I was driving up the M1 just after 6 on Monday morning. As I took the on ramp, I was struck by the sheer number of people there – none wearing high visibility clothing – on the ramp and the motorway itself waiting for lifts.
Cape corps in WWI ensured we’d enjoy our tomorrows
This gun is from Square Hill. There’s a suburb of the same name about a kilometre north of the famous Big Hole. A once upper middle-class area once beloved of local politicians and professionals before 1994. You wouldn’t immediately know that they refer to the same thing – a battle fought 100 years ago this week in harsh terrain much like the Northern Cape.
Actors change but our story’s still the same
White South Africans didn’t know what happened during apartheid (even less voted for apartheid). No South Africans knew that state capture was happening and, by Wednesday, Markus Jooste, the erstwhile CEO of Steinhoff had never known of the accounting irregularities in the company that went from hero to almost zeroing the Joburg Stock Exchange.
Trek4Mandela: Climbing the stairway to compassion
Kilimanjaro looms large on our consciousness as Africans – both as a literal and figurative reference..
End the taboo. Period!
There are many milestones to climbing Kili with Trek4Mandela, but all have to come back to the apex priority – keeping girls in school.
Time to get real, Kili real, at the Berg
Sterk Horn has loomed large in my dreams – and nightmares – for months now.
Training for the trek takes a toll on the Westcliff ‘Stairs of Death’
The stairs have become legendary – in a bad way.
Mighty mountain, humble me
There are rubber tips at the bottom of your climbing poles. They’re there so that you can get them past airport security without having them confiscated as weapons.
A mountain of clothing, courage and commitment needed to climb Kilimanjaro
It’s hot in Joburg, even hotter in the middle of Sandton City, it’s difficult to think that in four months time – almost to the day – I should be at the highest point of Africa.
Perhaps #PeterDutton should get his way
This week Australia’s home affairs minister Peter Dutton asked his department to consider fast-tracking the visa applications of white South African farmers who want to escape the “horrific circumstances” they are forced to endure in their own country.