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Pa is moedeloos November 21, 2008

Posted by oomherman in People / Mense.
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Ek het die grootste agting vir my pa se “engineering expertise” Hy was, vandat ek kan onthou, altyd ‘n groot planmaker. Ek skat dis ‘n kombinasie van arm grootword en sy natuurlike nuuskierigheid, maar hy sou altyd ‘n stukkende ding uitmekaar haal om te verstaan hoe dit werk, by tye tot my ma se verstaanbare moedeloosheid. In meeste gevalle, het hy dit wat stukkend was weer reg gekry, of selfs beter laat werk. Van my beste tye saam met hom was toe ons saam aan die huis aangebou het, waar ons elke dag moes planne maak om goed te laat werk wat ons nie heeltemal verstaan het nie. Van daardie gevalle waar bietjie kennis en moerse klomp entoesiasme beter is as enige expert. Dit was ons beste ‘bonding’ tyd, en ek het groot waardering vir sy onbeteulde nuuskierigheid, entoesiasme en genuine intelligensie gekry.

 

Die ander dag bel ek my Pa. Hy vertel hy sukkel met sy kar. Ek weet nie presies wat fout was nie, maar hy reken toe: “Ek is nou so moedeloos, ek hardloop myself sommer dood teen ‘n sink-kakhuis.” Toe ek myself van die vloer af optel van die lag, sê ek: Ja, Pa – die probleem is dat ek jou ken, en jy gaan moeg wees lank voordat jy by die kakhuis uitkom. Dan is jy moedeloos EN moeg.

 

Ek het gedink dis die snaakste ding wat ek in jare gehoor het – hy het nie verstaan waarvoor ek lag nie, want dis maar sy manier van sê. Soos ek hom ken, het hy ernstig so gevoel.

 

Nou ja, laat ek nie gou so moedeloos word nie, want dis wragtig erg….. 

Pa gooi die kar om November 21, 2008

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My Pa is die sterkste ou in die wêreld. Ek het dit baie ernstig geglo en my boetie Lucky ook. Sien, toe ons klein was (ek minder as 5 en Lucky 3 of so) het ons in ‘n straat langs ‘n oop erf gebly. Sommige mense het die oop erf langs ons vir ‘n rommelwerf gebruik en sommer enige gemors daar gaan aflaai. Soms sou my pa in die werf gaan rondkrap as iemand iets interessant daar gaan weggooi het. Hy het baie aan ander mense se karre gewerk en ook hout- en metaalwerk gedoen om die inkomste aan te vul en het gereeld na onderdele of nuttige material gesoek.

 

Die een dag toe Pa ons weer uit die erf vat om saam te gaan na die erf langsaan, toe het iemand ‘n hele kar daar weggegooi! Wel, dit was eintlik net die kar se ‘body’ en meeste van die meganiese komponente was al weg. Pa kyk hier en kyk daar, gaan haal skroewedraaiers en ander gereedskap en stroop nog paar komponente af. Toe hy nie mooi onder die kar inkom nie, toe vat hy die kar aan die onderkant regs en gooi hom om!!! Ek en my boetie Lucky was stomgeslaan!! Nou, julle moet onthou, dit was die laat 70’s. Ek dink Sam Casey of een van daai amazing dudes het net op TV gekom – die Man van Staal. Nou, Man van Staal was cool en alles, maar toe ek en my boetie sien hoe ons eie pa ook karre omgooi nes Man van Staal, toe kan daai ou maar gaan slaap – Pa was ons hero en ons was vir baie jare na dit nog baie bang vir hom.

My boetie Lucky: episode 5 November 21, 2008

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Ons is nou al mooi groot en my boetie Lucky is nogsteeds met sy mannewales besig. Hy het baie rustiger geword, nou met vrou en kind, maar hy kan ons nog steeds lekker laat lag met sy avonture.

 

Lucky is, na ‘n heelwat kleurvolle loopbaan, nou ‘n polisieman op ‘n klein dorpie in die Noord-Kaap, naby waar ons grootgeword het. So paar jaar gelede word hy gebel deur die Kooperasie se mense. Hy moet kom help, want iemand se bokke het losgekom en is besig om die Kooperasie se mooi blomtuin op te vreet. Lucky is nie links nie, en hy vat die vangwa na die Kooperasie. Daar gekom, ‘arresteer’ hy elke bok en sluit hulle almal in die vangwa op. Hy vat hulle stasie toe en sluit die bokke in ‘n sel toe. Lucky kry die eienaar van die bokke en laat hom ‘n boete betaal omdat sy bokke so skade maak voordat hy sy bokke kan terugkry. Niks meer sonde met die bokke nie. 

 

Die ander dag, hoor Lucky by ‘n oom op die dorpie dat sy visvangbootjie soek is na die rivier in vloed afgekom het. Lucky kommandeer die stasie se boot en gaan soek in die river af na die boot, wat hy toe later kry en terugroei na die dorp toe. Local hero number 1. 

Hitch-hiker tales – Part I November 21, 2008

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It was Tom who made it sound romantic and exciting to hitch-hike. In the best tradition of dyed-in-the-wool bloody idiots everywhere, I believed him. I hitch-hiked several times and managed to cross not just South Africa, but several other countries in the process, too.

 

I cannot recall the first time I hitch-hiked, but it was probably in Tom’s shadow. He taught me some tricks: don’t walk along the side of the road – you stand still, stand well clear of other hikers, try to look forlorn, but not scruffy or criminal, try to make eye contact when the car approaches. In any case, those first times were exciting and different. You meet new people – some just like you and others even more weird.

 

Some of my first hikes were around Cullinan and Pretoria and from my hometown in Kimberley to Tom’s place near Jwaneng in Botswana. All of this fairly painless and interesting. We once got a ride in a prison lorry, full of real-life prisoners (we got to ride in front, of course…)

 

The Africa ‘Transect’ – March 1993

 

My most audacious and interesting hike to date was in 1993, when Tom and I hiked from Jwaneng up north through Botswana, then through Zambia and finally through Malawi before threading our way back home.

 

Preparations

We started out preparing for the trip by buying some tinned food and packing light. We had those simple ‘fishing’ style canvas backpacks that you could buy at PEP or Ackerman’s for under R 20 in those days. No fancy Karrimor’s or First Ascents – those were either way out of our price range or did not exist yet. To the bottom of each pack, attached with a thin piece of nylon rope, came the sleeping bags and ‘loafer pads’. A tent on top of Tom’s pack and the little gas stove and a small pot on top of mine completed the outfit. We each had about two changes of clothes and were carrying 8 or so tins of food, some rice and a water bottle. That was it – all set for a big African adventure. Between us, we had the Pula and Dollar equivalent of R 350 (South African Rand) to our names. I reckon it was about US$ 80 or so in those days’ money. 

 

Start

Tom’s dad took us from Jwaneng and dropped us off on the far side of Gaborone. So far so painless. We quickly got a lift that took us quite some way – beyond Mahalapye and to Palapye, where the driver turned off to Serowe. It was still fairly early in the day and our spirits were high – we were on the road! It was not long before another lift came by that took us to Franscistown. From here, yet another lift quickly got us to Nata, because we headed north-west through Botswana instead of going through Zimbabwe. (I forget the reason, but somehow it made sense at the time)

 

A successful day 1; the Zambezi

By roughly 13:30 the afternoon, we were at the roadside outside Nata – north, on the road to Kazungula. And then the BIG WAIT. We stood by that road for just over 4 hours in the sweltering heart and I was convinced I could hear lions roaring nearby. We were tired, hungry, thirsty, sunburnt, possibly a little dehydrated, listless and all romantic visions of an African adventure were long forgotten by the time that the kind Mr. Ken Hahn rolled by in his little Corolla Station wagon and offered us a ride. As it turned out, this was probably the nicest lift I ever got hitch-hiking. By the time that night came around on our first day, Ken had not only given us lift to a lodge in Kasane where we stayed over in a campsite for the night, but also invited us for dinner to his lodge and promised to pick us up the next morning for the onward journey into Zambia. Two things I will never forget of that night, is the long, slow, ice cold Zambezi beer I had with the other two gents on the deck of the lodge, looking over the hippo’s and crocs lazing on the banks of the Zambezi. The other is the snorting, scuffling, trampling and general mayhem the hippos caused in our camp, not much more than 10 steps from our perilously perched little tent that same night. After 8 or so Zambezi’s, no-one pitches a tent like the picture on the bag…

 

Zambia

The next morning, we were off and across the Kazungula ferry into Zambia. Ken payed a hefty fee for customs to bring the little car, which he imported through Durban in South Africa, into Zambia and this caused significant border delays. We were only in Livingstone by that afternoon and decided to stay to see the falls. We spent the morning of the next day swapping money, bartering for local handcrafts with our T-shirts and tinned food and seeing the falls. There are simply no words to describe the sheer size and noise of the ‘smoke that thunders’. Many years later, I have seen the Grand Canyon and Niagara falls and still, nothing took my breath away like Vic Falls.

 

We pushed on through the night and into Zambia, still with Ken in his little car. At intervals, I slept in the back seat while Tom relieved Ken at driving duties. We all took turns driving, sleeping and navigating/ keeping the driver awake. We made slow progress during the night. The roads were absolutely appalling and we never went faster than 35km per hour, to avoid damaging the little car through the potholes. Regardless of our best efforts, sunrise the next day found us only just approaching the bridge over Kafue river and with the rims on the Corolla looking decidedly second-hand. Luckily, we suffered no punctures in the night. We could only cross the bridge once the crossing guard woke up, so we waited it out. It would take us another full day to reach Ken’s farm outside Chipata.

 

Here, Ken introduced us to his wife and daughter and showed us around a bit on his expansive tobacco farm. Most remarkably, they had a Malawian servant named ‘Spech’ (Because he’s special) Spech was impeccably dressed in a black and white half-suit with an undercoat and would answer to a bell on the table at dinnertime, then briskly proceed to the kitchen to prepare you anything your heart desired. How very colonial! We were awestruck at this remnant of a different epoch, alive and well and living in Zambia, of all places.

 

We made the best of Ken’s hospitality and stayed the night. Our clothes had started to ‘pong’ significantly by this stage, but Spech delivered all our clothes cleanly washed and pressed the next morning. Ken dropped us off just out of town on the road to Malawi, which was not far anymore. We stood by the road for quite a while. If you think lifts in South Africa or even Botswana are few and far between, try Zambia or Malawi. We finally got a lift to the Zambian-Malawian border with a bus full of very happy and excited people. I still don’t recall who their group was or where they were going, but we immediately struck up animated conversations on the bus and learnt some local phrases. The bus took us as far as the border post on the Zambian side of the no-mans-land. We had to walk the distance between where the bus dropped us and across the no-mans-land to the other borderpost. We passed rolling green hills and some of the most achingly beautiful countryside I’ve seen before or since.  As we proceeded, many local kids came running up to us and we attracted quite a little crowd. They all tried their very best English on us: “Good morning”,  ”Hello”, “How are you?”, “I love you”, “Give me money”, “Give me food” These phrases were about the full extent of every conversation we had perhaps a hundred times over in the 8 or 10 kilometres we had to walk to the other border post. In the event, it took us all day to get through the no-mans-land, through the border and into Malawi.

 

Martyr’s Day

We arrived in Malawi early on the 3rd March 1993. Now, for anyone familiar with Malawi, this is Martyr’s Day. A very significant national holiday on which the whole nation mourns the freedom fighters who have lost their lives liberating the country. There are no shops open, no busses, no transport systems running, nothing. We were warned that you could get arrested for even smiling or laughing on this most revered day. So, as solemnly as we could, we walked across town to the far side of Mchinji, were we waited for lifts towards the lake. We eventually got a lift right into Salima and walked the few kilometres down to the lake for a swim, with scant regard for bilharzia or other hazards that this lake sometimes suffers from. That night, Tom and I made a fire larger than usual and cooked ourselves a lavish meal. Rice with peas and tuna from tins – enough to fill each of our large blue enamelled camping plates to the brim. It remains one of the most memorable meals I’ve ever had. 

 

Coming back

 The next day we lingered at the lake after breakfast and we argued a bit over where to go next. I was rearing to go north from here, but Tom had studies to return to and our funds were running low, so we started on the road back.

 

We got a lift back to Lilongwe, but there our fortunes ran out. We had stood by the roadside for well over 8 hours when night fell. We were on the west side of Lilongwe, just out of town and en route to Chipata, back the way we came. Just as the night set in good and proper, at around 8 pm, a car came by and stopped. I don’t recall the guy’s name, but he was a missionary all the way from California and warned us that it’s dangerous out at that part of the road at night. He took us to the mission, where he introduced us to his lovely wife, Mary, and their two kids. They had a nice house on the property and Tom and I had long, hot showers before we turned to proper beds for the first time in what felt like weeks. In the morning, Mary made true, proper American flapjacks with maple syrup for breakfast. Another culture shock – right here in the liver of Africa. As we headed out to the road after breakfast and hearty greetings, some other missionaries from the compound came by. They said that they had been watching the news and that a civil war had broken out in Zambia. At that moment in time, Zambia was between ourselves and our ‘home turf’, so we had little choice but to continue.  

 

Mind your fingers!

We got a few lifts back to the border with Zambia and crossed over without any hassle. In the no-mans-land beyond the border control post, there were very few lifts and we paid a taxi to take us over (along with quite a number of other people who also squeezed into the little car. As I got into the car in the passenger seat (left-hand side in this neck of the woods) and closed the door, I caught the hand of a person behind me who was holding onto the door pillar to squeeze into the already very full back seat. I spent the rest of the trip apologising profusely in a language that was clearly not understood by the hapless victim of my doorframe. On uphills the little car, which was only about 40 years old or so, managed all of 40km per hour. On downhills the driver switched the engine off to conserve fuel and we made brisk progress, albeit without much in the way of brakes. We made it to the Zambian border post without further incident and checked through.

 

 

Lovely ‘do’ don’t you think?

In Chipata, Tom and I had a disagreement about something. I can’t recall what, but we ended up not speaking for the rest of the day. To add insult to injury, night fell seeing us still on the outskirts of Chipata. We could not a flag a lift for the whole day. We resolved to sleep under an awning used by a builders’ yard just outside the town, amongst some half-bricks and heaps of riversand. It started raining, but we were fairly dry at first. A few drips and drops on our sleeping bags was about all we felt before we fell into the sleep of the dead. We were not, however, the only ones seeking shelter from the storm that night. We were plagued throughout the night by mice that either crept into our bags or waded through our hair. It was truly dreadful. In the morning, Tom and I counted the mice that we had killed in the night, mostly by smashing them hard against your own skull with your bare hand as they crawled through your hair. We killed well over 20. The other 200 got away, I guess. Also, of course, that persistent drip became a miniature Vic Falls from the roof and we got up cold, wet, and with our clothes and sleeping bags soaked through.

 

The big bus cometh

 We went back to the road cold, wet, miserable and in low spirits. By 10 o’clock the morning, we still did not have any luck with lifts and we were getting hungry and thirsty. These were desperate times, and we walked to a nearby bus stop. We made some enquiries from the other people obviously waiting for the bus and decided that we would also get on the bus to Lusaka when it came. The bus came, and we were assured that there was plenty of space for us. The bus was the stereotype for every African bus you would see in a movie. It came complete with chickens, goats and other ‘passengers’ on board. Our space was the sum total of about 40cm of the back bench, between two very wholesome African ladies. We got on, dropped our bags and started chatting. It was searingly hot and the people in the bus were sitting intimately close, so the bus developed it’s very own olfactory equivalent of the Oort Cloud very soon. The tiny windows provided some respite every time the bus went fast enough to generate some draught, but that was about twice, so not much help in general. The bus stopped at Kachalola for a bathroom and food break, and we got out and into the local market. I was starving and homed in on the offering of fried bread. (similar to ‘vetkoek’, in my tribal tongue) I greedily dug out a handful of these breads from under a small heap of dead flies and gorged myself. So far so painless – there are pills and drugs back home – I must just make it there, and hunger is a more immediate threat than cholera or whatever.

 

We mounted the bus again and drove uneventfully into Lusaka. The trip cost us the equivalent of R 5 (South African Rand) for 500 km, or one cent per kilometre, and is therefore still the cheapest form of transport I’ve ever used. In those days, this would be about US$ 1,30 for 500 kilometres.

 

Accomplices to GTA

On the far side of Lusaka, we got perhaps the second nicest lift of the whole trip. Three guys in a Toyota Hilux stopped and offered us a lift all the way through the border, into Botswana and to Gaborone. We were very grateful and piled in. The Hilux was very uncomfortable, but it was a good lift. Tom is not a small guy, and neither was any of the others, so the three of us in the back had to synchronise our mutual bodily orientations as we snoozed away the miles in the back seat. We crossed the border before it closed and were happy to be back in Botswana. At a fuel stop in Nata, Tom chatted with one of the guys and he was getting worried, because it seems that lifts like this are not free in Africa. These guys were expecting good payment for getting us home. This was trouble, as we were almost completely out of money. Tom essentially gave the guys all the money that we had in order for them not to leave us right there, and we continued. We drove through the night and arrived in Gaborone the next day. Tom speaks more than a little Tswana and later told me that the car we travelled in, was stolen and the guys were taking it to South Africa to sell it there. We made our way to Jwaneng uneventfully and got home to just shower and lay in our beds for two full days. We were severely sunburnt and utterly exhausted. We ate like hogs from the home cooking at Tom’s house. On day three after our return, I headed home myself, hiking back to Kimberley. I was out and back for just about 3 weeks.

 

It will be the understatement of the century to say that I will never forget that trip. It was filled with strange and wonderful sights, sounds, people and places. I changed, too. You only dig out bread from under a pile of dead flies once from sheer hunger before your personal objections to certain types of food or their preparation seem petty and insignificant.

 

 

Looking back now, more than 15 years after the fact, it remains the sort if thing you do when your gonads are doing the thinking. I will most certainly not attempt it again, though I felt safer then than the numerous times I hitchhiked in South Africa after that. At junctions like these, everyone always says: “Oh, but you could do itthe world was a different place then…” Rubbish! – it was always a dangerous and stupid thing to do, but it remains an experience that I shall never forget and a good tale in the bag for the children. 

 

 

Tom and I are still best friends, even though we see each other only rarely these days. I still keep the shoes that I wore on that trip as a memoir of the many, many miles that I walked through a sweltering Southern Africa that summer.  

It’s a good thing that these memories remain indelibly etched in my mind – I never packed a camera.

Hemmingway se Ducati en avokado vir brêkvis Oktober 24, 2008

Posted by oomherman in Hoort nie in ander kategorie nie.
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My vrou het met die ding begin toe ek Sondag lus kry vir avokado. Ek is nooit lus vir avo nie – ek hou nie van avo nie – nooit nie. Toe ek nou Sondag wakker word met ‘n lus vir avo en vir haar beskryf hoe ek my oggend sien ontvou: .. so met brekvis van bacon en avo op open toasted ciabatta en baie koffie op ‘n stoep iewers waar mense verbyloop en ek die stad kan sien wakker word…. Toe sê sy: “Ja, Hemmingway…”

So, dit het my laat dink aan die een Ernest Hemmingway storie wat ek wel ken. Die storie gaan min of meer oor hierdie ryk vrou en haar man wat kom jag in Afrika (ek dink net ‘n paar van Hemmingway se stories begin so – sekerlik nie meer as 98% nie) Die vrou raak heel gek oor die jagter wat hulle die bos invat nadat hy ‘n leeu skiet wat op haar man afstorm of so iets. In alle geval, sy ‘vat’ toe die nag die jag-oom soos in die voorjare en haar man is baie kwaad. Die volgende dag gebeur iets soortgelyk, maar haar man staan sy, wel, man en hy skiet die buffel wat hom storm. (Hy voel toe nou natuurlik naby selfmoord want sy vrou is so los soos ‘n tuinhekkie en, en, en…) Later die dag sien sy toe nou die veranderign in haar man. Hy het self geen meer vrees gehad nie, want die ’near-death experience’ het hom losgemaak van sy vrese. Toe sy besef dat sy geen meer houvas op hom sal hê nie, toe skiet sy hom dood terwyl hy nie kyk nie.  

Dit alles is ‘n lang manier om by die storie uit te kom. Vir my is die kruks van die saak oor die vrees oorkom en ook, meer belangrik, dat ons baiekeer bang is vir goed wat eintlik glad nie so erg is nie. Of mens later net gewoond raak aan die vrees en dit maar ignoreer en of jy dit werklik oorkom en vrede maak daarmee, is ‘n ope vraag.

Ek wonder net soms as ek so op my motorfietsie werk toe ry of Hemmingway dieselfde storie sou kon skryf oor ‘n bang ou wat al paar keer deur karre en trokke in die verkeer getref is, maar aanhou motorfiets ry…..van vrese oorkom en dinge.

Armystories 2: Stil en rustig…. Oktober 24, 2008

Posted by oomherman in Hoort nie in ander kategorie nie.
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Jy sien, die ding met die army is dat jy eers jou identiteit moet afdoen voordat jy lekker saam met die ander maatjies kan dril en rondhardloop en orders ontvang. As jy dit nie kan doen nie, gaan jy heeltyd wonner oor: “Hoekom moet ek dit doen?” en “Wie de hel is jy? - doen dit self” – en sulke ouens sterf gewoonlik sommer vroeg as daar oorlog is – of so wil hulle vir jou vertel. In nabetragting en na jare se brannewyn, voel ek so oor oorlog: “Those who run today, live to run another day” – daar is geen glorie in oorlog nie, of in doodgaan vir ideologieë waarmee jy jou nie self kan vereenselwig nie. But I digress…

Ek was in die Army en het geleer om ‘n gunner te word – skiet met groot goeters. Lekker. Deel van die partytjie is egter ook dat ons moet leer van ‘onluste beheer’ Dis immers die vroeg 1990’s en die ‘vyand’ is lankal oor die grense en bly op ons voorstoepe. So is een van die meganismes om jou van jou identiteit te distansieer, om jou ‘n nommer te gee en nooit jou naam te gebruik nie. Almal leer mekaar maar so op die van ken. Engels en Afrikaans is deurmekaar en selfs die rou ’souties’ leer later Afrikaans praat.

Dis maande later en ons is ontplooi in Wembezi, ‘n klein maar hoogs aktiewe ’settlement’ net buite Estcourt in Natal. Ons het kamp opgeslaan buite die dorpie maar ons beheerkamer is reg binne die polise se kamp binne die dorpie. Van daar kan ons vinnig saam met die polisie reageer en ook met die ouens by die ‘huis’ in Potch praat oor ons groot radio.

Dit gebeur toe nou eendag so dat Earl (dis sy van – ons het nooit mekaar se name gehoor nie) die radio beman in die beheerkamer. Earl is Engels, maar hy het al paar Afrikaanse terme deur die laaste maande in Potch opgetel, waar selfs Marsmanne later Afrikaans sal moet leer praat. Terwyl mens op patrollie ry, moet jy elke 15 minute berig skryf oor wat aangaan. As daar niks aangaan nie, skryf jy “Alles is stil en rustig…”  Earl moes dit iewers gehoor het by sy makkers op patrollie.

Dié betrokke middag was daar fout met die bus-skedule en die Inkhata en ANC-busse kom toe nou  terselfdertyd by die busstop op die polisiestasie se hoek aan. Nou, daar is goeie rede om in 1992 (net voor die bully-beef verkiesing) die busse (a) nie terselfdertyd te laat opdaag nie en (b) by die polisiestasie te laat stop.  Die rede is dat (c) die mense sommer maklik handgemeen sou raak om hulle politiese oortuigings by die ander spanne tuis te bring.

Toe die busse nou hierdie betrokke middag gelyk by die ‘copshop’ stop, toe het daar sommer kortliks ’n redelik impressive gunfight op die hoek uitgebreek. Dis toe dat Samajoor Kuifie net toevallig uit Potchefstroom bel om te hoor hoe dit gaan en Earl antwoord die radio heel paraat. Die kort gesprek het min of meer so verloop:

Samajoor Kuifie: (radioformaliteite) (Earl antwoord soos ons geleer is. )

Samajoor Kuifie: Earl!, jou rakker, hoe gaan dit?

Earl: Samajoor! Alles is stil and rustig – the bullets are flying heen-en-weer..

Chaos bars los en paar koeëls tref die tent waarin Earl se radio staan. Die gesprek is onderbreuk en Ealr moes later met Sam. Kuifie praat.

Ons het vir jare later nog gespot met “Stil and rustig – the bullets are flying heen-en-weer.”

Ek onthou maar altyd dat dit maar in jou persoonlike lewe en op ander vlakke ook partydae so kan gaan. Alles is nog ’stil and rustig’ while ‘the bullets are flying heen-en-weer…..’

Random ramblings; humour and probes of the worst kind. Julie 31, 2008

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Humour. One word, two syllables. Sounds like: ‘tumour’

My experience with humour is that is holds mirror up to ourselves. Why do we perceive something as funny? I think it is probably a projection of the self that is half of what constitutes humour. We see or hear of someone making a total twit of him- or herself and we laugh because so-and-so is such an idiot. I think what happens is that we laugh from sheer relief that it was not ourselves that were embarrassed in the situation described. We perceive the situation as described in the joke, project ourselves in that situation, and then laugh with relief at the consternation of the poor sod that has just had this embarrassment visited upon him- or herself.

ALIENS AND ANAL PROBES

What is it with aliens and anal probes? Is it illogical to anyone else? That a species so far more advanced than us that they have mastered interplanetary space travel have nothing better to do on a Saturday night than scare and abduct farmers and shove sticks up their bottoms…….. I mean, seriously, have you also noticed the trends among all alien stories? A. They never appear to our doctors, leaders of state, top scientists, SETI, or anyone who is actually looking for them. B. They always choose some backwater local yokel with a one syllable name and abduct him (never a her) C. No-one ever believes these stories because of the perceived lack of veracity of the protagonist.  ’Gives a whole new meaning to moonshine, you know what I’m saying…?’

I bet the aliens that we do hear about, are actually juveniles in any event, and SETI and other organisations who take this sort of thing seriously, should adjust their search strategies as such. Do you also see parables with a 17-year old stealing Dad’s car for a joyride?

Picture this: It is late Saturday night in a quiet suburb of Haltjuhi, just outside of Weartuidel on the east coast of Qartufki. lIfghoux and Bteschaw have had a few beers that their mates from school left after they partied the night before. (beer is universal – must be) They are lazing about at Btes’s computer where they were creating static to send to some sods at a place called SETI a few solar systems over. They found the frequency to transmit on from a shiny plate on a spaceship lying in the local scrapyard. (I’ll translate the conversation for those who don’t speak Ooorghqaski)

Oi, Btes!

Yeah, mate?

You reckon those sods on earth or whatever get all of this?

Dunno.

You feel like a roadtrip?

Shueeeaaah!!!!!

Short while later, they’re in Dads’ Vrakinator 3000 XLS Deluxe for a spin to earth. Avoid the lights or busy areas – find a dark road outside of nowhere. Shove a stick up the bum of some poor sod who no-one will believe afterward anyway, and then spin a few circles in the corn crop just for laughts before they have to hightail it back home. 

I bet those crop circles will really throw those idiots !!!

SHUEEEAAAAH!!!!

(Well, when you put it that way, I suppose it IS possible……)

So, what are we to do if we want to find and talk to these chaps from outer space? Well, our search strategy should include the sort of things that juvenile aliens should want to come and investigate, like girls, beer and fast motorbikes.

Better plan than most, I reckon…

Blog going slow/ Die Bog-blog gaan stadig Julie 25, 2008

Posted by oomherman in Dames en Here... Intro.
2 comments

Lesers 

Ek moet eers verskoning maak dat ek nie meer so gereeld skryf nie. Ek het by die werk van ‘nie-veel-om-te-doen-nie’ gegaan tot ‘kan-nie-my-agterent-draai-nie’ in ‘n kwessie van 2 weke. Sal nog stories pos soos die geleentheid hom voordoen.

Groete

Herman


Dear readers

My apologies for not having posted in a while. Things have become ‘interesting’ at work lately and I have not quite found the time to write. I will post again as time allows. 

Regards

Herman

Blikke sonner skille… Julie 7, 2008

Posted by oomherman in Hoort nie in ander kategorie nie.
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Sien, my Pa was vir lang jare ‘n eiseondersoeker by die Spoorweg gewees (later Transnet, Spoornet, Net-Net, julle ken die grappies) ‘n Eiseondersoeker se werk is om te gaan kyk wat die skade is as daar iets fout gaan op die trein en dan al die papierwerk doen om die regstellings daarna te maak. Byvoorbeeld, in die dae van stoomlokomotiewe, was baie van die eise van boere wie se velde afgebrand het van kooltjies wat uit die trein gekom het. Dan het die eiseondersoeker die boer se eis gaan ondersoek, afgemeet presies hoeveel veld van wat is afgebrand (weiland, koring, wat ookal), en ‘n aanbeveling gemaak oor wat die Spoorweg die boer moes uitbetaal. Waar die trein in ‘n ongeluk betrokke was en die vrag beskadig is, moes die eiseondersoekers ook gaan verslag doen, die beskadigde goedere in stoor neem en die sender uitbetaal vir die verlies.  Wanneer so ‘n eis uitbetaal is, word die beskadigde goedere die Spoorweg se eiendom om oor te beskik soos wat dit goeddink.

So het dit gebeur dat Pa, as eiseondersoeker, telkens die ‘inside track‘ gehad het op goed wat na die stoor gegaan het en wat moontlik handig kan wees vir ‘n familie wat op ‘n staatsamptenaar se salaris oor die weg kom.

Die een keer het hy kuikens gekoop teen 5 sent een. Dié goed was veronderstel om na Ouma op die plaas te gaan en hoenders te word sodat ons hulle kan eet. Pa koop omtrent R5 s’n. Pa kom met ons hele stasiewa vol kuikens by die huis aan en almal raas en almal is NOU honger en meeste loop en skyt so vêr soos hulle gaan. Kan nie onthou wat was erger nie – die gemors of die lawaai.

Die ander keer kry Pa geleentheid om blikkies kos wat in ‘n vragwa was wat omgeval het, te koop. Die goed was saam met ‘n vrag kookolie gelaai, so al die etikette het afgegaan van die olie – die oorspronklike no-name brand! Pa kan die naamlose, geduikte blikkies kry vir 1 sent een, en hy reken toe hy vat so R 3 s’n. Weer kom die stasiewa swaar gelaai by die huis aan een middag laat. Pa gloei trots en die kinners moet kom help aflaai. Daar was blikke orals, in die kaste, op die kaste, langs die kaste, onder die beddens, in die garage is net blikke en niemand weet wat is in watter blik nie – dis Lucky Draw elke keer.

Toe ons by die huis nou later uitgeëet raak aan al die blikkieskos (ek dink dis toe Ma geblikte ertjies in ons ontbyt probeer wegsteek het, dat Pa sela geroep het) toe word die goed tot die visvang-trommel bestel. Ons het kinderjare baie naweke saam met my Pa gaan visvang (ek en Lucky) en ons het Pa se kookvernuf by die water baie geniet. Pa maak die beste kos by die water of op kamp. So is meeste blikkies toe nou vistrommel toe. Elke keer voor ons gaan visvang, dan vat ons net paar blikkies uit die ‘stash‘ uit vir die naweek. Om die risiko van alles dieselfde soorte blikkieskos te probeer verminder, moes ons blikkies uit verskillende oorde van die huis loop haal. Om dubbeld seker te maak en as ons eers by die viswaters is, kon ek, Lucky en Pa gewoonlik elkeen een blik kies. Pa het dan die 3 blikke op maniere wat net hy weet, in die beste aandetes omskep. Dit was een betrokke aand op die oewer van die Vaalrivier waar ek en Lucky en Pa, na nog ‘n lang dag op die water en doodmoeg, ons beste lewer en elkeen toe ‘n blik ertjies trek…. Wonderlike aandete van ertjies met ertjies en bietjie ertjies langs die kant en vir nagereg, nog ‘n helping ertjies. 

Ek dink dit alles is dalk deel van die rede waarom geblikte ertjies vandag nog nie my favourite is nie….

Desnieteenstaande die ertjie-episode, was daardie aande en naweke by die viswater altyd die beste tye saam met my Pa en boetie. Ons maak vandag nog moeite om saam vis te vang as die geleentheid hom voordoen, hoewel ons probeer om net blikke met etikette op te vat en nooit weer ertjies koop nie.

My boetie Lucky – episode 4 Julie 2, 2008

Posted by oomherman in People / Mense.
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Ons was nog op laerskool toe my niggie een skoolvakansie van Johannesburg af kom kuier. So ‘n rukkie in ‘n skoolvakansie dink ek die ouers raak ook maar moeg vir die kinders wat so knaend is, want daar was nog nie stories van ons by ‘n mall aflaai of iets nie. Kimberley het nou nog nie ‘n oortuigende mall nie, wat nog van in die 1980’s?

So vra ons eendag vir ma of ons kan gaan piekniek hou in die parkie agter die huis. Die vra is meer dat ma die kos sal pak, sien? Ma stem in en die voorbereidings vir die piekniek begin. Dis omtrent net soos padkos vir vakansie – daar is lekker toebies, klein frikkadelletjies, Simba chips en blou eiers – hardgekook in die dop. Verder het ma nie koeldrank nie, maar daar is die bottel Pine-Nut wat Pa van die visvang naweek teruggebring het. (Onthou julle daai vet 1,5 liter glasbottels? en Pine-Nut?) So daar gaan die kinners vort met die piekniekmandjie en die bottel Pine-Nut. 

Nou moet ek eers vertel hoe die bottel sy weg teruggevind het van die visvangnaweek af. Pa en sy groot fishing-buddy het die laaste drank wat hulle gehad het, moes saam meng om hulle rugsakke so lig as moontlik te maak om op ‘n sekere punt die rivier te kan oorsteek. Dis toe dat hulle die 3/4 bottel vodka met die laaste Pine-Nut meng om net een bottel in die sak te sit. Toe hulle klaar in die stroom geelvis gevang het en ander wal toe gaan om te rus, toe vind hulle dat die mengsel nou hopeloos te veel vodka vir die Pine-nut in het. Hulle was gesoute drinkers, maar het self nie kans gesien vir die mengsel nie, so hulle het dit maar teruggebring huis toe met die idee om nog Pine-Nut te koop om later by te sit.

DIe kinders kom in die parkie aan en speel eers bietjie. Gooi bal, skiet kettie en jaag die honde deur die parkie. Later is die kinners moeg en maak die kombers oop om op te sit. Die kos word uitgepak en almal smul lekker. Nou is dit die koeldrank se beurt. Pine-Nut is niemand se gunsteling nie, maar dis wat ons het, so ons begin by my (wants ek’s die oudste) en pass die bottel aan. Ek proe onmiddelik dat dié goed niks lekker is nie en vra vir Lucky wat dink hy is verkeerd. Nee, hy weet ook nie, maar dit proe snaaks. Pass aan vir Sussie, dalk weet sy. Nee, weet nie, maar stem saam dit proe snaaks. Pass aan vir niggie – sy weet ook nie, maar stem in die goed proe nie heel soos die Pine-nut wat sy onthou nie. Na lang klomp geproe-ery, besluit ons dat daar drank in die Pine-Nut is, en nou is dit mos ‘n groot avontuur! Net grootmense drink, maar ons is nuuskierig oor dit, so ons gooi.

Ek vat nog paar slukke, maar die meisies sê hulle voel nie so lekker nie en hulle gaan nou huis toe om vir Ma te vertel. Ek strompel ook maar huis toe en los vir Lucky daar in die parkie met die bottel Pine-Nut. Ons gaan vertel vir Pa-hulle daar is iets fout met die Pine-Nut. “Maar waar is Lucky?” vra Ma. “Nee, ons weet nie“. Na lang redekawel en Ma wat vir Pa kwaad word want hy lag sodat hy nie kan staan nie – hy en sy maat het nie kans gesien vir die goed nie en Ma gee dit vir die kinners – hoor ons Lucky huis toe kom.

Ons almal hardloop voorhekkie toe want ons hoor ons boetie aankom. Lucky loop in die middel van die straat. Om hom blaf die honde. Hy sing en skree en raas. Hy is bloedneus geval en die stukkies klippies en grond sit in die skrape in sy gesig vas. Dit pla hom niks – hy traak nie, want hy is happy – hy sing en sleep die leë Pine-Nut bottel in die een hand en die piekniekkombersie in die ander hand huis toe.

So dis waar al die kinners die eerste keer saam gekuier geraak het, met Lucky aan die voortou, en Pa en Ma wat nie kan besluit wie se skuld dit nou eintlik is nie…