We have just returned from a mind-boggling, eye-staggering, neverrrrrrrr-ending, bloody unbelievable, eight-week, 6 000-kilometre trip to the Australian Outback of northern Queensland. I am not a travel writer’s backside, so please excuse my unbalanced, oblong sentence.
How was it, you might ask? Well, I’m still collating the infinite collections of impressions driving around in my head. At a small town with a big pub called Boulia near the Northern Territory border, a sign pointed directly east and read, ‘Alice Springs, 1 000 kilometres, the world’s longest short cut’. (This would have been on a gutted track through the North Simpson Desert.)
On arrival back at Cape Town International Airport, I was once again overjoyed by our country’s haphazardness, happy beauty and sad brutality. However, a glance at a newspaper headline filled me with dread. It highlighted that Table Mountain National Park has almost become a no-go zone for tourists and advised that security guards should accompany hikers and climbers. My ‘Happysadland’ had become my, ‘Just-shake-your-head-land’.
I slowly shuffled my depression to the rather glamorous tourist information desk and asked in a gruff voice how our iconic World Heritage Site and top tourist attraction had become a no-go zone? The pretty informant kept her lovely smile stretched and then just slowly shook her head. Right, okay, got it, get in the car, drive home. Home. You know, where the heart is.
My photographic studio was exactly as I’d left it. Untidy. In the far corner I have constructed a partitioned area that, well, we can call it The Confession Booth. This is where thoughts are evoked, dreams followed, depressions lifted and journeys planned.
Denne historien er fra November 2019-utgaven av SA Country Life.
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Denne historien er fra November 2019-utgaven av SA Country Life.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
The Little Car That Could
The new Hyundai Atos is proof that budget-friendly vehicles can be fun
Cowboys Never Cry
GEORGE ROBEY rides the range outside Ficksburg with one of Africa’s great cowboys
Family Stays
Make some beautiful memories at one of these countryside getaways
Art from the Heart
Watching blacksmiths at the forge, painters at the easel, cabinet makers at the chisel, and wandering the woods with a famous calligrapher in small, bespoke gatherings is what the Prince Albert Open Studios project is all about
Lighthouse Over Yonder
A shipwreck road trip from Bredasdorp to Danger Point is a fine way to spend a day drifting over the Agulhas plain
Up and Away In The Amatolas
A burgeoning settlement of people enjoys the good life among the mountains, mists and forests of Hogsback
The Salt Shepherd
ALAN VAN GYSEN finds out how a farm boy the Vleesbaai skaaplande became as dedicated to big waves as he is to sheep
Time Holds on Longer Here
Do not blink as you take the R62 that runs through the Eastern Cape Langkloof, warns OBIE OBERHOLZER. You might miss the strip of tar to the tranquil village of Haarlem
Place of Refuge
People have been escaping to the remote Winterberg mountains in the Eastern Cape for hundreds of years, writes MARION WHITEHEAD
The Place Of Roaring Water
In Augrabies Falls National Park, cultural projects are creating a thunder akin to the mighty Orange as it plummets into its famous gorge