Sunday, May 31, 2015

Polo @ The Inanda Club

Dogs are welcome!

This week we visited another storied club in Sandton, The Inanda Club. But instead of genteel Lawn Bowling like we played at The Wanderers Club earlier this week, we came to Inanda to watch the faster-paced sport of Polo.

The Inanda Club was founded in 1934 to provide a home for equestrian sports. The club was located in what was then open countryside just north of Rosebank. It is doubtful that the founders imagined that the bucolic area would become what it is today, the commercial CBD of Africa.







view of the Polo field from the club porch

But rather than decamp for wider open spaces completely, The Inanda Club chose instead to become a full service town and country club. The Sandton venue is now a modern city club with a distinct equestrian and country character. It maintains a full scale Polo field right in heart of the Sandton CBD! This town club combined with the Inanda Country Base in Kyalami provides premier equestrian facilities fulfilling the objectives of the founders of Polo and the Rand Hunt.


And I just found out that as full members of the Royal Cape Yacht Club in Cape Town, we have reciprocal members' privileges at The Inanda Club ... which means we have member access to their many dining rooms and events. Oh boy!

First event was the 2015 Inanda Development Cup, a Polo match that is all about creating an opportunity for talented, underprivileged and aspirant Polo players to participate in the sport and help them reach a professional level.
 

Now that we know, we plan to take advantage more often of  our new-found privileges at The Inanda Club. There is the Land Rover Africa Cup there in August and after Polo season ends, The Rand Hunt Club meets at the Inanda Country Base in Kyalami.

Save the dates!



Saturday, May 30, 2015

Sandton Scuba

Vince has been a certified open water scuba diver for more than 40 years! He once was very diligent about keeping his certification status and dive log up to date. (Certification lasts a lifetime, but when presented, an active log precludes any additional check-out procedures administered by responsible dive operators on the day of diving.)










Vince snapped this picture of Alex and Nick diving in the BVI


But as he has discovered when diving in many places outside the USA such as the Caribbean, Thailand, Costa Rica and Mozambique, he has rarely been asked to present his certification card and log book for inspection. (Australia and the Great Barrier Reef is a notable exception. Like everything else, they care deeply about such things!)


But since we are about to check out the Sardine Run in the Indian Ocean and Vince will be diving with sharks and whales, he figured he'd better make sure his paperwork - and his diving skills - are all in tip top order.

So he's refreshing his skills at Sandton Scuba in Bryanston today. Scuba Sandton is a one-stop dive shop. Along with PADI courses and organized dive trips, you can rent (or buy) equipment for all your diving and snorkeling needs, including underwater cameras!






Sharks and whales? I am happy to just snorkel!

Friday, May 29, 2015

House and Leisure

Another House and Leisure Night Market. This time it was housed on the top of the Rosebank Mall parking deck where the weekly Finders Keepers market is held on Sundays.

Spanning two nights (May 28th and 29th this year), House and Leisure is the premier shopping event of the season featuring the most original products made in South Africa.















These were some of our favorites:



Simon and Mary hats. Hats!




I had already bought one of these cool two-toned felt hats at the Factory on Grant in Norwood and I'm glad I did. They sold out their complete stock of them last night! My hat is black and gray but I was hoping to pick up one of their brown and wine colored hats. Oh well, you snooze, you lose.
And VintageZionist. Their jackets are made out of reused retro-80s, 100% leather and they are sooooo soft.

I have an LBJ (a little black jacket) which I bought at The Collective in Kramerville last year and was looking for a brown one. They are so versatile. But alas the pickings were slim here too, this being the second night of the market and all. But I did snatch a calling card and will try to special order one before my next safari.

Cinda sources her beads and stones from all over the world - India, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Nepal and Africa - and crafts them into modern, wearable art.

I have bought several of her pieces before from Amatuli where she is represented and picked up another necklace tonight.

French jacquard linens woven in Cape Town with African designs. I bought three tea towels with different Big Five Safari motifs.

And I usually do not buy anything at these markets that is not exclusively made in South Africa or at least made somewhere in Africa.

But I made an exception for Cork which features a variety of unique products made from natural cork and imported from Portugal. I bought some more jewelry, but they had everything for sale from hats, belts and purses to iPad covers and briefcases, all fabricated from soft and lightweight sustainably raised cork.


And I am pleased to report that the gourmet Bloody Mary has finally arrived in South Africa. I'll drink to that!

Thursday, May 28, 2015

00 Flour

last year with Lisa @ Da Graziella in Edenvale
The SuperSpar in the Hobart Grove Shopping Centre carries 00 flour for our pizza dough! Right there on its shelf!

We had been buying our 00 flour from Graziella at the Bryanston Organic Market. She does not sell it as part of her regular inventory at her twice weekly Italian market stall, but she and her brother also own an excellent Italian restaurant in Edenvale called Da Graziella. As a favor, she special orders the flour for us as part of her regular restaurant kitchen supply order and we pick it up in Bryanston.


00 flour on the shelf at the SuperSpar
But as you can imagine, that takes advanced planning, coordination and communication. It is so much easier to just pick it up off the shelf when we run out like we did in the States.

And now we can. The SuperSpar is truly Super!


Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Lawn Bowling @ The Wanderers Club

Yesterday was Memorial Day in the USA, the unofficial start of summer.

I'm confused. Are you sure it's not the start of summer in Africa too? The weather sure makes it feel like it. And today we learned how to play what is considered a very "summer game" in the Northern Hemisphere - Lawn Bowling.








10th Avenue Freeze-Out team @ the Asbury Park Bocce Tournament


I am not a total lawn bowling or boules game rookie. I've played Bocce on the gravel in Cinque Terre, Italy and competed in the cut-throat Asbury Park Bocce Tournament in NJ. And I've played Petanque on the hard sand of the Camargue in Provence, France.

But Lawn Bowling, as I was about to find out, is an entirely different animal.





 


South Africa has a long standing Lawn Bowling tradition. A kissing cousin to (Italian) Bocce and (French) Petanque, the game we played today was (English) Lawn Bowling. It began in the 13th century in Scotland, making The Wanderers Club in Illovo a perfect setting to indulge in this very English sport in Africa. The Wanderers Club is an institution in Johannesburg.

According to its website, "The Wanderers Club began in Johannesburg in 1888 and its fortunes rose and fell with those of the Golden City. The story of the sportsmen who created and preserved it through many misfortunes is a story of wars and revolutions, strikes and fires, bullets and explosions. The men who found their recreation on its fields and broke sporting records were often played in a wider drama, much of which actually took place on the famous grounds.

The history of the Wanderers Club is bound up with the history of the Transvaal and has for decades been a beacon in the international sporting world. Its story is a human drama of great personalities who were as much pioneers of South Africa as enthusiastic sportsmen." Wow!

Wimbledon wear

Dress code was "festive. White/beige/tan and sun hats." And our hostess made sure there was bubbly on hand making it very festive indeed!















ready to play!

After a little introduction to the history of the game, we started off with instructions on how to play. Each team gets four balls. We had two players per team so we each played two balls per round. A round of play is called an "end" in Lawn Bowling.






the proper way to hold the ball

The balls in Lawn Bowling are weighted off-center which means you can bowl forehand or backhand depending on which way you want the ball to break.

What does that mean exactly? Well, if you are right-handed as I am and you face the small circle side of the ball towards your body, it is considered a forehand and as it rolls, the ball will break to the left at the end.
If you face the large circle side of the ball in towards your body, it plays like a backhand and will break to the right as it rolls. This is very different from Bocce and Petanque which is played with unweighted balls. No breaking unless you give the ball some spin yourself.



We then had a little lesson on scoring which at least is similar to Bocce and Petanque. To start an end, one team member throws out a small white unweighted ball called the jack. Once the jack comes to rest, it is moved to the center of the playing rink. Next the same team member throws out one of her lawn balls trying to place it as close to the jack as she can. The teams alternate until all the balls have been thrown.

Whichever team gets a ball closest to the jack wins that end and is given one point for every ball that is closer to the jack than the opposing team's closest ball. There is a possible 21 ends that can be played in a game but you can also play to 21 points.

bowling green and gutter
Another difference between Lawn Bowling and Bocce is the rink. Bocce is played on pea gravel in a rectangular rink with hard sides which contains the balls during play (and can be used to ricochet off of like pool.) We bowled on an open lawn which meant our balls could roll "out." (Petanque can be played on either an open or a closed field.)

There was also a gutter around the entire bowling green at The Wanderers and if your jack goes into the gutter, the end is over. Dead end as it were.

The bowling green is maintained like a thick short pile carpet and it is very important to wear proper shoes that will not cause holes or divots.


Or you can do what I did and play barefoot! Any sport in which you can play barefoot is my kind of game.














You pitch off of a mat and you have to keep your left foot (if you are right-handed) on the mat until after you release the ball.

I admit that I never really got the hang of it. The whole weighted ball thing really threw me off. This was my best shot where my ball actually "kissed" the jack and landed alongside it winning our team one lonely point. It was an aberration though.


 



We learned a little strategy too. Just like Bocce and Petanque, there is something called the "missile move" where you use your ball as a projectile in order to blast the jack and the opposing team's closest balls out of the way and remove their advantage. Our team never attempted that advanced move. We were playing a much more friendly game.

Put her here!

You are allowed to stand in the end zone and prompt your team mate from across the field with strategies or even to act as a bigger aiming target if the jack is hidden in a crowd of thrown balls.














photo by Marguerite Slavik
Lawn Bowling is fun and I can see how it can become addictive, especially after you master the whole weighted ball aspect. In any event, it was a truly pleasant way to spend a summer's - or even a winter's - day in South Africa.

Monday, May 25, 2015

Happy Summer! Er, I meant Happy Africa Day!

Happy Summer to MYC!
"Happy Summer!" That is the way everyone greets each other on Memorial Day weekend at parades, at cocktail parties, on the buffet line at the Yacht Club BBQ and during Memorial Day regattas wherever people in the northeastern United States summer. Yes, "summer" is a verb too. As in, "Where do you summer?" (Translation: "Where do you spend your summer?"

Memorial Day weekend is the unofficial start of summer from whence I hail. But Memorial Day is not a national holiday in South Africa so today is still a work day for most. But coincidentally, today is also "Africa Day" and it is celebrated all over the African continent.

President Zuma spoke in Pretoria for Africa Day
Africa Day is the annual commemoration on May 25 of the 1963 founding of the Organization of African Unity (OAU). On this day, leaders of 30 of the 32 independent African states signed a founding charter in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia to promote the unity and solidarity of the African states and act as a collective voice for the African continent. (The OAU was disbanded on 9 July 2002 by its last chairperson, South African President Thabo Mbeki, and replaced by the African Union (AU).)

Africa Day is observed as a public holiday in only five African countries, namely Ghana, Mali, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe. However, celebrations are still held all over Africa and in the rest of the world by Africans of the diaspora.

Happy Afrika Day to Africa!
In Joburg, there were several events taking place over the weekend in celebration of African unity and solidarity. On Sunday, there was an Afrika Day celebration of theatre, dance and food at Common Ground in Maboneng that looked interesting, including a performance of The Forgotten One by ISARO on the POPArt Outdoor Stage. There was a gala concert at the Joburg Theatre on Friday and Saturday nights, a fashion show at the Fashion Kapitol on Saturday, and a jazz, art and poetry night at the Afrikan Freedom Station on Friday night as well. But we did not attend any of them.

We chose instead to continue a USA tradition over this Memorial Day weekend in order to celebrate Africa Day. The US barbeque or as it is known in SA, the braai. Several of them in fact.

Happy Africa Day! (photo by Will Perry)

We spent Saturday afternoon at the Ubuntu Kraal Brewery in Soweto for a special township chisa nyama, brewery tour and beer tasting.














Happy Africa Day SH2015 Gaza Gray group!

And on Sunday I went to an introductory braai in Arcadia to meet my fellow volunteers with whom I will be going on an archaeological dig in Kruger in August. After that Vince and I had an American friend over for a braai at Valley Lodge (complete with Memorial Day Strawberry Shortcake for dessert.) Lou & Serge love the braai!



Memorial Day BBQ at Valley Lodge


And rather than wish everyone a "Happy Summer," I wished them all a "Happy Africa Day!" instead.

Diggin' up Steinaecker's Horse

Colonel Ludwig von Steinaecher
Steinaeker's Horse was a volunteer military unit fighting on the side of the British that operated mainly in the Lowveld and Swaziland during the Second Anglo Boer War which was fought between Great Britain and the two Boer republics, Transvaal (Zuid-Afrikaansche Republieck or ZAR) and the Orange Free State.

Steinaecker's Horse had many outposts along the border between the ZAR and the Portuguese territory. One of these was a large post at Sabi Bridge where they also erected a blockhouse at the eastern side of the southern end of the temporary bridge. Captain AW Greenhill-Gardyne, the adjutant of Colonel Von Steinaecker, was placed in command of the garrison at Sabi Bridge. The site is currently being investigated through archaeological excavations.





Archaetnos

some of 2014's diggers; Dr van V is 4th from the right
In the month of August I will take part in one of the excavations, the 2015 Steinaecker's Horse project in Kruger Natonal Park (KNP) under the guidance of Dr. Anton C. van Vollenhoven, a professor at the University of Pretoria and a partner of Archaetnos Archaeologists & Heritage Consultants.

The Gaza Gray Outpost, where we will be excavating, is one of the largest sites associated with Steinaecker's Horse and is situated in the south of the Lower Sabie rest camp in KNP. It is named after Edward George (Gaza) Gray who was a captain in the Steinaecker's Horse unit.

The Steinaecker's Horse excavation project led by Archaetnos Archaeologists is now in its eighteenth year! Much of the current focus will be to do research on the involvement of the indigenous people during the war, an area that has not previously received much attention from researchers. Along with skeletal remains, previous excavations have produced artifacts such as traditional non-European ceramic potsherds as well as spent cartridges and shot gun cartridges probably used by indigenous people for hunting.

map of KNP dig sites
It is interesting to note the greater significance of Steinaecker's unit to the overall establishment of KNP. Rules implemented by them to conserve the game in the area were used as guidelines when the park was founded. Quite a few Steinaecker's Horse soldiers became some of the first game rangers of the new KNP after the war, of which the most famous was Henry Wolhuter.

I first heard about the excavation and the history of Steinaecker's Horse in January through a call for volunteers that I read in The Heritage Portal's newsletter. I had been looking for an opportunity to participate in an archaeological dig in South Africa so I immediately signed up. Then I somehow convinced my American expat anthropologist friend Jonnie to join me as my tent-mate on this adventure.







Dr. van V fills in the details & answers questions about the dig
Since March when the dig group was finalized, all of our communication has been through email and via a private Yahoo group. Until yesterday when most of us met for an introductory braai at Dr. van V's home in Arcadia, Pretoria. Unfortunately Jonnie is back in Connecticut recovering from some surgery and could not be there, but Vince and I had her husband Bob over for a Memorial Day barbecue later that day and I gave him a full report to bring back to Jonnie.

most of SH2015 Gaza Gray group
The most important tip I learned at the kick-off braai is never to mention the word "rain" or any synonym or even any variation of any type of moisture-coming-down-from-the-sky while on the dig. Rain means no work. And no work means ... no work. Any mention of said moisture will earn you a "straf" (penalty.) I am not sure what the penalty exactly is but I do not intend to find out. No matter how badly I may want a day off from work!

wood behind the combie

I also found out we will all be given an individual daily responsibility around camp during our stay. And to get us in the mood, the custom at the kick-off braai is to practice taking instructions. We were asked to move our portion of the campfire wood (two bags) from the woodpile behind the combie to the one in front of the combie which will later be loaded onto the supply truck for transport to Kruger. I did and I passed the test!

woodpile in front of the combie




SH2015 Gaza Gray. Bring it on!