| The black slab of fog in False Bay |
I put myself in stroke again and we headed out. Even before we reached the harbour wall the sea was pushing wedges towards us. In the murk I got disoriented and thought I saw the wreck out of the corner of my eye. We rounded the bull nose and spent the next half hour on the rinse cycle of a top loading washing machine. The boat rocking side to front, side to side, the waves merging in crests and back. My stomach increasingly queasy. My mind running wild in the blue light. Monsters rising up from where our blades had left puddles in the water.
Yet again I had a bowman who couldn't steer. For the second time in a week we nearly rowed into the same menacing, jagged black rock that sucked at the sea. Kelp strings swirling up as the water fought against the vacuum. We zig zagged our way to windmill beach. The single waiting patiently for us and shouting out into the gloom each time we headed off course pushing him unceremoniously into a field of kelp.
It was only once we were nearly home that I peered again at the wreck. Thats a submarine, isn't it? Immediately opposite the naval entrance it sat. Its foreboding silhouette and us. We paused in the atmospheric silence. Two sailors were cleaning one of the anti-aircraft guns on the ship at dock. Their bodies swinging in unison, sliding the rod deep into the barrel, backwards and forwards. From somewhere inside the blue steel hull the high pitched trilling of a bosun's whistle called. whoooooeeeeeoooo trrrup trrrup trrrup peeeooooo intricately dancing across the air. It was the visiting Indian naval ship and must have been some Indian language that was being whistled to the men onboard as I'd never heard that particular tune before.
| Being watched |
So, yes, that's it, no regatta this weekend - I am going to Zambia after all and although mourning every day that I'll miss rowing I'm mightily excited. We will be camping deep in the bush in the very heart of my soul and if I get a chance to find internet will send off a post. It will be circuit training al fresco for me in a vain attempt to keep the rolls of fat at bay. I have my skipping rope and my exercise mat - lots of planks and squats methinks! I tried out a new aerobics class this week, that, together with kettle balls with my trainer has left my forearms almost unusable. Kettle balls are an odd concept - swinging a giant ball between your legs with your back arched and thrusting your hips forward at the finish. One has to concentrate very hard whilst not bursting into sniggers. Though its a seriously good back workout, not so sure I like the thought of having enlarged forearms. My thighs are already like godzilla wads of muscle, i don't need arms like that too!
Chat soon folks! Hopefully from the banks of the Luangwa. Yippee!