Re: Spring 2014 | Page 72

Our farewell meal – superb Peking duck! Next day’s drive was short and pleasant, along the coast with a brief coffee break in Knysna, a beautiful holiday resort on a lagoon. South African scenery is ever-changing, and one can go from Karoo desert to rolling English hills to semi tropical beachfronts in a matter of hours. As we were quite early, we decided to stop at Gordon’s Bay, about ten kilometres short of Winery Road. It’s a small, quaint seaside town on the edge of False Bay and we spent an hour having a few drinks and fish and chips; edible enough, although it has to be said this is one cuisine where England reigns supreme. Winery Road was fantastic; situated on the edge of the Ken Forrester wine estate, the view from my bedroom spread across acres of vines to a backdrop of the Simonsberg mountains. We dined at the restaurant with Ken’s mother in law – an old friend of my brother – and had a really fun evening. A favourite on the menu was duck “ Suffice to say it was one of the most enjoyable 48 hours I have ever spent “ 70 and cherry pie; a popular hangover from Ken’s days as a restaurateur in Johannesburg. The next day we spent touring the winelands, visiting the Rupert family’s incredible car museum at L’Ormarins and then having freshly poached trout for lunch at Le Petit Ferme, located in the hills high above Franschoek with fantastic views across the valley and beyond. On a day like that, one can readily imagine why Jan Van Riebeeck, on landing in 1652, named the area Cape of Good Hope. Sadly, the holiday was drawing to a close, but my brother and his wife had one last – and the best ever – treat in store for me; a return journey from Cape town to Pretoria on the famous Rovos Rail. Owned by Rowan Vos, it is considered by many to be the most luxurious train in the world, and has been voted the International Rail Travel Society’s favourite rail experience. There is not room here to dwell in detail on the sheer magnificence one encounters on boarding; the beautiful stateroom with en suite shower and toilet, the rosewood panelling, the immaculate service in the bar and dining cars, the tour of the Kimberly diamond mine, and much much more. Suffice to say it was one of the most enjoyable 48 hours I have ever spent, and an experience I will never forget. One last night in Johannesburg, a farewell dinner of Peking Duck, a last swim in my brother’s pool and it was farewell OR Tambo and hello Gatwick – urrgh! Of course it was great to be home with Liz and see the girls again, but I couldn’t stop thinking about my trip. Paradoxically, although some 9000 kilometres away, South Africa is the nearest thing to Britain you can get; virtually everyone – black and white alike – speaks English, and most of the time they drive on the left. We share the same menus and type of beer, and the ancestral link is apparent wherever you go, be it in street names, architecture, statues and the like. True, its politicians are past masters of the euphemism; there are no more squatter camps, only ‘informal settlements’ and blacks and coloureds have been transubstantiated into ‘previously disadvantaged people’. Without doubt it’s also a troubled country with many problems, a lot of them considered insoluble in typical African tradition. It’s culturally bi-polar, in that the majority of whites continue to live a hedonistic lifestyle without any compelling need to question the origin of their good fortune, and the majority of blacks have seen little or no improvement to their lot. Evolution to democratic independence, however – whilst by no means perfect - has proved to be far smoother and less chaotic than that glorious Socialist paradise immediately to the north. When you query the endemic corruption, you are greeted with a polite smile and questions about Chris Huhne, Jonathan Aitkin, Jeffrey Archer and the News of the World. Criticism of the collapsing government health service is met by comparisons with Staffordshire hospital, the NHS, abuse of the elderly and SARS. Mentioning violent crime is countered with comments about British soldiers hacked to death in broad daylight and the UK’s seemingly uncontrollable paedophile problem. Et tu, Brute. So: all in all, a great time and glad to be home. Oxymoronic? I don’t think so. I could never live there, but certainly can understand why so many of our countrymen do. Would I ever go back? In a heartbeat! By John Clarke