Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Sunday, January 22, 2023

Back in Africa after 7 years!!!

 

Ayalew and me
Technically my return to Africa happened about a week earlier after my flight from Amman, Jordan landed in Cairo, Egypt. But not really. Egypt doesn't feel like Africa to me. Not like Ethiopia. Ethiopia feels like Africa.

Ethiopia is the one country I didn't manage to visit during the four years we lived in South Africa. I was planning on it, the next year in 2016 as a matter of fact. But a sudden change in plans precluded "next year in Ethiopia."

You see, we moved and our departure from South Africa was fairly rapid. Even though we had just signed up for another three years in Africa about a month earlier, an opportunity to move to Asia presented itself unexpectedly in autumn. There would be just enough time for us to scout for a new apartment, process the necessary paperwork to move, pack up our belongings, vaccinate and fly our dogs to a quarantine facility (where they would have to spend a month immigrating from anywhere in Africa!) and physically move before joining heading to the USA for our already planned Christmas holidays. Absolutely no time to sneak in a last-minute trip to Ethiopia. Then once we arrived in Singapore, sprung the dogs and set up house, I found myself with a new continent to explore. Ethiopia was put on the back burner. But while the fire was extremely low, it never really went out as i would find out a few years later in 2020. 

A discussion on how and where to celebrate a big anniversary that year led to us finally settling on a trip to Israel, Jordan and Egypt. Suddenly the back burner sputtered. I mean once you're in Egypt, it is only a comparatively short flight to Addis Ababa, I argued. We made our plane reservations, booked our hotels and hired private tour companies to make our anniversary dreams come true ... and it looked like I would finally make my Ethiopian dream come true as well. And then disaster struck. Covid19 forced us to cancel our entire trip. Then more disaster - a civil war broke out in Ethiopia in 2021. Honestly, at that point I have to admit the Ethiopian back burner flame went completely out.

But now it was 2022. Discussions about where our family should spend the Christmas and New Year holidays ended up with our dusting off that cancelled itinerary for Israel, Jordan, and Egypt at least. We tweaked it here and there to add some holiday touches like Christmas Eve in Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity and we replaced our marriage renewal ceremony in Cana with a trip to the crusader tunnels in Acre.

And then just as I was about to book my return flight to Singapore, I got a Whats App message on my mobile phone. It was from Ayalew, the local guide I had engaged in 2020 to help plan my original trip to Ethiopia. We had been checking in with each other off and on during the pandemic and civil war but I had not heard from him in some time. In fact the last thing I heard was that Lalibela had been occupied by the Tigray People's Liberation Front. Moreover Ethiopia was still on the US State Department's No-Fly list. I hadn't even though about adding Ethiopia to our itinerary.

 "Are you ever going to come to Ethiopia?", he asked. "Is it safe to visit?", I replied. "What about the civil war?" Ayalew said there was a ceasefire and now, most of the Ethiopia was safe once again for travel. His timing was perfect and the flame completely rekindled. And about a month before our trip, the Ethiopian government and Tigrayan leaders signed a peace accord making it official. 

 





NB: I highly recommend Ayalew Setegn to help you plan your dream trip to Ethiopia. He is an expert guide, hires the best and safest drivers, chooses excellent hotels and is a master at getting you up front at the biggest festivals in Ethiopia. Contact him through https://hiddenethiopia.mystrikingly.com/. He can also be reached by Whats App (+251 91 284 4474) or email (ayalewsetegn@gmail.com).

Friday, November 27, 2015

Christmastime is here!

Literally stuffed like one of the three turkeys we served at last night's Friendsgiving feast, I am jetting off to the USA tonight until early January.

Looking forward to my first white Christmas in years with both our sons and lots and lots of family and friends; decorating real pine and spruce Christmas trees; skiing on real snow in Colorado; ice-skating outdoors (!); drinking hot gluhwein and cocoa because Jack Frost is nipping at your nose; being dazzled by the Christmas decorations in New York, Philadelphia, Denver, KC and San Fran (Nobody does Christmas like NYC though. No. Bo. Dy.); and reuniting with my jewelry in storage!

Visions of rutabaga, jicama, & Cheese Danish dancing in my head. Tidings of comfort and joy. Comfort and joy. It is going to be the best Christmas ever!

God bless us, everyone.


ice sculptures in the windows at Barney's

gingerbread at Lord & Taylor's
The Met’s Christmas tree and Neapolitan Baroque crèche
Breck
KC's Crown Center Plaza

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Bye bye Bookworms!


Delicious and festive pot luck Christmas lunch with the International Women's Club of Johannesburg Bookworms book club.
savories

sweets
My Easy Pea-sy Pea Salad Recipe
Ingredients:
2 (16 oz packages of frozen petite peas)
6 oz. smoke-flavored almonds, finely chopped
1 onion, finely chopped
1 cup mayonnaise, or more to taste
ground black pepper to taste


Place frozen peas in a colander; rinse under cold water until thawed. Drain and transfer to a large bowl. Add almonds and onion; mix well. Fold mayonnaise and black pepper into the pea mixture until evenly coated. Cover and refrigerate until serving. Enjoy!

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

South African Wines Part Ten: Holiday Weekend in Cape Town

picnic at Boschendal
A four-day holiday weekend in Cape Town for Heritage Day gave us another opportunity for some serious wine tasting and touring in the Cape Winelands - mostly Stellenbosch with a few strategic stops in Franschhoek, Somerset West and Constantia.

And since we were in a holiday mood, we decided to plan ahead for some other upcoming holidays. Friendsgiving is right around the corner and we will need to bring back some wine for our family Christmas dinner in Colorado.
Jordan


In Stellenbosch:

Jordan: Cobblers & Chameleons

Kathy and Gary Jordan descend from the Jordan Shoe family, a fixture in South Africa since 1877. And their aptly named Cobblers Hill is a homage to their footwear heritage. It is also the ultimate expression of the Jordan terroir!

Jordan also produces a range of wines whose profits support a PhD bursary for researchers studying the Cape dwarf chameleon, a native species commonly found on the wine estate. We tasted a 2012 Chameleon Merlot that contains no added sulphur. For anyone with a sulphur allergy who likes red wine ( and chameleons!), this is probably a godsend.

We bought two of the Bordeaux blend Cobblers Hill 2012, two of the 2012 Cabernet Sauvignon, a product of the oldest vines on the property and two of The Real McCoy Riesling 2015, the only 100% Reisling grape wine produced in South Africa.








De Morgenzon
De Morgenzon: Maestros & Wildebeests

Right next door to Jordan is De Morgenzon. Entering the hunting lodge-turned-tasting room was more like walking into a concert hall. The sound of music echoed off the vineyard-covered slopes to the valley below. We bought two each of the beautifully orchestrated DMZ Maestro 2013, a bold blend of five varietals and the 2013 DMZ Syrah











"The Chinese Girl"@ Delaire Graff
Delaire Graff: Diamonds & Tretchikoff

Delaire Graff has some serious pedigree and I do not know why it took three years for us to get here. Founded 30+ years ago by SA's dynamic wine duo John and Erica Platter, it was bought by SA's diamond king Laurence Graff about ten years ago. A Relais & Chateaux property, it is the jewel of the Cape Winelands! We bought two of their creamy and butter-y 2014 Chardonnay, two of their cinnamon-y 2015 Coastal Cuvee Sauvignon Blanc and two of their pepper-y 2014 Shiraz.

They also have quite an art collection. We were greeted at the door by Tretchikoff's "The Chinese Girl!"






We love Relais & Chateaux

yes, that Graff

vineyards and birds-of-paradise
Pinotage @ Hidden Valley
Hidden Valley: Valley Views & Pinotage

By this time we had picked up a wide variety of wines to drink for the upcoming holidays and we started to concentrate on filling in the gaps. We needed some Pinotage! So we dropped into Hidden Valley to taste and buy three bottles of their highly regarded 2013 Pinotage.












Port at Muratie
Muratie: Pedigree & Port

And some Port would be nice for both Thanksgiving and Christmas. For that, we visited Muratie. The Melck family have been making wine at Muratie since 1699! And the Muratie Cape Vintage Port is produced from a single vineyard planted in 1965. Not a bad pedigree either!

Their Ports seamlessly integrate alcohol, fruit and acidity into a delicious bundle of flavor. We purchased two bottles of their Ben Prins Cape Vintage 2011 which will go oh so well with some Christmas Stilton. (I am stopping in London on the way back to the USA for Christmas. Make a note: pick up some Stilton!)

And in Franschhoek:

Bean bags, baskets and blankets on the lawn @ Boschendal

Boschendal: Picnic & Friends

We passed on the fine restaurants at Jordan and Delaire Graff to join some friends for a picnic at Boschendal. Their Olive Press restaurant provided sumptuous baskets filled with cheese, charcuterie, salads, pates and tapenades. Delicious bread, some Boschendal Rose and Chardonnay, and some lively conversation. A perfect picnic!
fresh strawberries from Zetler's Berry Farm





For dessert, vanilla pots de creme made with fresh strawberries. It's strawberry picking time in the Cape Winelands!











La Motte
La Motte: Pierneef 

Honestly, we mainly went to La Motte to visit their museum ...





 









...  filled with original works of art by acclaimed South African artist Jacob Hendrik Pierneef. But we tasted too of course! FYI: La Motte even has a Pierneef Collection of premium wines named in honor of the artist. Tasting Pierneef in a room filled with his art? Priceless!

In Somerset West:

conservation at Waterkloof
Waterkloof: Biodiversity & Organic Wine Farming

Waterkloof is committed to conservation ... and wine! And at Waterkloof, they can go hand in hand.

Situated in the Cape Floral Region, Waterkloof has set aside 50% of their farm for conservation of the unique fynbos habitat. And the other 50% is set aside for biodynamic wine farming. Some of the strategies they implement include drip irrigation and biological pest control, mulching, clearing invasive and re-establishing native vegetation, maintaining flocks of chickens for for pest control and compost (and fresh eggs for their kitchen!), herds of cows for compost tea, flocks of Dorper sheep for weed control and Nitrogen replenishment, and developing an earthworm farms to replenish the soil on the farm and occasionally in the vineyards.

And there wine reflects their sense of place and commitment to the earth that nurtures it. We particularly like the infinitely drinkable Waterkloof Circle of Life Red - a blend of Merlot, Shiraz, and a tiny dollop of three other red varietals - and the Circle of Life White, a blend of Sauvignon Blanc, Chenin Blanc and Semillon..












And finally, in Constantia:


 Groot Constantia: Celebrations!

Christmas dinner is going to be huge! Along with real family (my sons, my sister and her family, hopefully my brother and his family), we will probably be spending Christmas Eve with our adopted family - Charley and  Mary Lou and Ric. This calls for some serious celebratory wines. For that, we went to Groot Constantia to pick up a couple of bottles of their top 100 award-winning vintage 2012 Grand Constance and a few bottles of their birthday commemorative 2014 Reserve Red.

God bless us, everyone!


rosemary (hedges) and Darlene

Friday, July 31, 2015

The Holiday

Happy Mandela Day!
I took advantage of my July summer holiday in the USA to celebrate a real American 4th of July with fireworks and a barbeque as well as Mandela's and my niece Jill's birthdays on July 18th.

But I also recreated many of the other non-July holidays I missed celebrating this year with friends and family by being an expat living in South Africa. The month was like Christmas, Mothers' Day, my birthday and Thanksgiving all rolled into one big month-long holiday celebration!





Happy Independence Day in Denver!
my contribution to the 4th of July barbeque ... a peach, blueberry & lemon thyme cobbler!

Merry Christmas in July in Denver too!
Christmas crackers and Rwandan shweshwe bunting


shweshwe stockings hung by a real fireplace where they belong!

mini rhino crackers on a Christmas giraffe plate

Happy Mothers' Day in Austin, Texas!

Just like the Thanksgivings in Kansas that I remember!

friends, family, good food! (@ Milano in the Crown Center, KC)

more family!

Thankful for new babies!
Belated birthday cocktails cruising to Catalina Island in Cali

an aquarium birthday party in Long Beach, CA

and a birthday party at The Magic Castle in Hollywood ... complete with real magicians!
Okay and I even celebrated Cinco de Mayo several times over in Denver, Austin and L.A. ...

Feliz Cinco de Mayo in Denver!
Happy holidays!

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

USA bound for the month of July!

Leaving today for Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Texas and California to visit with family and friends for the whole month of July! Woo hoo!

Independence Day fireworks. Authentic Mexican food in Denver and LA and Tex-Mex in Austin! Continuous electricity. Binge-watching Masterpiece Theater. Serial pod-casting SerialHeat and humidity. Kansas City BBQ. Austin barbeque. Cheap electronics. Christmas in July with family (but sadly not Vince, Lou & Serge)! The Pacific Ocean. The Rocky Mountains. Summer!

And since I'll be Out of Africa, a well-deserved blog-cation!!! See you in August, Africa!

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Jock of the Bushveld

Last night we finally watched the film version of South Africa's legendary book, Jock of the Bushveld. Our friends Johann and Louise lent it to us months ago as a must-see while we are in South Africa. So last night we gathered Lou & Serge up onto the couch for a double date night and popped in the DVD.

Written in 1905 by Sir Percy Fitzpatrick, it is the true story of the relationship between Fitzpatrick, an Irish immigrant who came to South Africa to find his fortune in the goldfields of Pilgrim's Rest, and Jock, the runt of a litter of Staffordshire Bull Terriers born in Kruger National Park. Fitzpatrick saves Jock from drowning and the two become inseparable through their adventures in the bushveld. Jock becomes a powerful hunter and protector and Fitzpatrick surely needs it in his new role as a goods driver from the goldfields through the wilds of Kruger to the Mozambique port.

The story reminded me of course of another noble dog book, Jack London's Call of the Wild. Like Jock, the star of this American classic is a powerful dog named Buck. Buck is half St. Bernard and half sheepdog and just like Jock was saved by Fitzpatrick, Buck is saved from mistreatment by John Thornton. Jack London wrote his novel in 1903 after his own experiences in the Alaskan Yukon during the 1890s Klondike Gold Rush.

Since Fitzpatrick's is a true story, there is actually a "Jock of the Bushveld route" in Mpumalanga which identifies many of the landmarks Fitzpatrick chronicled in the book. Now that we've seen the movie, I will have to look for some of the plaques when we go back to Kruger in August.

I've blogged about it before but I do like to use books as literary guides to the places we travel. We all read The Call of the Wild before our family traveled to Alaska in the summer of 1998 and we followed much of the same trail Buck and Thorton traveled in the book through Juneau and Skagway and up to Whitehorse.







We took a helicopter to the Mendenhall Glacier outside of Juneau and we hiked on the glacier itself. We kayaked in Glacier Bay and cruised up to Skagway where Alex and Nick became Junior Rangers at the Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park. We even took the White Pass & Yukon Route narrow gauge train from Skagway up and over the very same Klondike Trail that London and his fellow prospectors hiked and crossed into the Canadian Yukon.

In Fairbanks we visited a dogsled farm where we met an experienced Iditarod racer and her pack of dogs. It was summer so we couldn't take her dogs out for a spin but we did drive a sled ourselves later one Christmas in Vermont.



kayaking in Glacier Bay
waterfall in Glacier Bay
Nick driving a dogsled in Vermont
It really brings so much more meaning to the experience of travel when you can relate it to a book with larger than life characters such as Jock and Buck, Fitzpatrick and Thorton. Wish we could take Lou & Serge with us on our next trip to Kruger but unlike the bushveld in 1903, now there are no dogs allowed!