Monday, December 13, 2010

To Chobe We Will Go

With Miki gone, we knew our time in Arnie was winding to a close. Our little blue kombi had been good to us, but was sorely battered and bruised. For a goodbye trip, we decided a jaunt into Botswana was in order. Brett, Oliver and I would go to Chobe for one last game drive, then head back down to South Africa to sell the van. I had been to Chobe before, but the game viewing in Botswana’s first official game park had been magnificent the first time, so I couldn’t resist.
I waved goodbye to my friends in Victoria Falls and we pulled out our passports to enter a new country. Botswana was a relatively poor neighbor to Zimbabwe, but it seemed to be comfortable in its own skin. Images of poverty did not slap you in the face and gone were the tourist trappings of Victoria Falls. We were guests in a proud nation that seemed to take care of itself in a way that we had not seen thus far. A feeling of peace filled me as we drove towards the park entrance. I smiled at the dry landscape we passed and the beautiful people in their simply constructed rondavel homes. This was the Africa of my dreams.
While Chobe National Park is not Botswana’s largest park, it does hold some of the biggest concentrations of game. There are massive amounts of elephants. Hippos can be seen lazing on river banks or slowly drifting downriver from the multitudes of hungry crocodiles. Assorted deer species such as impala, sable, kudu, eland, bushbuck and waterbuck are found within the parks borders, as well as many of the Big Five (leopard, Cape Buffalo, elephants, rhinoceros and lion). We hoped to see as many animals as we could while we were there and odds were good in this relatively flat country.
 Our drive into the park heavily wetted our appetite for game viewing. Despite it being mid-day, which is not the best time to spy game, we were treated to tonnes of animal sightings. We saw impalas and giraffes, passed baboons and warthogs, and even spied buffalo and zebras. We were thrilled and anxious to set up our camp so that we could go for a proper game drive that evening. We knew that the best times of day for game viewing was between 6 and 9AM or 4 to 6PM. Most animals prefer to sleep during the worst of the heat of the day. We were not immune to the incredibly dry, hot weather either. After setting up camp, we retreated into our tents to snooze away the afternoon before heading out for our highly anticipated evening game drive after our plethora of sightings earlier that day.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Snow + Cold = Xmas Tree

Snow
More snow
Snow forecast all week
More snow
Snow

Ha!
Your afflictions
Born of cold weather
Can’t stop me
Nah!

Tree
Christmas tree
Tucked in the corner
Gathered today
tree
~


Neither snow,
nor this cold's flow
could keep me 
from getting our Xmas tree
or linking me
to the Sunday 160

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Saturday Sickies


sniff...
cough...

Now
a
cold.

Achoo!

~~~
Despite being housebound
with all this snow
I still
managed to let germs
catch me
sigh...



Thursday, December 9, 2010

The Aftermath

The snow has past,
for now we pray.
I believe it'll last
till Christmas day.

Up to my waist
in the deep back yard.
You should see this place!
I might be forever scarred.

But the sun came out
And schools re-opened for play.
So I just had to run about
For kid-free retail therapy!




Yippee,
55 words to you
from me
to throw at G-Man's flash party crew

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

A Winter's Day

Late last night
on my little side street
sat a city truck
with flashing lights replete.

My heart it sank
as questions began to mount.
What was going on?
What fresh hell could I now count?

 Early this morning
my fears were realized.
 A knock on the door
brought bad news, I surmised.

"The water'll be turned off,"
a man clad in orange declared.
A water main break;
The cause of this new despair.

So we watched from the window
as a hole was dug.
Morning entertainment; cool!
For another snowy day funk.

Well, on the seventh day of December
the numbers began to add.
Would you care to do the math
for my wintry woes comrade?

12 yellow flags


11 Tonnes of dirt (or something like that to fill the hole in the road afterwards)
10 AM - When I went out with coffees (and to survey the damage)
9 AM - When they started to dig


8 AM - When they knocked on the door
7th Heaven - for me as they plowed the driveway & brushed off the van (in appreciation for coffee)
6 Big orange pylons
5 City workers


4 Cups of coffee (plus 1 tea for the poor guys stuck out in the snow)
3 G-Tel vans (line locating crew)


2 City trucks
and 1 Back hoe to dig the hole...


 Happy Winter Days my friends!
Oh, and I am jumping on early for One Shot Wednesday this week. Enjoy!!



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