Windhoek Airport was my entry point to
Namibia, it is also the exit point, where we’ll be catching our respective
flights to return home and to reality. Windhoek Airport is also the scene of a
pivotal moment in my life, I alluded to it in the first post about this trip
and I quote my words, “I am only a few kilometres from the spot where my mother
lost her life 46 years ago when SA 228 crashed…” Now this blog is about my travels, and not a
tear jerker, nonetheless I cannot write about Windhoek without referencing this
event. It was 1968, the day after my ninth birthday, Simon and Garfunkel’s Mrs Robinson was already getting
airtime when we waved goodbye to my parents as they took off from the (then)
Jan Smuts International Airport en route
to Europe. I recall, without knowing a thing about the story, toasting my mum in my mind thinking, "Here's to you Mrs.Williams," not just anyone got to fly to Europe in those days. I have a clear picture in my mind of my mum, a bit overweight, but
still very pretty, wearing a bottle green skirt and jacket, black blouse with
pearl necklace, those were the days that you dressed up to fly. She hugged me
then walking away through the doors that led to the departure lounge. I recall
standing on a balcony and watched her as she climbed the steps to board the
plane, I imagine that she turned and waved to me, it was the last time I saw
her. I have no idea how much of these memories are actually true or simply
confabulated, it does not matter, it is as I recall it.
The Boeing 707 made a stop at Windhoek, to
refuel and take on more passengers before heading north to Luanda, Las Palmas,
Frankfurt and finally Heathrow. However it didn’t get much further than the end
of the runway, crashing minutes after takeoff killing almost all aboard, of the
128 passengers and crew only 5 survived. Wikipedia (where else) has a
reasonable account of the incident, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_African_Airways_Flight_228.
My father was one of the 5 survivors, he suffered severe physical injuries
including temporary insanity and brain damage, which for the most part reversed
and returned him to a more or less normal state within three years. He was, however,
never quite the same person again. Perhaps it is a romantic thought that almost
everything about me was determined in those few seconds, but I believe it
actually is so… my sense of independence and distrust of religious doctrine and
authority was forged in the furnace of that experience. For years afterwards my
family referenced everything to pre or post the air cash. My sisters and I were
extraordinarily lucky to have grandparents that were willing and able to step
in and take charge, they effectively raised us, hence sparing us the awfulness of
separation and foster care. Of course at the time I did not consider myself to
be terribly lucky, and did not even think that my dear Gran and Gramps had the
option of washing their hands of the whole problem. In retrospect I have no
doubt that this must have been an attractive choice for them, they were old
retired people and my grandfather was rather sick with stomach ulcers, yet they
uprooted their lives and took on the task of raising us. THANK YOU GRANNY AND
GRANDPA.
Today we are travelling on the same route to Windhoek that we came by,
it is sad that we don’t take the more scenic road, the C 28 is definitely the
way to go... I hanker, I want this road, but I know that it is too risky. My
sister has a 1 p.m. flight and having suffered one flat tyre on just such a
stretch of road, I realize that the adult thing to do is stick to the tar…
damn. There is something I love about my travels on the Boulevard, I am alone
and have only to consider one person, me. If I get lost it is only me that can
bitch, if I choose a lousy road, it is only me that can be angry with me. However
today I have passengers and I have no option, I must choose wisely, there is a
plane to catch.
En-route to Windhoek
The journey passes quickly, far too
quickly. We pretend to be cheerful, but there is a melancholy atmosphere that
none of us can dispel. Already I miss my sister and wonder when I will get to
spend a decent chunk of time with her again. It’s a strange thing this South
African diaspora, not the way we expected things to turn out. The desert turns
to yellow grasslands and then to thorn bush and the hills surrounding Windhoek
materialize. To get to the airport we have to cross through the city centre and
witness some of the worst driving I have ever seen, but we make it there in
time and without incident, even have time to spare to get some lunch before her
flight. By this time we are all hungry, despite the delicious farewell breakfast
provided by Tilla and Tula at the guest house. The little restaurant in the
airport serves a tolerable lunch, but the complete lack of windows just adds to
the general ‘down’ of the moment. The time comes for her to pass through the
security portals and after a quick hug she is gone. I keep my tears in check,
no good for an old guy like me to be seen crying, I’m old school, ‘cowboys
don’t cry’. Still I wipe tear away before anyone can notice.
Lilac-breasted Roller - photographed at Arebbusch Travel Lodge
The big lump in my throat is still coming,
when my daughter and I must say goodbye, but for now we have a few days left to
enjoy each other’s company, and whatever Windhoek has to offer. The charms of
Windhoek are more in the nature of the traditional expectations of a western
person of an African experience, thorn tress, grasslands and African game, ala Karen
Blixen… zebras, antelope, baboons, elephant, giraffe, leopards and lions. Not
to mention game lodges, being called ‘bwana’ and bare breasted African maidens
dancing, actually this last bit is not seen much anymore unless it’s staged for
tour groups at much expense. The impact of television has some regrettable
consequences and of course you would not hear the word ‘bwana’ 'round here
except in sarcasm, they don’t speak Swahili in Namibia.
I had pre-booked and paid accommodation at
the Arebbusch Travel Lodge from Canada, (the same place we stayed when we
arrived in Namibia a few weeks back, see earlier post, http://www.not-so-easy-rider.blogspot.ca/2015/01/nam.html).
I suppose that I lacked some imagination when I was doing the bookings, and
should have tried somewhere else to make the experience a bit more interesting.
Too late now, I have already parted with the brass, so to speak, and it’s
really quite adequate, if a little bit too close to the City of Windhoek.
Besides spending some quality time with my daughter and doing some game viewing,
I want to see the southern hemisphere night sky at a sufficient distance from
light and other pollution so that one can actually see the stars properly. Star
gazing and game spotting, the ultimate of African experiences.
Pumba - Daan Viljoen Game reserve
Most of humanity seems to have forgotten,
and some may never have seen the night sky as our forefathers, and I presume
foremothers, witnessed it whenever weather permitted, as recently as 250 years
ago. Before Edison, Henry Ford and the industrial revolution turned the stars
into little twinkly things, like sequins glued to a canopy of black baize, flat
and all equidistant from Earth. If you
can get to a place on a clear, moonless, night that has clean air and far
enough from city lights, you will be rewarded by the grandest of vistas that
you have ever seen, and if you can do this in the southern hemisphere all the
better. You can then start to appreciate the fixation our ancestors had for
stars, you can see the depth of heavens, see that some stars are closer than
others even though they may be dimmer and the Milky Way is not just a smudge,
but you can actually see that it is made up of stars uncountable. The planets
become visible, Mars is orange and Venus does have phases just like the moon
and the stars really are not the same colour, some are blue, some are white,
there are yellows and even browns. It is the most humbling, yet most wonderful
experience imaginable. There was a time in my life when I drove between Johannesburg
and Cape Town and on a regular basis, about an 18 hour drive. Usually I managed
to time it so at least some of the part of the trip that took me through the
Karoo would be at night, (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karoo
). If I was lucky I would encounter the Karoo on a moonless night and stop next
to the road, to lie on the roof of my Jeep wrapped in a blanket and stare up
for an hour or so. I remember doing this with my daughter on one of those trips,
it was a moment in my life I will not easily forget. Sometimes I am asked, how
does a godless person like me find any meaning in life? Looking up into the
cosmos I have realised that there is more meaning to be discovered than my
meagre intellect could possibly manage over several life times.
Google, as always, is my friend, though the
internet connection at Arebbusch is not entirely as reliable and strong as I
would like it to be. There are a few options to do some game spotting - game
drives, guided hikes, and there are several unguided hikes available. I choose to
do unguided hikes, game drives are very pleasant, but generally expensive and
terribly touristy and guided hikes you need to book well in advance. The Google
machine leads me to a small national reserve with the unlikely name of Daan
Viljoen, a very Afrikaans name for a post-independence Namibia, http://www.namibian.org/travel/lodging/daan_viljoen.htm. It is an absolutely fabulous little place, even though it is only about 4000
hectares, not much more than a large farm in these parts, situated on the Khomas Hochland Hills, on the western side of Windhoek, overlooking the city.
They offer the intrepid traveler several hiking options from an
easy-peasy three km, to a more challenging nine km and a guided 27 km trail. We
decide on trying the 3 km as a prelude to dinner at their restaurant, the nine
km route we plan to do early on one of the days that we are here.
Interesting art at Daan Viljoen Game Reserve
We arrive at about 5 p.m. after losing
fifteen minutes to an error of route selection (aka, I got lost because I took
the wrong turn). There is a surprising amount of red tape involved and hidden
fees, forms to fill with several carbon copies and so on, in order to finally
park the car and take off into the wilderness. The 3 km hike is a 1.5 km walk
along a dry river bed to a silted up dam, and back again. It is not terribly
challenging, but still a decent hike with enough game to make it very
worthwhile. We see gnus, including males fighting over breeding rights,
warthogs and a troop of Chacma baboons, not to mention a good selection of bird
species. My daughter even manages to be almost in the path of a small herd of
gnus doing a little stampede. Being in close proximity to baboons is quite a
spine tingling experience, though they are not usually aggressive if you don’t
interfere with them in any way and you have no food with you. The big males are
a study in primate strength, lean and muscular, almost like cartoon depictions
of a body builder, huge shoulders and tiny waist, and armed with surprisingly
large and lethal canine teeth. Though they weigh less than half I do, I would
be utterly no match in a straight fight, not even when I was at my peak
strength in my mid-twenties.
Small stampede of gnus
Bit of male competition
I think the game we managed to see, though
not from the big five, isn’t bad for a short walk along a dry river bed, after all
I would not like to encounter anything more dangerous than the animals we saw. Dinner
at the restaurant is reasonably good, not quite as good as I had hoped for as
the venison fillet (known in North America as ‘tender loin’) that I order
tastes suspiciously like beef rump steak, nonetheless it is tasty and by this
time we are pretty hungry. So all is well,
there is a sunset, a few Scotches and soda, a full moon and the chance to spend
time with my daughter. Shit, I realize, a full moon presents a problem to the
star gazing ambition – full moon equals too much heavenly light to see the
stars properly.
This graveyard was on the path we walked at Daan Viljoen
The next day we just chill out at the
lodge, my daughter swims in the pool, while I experiment with building a sundial
using a water bottle, the tiles on the floor and my cell phone’s GPS. Adjusting
for the actual longitude from the start of the time zone, I manage to get the
shadow of the water bottle sundial to show the time to within only a negligible
error. I am such a nerd. It is now midday, very close to the summer solstice
and a hair north of the Tropic of Capricorn, time to get out of the pool and
the sun and head to the air conditioned sanctuary of the bungalow. I braai (otherwise
known as BBQ) lamb chops and my daughter makes salad for lunch. It’s a
wonderful feeling not having to do anything for the afternoon, a rare luxury
for me, but I seem incapable of taking advantage of it. I don’t know when it
happened, but somewhere along the way I have unlearned the ability to just
relax.
I have worked out that even though the
phase of the moon is just past full, there might be a very brief window for us
to see the night sky in all its glory between sunset and moonrise. Late afternoon
we head out, south towards Rehoboth on the B1 in order to get some distance
from the city lights. The sun dips below the horizon in a fabulous display of
pinks, oranges and finally purples, we turn onto a side road and find a place
to stop. I am disappointed as there seems to be a glow on the eastern horizon,
perhaps the lights of a town I wasn’t aware of. Nonetheless the sky darkens and
the stars start to reveal themselves. There is a very brief moment when I get a
glimpse of the night sky I am looking for, it is only visible over a patch of
sky above us, and then the glow on the eastern horizon gets brighter and
expands across the sky. It’s not light from an unknown town, but the moon itself,
from just a sliver of bright silver on the horizon to a shiny full disk takes
mere moments. The moon may have robbed us of the stars, but this is one of the most
magnificent moonrises I have seen. The land is flat bushveldt with a few mountains
in the distance, it’s a cliché, I know, but no other way of saying it, the
world is bathed in a silver light, it is breathtaking. The absence of pollution
and even moisture in the air, I speculate, produces this clarity of light.
The drive back to Windhoek is in silence, I
am not sure if it’s the moonrise or the realization that we have just two
nights left and only one full day, perhaps both. In any event it’s to be early
to bed. Tomorrow we will do the nine Km hike, and to avoid walking in the
midday sun in 38 Celsius we’d better be up early.
Hi, I did a shorter 9 km walk in Daan Viljoen many times and have never seen this small graveyard. Is it on a longer 30 km walk? Could you give its location?
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