Pages

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Home, again

 Alphen Trail

After a fourteen hour flight Vince and I and an Airbus A340-600-full of people landed at O.R. Tambo in Johannesburg. Phew.

Two-hourly walks to the back of the plane, with calisthenics and stretches that cracked up one flight attendant every time he saw me,  kept my neck and back in better shape than usual. I caught up on a year of movie-watching. I cried during Searching for Sugarman. My neighbour, a young man who'd left Kenya for Colorado when he was six and who was going home for the first time, became concerned. He was a perfect in-flight neighbour. Hardly got up, quiet, and thin. We flew on SAA, and it was lovely to have a first taste of vacation as soon as we took off: Appletizer,  a fizzy apple soft drink that takes you home in one sip.

After clearing customs, we had a short wait on the tarmac in Johannesburg, waiting for a blanket of mist over the runway in Cape Town to clear.

And then we were home.

 Cape dwarf chameleon

The air is different. You could tell even from the air, as the pilot swung the huge machine wide over False Bay to land into the wind, gentle from the Northwest. In summer it howls from the Southeast. It is not a profound change, yet - I was expecting bare trees, but so far only the poplars and plane trees have shed. The transparent, softer light and the new clouds over the mountain, the green grass and the montbretias (crocosmia) in bloom in the greenbelt, the early evening (sunset is before 5pm), and the chill that settles with the darkness have stirred the memories of this season, so that the sight of yellow oxalis flowers and tiny white daisies in the grass bend my heart sideways.

We have had a small lunch under the tree, already - my mother, father, Vince and me, and supper at the kitchen table. I made a fire in the study last night, to satisfy nostalgia, and we have already eaten and drunk more than is good for us. The serious hiking had better begin, to compensate.

 Crocosmia

Under the pine trees on this afternoon's walk with the corgis I found pine rings (Lactarius spp). Too old to be good, now, but a promising sign. I hope we have some rain, and soon...


Fallen poplar leaves, chameleons in the greenbelt, a roast leg of lamb for supper, pink bubbly, ripe tree tomatoes. A profound, 12-hour unconsciousness in a deeply silent night was not interrupted by the invisible click frogs, clicking in the reeds and wetland beyond the house, nor by the occasional clattering territorial shout of African shell ducks.

I woke just once in the night, when Vince came into the room, and I thought I was in Brooklyn.

But I am home.

15 comments:

  1. Aah, that is lovely. I'm glad that you are home.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Beautiful. May your springs unwind and then propel you into your beloved terrain!

    ReplyDelete
  3. We were in Cape Town in 2007 at this time of year for 5 weeks. The days were mostly glorious, we had chilly nights once the sun went down, and we were struck with how late the sun came up too. My only complaint was the cold bathroom when I had to shower. Was your flight a continuing one to Cape Town or a new plane?
    Have a wonderful holiday.
    Pam

    ReplyDelete
  4. Welcome Marie and Vince. Just in time for a good winter front coming in tomorrow.(As an aside, I went to the Iziko National Gallery today - free for Africa Day - and there is a superb photographic exhibition on documenting farm life in South Africa. Something you two might enjoy.. enjoy is a strong word, it's heart wrenching.)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Welcome home. Wallow in the nostalgia. It's a sweet place to be.

    xo Jane

    ReplyDelete
  6. Sounds relaxing. And since we too are having a fall day here in NYC, there is no opposition.

    ReplyDelete
  7. We are having a fall day here, 45F last night and the heat went on, so you are not missing any sunny Memorial Day weekend weather! Enjoy your trip and your change of seasons with your friends and family. xo

    ReplyDelete
  8. Beautiful. Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Glad you're safely there and not on KLM - stranded midway. Enjoy... and report!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Vince, is that one of "your" chameleons? Named, perhaps...? :-)

    ReplyDelete
  11. Welcome home, well your wish for rain soon is granted...rain for the rest of the week is predicted! Have a fabulous stay, can't wait to see your blog about our beautiful city. Love seeing it through your eyes.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Welkom tuis. Geniet!

    ReplyDelete
  13. I have just come from a trip "home" to the big Douglas firs and red cedars of my childhood. There was rain there too, in Vancouver. I meant to ask you a long time ago if you saw Searching for Sugarman. I watched it twice, mesmerized by that lovely Zen spirit. Enjoy your home.

    ReplyDelete
  14. I am catching up on your blog as I sit here and watch Searching for Sugar Man! I thought it was funny timing!

    ReplyDelete

Comments on posts older than 48 hours are moderated for spam.