ufgwacht. D Bsitzerin Linky het eus verzellt as vor zwei Wuche en andere Gast über die lang Dirt Road zuechegfahre isch, wohlverstande mimne 4WD, der heig aber ufem Weg en Pneu verlore... euse Corolla isch halt en Survivor mime exzellente Fahrer :)
      Derna simmer scho gli wiiter in Norde gfahre, Richtig Drakensberge. Wieder sehr schöni hügligi Graslandschafte mit gschwungene Strasse und verstreute Dörfer.
      I dr Nöchi vu Underberg lit de Sani Pass wo vu Südafrika uf Lesotho füehrt, leider au nur 4WD tauglich. Trotzdem simmer so wit euse Corolla eus treit het der Pass duruf und sind mit schöne Ussichte uf die Dracheberg belohnt worde. Ufem Weg zrugg is Tal hemmer en schöni Lodge mit Golfplatz entdeckt und sind ga frage öb si nu Platz heiged. Churzerhand het sich die Rezeptionistin uf fascht 50% Discount iglah und so logieremer hüt mit Blick ufd Usläufer vu de Drakensberge mit integriertem 18-Loch Golfplatz.*
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    • Day 73

      Madiba Capture Site

      April 13, 2018 in South Africa ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

      Madiba, Nelson Mandela, was captured here and sentenced to his long term in prison. The site is a memorial. It consists of 27 metal posts, one for each year Mandela spent in prison. And from one perspective of the posts, you can see Mandela's image.Read more

    • Day 9

      Ukahlamba (the Drakensberg)

      August 3, 2012 in South Africa ⋅ 🌙 5 °C

      http://www.travelark.org/travel-blog-entry/tofo…

      Today we enjoyed a cold breakfast at 7am. The days mission; to trek through the Drakensberg Mountains. Our guide Jonathan, lead eight of us from camp, accross the rickety Tebetebe Suspension Bridge. From there, we soon arrived at the start of the Emandindwini Trail, which would take us some 12-15km through the mountains, accross grasslands, rivers and through forests. It was a challenging hike, with rewarding views and a variety of environments. We even managed to spot some Eland along the mountaintops, and I souvenired a fallen porcupine quill from one of the forests. We started the walk around 8.15am, and arrived back at camp around 1.30pm, with little in the way of stopping for rest, sitting to eat a packed lunch in the grass along the way. I finished with plenty of blisters to mark the trip, how I missed my hiking shoes!

      At 3pm, we boarded the truck to learn more about the Zulu way of life, stopping at a nearby Zulu village. This was a great experience, getting to meet and interact with some of the local people, learn of their culture, and join them in their homes. The people were happy, relaxed and appeared to be pleased and accepting of our visit. The children were especially pleased to see foreigners and extremely excited at the prospect of being shown their photo on camera. They then broke out their poses and dance moves!

      Dinner was warthog and potatoes. We turned in around 9am for our last night in the Drakensberg mountains.
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    • Day 73

      Rock Art in uKhahlamba

      April 13, 2018 in South Africa ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

      Art of the San people, well over 1,000 years old.. The second picture, antelope, is actually engraved. Engraving are very rare, only a handful are known. The others are paintings. One is of an eland. The 4th, if you look closely, is two shamans laying hands on a sick person. Amazing to see. The last is a nearby waterfall.
      BTW, that isn't a typo with a capital as the second letter. In Zulu, that often occurs. Haven't found out why.
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