On Top of Pomongwe |
On parts of the journey Netta, Vaughan and Nicky Johnstone joined us in the 16-seater 2.5 self drive Hi-ace. Over the Christmas period we covered some 2,500 kilometres.
The quotes in italics come directly from my diary & there are some contributions from others on the team...
The quotes in italics come directly from my diary & there are some contributions from others on the team...
CMR January 2013
Stephanie's art |
The Mandys and Johnstones were already in Zimbabwe as the Robertson parents had been involved in a car accident there at the end of October. It was a sad time as Jenny died on 4th December in the Avenues Clinic as a result of the accident and an underlying condition from which she would never have recovered.
Lynda, Cheryl, Jackie- Harare airport |
We decided to carry on with the journey as planned for our visitors - Jenny would have scoffed as us for changing it. So on 14 December we welcomed a slightly disheveled and apprehensive team of Poms at Harare I nternational Airport.None had set foot in Africa before.
Joan Hanly’s house at 10 St Luke’s Road, Rhodesville was the roost for Jackie, David, Alice & Lillie Fulton in the cottage, while the Whites - Lynda, Keith, Nick, Rebecca and Sam - were in "The Purple Room" 9aka Gan's lair or Mrs Dold's private quarters), my Dad in Joan’s room (she had moved out to son Stevie Weevie’s house) and Netta, Nicky and Vaughan in the spare room next to the dining room.
Mandys x 5 were at Ian and Jan Robertson’s house in Chisipite.
Joan Hanly’s house at 10 St Luke’s Road, Rhodesville was the roost for Jackie, David, Alice & Lillie Fulton in the cottage, while the Whites - Lynda, Keith, Nick, Rebecca and Sam - were in "The Purple Room" 9aka Gan's lair or Mrs Dold's private quarters), my Dad in Joan’s room (she had moved out to son Stevie Weevie’s house) and Netta, Nicky and Vaughan in the spare room next to the dining room.
Mandys x 5 were at Ian and Jan Robertson’s house in Chisipite.
Strelitzia |
by Steffie |
by Gregory |
Next day after a few scares in the night from Africa’s nocturnal wildlife, we all, including Sandy and the Johnstones headed for Ballyvaughan Game Park just outside Harare in our bus .
Gill and Bobby Welbourn joined us later. The park has “loads of caged animals in big enclosures, all rescued, bred in captivity or dangerous animals unsuitable for return to the wild.”
Guides Maynard and (Greg with the hat) - Lillie looks unperturbed |
The traditional people of Zimbabwe apparently watch the behaviour of impala herds to ascertain whether the rains of a particular year will be good or not. If there are going to be good rains the female impalas retain their unborn and continue with their pregnancy; if the year is going to be a drought year a female's body absorbs the foetus.
Serene delicate looking creatures - impala |
Sandy, Jackie, Shaunie & David |
We split into different groups then met where the elephants were. “Three elephants arrived with their handlers to take us for a ride - three people on each back. Steffi went twice as Gregory didn’t want to go, neither did Jackie and Sandy.... Great fun getting up and down as you have to hold tight as the slope is so high. The backbone of even an elephant when right up my Khyber Pass. Getting down was also hard – Robin had to be hauled off by a very strong guide.”
After that we had a barbecue lunch in a tree house overlooking a lake where “Jackie and Alice discovered they didn’t like long drops but when desperation strikes……”
Steffie & Robin |
Greg's impression of his canoe trip |
When Gregory said: “Isn’t that a crocodile?” I thought he was joking – but it was indeed. I bashed the water with my oar and it shot out of the shallows into the deeper water, its head and nostrils peering at us. Netta, Nicky and Vaughan finally made it to us and the guide had gone to shore only slightly ahead of us in a different bay – he too was nervous of the lightning….. Glad to join the group in the game park again.”
This is the story from David. "One small moment in time that I remember vividly was the BallyVaughan visit. If you remember we did shifts on the different events. Some went on the canoe ride in a millpond. Some went in a hurricane. I was with Lillie Fulton and we did not get mixed up with the instructions (unlike some). However the storm was determined to take us away from our destination. Poor Lillie was paddling away at the front and we were just being pulled away with the storm. I remember paddling the canoe backwards until we finally got to the shore close to our destination. I fell out of the canoe almost puking, just thankful that I hadn't killed myself and my little girl. Happy memories..... The elephant ride made up for it though."
Later on we saw“loads of wildebeest, zebra (who hang around together as they eat different parts of the grass; one lot eat the top section, the others eat the lower section so there’s plenty for everyone.”
0500 on 16 December
Robin shows Sam & Greg how it's done in Africa |
“Stopped on the side of the road for a pee which had Jackie in a state as she doesn't do public urination..... and she also didn’t like the possibility of a truck bearing down on her exposed naught. Lynda and I held a towel up to avoid prying eyes – but the Juggernaut sneaked up behind us.”
Plenty of curio stops along the way |
Matobo Hills (previously called Matopos Hills) |
"Had chicken casserole for supper made by Bonnie. Lots and lots of bugs. Jackie and Alice beside themselves with the bugs. Lillie and the others playing tok-tok (black bugs) races and Lillie lining up the tok-toks on herself! Loads of butterflies, less lizards than when we visited last year, lots of birds, not so many monkeys but baboons instead”.
17 December 1998
“Alice, Steffie, Robin, Rebecca and Lynda took a horseback safari through the bush – they saw a black mamba slithering across the road; also sable at close range. Lynda had the bruises of the stirrup straps to prove it.”
Never startle a rhinocerous |
Wood carver at work Matopos |
Cecil John Rhodes' grave |
Bushman rock paintings are found here all over this area too, the most accessible at being at Pomongwe Cave and the clearest at Nswatungi. All date back some 40,000 years. “Men went to get petrol and buns in town – we did the usual looking after children. They came back with more books and wood and charcoal. Another braai – it rained rather heavily and then the power went off so it was a bit chaotic and food so late no-one wanted to eat anyway. Steffie fell off a rock – it was dark - and screamed a lot. We watched two yellow-billed kites swoop down and one pinched chips, so David tried to entice it down with a raw sausage – it sat in the tree and watched us and didn’t take the meat.”
Next day we all climbed Pomongwe (it is the name of a type of melon) a huge gomo with 360 deg views from the top.
Keith & Lynda Matobo Hills |
Baboon thief
“Down at base we had a big breakfast….and a visit from a big baboon the size of 11 year-old Nicholas. It sat outside peering at us, I called Robin to come and scare it away with the kattie but when he came out of the kitchen the baboon sneaked around the side, zipped into the kitchen and swiped a loaf of bread off the counter. Pandemonium!...the warden came out with a rifle but the baboon was long gone. Two of his mates had to be shot recently.”
“Down at base we had a big breakfast….and a visit from a big baboon the size of 11 year-old Nicholas. It sat outside peering at us, I called Robin to come and scare it away with the kattie but when he came out of the kitchen the baboon sneaked around the side, zipped into the kitchen and swiped a loaf of bread off the counter. Pandemonium!...the warden came out with a rifle but the baboon was long gone. Two of his mates had to be shot recently.”
Dinner under the stars at Maleme Dam rest camp |
Nswatugi Cave |
"We drove to the main Bulawayo-Kezi road and headed for Figtree then Marula, with David driving. Very bad road from Marula to the farm – eroded by all the rains.”
The dusty curio laden bus took us to cousin Graham’s Garth Farm, which offered some of the party bush camp accommodation in thatched rondavels (round huts) near the Mangwe Memorial (by 2007 this part of the farm had been taken). Lying 27 corrugated kilometres from the village of Marula , the memorial was erected to honour those adventurers, miners and explorers who bashed their way through the inhospitable granite rock countryside around 1850, way before Rhodes’ pioneer column reached what is now Harare in 1890. Lee’s House, once a watering hole and (incidentally) place of ill repute is now a pile of bricks but its infamy lives on.
Garth's bush camp
by Greg |
The rest of us stayed the night at the farm house with its generator electricity and hot running water, although there were a few surprises there too – some dive-bombing beetles, a friendly gecko with diarrhoea, 11 labrador puppies, a dassie or rock hyrax called Cricket and a small sausage dog called Radio about to give birth.
“Returned to the farm for a restless sleep with Shaun and Steffie in my enormous bed – next door in Elisha’s room were Lynda, Sam, Becca, Lillie, Jackie and Alice, the latter two were close-on hysterical because of the huge gecko in the stiflingly hot room – all windows jammed shut by Jackie to avoid bugs. Lynda, Sam and Rebecca didn’t mind the gecko which had pooed all down the wall, probably in terror itself. The black bug of mediocre description wedged on Jackie’s pillow sealed the doom of a restless night. Radio sneaked into my room when I was out attending to Ms Fultons, so when I settled down for the night, lights were off – I smelled something – a very strong puppy smell – a doggy smell. Turned on the light and unearthed Radio who I tried to pull out but she wouldn’t come – just bared her teeth. I eventually called Doris to remove the dog – puppies were imminent so I didn’t want her having them under the bed all night. I can never sleep at Garth Farm the first night. Shaun takes up half the bed as well.”
Ominous sign - a frog in the doorway |
Worth a mention here, is that Doris told us all to watch out for frogs in the rooms as invariably snakes follow after looking for them as fodder. This fellow to the right drawn by Greg, appeared in the doorway of the Fulton x 3 hellhole, blocking the entrance to the loo, which further terrified Ms Fultons x 2. It was a superb night, not!
20 December
20 December
Greg's instructions |
We ate the fish after gutting and scaling all back at the farm – this is where David was asking about pricky pears and – there’s a story in that, he can fill it in!!!
Prior to that we went on a nature ramble/tour of the farm by Graham Robertson. David was being an FT asking all sorts of questions, some relevant, some not, but when he asked what sort of tree "that over there was?" Graham replied: "It's a green tree with leaves." "Oh." said David, and he pondered on it for a while, then decided not to be an FT and ask any more questions.
“Finally we left the farm and Keith drove like a madman on those dirt roads to the tar at Marula, very narrowly missing a culvert. Phew”
Prior to that we went on a nature ramble/tour of the farm by Graham Robertson. David was being an FT asking all sorts of questions, some relevant, some not, but when he asked what sort of tree "that over there was?" Graham replied: "It's a green tree with leaves." "Oh." said David, and he pondered on it for a while, then decided not to be an FT and ask any more questions.
“Finally we left the farm and Keith drove like a madman on those dirt roads to the tar at Marula, very narrowly missing a culvert. Phew”
Team kids plus Jade & Tracey Williams |
Next installment - Chapter 2 - goodness knows when. xx
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