| Can you get more iconic than that? Living the dream |
I noticed a couple of security cars parked alongside the mall entrance with their lights on as I pulled in. The car park sitting pregnant in the dark waiting for the daily onslaught of shoppers. I tried to choose one of the empty spots that would be safe for my car from arseholes with shopping trolleys and opportunists in the early morning darkness. Eenie meenie, miney … The security guards weren't interested in a polite hello, so i fumbled in the blackness for my sports bag and left my Mazda to her fate. Like a child at kindergarten. My bag and me stood by the rendezvous next to McDonalds. Blinking like an animal caught in the headlights at each car that passed. Some black guys came sauntering past, i hid my phone subconsciously and greeted them. Their response felt surprised. I'm not sure whether it was because i greeted them at all or whether it was because i was a white woman greeting black men. It felt strange and i was nostalgic for the joie de vivre of a Zambian black person who would never dream of passing anyone in that situation without a soul warming good morning. Ah well, maybe I'd changed these guys day in some small way.
A familiar squeaking of metal announced that my wait was over. Sure enough, beyond the halo of blinding light coming towards me, I could make out the boats stacked up on the trailer. Our tail lights weren't working so we were in convoy, the other car suckered to our backside. It was a long time since I'd done that familiar journey out to Bloubergstrand. Another lifetime. By the time we pulled into Klein Bay the sun was well up, the tide out and blobs of people already parading to the island across the sand spit that i knew was there behind the water. Cool wetness beneath our feet. The bay sweeping round to the familiar house where my husband's family had lived. The sloping red roof. A car outside it. Strange memories. Happy ones and torn ones of turmoil from another time.
We winched the boats down, a sea going quad, a double and a single. Rolling the dollies out onto the wet sand. The water was like standing in an ice bucket. My feet sending shards of nerves straight up into my head. Id forgotten the cold. Intense and invigorating, the crystalline water lapping at the edges. There wasn't a breath of wind as we pulled out through the mounds of kelp that stood up out of the water. Table mountain already in view on our stroke side as we curled around the little bay. The island where I'd had the breath shocked out of me jumping feet first into a secret pool hidden amongst the rocks, deep ice cold. Flocks of stand up paddlers were already wobbling around in the shallows, dogs barking up and down the beach. Their voices echoing in the silence. The blobs gradually shrank, the dogs became fainter and at last it was just us and the vastness.
The gentle gurgle of the water running out through the hatches, the slide of our seats against the runners. Blades plopping in. We passed an enormous ship that was sitting so high out of the water it looked like it was on a sandbank. The propellor almost visible as it towered up above us even from far away. Robben Island sat floating on the sea in front of us. Id looked out from the house over the years. Seen the ferry racing enthusiastic Mandela worshipper tourists from the harbour. Contemplated those prisoners incarcerated, my mind imagining. We approached with stealth - the designation unseen, behind our backs, beyond our eyes.
| Mandela's view of Table Mountain |
| The great arrival! |
Biltong and nuts had appeared out of people's dry bags which we were devouring. Rather more interesting than my early morning grab at the bananas. "Its blank!" He reported back, my nerves calming. "Completely erased." The white sign in my vivid imagination had had it casting its officious hand threateningly at anyone who dared set foot on the island rendered harmless in the post Apartheid sunshine.
| Robben Island - low lines of trees and buildings |
Sliding over the icy water, suddenly we were surrounded by the explosive breaths of more whales. One, two! Theres another one! And another! Look. You can see the blow holes - plumes of condensation bursting high above them into the air like steam train funnels. The sound reaching us a fraction of a second later. A pair was behind us closer to the island tail fluking together and the original youngster we'd seen at first and another two closer to shore. Totally out of season - perhaps they had overwintered here. Unusually so for southern right whales.
| Spot the circle to see the whale |
Forty minutes blinked by and i was guiding the boat ashore amongst the throng of seaside worshippers. I hopped onto my phone to report to the husband that i was back safely. Damn. The phone was nearly dead. There was a message waiting for me "Chased out the water by a Great White." And then the phone went blank…...
photos courtesy of the rowing crew.
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