Tag Archives: Travel

A Gecko Getaway – Ebb and Flow, Wilderness – Day 4

Last night we put our camp chairs into the back of the car just in case it rained and rain it did! We had quite a few downpours during the night but by morning it had all gone away and we awoke to sunny skies.

This morning I was at the showers by half past seven and the Earl and I left camp at half past eight to meet our daughter and granddaughter at the Sedgefield Market. Only I had misread the time on my watch – it doesn’t have numbers – and it was an hour earlier! It was only when we saw the digital time in the car that we realised my mistake! So we did a scenic tour around Wilderness and then wandered around the Wild Oats Market until Lauren and Shannon met us at 9.

The Farmers’ Market at Sedgefield is well worth a visit. It is held every Saturday morning and is popular with locals and tourists alike. 

Wild Oats Market

Opposite the market grounds are a few shops and more craft market stalls and when the kids arrived we went there and found a lovely restaurant where we could sit comfortably, have breakfast and chat. It was lovely to catch up with Shannon as we did not see when we visited for the Christmas holidays as she was in Queenstown with her fiance. She is getting married in March and the whole family will be gathering at St Francis Bay for the Easter Weekend. As you can imagine most of our conversation was about the forthcoming Big Event!

The other side of The Market – Lovely sculptures

The rest of the Gecko gang did their own thing all day today and gathered for a communal braai for the last evening which we missed as we had to leave to attend a function in Struisbaai. Our good friends Cath and Alec kindly left with us to provide support should anything go wrong. We really appreciate their support.

Thanks to all the Gecko Gang for a fantastic getaway. We had such fun and thoroughly enjoyed bonding with everybody at Ebb and Flow.

John Magner as I mentioned before took the opportunity to do a pentad for SABAP2. This project is very important for tracking the movement of birds in South Africa and where they are likely to be found. Many dedicated birders send in their cards to help with this project and we really appreciate their contributions. 

This is the list that John got during our Gecko Camp. I have put an asterisk on the ones I personally saw too.

Laughing Dove,*
White-throated Swallow*
Red-eyed Dove*
Ring-necked Dove*
Knysna Turaco,*
Black-headed Oriole,
Bar-throated Apalis*
Southern Grey-headed Sparrow
Cape White-eye*
White-breasted Cormorant*
Egyptian Goose*
Helmeted Guineafowl*
African Hoopoe*
Sombre Greenbu*l
Southern Boubou*
Fork-tailed Drongo*
Reed Cormorant*
Common Moorhen*
African Fish Eagle
Cape Batis*
Purple Heron
Burchell’s Coucal
Hadada Ibis,*
Fiery-necked Nightjar
Cape Weaver*
African Black Swift
Little Swift
Pied Kingfisher
Red-faced Mousebird*
Barn Swallow*
Lesser Swamp Warbler*
Pied Crow*
Hartlaub’s Gull*
Little Grebe*
Blacksmith Lapwing*
Kelp Gull*
Southern Double-collared Sunbird*
Red-knobbed Coot,*
Malachite Kingfisher*
Western Cattle Egret*
Cape Wagtail*
African Swamphen*
Little Rush Warbler,
Great Crested Grebe*
Domestic Goose*
Giant Kingfisher,
Fiscal Flycatcher*
Black Saw-wing*
Southern Fiscal*
African Sacred Ibis*
Yellow-billed Kite*
Red-winged Starling*
Swee Waxbill
Forest Canary
Cape Bulbul*
Bird List of John Magner

A Gecko Getaway – Ebb and Flow, Wilderness – Day 1

Today the Gecko Getaway officially began and by around 3 pm all twenty-two caravans had arrived. Several of us have formed a laager where a beautiful wild fig tree provides shade and privacy from the rest of the campsite. The rest of the caravans are scattered around nearby and are in easy reach of the laager.

After breakfast I joined Chris and Rita on a walk around the campsite. The Touw River flows through it and one can hire canoes or even book a scenic boat trip. We decided against these two options!

Fun on the Touw River
Chris and Rita

There were lots of birds about and saw weavers, wagtails, drongos, martins, sunbirds, hadedas, geese among others but I only managed to get three reasonable photographs. 

Helmeted Guineafowl
African Hoopoe
Bar-throated Apalis – he was a bit camera shy!

As each Gecko arrived there was much joy at reuniting with friends made at previous gatherings and getting to know those we had not met before. Gecko owners have an instant bond!

Nida and Pottie – Lekker om julle weer te sien!
Colin the main organiser with Earl and Rita
Rita and Avril met for the first time today and are already good friends!
Cathy and Alec
I am always behind the camera, so Cathy took this one of me with The Earl
Boet and Avril
John, Jane and The Earl

In the evening all 44 of us gathered at the laager to braai together. Thanks to Johan for providing the meat, Nida for the broccoli salad, Maria for the pasta salad, John for the corn bread and Rudie for the dessert. Colin our awesome organise opened the evening by welcoming everybody to Ebb and Flow and thanked Nardus and Adeline and his wife, Diane for all their hard work in the background. Without their teamwork this wonderful getaway would not be possible. There have been other gatherings in the country, but this has been the best response yet with 22 caravans participating.

A good way to defrost the meat – hang it on the line!
Doing what South African men do best! Dit was ‘n lekker braai!

Almal het lekker saam gekuier, lekker gebraai and net ‘n bietjie gedrink! Hoe geseënd is ons om ‘n wonderlik plek soos Ebb and Flow te kan geniet met ander vriendelike Gecko eienaars!

A Gecko Getaway – Ebb and Flow, Wilderness

Thanks to Colin’s wonderful initiative and organisation we are once again having a Gecko Caravan gathering in the Western Cape. This time the venue is in the beautiful Garden Route National Park – Wilderness Section.  Twenty-two Geckos will be invading Ebb and Flow Rest Camp for four nights. Some of us, however, have chosen to come for a little longer. 

For those who are reading my blog for the first time or have come across it by accident let me explain about Gecko. A small family business in Haenetzburg, Limpopo has been building Gecko Off-Road Caravans for some years now. Each caravan is numbered in the order in which it came off the production line. So in our case, we are Gecko 81 having been the 81st Gecko built.  Most Gecko owners belong to a WhatsApp group where ideas and experiences are exchanged. Because we are all proud Gecko owners we get excited when we meet a fellow owner and all over the country Gecko rallies are sometimes arranged. This will be the third one that we have attended and because it is being held in a summer month on the very popular garden route it is being very well attended with some folk coming from other provinces to join us.

Together with Cath and Alec, owners of Gecko 109, we decided to come a day early. We then contacted new Gecko Owners who recently bought number 12, and also live in Struisbaai, to join us. At the last minute they agreed and we set off together this morning at quarter to eight. BUT – disaster struck and just outside Struisbaai, Chris and Rita lost a wheel from their caravan! We were just about to pull off to wait for them when we noticed them not following when a car flashed lights at us and pulled over. We stopped behind her and she informed us of the disaster. Chris had been unable to ring us as Vodocom was down. But then it came back into function and we rang to see if we should turn back. Chris said that help was on the way and we should just go ahead. Thanks to Agri Bredasdorp they were able to get the problem solved at the roadside. We had just set up at Ebb and Flow when they arrived with no damage done to their caravan.

Ons is so bly dat julle veilig deurgekom het, Chris en Rita. Dit gaan ‘n baie lekker paar dae wees!

The weather today was overcast but very warm and there was no wind. Our three caravans are parked together under large shady trees. There are about eight of us already set up and ready to greet the rest of our fellow Gecko friends tomorrow.

Click on the first photo to enlarge and then use arrows to go to the next slide.

Ons kan nie wag om julle almal te sien nie! Ry veilig!

Share Your World Monday 15 January 2024

Here is my contribution to this week’s SYW from pensitivity100

1. Do you use an air freshener in your home? If so, do you prefer a solid gel, spray, timed release, potpourri or something else?

I use an air freshener spray in the bathroom. 

Sometimes I use a diffuser in the living area. You place a few drops of essential oil in water and the diffuser breaks them down into smaller particles and disperses them into the air giving your home a pleasant aroma. The oils are supposed to be calming too. 

2When good weather permits, do you open your windows to let in the fresh air?

Yes, all our windows are open during the summer months. We open the windows at the entrance of the house and also the sliding door that opens onto our back garden – this gives a lovely through draft which keeps the house cool.

3.  With the extreme variants in weather these days, do you feel the cold in the Winter months?

I have found that winters get colder every year. I am not sure that temperatures are actually dropping or whether age is preventing me from dealing with cold. 

At the moment it is summer in South Africa. I find that the warmest months these days are from January to the end of March. I prefer the heat to the cold.

4.  Which would you prefer………..
to curl up in front of a log fire or log burner, turn the heating up, or go to bed early with extra blankets

I really enjoy a wood-burning stove during winter. We usually light our in the early afternoon and then go to bed early. We have an electric blanket and a down duvet. The blanket is switched off once the bird has warmed up.

Gratitude:
From time to time, I find some wonderful Memes on other blogging sites and I will include them here. Forgive me if I cannot remember where I first saw them, but thank you.

Great meme. Wouldn’t it be great if we could all be like that toward each other?

Just Jot It January and Stream of Consciousness 13 January 2024

Today Stream of Consciousness Saturday is combined with Just Jot It January and the prompt is Close-up or Close Up.

I enjoy taking photographs but I am really of the aim and shoot variety. Reasonable memory shots are usually the result of my efforts and I have an archive full of photographs from many years of recording just about anything since digital photography became a thing.

I received my first digital camera on my fiftieth birthday – twenty-one years ago. I guess it’s time my photography skills came of age! That little camera had a three times optical zoom and cost R7 000 if I remember correctly. At the time I owned a video camera which was my pride and joy but it was not digital. My camera did not have a video function so I still had to use both of them. 

My next digital camera came a few years later and I paid R 6 000 for a 12x optical zoom camera – Wow – was I thrilled with that. I could not believe that a camera so superior to my previous one cost R1000 less. And it had a video function so the video camera went into a junk cupboard and stayed there for many years before giving it away for nothing! 

But now to the point of the prompt – close-up. Well with my new digital camera, I discovered that close-ups were quite easy and great fun too. As technology improved I moved along with it by purchasing the newest in digital zoom cameras until at last I got one with a 65x optical zoom. My brand of choice was and still is Canon, and their PowerShot range is superb.  Each time I bought a new camera the price was less than the time before until the latest one.  Cameras now cost twice as much as what I paid before the one I have now – a Canon PowerShot SX70HS. I have to take great care of this one because it will cost too much to replace. My previous cameras have all been given to members of my family who coveted them!

Camera technology today is amazing. Who would have imagined twenty years ago that a phone would double as a camera? In fact, the cell phone is even more than that, and what a difference that has made to modern life!

Let me now close up this post with a few favourite close-up photographs. The Earl is in fact the best close-up photographer so I have also chosen from his folder too. He uses a Panasonic Lumex 60X with 60x optical zoom.

Giraffeclose-up by The Earl
Lion close-up by The Earl
Zebra close-up by me.

JusJoJan

As it is a New Year and I have been erratic with my blogging, I have decided to start the year by joining in the JusJoJan challenge – Just Jot it January. Linda gives us the daily prompt

Today’s prompt is ‘train’.

The word train has featured quite a bit in my life. I remember my mother saying that it was her duty to train her children. She needed to train us to have good manners, be obedient, and master certain skills. Strangely enough, I also remember her telling me that she had to train my hair to grow a certain way. Well, in training us to be well-behaved and become law-abiding citizens she certainly was successful but as far as training my hair was concerned – total failure there!

When I left school, I went to a college to train as a teacher. That was the best decision I ever made in my life and I believed I was trained very well.

Another part of my life where the word train featured was where it refers to a mode of transport. Oh yes – I rode a train throughout my childhood. In the days of my youth and in the part of the country where I lived riding a suburban train was the best mode of transport. I seldom rode on a bus and when I did it was a huge novelty and quite an adventure. I knew the names of all the stations from Fish Hoek where I lived to Simonstown and back to Fish Hoek and then all the way to Cape Town. I rode that train on my own from a very early age. I was seven when I knew how to look up the train timetable, which platform to wait on, how to purchase my ticket and where to get off. In those days it was perfectly normal and safe for a small child to travel unaccompanied by an adult on the suburban train. I would take the train to visit my grandmother – a half-hour journey, to go to the movies – a 15-minute journey and to go to my swimming lessons – a 10-minute journey. My friend and I also travelled on our own all the way to the city for her orthodontic appointments when we were just nine years old! Then for my last two years of school, I went to school in the city – an hour’s journey – and travelled by train to get there and back. What a great way to travel. These days the suburban train service is not as reliable as it was back in the sixties and seventies and crime has been a problem too. Things are in place now to rectify this but one would certainly not allow a small child to travel unaccompanied on a train.

When I went away to college the mode of transport to get there was an overnight train. In fact, the train took two nights. Sometimes this journey would involve changing at a place called De Aar in the middle of the Karoo. Four times a year there and back I would take this train and oh what fun it was! There were, of course, other students riding the train and travelling Second Class you would share a compartment with five others, the bunks being top, middle and bottom on each side! In the compartment was a single wash basin which we all shared. The loo and shower were a short walk down the corridor. Some of us would pay a little extra to get bedding while others would bring a sleeping bag. If you got bedding a steward would make up your bed for you each night. 

There was also a dining car and the food served there was not bad at all. Of course, as we were poor students we would choose the cheapest items on the menu.

The last time I slept on a train was in 1973. The last time I rode the suburban train was in 2004 when I took my grandsons on a train just for the fun of it! They were six and seven years old and had never been on a train in their lives. The look on their faces when the train rumbled into the station was priceless. And they loved it! The next time they went on a train was in their teens and we had to carefully explain how to use the train timetable, how to buy a ticket, which platform to wait on etc. 

Of course, when I travel abroad I use public transport and find it totally awesome. The freedom to just hop on a subway train or a bus and get to your destination without worrying about traffic is beyond amazing. 

Recently I hosted two young German tourists who had been travelling through Africa. They used public transport in every country but in South Africa, they hired a car because our public transport system is so unreliable. Oh if only our trains ran like they did in the sixties – how awesome that would be!

Christmas Present in Plettenberg Bay

Every year at Christmas we holiday with our immediate family – our three daughters, son-in-law and four grandchildren. Since our granddaughter has been dating the young man she is about to marry we have had to share her with his family and this year it was their turn to be with them. Our oldest grandson is now living and working in Hungary so we missed him being with us too. Over the years Christmas has changed for us many times and we must now accept that with the grandchildren all grown up it will change again. But how amazing that we have all the memories and photographs of Christmas Past and Christmas Present and we will make new memories with Christmas Future.

Christmas Past – Reading the Grinch who tried to steal Christmas to the Grandchildren –
Clockwise from back – Shannon, Jay, Joshua, Granny, Simon, Grandpa
Christmas Past Kokstad 2016 Allan, Earl, Lisa, Laurie, Lauren, Simon, Shannon, Jay, Helen, Joshua
Christmas Present – Lauren, Laurie, Allan, Grandpa, Joshua, Lisa
Simon always plays Santa and hands out the gifts
Simon showing off his Secret Santa gift
Granny reading her Secret Santa message

By the style of the writing in my Christmas card, I guessed that it was from Allan. I was correct and on the back of the card in tiny type it said – Made specially for you by your son-in-law. He then told me to look at my WhatsApp – A photo of a pair of good hiking shoes! 

“Check your WhatsApp Gran”

We are all together with Lauren, Allan and Simon in Plettenberg Bay and the days have been mostly sunny and warm. Most mornings the fit ones amongst us get up early and walk on the beach before breakfast. 

Simon, Allan, Lauren

We have also done the Robberg Hike which is, to say the least, quite a challenge! I have done it several times in the past and I’m proud to say I managed it again this year!

Robberg Hike – Lauren and Allan
Robberg Hike – Me – SIL thought my shoes were not good enough – hence the promised Secret Santa gift!
Robberg Hike – The Afrikaans word for seal is rob. Robberg means Seal Mountain. Here we are looking down on a rookery of seals
What a wonderful life!

Lauren and Allan’s home is in a gated estate that has some beautiful, marked trails which we walk most afternoons. 

The trails also have fitness circuits
There is also a lovely play park for kids
Lollz and Josh still think they’re kids

Plettenberg Bay has an awesome climate and the most beautiful, white, sandy beaches.  Robberg Beach is the perfect place for enjoying walks, swims, dog walking and sundowners.

Allan, Simon, Josh and some friendly dogs having fun

On Christmas Eve we all went to a lovely restaurant called Barringtons for breakfast. This place has a fabulous herb and vegetable garden and the sunflowers are spectacular.

Today the weather has turned chilly and we have had some rain – most unusual for Plettenberg Bay at this time of the year. So we are all chilling indoors, bonding, reading, watching movies, cuddling the pets etc. 

Tomorrow Lauren, Allan and Si are off to join friends on the Wild Coast for a few days and we are going to pet-sit. 

I hope you have all had an amazing festive season.