This will be a short entry, hopefully it will serve as a marker and I will add more detail in a couple of days. Reason for this is…. I am either suffering from being too long in the dry atmosphere of the planes, picked up some sort of bug or have become victim of South African allergies. That combined with being pretty busy during the day and socialising at night leaves little time to write. That should change when we get settled down next week.
Items for this blog entry will be the progress of the weaver bird in building a new nest, our visit to the Cradle of Humankind, where the first humans evolved, a trip underground to where the remains of these first humans were found and a meal at a Pub where the owner has a Rover 3500 car.
As usual, if you don’t appreciate the misspellings, poor punctuation, poor grammar etc you can always stop reading.
OK, one day later and feeling a little better with a bit of time to spare. Normally when we travel there is just the two of us, so finding time to write the blog is not a problem, but when staying with family we are on the go a lot more.
Just to set the picture we are staying with Lyn’s brother and wife (Robert and Mollie) in Henley on Klip about 50Km south of Jo’Burg. When we arrived one of the first things we noticed were nests hanging in the trees. These nests were made by a weaver bird, the picture below shows a completed nest, and it should show why the bird gets its name.
The bird builds the nest to attract a mate, should no mate approve of the nest it will be destroyed by the builder and he will start again
Above is the start of a new nest and below is the new nest about 8 hours later.
This morning we headed about 90kms north(ish) to Maropeng which roughly translates to Where it all Began and the exhibition at the Cradle of Humankind (http://www.thecradleofhumankind.net).
This is the area where the remains of the first human type species were found. Being a total failure at Latin 90% of the words in meant nothing to me. I did get that the previously thought oldest human remains found in Ethiopia were named Lucy because Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds was on the radio when they discovered her. Also the oldest remains were named Mrs. Ples, but later on they proved she was an adolescent male!
Despite my comments above, the trip was interesting and the exhibition was well laid out. As we were seniors, for the outrageous price of $6 each plus free parking we also got free access to the Sterkfontein Caves. This is the underground cave system where the remains were found. The trip through the caves gave us plenty of exercise. Unlike many cave structures where the stalactites and stalagmites had been well preserved from discovery these caves had been used by miners to recover limestone required for the extraction of gold in the early 20th century. Guess what is made of limestone?
Above is one of the few remaining pillars, where the stalagmite and stalactite meet.
Above shows where the limestone has been broken off. Some of these stalagmites and stalactites were over 10ft across. Again a well laid out and interesting tour.
In the evening we were taken out for a meal at the local pub, good food at an excellent price. The owner drove up to his pub in an old Rover 3.5, a British car from the late 60’s.