My new life and lockdown….

Being in isolation, sheltering at home, confined to lockdown, whatever you wish to call it has allowed me, as with many others, to reconsider and re-evaluate my ‘new’ life.

Until now, I have not been able to fully articulate my reasons for the move, my feelings about it, nor what I have experienced over the last 9 months.

But sitting quietly, very quietly, I can reflect about what I love and value of being here.

I ‘bravely’ gave up my most recent 18-year career and big city life to relocated to Prince Albert, a small rural town in the Great Karoo. South Africa. Here I hope to live a simple, considered, authentic life on my own terms, unencumbered by some personal past difficulties and the rigors of “normality”, a place where I can contribute and perhaps connect to a community and myself. Where I have time and space.

Time to be free, to think, create, learn and write. 
Space to adventure.

To walk in the veld, unhindered by time or crime that allows me to feel and be present. Touching and smelling plants, stepping over uneven hard terrain, exploring dry riverbeds, crunching dry mud flakes barefoot on empty dams, climbing steep rocky and yet unexplored gorges, while at all times being aware of the solitude, beauty and subtle opulence that surrounds me.

Cycling, uninhibited by traffic and tarred roads, travelling kilometres on hard-packed dirt roads, jeep racks and animal paths seeking out windmills and reservoirs, scattered through arid sheep country, sometimes hindered, and challenged by corrugations, headwinds, and horse flies! But, with warm wind on my face, fresh unpolluted air carrying a myriad of new fragrances, encouraging me to breathe deeply and slowly – nature’s own meditation.

Adventuring in my very competent 4×4 Jimny, carefully learning the limits of ‘her’ capability, and overcoming my ‘what if’s’. I feel like I can go ‘where no (wo)man has gone before’ I feel tough and fearless, and what’s on the other side is always exciting and constantly fulfills my curiosity!

Endless vistas of undeveloped dry land, dolerite sills, the magnificent Swartberg Mountains and rocky, ancient post-glacial outcrops scattered across the mostly flat landscape – littered with hundreds of species of xerophytic plants and animals that have adapted to this harsh, but beautiful landscape. Strewn with a collection of stones, fossils, rocks and meteorites, a petrologists dream! Hidden caves with rock paintings, ceramic fragments and flint tools of the amazing Bushmen who shared this place.

Finding water in this place has become such a joy for me. Whether it is from an isolated, noisy, rusty windmill pumping up a few drops at a time and slowly filling a reservoir generated from a gentle breeze, to paddling barefoot in the perennial rivers that run through the Swartberg range. Water is life. To quote from a late friend – ‘Water has no enemy’
On the hottest day in the remotest driest of places, where there is water there are a myriad of living creatures, from minuscule unidentifiable creepies, worms, ants, spiders and scorpions, tortoises, birds, snakes, sheep, buck, all manner of flying insects who all survive and thrive in these miniature biomes…. it’s fascinating!   

Sounds of utter and complete silence or the gentle rustle of a cooling summer breeze through thin acacia leaves. The deafening frightening tropical thunderstorms, with the frantic rushing sound of flooding rivers after a deluge, the distant call of an evening owl and of a daytime turtle dove – have all become my music – far from the madding crowd.

Visions of magnificent (and ordinary), transitory sunrises and sunsets. Night skies overflowing with stars falling onto distant horizons, all humble me and fill me with gratitude.

Kind, friendly people from every walk of life, hardworking resilient characters, and creatives, with whom I feel I can relate. People who acknowledge and greet on every occasion with a wave or a smile – there is no indifference here.

All of this is my new life. I am living :)

9 months!

Where did the time go…if I don’t catch up now, I will forget everything that happened during the last 4-5 months. Winter came and went and was mild according to the locals. It was, but with some freezing days, mild for the rest. I worked hard in the garden …large rockery actually! Jonathan, my hardworking gardener, and I cleaned, cut, weeded, fixed the front fence, and erected a new 30m back fence…I learned a lot! Moved hundreds of stones (no gym required), river stones that litter my property. The garden is now clean and neat, and I can see the wood from the trees and am rearranging my little landscape.

I adventured out a lot, took many photos and lived the life I had hoped for:) I 4×4’d and cycled all over the area. We had some fantastic rain! More in January than the whole of last year!

Endless Vistas
Endless vistas
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Gamka River after the first rains
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Dorps River Swartberg Pass
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Mammatus Clouds
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Newly explored roads

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Distant rain
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Climbing -some adrenaline on the last day of my 63rd year:)
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Bushman painting “Swift” 

I was involved with the Marketing for Prince Albert Open Studios which kept me busy right up to Open Studios on 3rd January. I painted the inside of my house, with help from so great painters. This we did in three sessions and my home looks great now, what a difference a coat of paint makes. I also converted my “office” into a small gallery called Studio 51 where I sell my own and work of other artists.

I collected my daughter and granddaughter from Cape Town International on 24th November – I had not seen them since she was born, and she was then eighteen months old. What a joy and privilege to be a Granny, I was a little nervous that she may not want a hug or connect…but it took about a minute, and she lifted her arms to me to pick her up and she gave me the best hug ever – what a gift:) She has named me Gaya:) I love it

We spend some time together in CT and here at home and the extended family joined us for Christmas. It was a great time. And then they were all gone! So quiet…but I am glad they live in Europe and have a better future.

And then Covid-19……!!

Almost 3 months…..

Writing this while watching my first bake in the first-ever use of a gas oven! I am baking Oopsies…. Cream cheese and egg type muffins… The thing that I can’t work out is there is no light to say when the temperature set has been achieved! But they are rising and slowly going brown. 10 more minutes and I will let you know if I was successful.

Today was also snake day! Yes, a Karoo Sand snake (Whip Snake) struck and ate an unsuspecting gecko – almost under my foot. It is harmless and skinny, and it could have been its first meal after hibernating for winter! About 800mm long it was interesting to watch the head of the unsuspecting gecko disappear and then the bolus progress along the snake’s body. This small town has a resident snake catcher, who’s name I had been given, together with the plumber and electrician in case of such an event and being that I had totally no idea at that stage what kind of snake it was I called Athol, he arrived within minutes and in spite of us “knowing” where it went, we could not find it! So, for now, he lives somewhere adjacent to my garage, or he escaped while he could! Since then I have had a few more Karoo Sand snakes in the garden, they move so fast, are harmless and I just let them be:)

It seems like summer is arriving early there have been some hot days already.
I always wondered what it would feel like not to go to work…. something I have done since I was seventeen, everyday like clockwork. There have of course been some holidays, but work has taken up most of my life and mostly I loved it.
I have slipped into this new life with such ease. No alarm clock, just early morning light or an unfamiliar bird call wakes me from a restful uninterrupted sleep. Ready to face another new day with no expectation. When you are doing something new each day there is a sense of achievement, even if it is just unpacking boxes and sorting. Every time I venture out into the veld, I am assured of something new, something never seen before. There is no rush, no drama, no stress, just new opportunities and new views.
So, these first three months are good. I’m finding my way around and finding me:)

First Snow!

It snows on the Swartberg range most winters! In Africa, until now I have only seen it from a distance, and once on Table Mountain. I traded my sunrise walk with an early departure from home up the Swartberg Pass this morning and am I glad I did:) Only about 10kms from my front door, I rounded a corner and there it was –  a gentle sprinkling on the Bain’s built wall of the steep and winding road…for an African born in tropics, this is a special sight, unusual, unexpected and such a joy! By the time I got to the Tierberg lay-by, there was even more!untitled-20-07-19-IMG_20190720_074702-2-183

21 days

I can’t believe 3 weeks have magically evolved into what is my new life…. I have been asked if I’m settled yet, no settling needed, I feel like I belong here, no drama, no trauma, no adjusting, no feeling uncomfortable, no effort, no frustration……I just fit! Round peg round hole. I’ve been thinking about what I love the most….

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Prince Albert waking!

My new old home
Fixing, cleaning, arranging
Gardening in my big wild ‘desert-like’ garden
My front stoep and my back stoep
A quick walk from my home into the veld
Dirt roads, windmills and abandoned buildings all around me
Space
Quiet
Slowness
Simplicity
Having 2 sinks in the kitchen!
Feeling safe
Walking everywhere I need to go if I want
The raw milk dairy
Lamb chops and game meat
Local produce
Smiling, friendly, helpful people
Real people at the end of the commercial phone line
Old fashioned efficiency
A sense of calm and contentment
Time to learn about me.

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A lovely starting point for my morning walks :)

My days start with a dawn outing every day. A walk/run usually involving the Robert Gordon Trail. About 3 or 4 kms. I explore different starting points and routes and experience the waking village from above.

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Sunrise with the dairy in the valley and the Swartberg range on the right

I’ve learned to dress for the crisp mornings, I am now a beanie person!  On two occasions I have seen a pair of Grey Rhebok, white tails distinctive as they sprinted away from me on the ridge.  A pair of large owls cooing to each other and many yet unknown birds greeting the day. That freshly brewed coffee on the front stoep when I return is just the best, followed by chores, good chores…. hanging pictures, erecting shelves, cleaning, collecting my post, gardening, feeding the birds, cooking lunch, and enjoying it slowly in the sun on the back stoep……emails and internet at still 2mbps! OMG, who even offered that speed…. This is the only frustrating thing…. and it is not really that frustrating…….I just need to adjust my mindset a little more….I am in no rush!

I have met quite a few locals and my neighbours, all of whom are genuinely nice. I have handed in some of my art to the local gallery, joined the library and made friends with some people who work at the Dairy.

Anytime I want I can ‘escape’ and drive into the Swartberg Pass, play in the river, photograph, explore, walk in the veld, and examine strange and interesting plants and stones, chase sunsets, cycle in the late afternoon, read, or watch a downloaded movie  – then I am asleep in my incredibly inviting bed for the next 8 or 9 hours. That’s my new life:) It’s called living:)

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Finding water in the Karoo is such a joy:)
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On my bike going somewhere slowly;)

Oh and one BIG negative … a big (they are all big, ugly and creepy by my standards) unlucky spider (I am a serious arachnophobe!! ) nearly (within millimetres!! ) fell on my head . OMG! when I opened the back door!!  He plopped onto the floor and died instantly under the sole of my hastily removed shoe. His carcass, (spread out on the tiles over 30 cms, such was the force of the blow) remained there for a few hours until I got up the courage to remove it and I was left unsettled for the whole rest of the day!!!!  I have not opened any door normally since. It is going to happen again (and when it does you will hear about it) but until I will remain hyper vigilant! (paranoid)