Southern Africa 2025. Part Six: Cape Town
1st
November 2025 (Day 21)
The Fellowship
is at an end, but not in a bad way, more like the bit where Aragorn tells the
hobbits that they should not bow to anybody. We lose Alan, Jinni and Sybille to
an airport transfer to Victoria Falls Airport, Zimbabwe. The rest of us
persevere to the border where kilometres of trucks queue in the baking sun. We
skip the line.
At the health
check a guy hands us a small piece of paper that he’s previously date stamped.
“What’s that about?” I ask Tawanda. He shrugs. The piece of paper goes into
box, a raffle maybe, on the Zambian side of the border building. The smiling
lady official asks me where I’m going, when I’m leaving and why I’m not
spending three months in Zambia as I’m allowed to. “I have a wedding to go to
on Wednesday,” I reply. “That I only found out about yesterday.”
Then we
transfer to a shuttle because this is where we leave Towanda and Jonas for some
reason. It’s an emotional farewell. I will miss them.
In Ghanzi
Jonas cooked an amazing meal of spatchcock chicken on the braai. There was a
mystery item roasting in tin foil. We asked what it was and we’re told
squirrel. He went on to explain, straight-faced, how he caught one while he was
waiting for us to complete the desert walk. Two squirrels were fighting and the
defeated one ran almost directly into Jonas’ arms. He strangled it, gutted it,
stripped off the fur and tail, put it into a bag and into the Tank’s fridge.
It was
butternut squash. We all believed him.
Susie and
Jenny are dropped off at Fawlty Towers in Livingstone, Warwick and Maree at the
airport. Only the four hobbits make it back to Victoria Falls Waterfront - me,
Claire, Vlatka and Zivana. Flight tomorrow, time to kill, don’t particularly
want to do anything. Taxi is ten minutes late to Livingstone, arrange for him
to pick us up at nine from the restaurant where we’re meeting Susie and Jenny.
There are
about fifty curio stalls in a row and we’ve US dollars and rand to use up. Most
of what they’re selling looks locally made and decent. We go to the furthest
stall and Claire buys some salad servers. In the next one she buys fabric. In
the next she tells me I have to buy something and I look at a mask I only have
a vague interest in owning. “Sixty dollars.” I walk away. “Make me an offer.” I
offer 20. “Okay.” It’s not that I want to deprive them of income but it was
only worth 20, if that. We buy from seven stalls in a row. We’re not being
hassled, they’re all waiting patiently for their turn, but we’re the only
tourists there. After the seventh Claire decides she can take any more. It’s
too hot.
So, there’s a
slow walk of 2km down the dusty, noisy main road, big trucks grumbling. It’s
busy, hot, smelly and unattractive. The Spar is nowhere near as good as the
ones in Namibia and Botswana. I try to buy cigarettes at the Shoprite kiosk, as
I’m not expecting much from Livingstone duty free, and a security guard has to
butt in an aisle till for me to pay. We’re the only white people outside of the
hostels. This is the real Africa.
I’ve been
trying to avoid eating anything that purports to be fresh and so far it’s
worked, so the frozen fish sushi at Sea Spice is perfect. Taxi guy turns up at
19:10. No, nine o’clock, we say. He goes away and comes back at 21:10. Watch is
slow perchance?
Lovely evening
finished off by a few G&Ts by the Zambezi and the soft crunch of mosquitoes
on ankles.
I was unable
to post this yesterday due to being properly knackered, not helped by the Uber
driver’s out-of-date satnav and his never having been to South London before.
Wake up at 7am
because my phone pings. It’s a text. ‘Kenya Airways would like to inform you
that one or more of your flights has been affected by a schedule change. New
itinerary: Livingstone to Nairobi 18:00 4th November. Nairobi to London Gatwick
23:59 2nd November.’
Now, I’m not
sure that’s going to work without time travel but, even with my first genuine
hangover of the holiday, I remain calm. I tap on ‘view alternative flight
options.’ They can offer us a flight at 19:15 today from Livingstone to Cape
Town, then Cape Town to Nairobi at 23:25, one hour after we’ve landed, then
Nairobi to London Heathrow at 09:10 tomorrow.
If you look at
a map you will see that flying to Cape Town is completely in the wrong
direction. In fact, if you draw a straight line from Nairobi to Cape Town then
half way along you reach a place called Livingstone. It’s six more hours flight
time. But there’s no choice.
At the
Victoria Falls Waterfront Activity Centre I ask the guy if there’s anything we
can do to waste five hours. Now, African people can be very slow, it’s the
heat, but this guy must be a Professor of Slowness at Livingstone University.
After a minute he says: “Have you booked your airport transfer?” So, I do that.
Another five minutes without looking at me. “Do you want to go on a game drive
at 11:30?” It’s 70 USD each, but right now I’d happily pay that to avoid
staring at the Zambezi and dreaming of food that isn’t steak, burgers, ribs,
bream or bad pizza.
Our guide is
Vincent, the same guy who drove us from the Botswanan border. He’s a lovely man
with a cropped shiny beard and no moustache. We’re the only ones in his 4WD so
the price seems worth it and he drives us a few km or so to Mosi-oa-Tunya
National Park, which is proud to call itself the second smallest of Zambia’s
game reserves.
You may rightly think that we’d be bored of game parks at this point, but Mosi-oa-Tunya is special in that all predators have been removed. Therefore, all the animals seem very tame and unbothered. We’ve seen so many zebras and impalas, but the ones here walk straight up to the jeep.
There are
committees (real word when stationery) and kettles (real word when flying) of
vultures and towers and journeys of giraffes – more than we’ve seen before,
just by the road. And, sorry Tawanda and Jonas, but Vincent is the most
brilliant guide ever – he knows these collective nouns, he doesn’t just make them
up, and he’s well-informed about botany and history. There are herds of
buffalo-shmuffalo and a new small type of antelope whose name I’ve already
forgotten.
But the main
reason to come to Mosi-oa-Tunya, which is also the local name for Victoria
Falls (‘the smoke that thunders’ for those who’ve forgotten) are the white
rhinos. There are only 10 in the park, but that’s out of 12 in the whole of
Zambia. And the reason they’ve survived the poachers who sell their horns to
stupid, evil Chinese people, is because they’re protected by armed guards 24/7.
The guards seem like nice chaps. We leave the 4WD and walk single file to where
six of the rhino are lying under a tree sheltering from the hot sun – 50% of
the white rhinos in Zambia. They’re beautiful creatures, cuddling up with each
other. Why some people want to make them extinct for the sake of a bag of
keratin is beyond me.
We’re the only
tourists in the park. Mad dogs and Englishmen and all that.
I had expected
nothing from Livingstone Airport other than a guy selling a couple of
sandwiches and some warm coke. It’s very clean and empty. There are two
check-in counters and it seems implausible that our luggage will ever make it
back to London, but they do print out all our boarding passes which is a relief
for our ailing phones. Claire surpasses even her own standards of failing
airport security by forgetting she has scissors and a knife in her hand
baggage. There’s a duty free of sorts, a café and smoking room with two
armchairs, one of which has shat itself. It’s hard to get lost.
Three hours to
Cape Town. In most airports the transit passengers go down a separate channel
back into the departure area, sometimes through security. However, nobody
transfers in Cape Town because it’s on the bottom tip of Africa and there’s
nowhere to transit to. Luckily, I spot our names on a piece of paper and a
woman marches us to the front of the passport queue, then through customs and
arrivals, back into departures, through security and another passport check. We
have our passports stamped twice in less than twenty minutes. Wouldn’t have
made it otherwise.
The
noticeboard says the plane goes to Livingstone and Nairobi. If it stops in
Livingstone I’m going to lose it, I think. But there’s an old Aussie guy in a
cap who’s having to do the same as us and I reason that if things kick off,
he’ll be in there first, so I stop worrying. I ask the woman checking the
boarding pass whether we’re stopping at Livingstone, and she mumbles something
under her breath which could have been either ‘yes’ or ‘no.’
We don’t stop
at Livingstone. Six more hours on the plane, a three hour lay-over in Nairobi,
which is one of the worst airports I can remember being in, then 9.5 hours to
Heathrow. The uncomfortable plane on which of course I can’t sleep flies over
the South Sudan, Chad, Niger and Algeria this time. Because I’ve booked us
Hindu vegetarian meals, we are given exactly the same food four times in a row.
Apparently, Hindus like dhal, spinach and rice for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Is Southern
Africa worth it? Oh, most definitely. The Zambezi and Okavango rivers are hot,
jungly and teaming with wildlife. Etosha and the Kalahari are barren
wildernesses where plants, birds and animals fight for survival. The Skeleton
Coast is a cold paradise of sand and waves, and the Namib has the landscape of
a far-away planet. Even though I knew what was coming, I didn’t know it would
be like it was, everyday had many surprises. It was impossible to predict which
animal would be pooping outside your permanent tent next.
The people
are, for the most part, friendly and glad that you’re here - so many tribes,
completely different from one another. And we had a great group in the
Fellowship and its guides. We made friends. This has been one of the greatest
trips of my life.
Wonderful Steve. You’ve captured our shared trip beautifully. I enjoyed reliving it. Thank you. Hopefully we will be able to host you both in NZ one day for a rather more relaxing holiday! Alan makes very good ribs, we have ice cold beer and not quite so many potholes as Africa. 😘
ReplyDeleteThanks Jenni. If we’re down your way we’ll definitely look you up. You should do the same if you come to London.
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