Next week’s adventure

There will travelling, and it will be distant.

I’m off to Sishen, in the Northern Cape. ‘Tis a drive of 585km, and I’m leaving on Monday morning at an unmentionable hour. Returning on Friday.
There is a large hole in Sishen, and I’m going to check that the nice people who work at the hole are digging it properly. And that they’re bashing the rocks they dig up properly. And they’re not killing the trees and animals and stuff. And not pouring oil in the drains. That kind of thing.

Considering the size of the hole, I think they might struggle, but perhaps I’ll be wrong about that. I hope so.

When I get back, I’ll write an audit report. I’ll also hopefully write an account of my experiences. There may even be photographs.

Dreaming of volcanoes

I recently discovered while reading about South Africa on wikipedia that South Africa politically owns the Prince Edward Islands. I starting thinking that I should pay a visit to this far flung South African destination. The islands have a volcanic origin, and the volcano is active. Technically, this means that there is a volcano in South Africa. How can we not visit the South African volcano?

Presumably because of this (but also possibly due to thinking about Mount Doom) I dreamed that I actually went to visit Marion Island.
I climbed up, but didn’t get all the way over to the edge because it was hot and glowing and dangerous-looking. Then it started to erupt. Kind of. It spat some rocks out into the air and I was worried that I might get hit on the head by them.
I decided it would be a good idea to get off the side of the volcano. As headed away from the crater, I noticed that the other tourists (yes, there were about five other people casually wandering about on the side of the volcano) were all wearing hard-hats. Why the hell wasn’t I given a hard-hat?

I feel a little less enthusiastic about visiting the place now.

Goblin’s Cove

I’ve been married 3 years now. Time hasn’t really passed all that slowly, which is a good thing because it proves I was having fun. Although it hasn’t all been fun, it has been predominantly fun.

Blah blah blah.
The point is that Angie and I went off on a mission to a place called Goblin’s Cove. It is situated near Magaliesberg. If you have Google Earth, you can check it out from the sky with this file.

It was a most excellent and restful visit.
We stayed overnight in an old railway carriage that had been refurbished to be more suitable as a hotel room. They pulled out a bunk to fit a double-bed into one of the cabins, and retrofitted a modern toilet and shower into the bathroom. They left the original fold-away sink in place. It had silly taps that you couldn’t really get your hands under, but it was an interesting experience.

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The passage inside the train

We spent most of Saturday there, just arbing, going for strolls, and reading. They have a weird menagerie that includes geese, rabbits, doves, and exotic chickens (yes, exotic is the only way to describe them and their plummage) in the same enclosure.

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Front view of Goblin’s Cove

There is also a gift shop, restaurant, and coffee shop. The decor is consistently bizarre and outlandish, and the architecture of the buildings is like something out of Middle-Earth (although the colours seem a little more garish than I imagined Middle-earth to be).

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Psychodelic coffee shoppe

We both loved the place (so thanks Angie (not the wife) and Sandor for the heads up), and plan to be going back sometime in (hopefully) the not too distant future.

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Goblin’s Cove – We’re lovin’ it!

[WaffleG] The ‘No, Waffle Group has not Died a Miserable Death’ Issue

#Waffle Group#
Official Waffleletter No.19
The ‘No, Waffle Group has not Died a Miserable Death’ Issue
Editorial
Loyal Wafflings! How you have waited for another issue of the notorious Waffle Group. How you have been disappointed. Disappointment no more! In fact, this is so long you’ll wish I’d fallen off that frosty mountain-top I spoke of in the previous, oh-so-hideous issue.

Naturally, other things have happened since then, and if you’d been visiting the Home of Waffle on the Web you’d know about some of the things. Certain descriptions have been cryptic, but bad things have happened and basically, since nearly falling a mountain, things have continued to suck muchly.

Things that suck tend to lead one in a journey of self-discovery. Why does it suck? How can I stop the suck? If I can’t stop the suck, how do I live with the suck? Do waffles suck? And other deep questions.
So I stumbled upon Buddhism which seems to have a philosophy that fits in nicely with mine, and helps me to deal with the suck.

Things are looking up though, and in the spirit of improving mental health, I won’t be dwelling on the negative, and will rather relate the more frivolous events in my recent past. Basically you’ll be getting another account of my international travels. The latest destinations being England, Wales and France.

My life of luxury will soon come to an end as I search for gainful employment. Angie has hinted at being tired of making all the money, so I will have to change my ways from blood-sucking leach to life-giving elixir while simultaneously finishing off my masters. Sounds like fun.

The Suck
Adapting my suck analogy loosely to the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism gives us this:

1. Life sucks.
2. Expecting life not to suck makes life suck.
3. It is possible for life not to suck
4. To stop life from sucking, follow the Eight-fold anti-suck path

To be honest, the suck analogy doesn’t do a very good job of capturing the spirit of Buddhism. This might be because generally people say things like, ‘You suck!’ or ‘This sucks!’ which lacks subtlety and nuance. Buddhism is practically all subtlety and nuance.
For a better description see about.com’s Buddhism articles.

What I really enjoy is that Buddhism is a scientific philosophy. One doesn’t practise Buddhism with blind faith, but with a questioning attitude. Nothing is to be taken as scripture. The practitioner is encouraged to experiment with the teachings and make observations. After gathering results of one’s experiment, it is possible to devise new experiments, or re-run the experiments in order to gather more data.
It isn’t necessary to believe and implement everything that the Buddha said, just do what works or makes sense to you.
For the first time in my exploration of philosophy and religion, I’ve found an attitude towards life where almost everything makes sense. No-one is excluded. There are no threats of eternal damnation. You are responsible for your actions, and there’s no get out of bad karma free ticket. Asking for forgiveness doesn’t help — you need to act for forgiveness. Even then you don’t get forgiveness, you just balance the karmic accounts.
Possibly the theory of karma is a load of crap, but it explains why bad things happen to good people a hell of a lot better than anything else I’ve come across. God working in mysterious and inexplicable ways has never done it for me.

Here’s an argument against an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-loving god.

Let us now consider Mumphred, the plush toy. Let us assume that Mumphred has hopes and dreams, and does not want to suffer a horrible fate at the teeth and claws of Satan’s Poodle (aka Bean).
I fed Mumphred to Bean as something for her to play with, and she treats Mumphred quite roughly. Mumphred has had his heart ripped off (since he wore it on his sleeve), and his face mauled. From Mumphred’s perspective, these are bad things to have happened to him — perhaps even evil things.

If god is all-powerful and all-knowing, then he can’t be all-loving because he isn’t stopping evil, despite knowing about it and being powerful enough to stop it.
If god is all-powerful and all-loving, then he obviously doesn’t know what’s happening to Mumphred, because if he did he could and would want to stop the evil.
If god is all-knowing and all-loving, then he can’t be powerful enough to save Mumphred, because he must know about and want to stop the evil.

Why do I get into these theological debates with myself and email them to people? I think I subconsciously want to annoy Tammy. Sorry Tammy, it isn’t intentional.

The Travel Master
This is what it’s like to visit a small town in the south of France:

sdfh hj psdjfdsj l;kdfjgkj ;l ksd;flk ;lsdkofjsd;fkjsd ;klsjdf;lsdf lkdjdslfjhfdpb potposefoswdop pjd pojpojf oihj oihj pijsd pioj poj lkijdsiphjsdkj pij ijseoisd ih loihgthjyfsdo iohgufsdgoi opiisfadvjhj pi ygasdi uopiihyasgiy poixc ougrhasdiuc pou iohsdiy oijuouisdy ojsdoiudj iugsdpcxuip ihjsdohcviu jupfj

sdflkjsdlksdjsdflkj lkij lkgflk;lk lkjsdo ;ojk likisdkl ogbjpsdpoaspasdopvblo i piodfopdf i iofgopf iop ilhjg

sdfjkl dilj lkjsd l;oj lkisjdkidsfflfki odfjdsflksdfl iloksdjflkdsfjk lokijdfj kivjslkjf iogoiju ohiosdfki lokisdjvlihj kixckl lk ljkhx lokixdh klhdx klhxklxv lkhj lflk lk

As you can clearly see, there is no punctuation in small French towns.

London
We (being me and Angie, since we travelled together for a change) actually spent a few days in London with our friend Lisa before heading to France. Lisa was an excellent host, especially in the way she forgot the specifics of our arrival and was rowing on the Thames at the same time as we rang her doorbell. So we rang another doorbell next to hers and stirred a grumpy demon from her lair.
The miserable old wench hissed at us and told us to press whichever button we hadn’t pressed. She didn’t seem sympathetic when we explained that we’d pressed all of the buttons and had only her visage as a reward.

Lisa didn’t answer her cell, the landline just rang. The flatmates she told us she had were either her special invisible friends or dead. After almost booking into a B&B I managed to rouse one of the flatmates, from a slumber so deep it may have been a coma, by getting into a comfortable position and leaning on the doorbell button. Her name was also Lisa, which was a little creepy. Gloriously she was expecting us (although she didn’t know when exactly) and let us in, saving us from a slow, hypothermic death on the pavement — at least there were no mountains in sight.

To Lisa’s credit, once she came back from rowing she did an excellent job of taking care of us, showing us the sights and taking us to places of interest and just generally being excellent company. Thanks for everything, chick (as Angie would call you).

Onward to France
We spent a week in France near the base of the Pyrennees in a small town called Baynere, although I am not too certain about the name. It was French-sounding, and if the Americans don’t like the French, why should I bother?
We went there specifically to visit Angie’s aunt and uncle who have retired and moved there. Plus, they fed us for a week in über-expensive Euroland (which isn’t the same as EuroDisney). Bonus!

Technically, we could have made a skiing holiday of it, but when we went up the mountain to have a look at the ski-slopes, Angie had a bizarre panic attack and refused to go anywhere near the snow. It was a struggle to even coax her out of the car. She complained that there was too much snow, and everything was too white. She was also scared of falling on the snow and breaking her hip — a misinterpretation of a story Angie’s aunt had told us about an elderly lady who had slipped on icy concrete and broken her hip.

We did not ski. We did visit Lourdes. It’s a famous place. If you’re Catholic, you should know about it. If you’re not, you might know about it. If you don’t know about it, don’t trust what I tell you.
St. Benedine (or possibly she had a different name that sounds like Benedine, but definitely starts with a ‘B’) had visions of the Virgin Mary in a damp alcove up on a hill. The French Catholics were so excited about this that they built a fairly ornate and quite large church above the alcove.
Then some French entrepreneurs realised that devote catholics would flock to Lourdes to see this holy alcove, and they’d probably want souvenirs. Kitschy plastic Virgin Marys and gold-coloured medallions of the Pope and the like.
The people wanted it, and so it came to pass. Souvenir shops and vending machines were created, and God looked down upon all that the humans had made and saw that it was irreverent.

Angie insisted on buying a small plastic virgin. I frowned upon her.

A final note on France: The rumours about the food are true. French food is excellent. I didn’t eat a single bland, ordinary meal while in that country (not so for the UK). You may not know what it is that you are about to eat, but you know it will taste good.

Wales
The Welsh language sounds a lot like Klingon (this is a reference to Star Trek, for those who refuse to have anything to do with cult TV shows from the 60s that have spawned spin-offs in the fashion of a plague of locusts). Not that this was a problem: everyone spoke English, as is only right and proper. The more countries the USA and UK invade the better. I’ll be able to go on holidays to Iraq and Afghanistan and be understood, just before I’m shot to death.
But I digress.

Wales is a country we visited because Michael and Frances moved there. It was cold and overcast much of the time. There were very few Chinese people to be seen on the streets. I expected more considering that Wales is where all the Chinese people from Eastern Europe were sent after the cold war.

Still, all was not lost. There were many castles. We visited several. Frances likes castles very much. I think castles are okay. This difference in our views of the value of castles may have caused a little friction. Sorry about that Frans.

I would like to draw attention to the gay castle, which is more commonly known as Caste Coch. I don’t know what ‘Coch’ means, but if there is any just ice in this world, it should mean ‘Queer as a Bicycle with Seventy-Eight Wheels.’
Castle Queer is built on the ruins of a medieval castle, and the foundations and cellar/dungeon bits are very authentic looking. So Castle Queer isn’t Queer to its roots.
Then a bunch of pansy Victorian hoity-toities got hold of it and “restored” the castle, complete with fairy-tale pointy turrets. Externally, if you can get passed the pointy turrets, it looks like a real castle. Inside, it looks like a gay-Victorian-medieval-fantasy or more plainly, it looks like a joke. Everything is ostensibly medieval, but with Victorian flair thrown in.
Historically accurate restoration? I don’t think so. It just isn’t bleak enough.

That’s the whining out of the way.

I enjoyed Cardiff despite what I thought of Castle Queer. We caught up with our friends, went ice-skating outdoors (not something practical in South Africa), went to Indian restaurants (yes, Indian), crossed the bay in a water-bus (which is really just a boat. Angie said they might as well call it a water-train), visited pubs, drank liquid Brains, ran around screaming. You know, the usual.

It might interest you to know that Brains is a brand of Welsh beer. Those Welshmen are crazy.

While I was there, we got the women out of the way and Michael discussed the wedding proposal with me. Now I’m leaving Angie to marry Mike. Well, that’s what I was hoping for. Turns out he’s more interested in marrying Frances. Curses.

Perhaps I need to hang around the gay castle a bit more.

Anyway, thanks for putting up with us in your space for two weeks.

End of Laze
I’ve started earning money.
I have been looking for work, and found work on a kind of freelance basis with environmental consultancies. They get too much work to handle. I absorb the overflow and they pay me.
So far it looks like it will work out quite nicely.
Bizarrely, having to find money earning work has had the effect of making me work more effectively at my masters. An all-round good thing then.

My other entrepreneurial plan is to sell plastic Virgin Marys at traffic lights. If that doesn’t catch on, plan B is to stand there very still with a cardboard sign that reads “I think I am a haystack. Need money for therapy.” If that also fails, I’ll change the sign slightly to a more aggressive stance: “I make dead people. Give me money for therapy” and wave about a bloody baton.

--That's all. Any comments, suggestions, complaints, insults. Send them to me.

Pay homage to the Waffle Masterhttp://thewafflegroup.blogspot.com/

Empathise with the Plush | Cheer on the Poodlehttp://satans-poodle.blogspot.com

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[WaffleG] The East African Edition (No.19)

Editorial
I seem to be struggling to remain in South Africa, oh humble wafflings. It’s not like I was trying to travel all over the place, it just seemed to happen. Such is the nature of being the Mighty Waffle Master. Cower before my syrupy magnificence!

Kenya is the destination for this issue. Next month the moon, and then after that – Mars.


New Members
None this time. But the following still applies, I suppose.New members: If you’re confused about this, visit the Official Waffle
Group Web page

It’s unlikely to clear up your confusion. Email me for clarity.

See the end of the message on how to unsubscribe.


The Destination
I found Mars to be just as red, barren and dusty as it always appears to be in the movies (and in photos). I found the thin atmosphere to be somewhat suffocating, and it was a real pain to always put on a pressure suit whenever I wanted to go out for a walk.
There were no tourist attractions to speak of and the locals were very strange and alien.
I don’t recommend you go there unless you really like the colour red.


Stop Being Silly Now
Ok. I’ll try. No promises.Firstly I’ll express my disappointment that I saw neither Tigers nor Lions in Kenya. Weebl – you are a trickster and a cad!
But, perhaps I should not be so harsh on Weebl. There are no lions and tigers in Nairobi. I didn’t manage to venture out of the confines of the city, so perhaps he speaks truth. I can confirm that there is a tall mountain with snow on the top. I saw it as we flew 1500 feet above it on the way to Kenyatta International. The disembodied voice that spoke to the passengers on the plane called the mountain Kilimanjaro. You need to ask yourself whether disembodied voices are trustworthy.
How can you be certain that anyone is actually flying the aeroplane? As a passenger I’ve never seen the pilot sitting at the controls. Is a disembodied voice flying the plane?
I propose that a small camera is fitted in the cockpit so that when the pilot has something to say, passengers can actually see him/her/it speaking on the TV screens. This is so obvious that the only reason it’s never been implemented is because no-one is flying the plane. And the air stewards are probably all robots.


The Point of the Visit
I went to Kenya because the UN headquarters for Africa are in Nairobi. Just down the road from the UN is the US embassy. The same US embassy that was bombed back in 1998. Exciting stuff! I was surprised that no-one tried to kidnap me, being as important as I am in the sphere of waffles.We met at the UN for the 1st African Symposium and Workshop on Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) from 29 August to 2 September. “We” being people from 11 African countries, and few people from other regions to assist in facilitating proceedings. My expectations for the event were not entirely met. Most of the attendees had heard of LCA, but didn’t know much about it. I was actually one of the more knowledgeable people there. As a result, I didn’t learn many new things about LCA (as I had hoped). At the same time, this is encouraging since it indicates that I probably know more than I thought I did, ergo I haven’t been totally misleading myself while studying LCA.
The best thing about these sort of gatherings is meeting new people who are interested in your field of study. Ultimately, when the studying is done, you can try to sucker some of them into giving you a job (or at least referring you to someone else who might give you one). Those guys who worked for CSIR looked particularly promising.
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The UN venue. I felt important sitting there

There was also a fascinating bureaucracy about the event. We held several open forum discussions, and various people voiced their opinions on extremely diverse issues. Most had very little to do with LCA, and the capabilities of LCA.
In one case we discussed potential impact categories that would be relevant to Africa, before anyone properly explained how impacts are modelled. Impact categories are usually things that can be determined using scientific principles and models. The impact category Climate Change is determined using some measurable variable, like CO2 and CH4 emissions (believe it or not, I am making an effort not to bore you into a catatonic state as I explain this). Data plugs into the model and voilà you have an impact score.
Sometimes you can define impact categories that don’t operate on a scientific principle, but you still need some sort of reliable statistical data. I hope you can see why I shook my head woefully when the impact category Corruption was proposed.
I suppose this kind of thing was partly a symptom of the delegates’ ignorance, and not their entirely their fault. Yet, I got the feeling that many people liked to propose motions that would be completely impractical or simply impossible to carry out. Everyone just smiled and nodded and made little notes in their little notebooks.
Sometimes certain people would challenge an opinion and there would be much debate and nodding and smiling and so on. Timeless discussions with no apparent end.
I started to see the merits of dictatorship. Benevolent dictatorship kicks democracy any day.
As Kevin (who also attended) said to me, “If this is how a bunch of academics discuss things, I’d hate to spend the day with a bunch of politicians.” Touché


The Most Chaotic Traffic Flow of Nairobi
There seems so be only one traffic rule in Nairobi: Keep left unless that’s inconvenient.
The rest are just guidelines.

At any intersection, the vehicle travelling at the greatest velocity has right of way:
Unless a stationary vehicle already blocks the road, in which case this vehicle has right of way until the vehicle blocking its path clears a space.
Give pedestrians a chance (I actually saw a road-sign stating this) since there are no pedestrian-crossings and very few traffic lights.
Keep a following distance of at least 1000 Angstroms. This also applies to vehicles to your left and right.
Hoot at cyclists
Get your mind checked if you are a cyclist

Because of the special guidelines traffic had a kind of organic quality to it. It seemed alive. Where the road was clearly designed for 2 lanes, there were three. At one stage our bus was driving on the wrong side of the road because an extra lane had spontaneously grown out of the left side of the road, consuming a lane on the right side. I recommend visiting just to see the traffic. I also recommend you get someone else to drive for you.


Festive Hotel Locations
Kevin and I (and most of the delegates) stayed at 680 Hotel. I think the website makes it look better than it is, but at least it was clean.
Kevin and I undoubtedly had the best rooms in the place. We were on the top floor and we looked down at Simmers, a wonderful bar/club/whorehouse that had a live band every night, seven days a week. Oh how we rejoiced as the pumping jams wafted tranquily up to our room, drowning out the insistent cackle of the television until the early hours of the morning. Oh, how well we slept each night with these soothing rhythms stroking our eardrums in gentle lulling softness. Oh how we were started awake each night at 3a.m. to the sudden silence at Simmers closed for the evening.
Indeed, as their pay-off line stated, Simmers was truly “The answer on a plate!”
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But does it look like the answer, on a plate or otherwise?


Simmers – A Closer Look
What to do in the evenings? Well, Simmers had been aggressively advertising using an audio medium, so Kevin and I figured we’d join Chris there for a drink.
It was festive and pleasing and we spoke of many things. Chris and I met up first and waited for Kevin to arrive. It took him quite a while. Apparently he’d been delayed by a waiter who had insisted that there were no other white people in the place, and he was to sit here at this table, and nowhere else because there were no other white people here. Fortunately, Kevin was strong-willed enough to break free and seek Chris and me out.Time passed. Beer bottles were emptied. There was talk and merriment. Then there was an overly friendly woman. She figured she could probably charge the gullible white men more for services rendered. She first sneakily positioned herself at the table next to ours. Then she drank some alcohol, presumably to build up some courage. Then she started talking to us. Then she started touching Kevin (since he was closest). Then we realised that we were actually surrounded since the woman seated at table on the other side reached out and gave my back a friendly stroking.
Then we paid for our drinks.
Then we left.

Later in the week Kevin and I were held up in the hotel lift by someone who claimed to work at the massage parlour on the second floor of the hotel.
“That’s nice. We’d like to go to our room now.”
She didn’t like that idea and continued with her marketing, preventing our escape by standing in the elevator doorway.
“That’s nice. We’d like to go to our room now.”
But she promised that the massage would be very nice, right over here on the 2nd floor. We could come any time we liked, and all the women who worked there were very beautiful, and look! here were a few of them right now. Aren’t they lovely?
“They’re nice. We’d like to go to our room now.”
Then the other ones started marketing a little. It didn’t look like our tactic of complete disinterest was working very well. Kevin attempted another approach.
“Maybe some other time. We’d like to go to our room now.”
It didn’t have much of an effect either.
But, the new characters didn’t seem to be as drunk as the one barring the door, and they quickly saw that we weren’t going to be giving them any money, so they dragged our new friend away and we returned to our room and the Simmers party.


The Carnivore
A whole bunch of delegates went to eat meat at the Carnivore. If you don’t like meat, you shouldn’t go there because you won’t like it. If you do like meat, you should go there. They will give you as much meat as you can eat. You will get meat from a cow, a chicken, a pig, an ostrich, a lamb, and a crocodile. Apparently they used to serve other game, but stopped doing that. Something about protecting endangered species. What are endangered species good for if you can’t eat them?
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Hell for Meaty BeastsThey will bring you the meat skewered on massive sword-like things, and slice it off using pangas. It’s really quite vicious, but most yummy.
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Dead beast is served

The day before going to the carnivore, some of us atoned in advance for our actions by eating at the vegetarian restaurant, which really made the most incredible meals, and for hardly any money at all.


Meeting the Family
After the conference I stayed the weekend. This gave me opportunity to finally meet my oldest uncle and his family who have been hiding out in Kenya all my life (and longer, but I’m still not convinced that anything existed before I did, so these claims may not be true).
I’d met all my other aunts and uncles before, so it was excellent to finally close the loop. It’s sort of creepy how is similar to my dad in many ways.
He drove out all the way from Kitale just to see me and I was really flattered by how important he and Freda considered our meeting. Initially I’d just thought it would be nice to meet them, but it really was a whole lot more significant than that.
I wanted to stay longer, but the taxi came to take me back to the hotel. I plan to go back for a holiday. Perhaps I’ll see the tigers then.


Thanks go to…
I arrived home to my darling wife to discovered that she’d gone a bit odd in my absence. She had a bit of a freak out while I was away, and it would appear that I actually keep her sane just by being around. Perhaps insane people emit sanity waves, which is why two insane people like us have to live together in order to keep stable. This hypothesis doesn’t explain why I didn’t go nuts, but then I did have Kevin around a lot while in Kenya, and there’s clearly something wrong with him.
In future, I will just have to take her with me wherever I go.
The good news is that the positive effects of my presence are starting to influence her once again, and I predict her recovery will be swift.
A bunch of people helped Angie through the weak (ah look! play on words!) and I’d like to thank them impersonally via email and the Internet. Yes, electronic media is eroding our humanity. Cope.Megs, Jaco, Louise (and I suppose Rob, you helped too, although you are in a way an extension of Louise). Thanks so much for looking after Angie (and Bean where applicable) when she needed you most.


That’s all. Any comments, suggestions, complaints, insults. Send them to me.Checkout the official Waffle Group Webpage at http://thewafflegroup.blogspot.com
Unless, of course, you are already there. Good on you!

If you don’t want to receive this newsletter from me, send me an email with the phrase “SOD OFF” in the subject.

The Horrible Hike of Horrible Horrors Issue – No.18

****************
* Waffle Group *
****************
_Official-Looking Waffleletter No.18_

_The Horrible Hike of Horrible Horrors Issue_

*Editorial*
Greetings Wafflers.
As you can see I’ve given up trying to get the colours right in HTML.
Plain text is what you are getting from now on. I apologise to the
readers who had no problems. To those complaining whinging types – I
hope you’re happy with the drab, boring and plain black & white. How am
I meant to draw the youth back to the medium of the printed word now,
and keep them safe from occult that is Harry Potter (parading as
children’s books, but obviously evil propaganda published with the
intention of turning children into basket-weavers, or something even
more sinister).

So I went hiking, and this is what this issue is about. Other stuff has
happened since the last issue, but it all pales in comparison to what I
experienced the weekend of the 16^th and 17^th July.
Before I go any further, a message for Louise. I’m not angry with you.
Really not angry. Because of this trip, I finally got Angie to agree
with me about the importance of camping with the correct equipment. So
actually, in retrospect, I thank you.

*New Members*
Three new members this issue.
Friends of mine find themselves girlfriends/ fiancées/ lovers/
dominatrices. They get sucked on to the list. Welcome to Kim and Gaby
who fall into this category. They have Gareth and Quinn to blame.
Then we have Mr. Andy, who should have been on the list a long time ago,
but never gave me (or Angie) his email address. This has now been rectified.

New members: If you’re confused about this, visit the official Waffle
Group Web page (http://myweb.webmail.co.za/halfhaggis)
Clicking on the words is likely to cause more confusion.
Clicking on the waffle itself might be more useful, but less entertaining.

See the end of the message on how to unsubscribe.

*Arm-twisting and other pursuits of love*
“Oh Neil my love, Louise and Rob are going on a /snow-hike/ in the
Drakensberg in the middle of winter, and I’d like to go with them. It’ll
be /fun/,” says Angie.
“Good for Louise and Rob. And good for you too. It’ll be /cold/,”
says I.
“Don’t be such a bore. We never do anything fun or interesting.
We’re always stuck in Jo’burg. I really want to go.”
“It’ll be cold. [insert expletive] cold.”
“Ok Neil,” says Angie, “you don’t have to go if you don’t want to,
but I’d /really/ like you to.”
[Insert expletive] thinks I.
“Ok, I’ll come along,” says I
“You really don’t have to go if you don’t want to…”
Yeah, right.

I had other reservations about our little mountaineering adventure –
such as our lack of camping equipment. You see, the ‘snow-hike’ was
actually a snow-hike and snow-camp (and snow-freeze-to-death — but more
on this later).
Apparently many people have camping equipment, and a number of them like
us enough (or perhaps hate us enough) to lend their equipment to us.
I point-blank refused to be involved in any way in the preparation for
the trip. My viewpoint was that if Angie wanted to go up the mountain
–dragging me in her wake– and freeze our butts off, then she had to
organise everything. That way I could blame her when we lacked something.

Somehow Angie managed to scrape together backpacks, a tent, sleeping
bags and ground-mat thingies. We stuffed the backpacks full of blankets
and woolly clothing to cover every part of our bodies. Food and water
was jammed in there too. Seemingly well equipped for our journey into
the arctic tundra, we set forth early Saturday morning (Friday evening
having been utilised for my idea of fun – good food and drink at an
excellent restaurant (built of material more sturdy than tent-canvas)
with charming company and air temperature regulated at a
non-life-threatening level).

*Drive Drive Drive Drive*
After roughly 4 hours travelling, we reached the mountain, and I’m
pleased to state that most of the journey up the mountain was by
motor-vehicle. I’m less pleased to state that by the time we got to the
mountain, I was the driver of the motor vehicle. But most alarming of
all was that the motor vehicle was a Peugeot 206. I now see the merits
of 4×4 on steep gravel roads.

*Arrive*
Louise and Rob and company were waiting for us at the top (well, the top
in terms of motor vehicle travel). They made us breakfast and plied us
with alcohol – but not enough.

*Hell Begins*
I’m relatively sure that when a damned soul arrives in hell, Satan gives
the poor bastard a backpack and then he chuckles maliciously as he tells
the soul to hike up steep mountains that very closely resemble the
Drakensberg.
I knew that the camping bit of this horror would be really unpleasant
but, since I actually quite enjoy hiking, the hike bit was meant to be
much nicer. My fatal error was of course forgetting that a backpack has
stuff in it. Lots of stuff. 12 kg of stuff (I checked when we got home).

And now, a little Newtonian physics:

W = F.s
where:
W is Work
F is Force
s is displacement

F = m.a
where:
m is mass
a is acceleration

Let a = g
where g is acceleration due to gravity

Ok. Stick all the bits together and you get
W = m.g.s

Now let’s throw in some numbers:
m = 12 kg
g = 9.81 m.s^(-2)

So I had to expend an extra 117.72 J for every metre that I went up the
mountain.

I hope that seems like a lot. Because it isn’t. One Romany Cream biscuit
provides 315.18 kJ of energy, so I’d need to hike up 2677 m before one
biscuit wouldn’t be enough to replenish my energy.

Physicists clearly need to climb more mountains. If they had, their
stupid formulas would be designed to work properly.

I’m re-evaluating my vision of hell: damned souls must hike up mountains
with heavy backpacks and solve non-linear differential equations in
their heads while juggling piranhas.

Enough digression.

*Hell Continues*
Hike up. Hike along. Huff. Puff. Rob says we’re almost there. He says it
a lot and at regular intervals. We stop believing him.
The shadows grow long. The packs grow heavy. The pains and aches just grow.

When we thought things could get no worse, we arrived at the
chain-ladder. Just up the chain-ladder and we’re at the top.
Just. Up. The. Chain-ladder.
Ha ha ha we nervously laugh. Ha. Ha.
Whaaaaaaaaaaaaa!

We’d been warned about the chain-ladder. No. rather we’d been told that
there was a chain-ladder, and would that be a problem. Nah. No problem.
Angie and I had climbed chain-ladders before in Cape Town – no sweat.
Obviously there was a miscommunication somewhere. Either this horrific,
endlessly uprising, vertical, rusting, linked chain behemoth was a
‘chain-ladder’ or the short series of metal rungs linked with chain on
Lion’s Head (in Cape Town) was a ‘chain-ladder’. They could not both be
chain-ladders. They were not the same thing.

I climbed the chain-behemoth for a long time.
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
A long long time
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
I reached the top. Others followed. Angie was very impressed with
herself (since she has an intense fear of heights) and I was impressed too.

Oh look. What’s this? *Another* ‘chain-ladder.’

*The Summit*
I was unimpressed. Having laboured away the whole day (about 5 hours
hiking/resting/moaning) we got to the top. It was flat (and not even the
most top top – we’d made it to the base of Mont-aux-Sources). Flat
like a plateau. Flat like the Free State. Flat flat flat. Flat.
Other mountains still towered above this pathetic flat bit I found
myself on. To say I was dismayed does no justice to my feelings at that
point in time.

*The Camp Site of Hypothermia*
The flatness wasn’t all bad. Because the camp site was several hundred
metres away in a valley, the walk to the camp was far less painful than
it otherwise might have been.

By the time we made it to the camp the sun had already set and light was
receding rapidly, as was the warmth of the sun.
Pitch tent! Put on more clothes! Shiver! Go for a piss! Move into
Louise’s tent!

I don’t want to dwell too long on the warmth and comfort that Louise and
Rob’s tent provided, because then you might think I enjoyed myself for a
moment there. Although that might be true, I am trying to pain a picture
of Horrible Horrors. Horrible Horrible Horrors.
Louise and Rob were properly equipped with a thermal tent, and so about 7
of us huddled into their ‘sleeps 3’ tent. It was warm and comfortable
and fun and festive in ABSOLUTELY NO WAY AT ALL.
Unfortunately we couldn’t all sleep in the tent, so after supper Angie
and I skulked back to our tent.

At first it didn’t seem that cold (the floor, however, was just as
uncomfortably solid as I’d expected). But that delusion didn’t last
long. As Angie put it, it got so cold in our useless borrowed summer
camping equipment that “we both pulled our beanies over our faces and
waited to die.”
It was a long cold uncomfortable wait. We’re still waiting which, I
suppose, is a good thing.

The sun finally rose after one of the longest nights in my memory where
I dreamed of terrible twisted cold things. Our water bottle was solidly
frozen. Our cell-phone stopped operating in the middle of the night, the
liquid in the liquid crystal display frozen in place. I was angry.
“You’re insane! I’m never going camping again ever!” I said as I stormed
clumsily out of the tent (stupid ropes and zips and crouching and
crawling — grrr). I marched off to urinate and found the sunrise to be
quite beautiful. Wow. I should take a photo or many. One of Angie’s
propaganda angles on this camping expedition was that I’d be able to
take many cool photos. Indeed, excellent photo opportunites were now
available (and the temperature was starting to rise, pushing my spirits
up with it). Maybe this wouldn’t be so bad. Maybe the photos would make
the torture worth it (or at least, I could tell myself that and feel
better).
Clumsily back into the tent – a grunt at Angie, just so she doesn’t
think I’m liking anything about the trip – and back out again. Photo
photo photo.

*A stupid way to die*
A small river runs passed the camp-site. I think it’s got something to
do with the Tugela, but I could be making that up. It was completely
frozen over and ran to the edge of the plateau, and then plunged over
the edge – a sheer drop that would very likely cause immediate death on
impact, except water isn’t alive, so no problem there.

Naturally the best photos to be had are near the edge, and more
specifically, near the frozen waterfall. I was to have the best photos
that were to be had, or else I’d be most annoyed.

Did you know that frozen rivers are slippery? I do. And I did. That was
why I carefully stepped over the icey river surface (low water season
making this possible). I took a couple of photos and crept towards the
edge. Not wanting to slip over the edge I kept about 1.5 metres away. I
decided it was far too dangerous to get any closer and take a photo
hanging over the edge. Time to back off and take a photo of the
waterfall from further away – I hadn’t hated this camping thing so much
that I wanted to kill myself. Survived the freezing night just to throw
myself over the edge of the mountain. Now that would be stupid.

My favourite thing is irony.
Don’t you like irony?

As I start to walk away from the edge, my feet suddenly stop holding me
up. By this point I’m already facing away from the edge, with a solid
rockface to my right, camera grasped in my right hand ready to take the
next shot. I’m leaning to the right, towards the rockface because of the
slight incline. There is nowhere for my feet to move to rebalance me.
I collapse. Instinctively my my right arm shoots out to break my fall.
It succeeds. It also does a good job of slamming my camera (lens first)
into the rockface. I slide down the incline a little, but fortunately
stop short of the river. Having averted certain death, I inspect the
state of my camera. Much like a tortoise head, the zoomable lens has
retracted into its shell, and refuses to be coaxed out. The lens cover
is nowhere to be seen (presumably knocked over the edge).

The fact that people across the river were trying to determine my state
of health only started to filter through to me.
“Are you ok?” I heard them asking. No-one seemed in a big hurry to jump
across the river and save me though.
“No! I’m not okay. My camera’s broken!” is something I thought but
didn’t say.

*Look Who’s Feeling Sorry For Himself*
Back at the camp, I presented the remains of my camera to Angie.
“What?” she asked.
“Uh… It’s broken. I slipped on the frigging ice and broke my camera!”
I told her.
This had an unexpected effect. Angie broke down into tears. I chased her
and we ended up back near the edge of the cliff (but further back, and
away from the river) watching the sun rise. We resolved the issue. Then
something took a liking to my butt and tried to take a chunk out of it.
I thought I’d sat on a thorn or spiking pointy thing. A pointy spikey
thing that tore a hole in my pants – and left three tooth marks, and
bruising. I was probably poisoned in a mild sort of way (since I didn’t
swell up and die). I’m still classifying it as Life-Threatening-Event
No.3 on the Mountain Where Bad Things Happen

I returned to the camp again and felt generally annoyed about my broken
camera. Broken cameras can’t take photos. Grrr. I suddenly stumbled upon
a brilliant idea. I will destroy the ice on the river! It was the icy
nature of the river that caused me to slip and break my camera, and so
the river must suffer! The river must die! The ice must be destroyed! I
will destroy it! And I will use this rock.
I threw the rock with considerable force at the ice expecting the impact
to cause an explosion of shards and splinters. It just skipped off the
surface, leaving a minor chip in the ice. Unsatisfied, I found a much
large rock and threw it as hard as I could. If anything, it made less of
an impact. I cursed. Clearly the rock was part of the mountain and so it
was friends with the river and they had some sort of treaty that didn’t
include me.
I later discovered that the ice was about an inch thick, but I still
think it was a conspiracy.

As the sun rose I moped. We packed up the tent and all of our equipment
and we waited for Rob. Rob wasn’t in a hurry to leave the mountain, but
then it hadn’t tried to kill him three times.
I hatched a cunning plan in my impatience. Leave the mountain
immediately. The main problem with the hike had been the backpack. Most
of the stuff in the backpack was other people’s anyway, and the stuff
that was mine I could replace. Of course Angie would be pissed off, but
she loved me and she’d forgive me. All I needed was to take the car
keys, my wallet and some water and just go. Angie could get a lift home
with Rob and Louise. The equipment I’d carried up wouldn’t be my problem.
The only thing stopping me was my consideration of how pissed off Angie
would get. While I was mulling this over I saw Angie check whether the
keys were still in the backpack. She gave me a suspicious look. I gave
her a suspicious look.

Abort plan! Abort abort!

*Down*
Down is better than up.
Except the chain-behemoth. Going down the chain-behemoth is worse than
going up it. That extra 12 kg on one’s back really makes one feel
unbalanced. And one has to look down. Down is splattery, and with the
memory of the mountain’s murderous intent fresh in my mind, it made me
nervous.

*Picking up the Pieces*
I took my camera to a photography shop for an assessment. He guessed
that to repair it will cost R2500, but referred me to the Nikon
technicians in Midrand to get a proper assessment for insurance purposes.
As I left his shop he mused, “An expensive weekend. Enjoyable; but
expensive.”

I decided not to bore him with the tale, since that’s what you Waffle
Group people are for.