This is just that. A point of departure.
Departure. In 16 days we are climbing into our cars and departing.
We, being our small, and slightly volatile, family of five.
We are leaving our reasonably comfortable, but stressful, closeted but risky - life in the city to go and spend two years living in a small Xhosa village on the wild coast of South Africa.
The fact that none of us can speak a word of Xhosa should bother us. Frighteningly it doesn't.
My partner (secretly my beautiful, brave, patient, kind, frustratingly correct wife) and I have both resigned from our jobs, taken the kids out of school, and decided to go and spend two years in the remote village of Nqileni, in one of the poorest areas in the Eastern Cape of South Africa.
Nqileni has no electricity, no roads, no infrastructure, no toilets and no running water.
They also have no traffic, no Big Mac's, no television, no crime, no pollution, no noise and nowhere to hide.
In about 17 days from now, however, we will have passed the halfway mark and will be closer to the destination, then we will in fact be arriving rather than departing.
Arrival. A point of arrival.
A new opportunity to learn. A massive challenge.
We will be moving from a 300 square meter house to a cottage less than 40 square meters.
This is small. Very small in fact. Our little house has a cow dung and mud floor, mud bricks, and a skew roof that I put up myself in our last visit in October.
We will have to dig our own toilet, rig up a shower under a Jerrycan, survive on what rainwater we can collect, grow our own vegetables, keep a few chickens, fish for a lot of our supper, home school the kids, and amongst it all, find each other and ourselves.
We will be hanging on by our fingertips through the whole wild ride.
Which at least means that we won't be able to point fingers at each other.
Shout , scream, laugh, cry and swear - yes.
Point fingers - no.
We have started packing and are both working flat out to get all of our work, packing and project planning in place before we leave.
We have a manic two weeks ahead of us.
We will keep the blog as a family. When in doubt go with my version of events.
Claims that I am prone to wild exaggeration are wildly exaggerated and not at all accurate.
I suspect that having got the ball rolling, I might be shunted to the back of the blog line by a thirty-something achiever, a nine year old teenage girl, a five year old bossy little dynamo, and a three year old independent little chap who quietly sows angelic destruction in his wake.
Well, the start is made.
Bravely by me, because it was done without consultation or prior approval.
Remind me next time to tell you why I was so wickedly clever calling the site "by the tips of our fingers" and not something like, "returning to the country life", or "Organic country living".
I am a clever little chap.
But let me depart.
For now.
Departure. In 16 days we are climbing into our cars and departing.
We, being our small, and slightly volatile, family of five.
We are leaving our reasonably comfortable, but stressful, closeted but risky - life in the city to go and spend two years living in a small Xhosa village on the wild coast of South Africa.
The fact that none of us can speak a word of Xhosa should bother us. Frighteningly it doesn't.
My partner (secretly my beautiful, brave, patient, kind, frustratingly correct wife) and I have both resigned from our jobs, taken the kids out of school, and decided to go and spend two years in the remote village of Nqileni, in one of the poorest areas in the Eastern Cape of South Africa.
Nqileni has no electricity, no roads, no infrastructure, no toilets and no running water.
They also have no traffic, no Big Mac's, no television, no crime, no pollution, no noise and nowhere to hide.
In about 17 days from now, however, we will have passed the halfway mark and will be closer to the destination, then we will in fact be arriving rather than departing.
Arrival. A point of arrival.
A new opportunity to learn. A massive challenge.
We will be moving from a 300 square meter house to a cottage less than 40 square meters.
This is small. Very small in fact. Our little house has a cow dung and mud floor, mud bricks, and a skew roof that I put up myself in our last visit in October.
We will have to dig our own toilet, rig up a shower under a Jerrycan, survive on what rainwater we can collect, grow our own vegetables, keep a few chickens, fish for a lot of our supper, home school the kids, and amongst it all, find each other and ourselves.
We will be hanging on by our fingertips through the whole wild ride.
Which at least means that we won't be able to point fingers at each other.
Shout , scream, laugh, cry and swear - yes.
Point fingers - no.
We have started packing and are both working flat out to get all of our work, packing and project planning in place before we leave.
We have a manic two weeks ahead of us.
We will keep the blog as a family. When in doubt go with my version of events.
Claims that I am prone to wild exaggeration are wildly exaggerated and not at all accurate.
I suspect that having got the ball rolling, I might be shunted to the back of the blog line by a thirty-something achiever, a nine year old teenage girl, a five year old bossy little dynamo, and a three year old independent little chap who quietly sows angelic destruction in his wake.
Well, the start is made.
Bravely by me, because it was done without consultation or prior approval.
Remind me next time to tell you why I was so wickedly clever calling the site "by the tips of our fingers" and not something like, "returning to the country life", or "Organic country living".
I am a clever little chap.
But let me depart.
For now.
You are very brave.....No water, no toilets...as much as I love nature and aspecially your view..I realy realy like to have a toilet at least.....
ReplyDeleteI have big plans for my loo. Tomorrow we fire up the prototype. In three weeks it will be the real thing. Biodegradable, odourless, insectless, comfortable and with a great view!
ReplyDeleteI'll have pictures up by about the 7th of Feb.
Wild Coast here we come. Guys its gonna be more than worth it. U only live once, and now u living. What an awemazing time u have ahead of u. Not much of a blogger myself, in fact never posted a thing to the blogosphere ever. I don't even do Facebook. So this is it. Well i did do some sort of messaging on Firefly back in '96 i think. Shoo. Anyway here goes.
ReplyDeleteWe shall enjoy your trip from the comfort and confines (physical and mental) of Kenilworth suburbia.
Funny thing actually, a friend of ours sent us a link to www.bulungula.co.za last year, and we thought, yea baby, 10 days up there looks like the ticket, so Starlings we'll see u asap. Well once u have adjusted and have sorted the throne out.
Now does one sign a blog entry, or just post it. Here goes. Chat soon
Thanks Rupert
ReplyDeleteWe will entice to visit us during the year.
The throne is now through first stage testing and moving towards field trials.
I will let you know about the surf break once I am more clued up.