I love travelling but I hate Safaris. I love animals but I get jittery when they invade my personal space. To me, birds are best left to the skies, the lions to their forest kingdoms and the crocs to their aquatic bastions. They look gorgeous on Discovery Channel, if you ask me. I marvel at all the wildlife enthusiasts in their cowboy hats and boots doing brave things with wild animals. But given the choice I would rather play safe and spend hours at a human habitation than in the jungle.
Well then, imagine my predicament when I landed in South Africa and actually found myself on a wildlife safari in the bushveld! To say that I just went for the heck of it would be a darned lie but I admit I hadnt seriously thought through the whole thing like I am prone to do with most aspects of my life. I just dived into it and thought- 'dekha jayega'! Somewhere at the back of my mind I had probably thought a safari would be like going in a covered jeep and watching animals prance around like in a 'jungle book' animated film, all sweetness and light as PG would say. To my horror there was no cover in the jeep, the bush was a stark dry open vast land where I had the most humbling experience of my life. But more of that later.
The flight from Delhi stopped at Dubai airport in transit. I've been to the middle east before and wasn't particularly overwhelmed by the glitter and shine of the place. If you ask me I quite took a loathing at first step. It was crowded, cramped and most unwieldy. We couldn't find a single money changer that had South African Rands and like extra smart travellers we had left it for the last. When the fourth money changer told us they'd just run out of Rands I began to wonder if they had some kind of genetic link with our Delhi shopkeepers. You know, "oh only yesterday I had a few thousands...!" types. Seething with frustration and barely managing to pee and grab a coffee we boarded the onward bound flight to Johannesburg. Boy, and was that a long flight or what. I looked with horror at the flight map and saw the vast continent that we were set to cover. A ten hour long journey along the coast of eastern Africa. There were all kinds of people on board- white, black, coloured, Indians. It seemed like a lifetime when we finally touched ground at Joberg International airport late in the night. Whenever I visit a new continent I'm always at my attentive best in the first hour- I like to smell and drink in the atmosphere- almost like an animal. Find the essence of the place. Unfortunately after 16 hours of flying my sense of smell was quite dulled and my droopy eyelids were an effort to keep open. But the first whiff of Africa was 'grassy' and windy. Africa literally blew me away.
Next: Joberg
Well then, imagine my predicament when I landed in South Africa and actually found myself on a wildlife safari in the bushveld! To say that I just went for the heck of it would be a darned lie but I admit I hadnt seriously thought through the whole thing like I am prone to do with most aspects of my life. I just dived into it and thought- 'dekha jayega'! Somewhere at the back of my mind I had probably thought a safari would be like going in a covered jeep and watching animals prance around like in a 'jungle book' animated film, all sweetness and light as PG would say. To my horror there was no cover in the jeep, the bush was a stark dry open vast land where I had the most humbling experience of my life. But more of that later.
The flight from Delhi stopped at Dubai airport in transit. I've been to the middle east before and wasn't particularly overwhelmed by the glitter and shine of the place. If you ask me I quite took a loathing at first step. It was crowded, cramped and most unwieldy. We couldn't find a single money changer that had South African Rands and like extra smart travellers we had left it for the last. When the fourth money changer told us they'd just run out of Rands I began to wonder if they had some kind of genetic link with our Delhi shopkeepers. You know, "oh only yesterday I had a few thousands...!" types. Seething with frustration and barely managing to pee and grab a coffee we boarded the onward bound flight to Johannesburg. Boy, and was that a long flight or what. I looked with horror at the flight map and saw the vast continent that we were set to cover. A ten hour long journey along the coast of eastern Africa. There were all kinds of people on board- white, black, coloured, Indians. It seemed like a lifetime when we finally touched ground at Joberg International airport late in the night. Whenever I visit a new continent I'm always at my attentive best in the first hour- I like to smell and drink in the atmosphere- almost like an animal. Find the essence of the place. Unfortunately after 16 hours of flying my sense of smell was quite dulled and my droopy eyelids were an effort to keep open. But the first whiff of Africa was 'grassy' and windy. Africa literally blew me away.
Next: Joberg
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