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another stop while we were in durban was at the tape aids for the blind headquarters. they have hundreds of readers from all over south africa read books and magazines into a mic and then distribute the books and magazines via cassette tapes for tree to anyone that is a visual/print-handicapped citizen of south africa. roddy recorded five books for them years ago, and is having all of our great guides content free for the tape aids program. this means that they will distribute recordings for us to the blind and print-handicapped all over south africa. i am really happy that we are able to do this, and had fun taking a complete tour of their headquarters, following a journey of a book 'from silent page to spoken word'.


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our stay at durban was short-lived, and after a day we headed to spioenkop game reserve. it couldn't have been more of an african landscape, unless you took out the boat club right next to the reserve blaring bad european pop. the park sits right on a dam and has so many zebra that you can't sneeze without scaring one. during the middle of the night, around three am, i was woken up by the sound of something like a burglar going through our campsite, to realize that in fact it was just an entire heard of zebra passing to the water in front of our site. in the morning, it wasn't zebra i found surrounding the lake, but giraffe. this park was an amazing stay, but only a temporary home before we bunked up with our great guide to the anglo-boer war, raymond heron.



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raymond heron owns a lodge and runs historical battlefield tours around the spioenkop area. the battle of spioenkop is a story of poorly informed decisions, faulted generals, and countless lives lost for no gain. after a blody battle that was waged over the course of a day, both sides (british and boer) retreated, not realizing the other was doing the same. the trenches that the british soldiers dug in the middle of the night turned out to be their graves that day, and the bodies still rest there. out of the battle, three people that shaped history walked away; winston churchill, louis botha, and mohandas gandhi . it was a sad and nasty story, but worth visiting in attempt that we may be able to learn something from it.

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our other guide that wasn't far away was rob caskie. he also leads historical battlefield tours, but over at rorke's drift and isandlwana. my day with rob was by far one of the most intense great guide days; not only did we have to do about four hours of audio recordings in the morning (after driving out for an hour and a half to meet him) but the story he told was incredible. the battle at rorke's drift is a story of true heros (somehow refreshing after spieonkop) and of insurmountable odds that were somehow defeated by the british. in a battle area smaller than five tennis courts, thousands of zulu warriors attacked 135 british soldiers, with over thirty of those soldiers sick in the makeshift hospital (sixteen so-much-so that they couldn't move). the soldiers made themselves a 4ft wall out of corn-meal bags and biscuit boxes that surrounded their three buildings, offering their only protection against the charges of the zulus. this battle was fought in the night, with the only light for much of it coming from the hospital roof, which was burning down on the people inside. after the fire burned itself out, the british couldn't see their attackers and the only warning they had was from a little dog that was left inside the compound that would bark at the wall where the zulus were coming. eleven victoria crosses were handed out after this, the most for any single military action in british history, including both world wars. recording the audio story was chilling enough, but walking around the grounds of the battlefield was a surreal experience. For extra chilling effect, a zulu church service was going on while we were there, filling the area with the slow church songs of sorrow (listen below). Download.
1 comment:
1. A question for Rachel…
If street children are making my sneakers how come those sneakers aren’t getting any cheaper?
2. I’m going to quiz you in-depth on those battlefields.
3. Try not to get stabbed.
HUGZ,
The Viceroy "De Campo" Curran
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