Hi bloggies, this is Jackson. After Morocco, we spent almost three weeks in South Africa and these are my favorite things I did.
In Capetown:
Table Mountain. Table Mountain is called Table Mountain because the top of it is as flat as a table. It is kind of like a table for giants.
To get to the top we took a cable car. The cable car was really cool because as we were going up the floor was slowly spinning so you could see the view from all sides. When we got to the top we sat at some picnic tables and ate lunch. It was really windy at the top so we had to hold on to our sandwiches so they wouldn’t blow away. After lunch we started walking down some trails. The trails had paths of grass everywhere, It was also pretty rocky. We saw a couple lizards on the rocks. I spotted a lizard but at first I thought it was a baby crocodile. I was a little disappointed that we didn’t see a dassie but it was still really fun. On a board it said that baboons, lynx, antelopes, dassie and lots of other animals could be spotted on the mountain, but we didn’t’ see anything other than the lizards. The view was amazing. It was a little scary to me because I am afraid of heights.
Jackson, Paul & Savannah with Table Mt in background |
Robben Island. We took a ferry to Robben Island. Robben Island is famous for many things and one of those things is the imprisonment of Nelson Mandela, the former president. He is famous for playing a big part in stopping the South African white rule of apartheid. Nelson Mandela made a lot of famous speeches too. In the prison on Robben Island they did a lot of cruel punishments.
Another famous thing that happened on Robben Island is the ‘each one, teach one’ this started because there was a lot of smart people like doctors and lawyers in jail and they knew how important education is so they all taught each other everything they knew.
Prison room for 30-40 prisoners on Robbin Island |
Cape of Good Hope: To get to the Cape of Good Hope we took a few hour drive. When we got there we got to ride on a funicular instead of using the stairs (yeah). When we got to the top we stood by a light house and got to see about where the two oceans Indian and Atlantic meet. Then a few people spotted something over the edge and what we saw was a Dassie. A Dassie is really cute and looks like a big light brown hamster.
Tassie - closest relative is the elephant! |
When we were done at the Cape of Good Hope we drove to a beach that had wild penguins EVERYWHERE! There were grown-up penguins, teenage penguins and even baby penguins! We even saw one digging his nest!
African penguins at Boulder Beach |
The Garden Route:
Spier: In Spier we went to a really cool place. Where we went you could pet a cheetah (a cheetah sanctuary), hold and stroke an owl, and hold and stroke an eagle. The first thing we did was pet a cheetah. Our cheetah’s name was Joseph. While we were petting Joseph a lady told us that when cheetahs lie down they use their tails to swat away the flies. When we were done with Joseph we went to the bird sanctuary. In the bird sanctuary we saw some cool types of birds. When we got to the end of the bird sanctuary we went into huge cage where they were letting you hold an owl. I had to wear a glove, then they put some owl food on my glove and then an owl flew right onto my glove! On my glove the owl kept giving me an evil glare. Then we got out of the cage and a man asked my dad if he wanted to hold a Wahlberg eagle and he said yes. So the man took us to Wallie (Wallie is the eagles name) when it was my turn to hold Wallie, the man placed Wallie on my glove. While Wallie was on my hand I stroked him while he was either preening his feathers or nibbling my hand. On the way out of the bird Sanctuary we got to pet some very small owls. (They were really soft).
Franshoek: It was early afternoon when we arrived in Franshoek. We stayed at a guest cottage on a farm that was a vineyard. When we got there a nice lady showed us our cottage and the area but when she was done a big black and white dog came running at us with a stick in his mouth. The lady told us that his name was Joey. All afternoon Joey left and came back. Each time he came back he bought a stick with him. And every time he was with us we threw the stick for him. At night we had to leave Joey outside but when my dad woke up and opened the door and found that Joey had been sleeping right outside our door! Then after breakfast we took Joey with us for little walk out in the farmer’s land. While we were walking we walked past plum trees, pear trees, grape vines and squashes. We walked all the way to the end of the farmers’ property. On our way back Joey found a stick twice as long as him. I was really sad to say goodbye.
Our new friend Joey with his stick |
Mossell bay: We got to Mossell bay early afternoon. That night we ordered pizza to be delivered to our apartment while we all played pool. After pool my mom and Savannah went to bed while me and dad walked across the beach. While we were walking we saw a couple fishermen all of which said they were having no luck. The next morning Savannah and I went swimming in the Indian Ocean and played on the beach after me and dad went Jogging.
Knysna: In Knysna we had a great apartment with a pretty view. The first morning dad and I went jogging. That day we went to an elephant sanctuary. When we got there a man took us to the elephants where we got to put fruit in their trunks!!! Then the man took us to walk among them and we got to pat them. We even got to pat the baby!! Their skin was very tough.
When we were done with the elephants we drove to a place called Monkeyland (a monkey sanctuary and rehabilitation place) where I brought a t-shirt. We took a walk with a guide who took us through what used to be a part of Knysna forest. He told us that the paths we were walking on were made by elephants a long time ago! Now most of the wild elephants are gone but they believe 3 -6 elephants still lived in the forest. But the coolest part was all the monkeys. There were hundreds! We walked among many different kinds of monkeys all living together, not separated by cages. We saw about 30 to 40 lemurs in a family. The guide told us that the lemurs were dumber than the other kinds of monkeys.
After seeing the monkeys, we went next door to Birds of Eden. It was a self guided tour through a very large Avery. There were a lot of very pretty birds. A cockatoo landed on the railing right next to us. Then a lady came over to us and told us that the cockatoo was very naughty and steals things like jewelry from you. When we were at the end we looked at the netted roof and saw a few baboons sitting on the roof!!!!
Another day we went to the beach. At the beach the water was absolutely FREEZING!!! And… Savannah and I went in. After a while my dad took Savannah and I to get snow-cones.
Our last day on the Garden Route we drove to Port Elizabeth and then flew to an airport near Kruger.
Kruger:
The schedule in Kruger was wake up at 4:45am do a game drive until 8:25 have breakfast at 9:00, free time until lunch at 3:00 and another game drive from 4:00 until 7:00 and then dinner at 8:00. Almost every free time I either swam or played chess, but one afternoon, a ranger named Jason played scrabble with Savannah and me. Another afternoon, a ranger named Ryan played monopoly with us.
Jason & Ryan with Jackson and Savannah |
On the game drives these are the animals I saw:
The birds we saw were: rollers, (three kinds; European, lilac breasted, and purple breasted.) magpie shrikes, grey go-away birds, eagles, (brown, snake and fish.) pearl spotted owlet, barn swallows, buffalo weavers, quail, and hornbills, (red and yellow billed.)
pearl spotted owlette spotted by Jackson!! |
The animals we saw where lions, buffalo, cheetah, giraffe, impala, elephants, wildebeest, hyena, jackal, warthog, bubbling casino frog and foam nest frog.
One of the two lazy lions |
Giraffes |
unhappy water buffalo |
The baby animals I saw were baby leopard, baby water buffalo, baby giraffe, baby impala, baby elephant, baby wildebeest and baby warthogs!!
Baby leopard |
After five days on safari, we left Kruger and went to Johannesburg.
In Johannesburg we went to the Cradle of Humankind. It is called the cradle of humankind because that is where they found the oldest hominid fossil (“Mrs. Ples”, who is 2.3 million years old!) A hominid is part human and part ape. In the cradle of humankind a guide took us into the caves where they found all the fossils! It was really creepy but really cool. When we got to the very bottom of the cave our guide showed us an underground lake. Another part of the cave you had to squat to walk though a small tunnel. At the exit of the cave we touched a statue of Dr. Robert Broom hands and nose. Robert Broom was the man who found Mrs. Ples and you touch his hands for knowledge and his nose for luck.
Jackson rubbing Dr Broom's nose for luck! |
SOWETO
We got a guide to show us round Soweto. Soweto means Southwestern Townships. Our guide told my dad directions(in the car) while telling us information about Soweto. During apartheid, the whites made the black people live in Soweto and many still live there. The houses are mostly shacks. Many houses do not have water or electricity. One of the stops we made was at tour guide’s house. We walked around in the area where she lived and three little boys followed us around. When we stopped, my mom took a picture of them. When she showed them the picture she took, they boys didn’t know who was in the picture! Our guide had to tell them it was them. My mom said, “It’s you” then they mimicked her and said “YOU”. Later, we drove to the grocery shop and bought them some candy for our guide to bring back to them when she went home.
Our friends from SOWETO |
Another stop was the Hector Pieterson Museum about the Soweto uprising in 1976. My mom was the same age as Hector Pieterson who was shot in the uprising when he was 13 years old. The uprising was because the South African government was making the students learn Afrikaans. It is like somebody telling you that you have to learn a language that will be useless to you when you are older.
Hector Pieterson Museum |
We also stopped at the Walter Sisulu Square. Our next stop was Nelson Mandela’s house, which is now a museum but he lived in it before they took him to Robben Island. In his house they had many awards that were given to him, and one of them was a plate from Bermuda.
I really wish that someday I can go back to South Africa, as I really enjoyed it and it was truly amazing to see.