Solo Self-Drive Safari: Day Nine

After spending the morning and early afternoon with the guys exploring the Rhino sanctuary hoping to find those illusive Rhinos, I bid farewell to my new friends and headed on south, my goal to get on the South African side of the border and find a place for the night before heading on to Johannesburg.

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The border entry procedures coming back into South Africa were even more lengthy and confusing than those going into Botswana. Not a surprising, given how South Africa has become the melting pot of the African continent. While the official percentage of foreigners in South Africa is less than 3% it’s believed the unofficial number is closer to 15%. For this reason, and due to several riots where foreigners from other African nations are attacked, and even where they have attacked each other, South Africa is in the midst of changing its immigration policies.  With the addition of a “health inspection” which consisted of finding the building where it’s done, surprisingly not easy to do, but if you don’t have a stamp from the health inspector on your entry form, you won’t even be seen by immigration. The inspection itself is conducted in a crowded temporary building, with several women standing on one side of a counter, while crowds of people push their way to their side of the counter. Once you make your way to the counter, these completely unmasked women aim a therm reader at your forehead, and if you don’t have a fever, they stamp your papers. I’m not a doctor, I don’t even pretend to be one on TV, but let’s just say someone in that crowd does have something, is this such a great system to coop them all up? At the time, the big worry was Ebola migrating from West Africa to the South.

Through the border, and with about 2 hours of daylight left, I notice a camp on my Garmin navigation system. There’s a phone number so I give a call, and indeed they have space available, they give some complicated instructions for gates, and etc. and after driving on roads that zig-zag around private property, I find a gate, and call in to get onto the property. Turns out, there’s only one space, its one camp, originally built as a hunting lodge by the current owners grandfather. Talk about alone! Now I’m camping at a bush camp with not another soul in sight.

Private bush camp in South Africa. With an emphasis on the word private.
Private bush camp in South Africa. With an emphasis on the word private.

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Bush camp shower! large pot you pump water into, and light a fire under. As the water heats it rises up the hose and into the container over your head. Pretty clever!
Bush camp shower! large pot you pump water into, and light a fire under. As the water heats it rises up the hose and into the container over your head. Pretty clever!

Final sunset on my bush adventure. Where I was this evening seemed so appropriate to end my trip reflecting on the past of South Africa, and its hopeful future.
Final sunset on my bush adventure. Where I was this evening seemed so appropriate to end my trip reflecting on the past of South Africa, and its hopeful future.

The camp is situated overlooking a deep ravine, and with woods all around. To, say I had the feeling of being vulnerable would be an understatement. First order of business is the fire, which was great, because part of the fee, is free firewood! After dinner, and getting a bit more comfortable with the solitude, of this camp despite constantly hearing movement in those woods, I hear a couple ATV’s coming down the ranch road. It’s the owner, and a few of his sons. They stay, and sit by the fire for a while, and I get the whole run down on the history of the camp, which is a fascinating history of South Africa as well! This Afrikaner family has had this property for several generations, and was among the first group of Dutch settlers that make up the cultural group of South Africans.  While many Afrikaner’s have emigrated from South Africa due to violence against them, this family has no intentions to go anywhere, and nothing about the way the spoke indicated they were living in fear either, even though since 1994 some 3,000 white farmers have been killed in South Africa something the group Genocide Watch has theorized could be the early warning signs of genocide of Afrikaners.

With the bloody history, of apartheid, it’s difficult to empathize, but as I listen and learn, I’m reminded once again of my mother’s words: two wrongs do not make a right. Not only did this trip push me into new challenges, it also provided me with a deep insight to people, cultures, and the overall understanding that as humans, we all share and contribute to the beauty & fear, love & hatred, peace & conflict, richness & plight that makes up humanity itself.

What do you think?

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