Monday, April 7, 2003 (Knysna – South Africa)
Never had so much fun before. Full steam ahead -
and luckily the whole carriage to ourselves ;-) A slow boat to the
heads
and back. Relaxing and catching up on some chores.
Day 26. Today was a fun day and we really got to enjoy ourselves. After getting
up this morning and enjoying the free cereal and fruit breakfast provided, we
drove down to the waterfront to catch the steam train ride to George. At just
R55 ($7) per person, it was hard to pass up the opportunity to catch a ride on a
genuine steam train. The two and a half hour trip would take us through some
spectacular scenery in a leisurely manor and in style. As luck would have it, we
had the whole front carriage to ourselves. I think the reason the other forty or
so passengers took the carriages further back was because it is so close to the
steam engine, which puts out a lot of small grains of debris in the form of
spent coal fuel. When you are leaning out of the window on either side to gape
at the scenery, you tend to get a head and mouthful of little gritty bits and
pieces when the wind catches the steam exhaust just right. It didn’t spoil
our enjoyment and we had a thoroughly good time – being a healthily
married couple ;-)Once we reached
the other end of the line in George (about sixty kilometres down the coast), we
looked around the train museum there and grabbed a snack before getting on the
minivan taxi back to Knysna.
For an extra R10 ($1), we could have stayed on the train for the return trip but
we had other plans and the taxi ride was just a thirty-minute jaunt. When we
arrived back at the Knysna train station, we kind of ‘forgot’ to pay
the R60 per person fee to the driver. It wasn’t intentional; it’s
just that nobody bothered to ask us to pay anything and I certainly wasn’t
going to volunteer. Didn’t think happen to us once before in the Cradle of
Humankind?We were originally going
to take the ‘township tour’ this afternoon. This is a three hour
tour through one of the local townships where you get to meet to locals, see
their village, their witch doctors and chiefs and so on. At R180 ($22) per
person, it’s not cheap but the money (or at least a good chunk of it) goes
towards the building of a township school. A guide takes us through and the
locals accept you (and your cameras) as they know that you represent money
coming into the community – or so they tell us anyway. Since we
couldn’t arrange the tour in time, we will now do this
tomorrow.
With a gaping hole in our afternoon, we decided to take the catamaran trip
through ‘the heads’ inlet and out into the ocean. The trip lasted
about an hour and a half and we got to navigate through some impressive scenery
but only just managed it to the open ocean before turning back to port. There
was just a little bit of chop once we got past the inlet but not quite enough to
bring on nausea.After returning from
the boat ride, I bought an ice cream to create change for the car guard and we
headed back to our backpackers place via one of the local Internet cafés
which doubles as a postal service. We wanted to check the cost of sending a
crate full of curios back to Europe. The costs aren’t too bad but
we’ll still probably pay more in postage than the cost of the curios
themselves. Just like Christmas in Florida and sending Christmas presents back
to the Nephews and Nieces in England and
Holland.So, tomorrow is the township
tour in the morning and a visit to one of the larger Internet Cafés in the
afternoon to upload some more pictures (as well as the family reunion photos at
last!). I’ve sorted out and processed all the photos I’m going to be
uploading so there shouldn’t be much to do other than wait for the upload
to complete with iPhoto.
I sent an e-mail to Iris this evening telling her about our progress and the
fact that we are slightly behind our originally expected schedule. At this
point, it’s looking like we will get to Gaborone no earlier that the end
of April.I’ve been slowly
starting to think about where to go after we reach Cape Town and ditch the
rental car (and rental cell phone). We know that we want to go to Namibia and we
already have the option of a luxury bus service to get there but the guy at the
front desk seems to think that we should be able to get a flight into Windhoek
from the Cape for under R500 ($62) per person. Since the 24 hour bus ride will
cost us R430 ($54) per person, it doesn’t seem reasonable not to fly. He
also looked into some organized overland tours for us today. He found a 12-day
Cape Town to Windhoek option for around R4000 ($500) per person but he thought
that this was expensive. I almost fell off the floor when he said this, as
nothing I could find through US/European operators during my research was
anywhere near as cheap. He’s going to do some more research for us
tomorrow while we are doing the township tour so we’ll see what he’s
come up with by mid-day.
Posted: Mon - April 7, 2003 at 07:53 AM