Category: LONDON TO CAPE TOWN

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Houstan! We ahhh… We have a problem.

9:38 am. Whats this? I have some spare time in the middle of the day to write a blog entry. How unusual. Oh wait, it’s because we are broken down in the MIDDLE OF NOWHERE. Hahaha. Not a major problem, just minor, but big enough to delay us too much and cop maximum lateness all day. Which is a shame, it was going to be another day on beautiful gravel roads for 700 k’s and 10 time controls we will miss. Which means about 5 hours of penalties 🙁 we won’t hold our glorious 31st place tomorrow.

I was driving along, and noticed the front right mudguard was wet, and i thought to myself “hang on, there are no puddles in the desert, how is it wet??? Shit….. our radiator has a crack in it.” Only a very small crack on the side where the solder had started to split. Smaller than a pin hole. So we dried the area up, and pushed silicon gook all over it, put more silicon gook all over it. And voila, no more leak. Now we are just waiting for the gook to go off and dry so we can plod our way down to Ai-Ais tonight. Everything else? Fine!

8:15PM. By Poseidon’s Trident it was hot today. We were in the worlds oldest desert and it was scorching hot! Pushing 40 degree’s C. Not very ideal for tyre life and engine heat. Reports from other drivers are that lots and lots of people got flats or de-laminating tyres, from the intense heat and gravel roads, the tread just working so much harder it was literally falling apart on the lesser quality tyres. We couldn’t make up the time we lost this morning for two reasons; our engine was getting too hot when we pushed it, and we were just too far behind from our radiator problem. Even taking shortcuts and more direct roads we only made the final time control 30 minutes before maximum lateness. But still drove 700k’s on the same beautfil gravel roads.

700k’s on roads like this takes so much energy and concentration, especially a giant car like that at respectable speeds on the gravel, i’m exhausted, but i am getting fitter from doing it hahaha. Only 2 more days to go. Then a bit of a rest!

Namibia is beautiful, almost entirely desert but there is something about the rugged-ness and just how old this place is. The canyons, and rock escarpments and sand formations are just amazing. Our SD card reader is currently broken, so no photo’s until we can buy a new one in Cape Town sorry. And so so dry. The amount of water we drank today was phenomenal. More sand in places you didn’t think you could have sand in as well haha.

Pulled into a lonely servo – 300k’s from anything else that had any signs of life – and jumped out and heard a hissing sound. Then i had a bit of a chuckle thinking the poor fella next to us had a flat tyre. Wrong! It wasn’t the poor fella next to us, it WAS us. So we changed another tube today, not quite as formula one fast as yesterday because it was hot and we didn’t need to rush, but still changed it out in 15 minutes or so, ready to hit the road again. Just another one of those “brilliant, no spare wheels remember, dad! Remember what happened to them?!”

ANNNDDDD our starter motor kinda broke today as well (our good luck must slightly be wearing off). Not a big problem, we will push start tomorrow and when we have more time tomorrow night we can fix it, just a bolt snapped. No biggy.

 

Animals:

-Some giant deer kind of thing, with no horns,  the size of a horse, oval shapped furry ears a bit like a rabbit, and pale grey all over. No idea what it was.

-and a mongoose. A few of them actually, so plural of mongoose would be Mongeese? Mongooses? Mongi? Who knows, but we still saw them.

-Ostriches

-and some more warthogs.

 

James

7 Left medium fast over crest then 40 right

Today i felt like a full on rally driver. The only thing to make it more official was if dad had pace notes calling the corners out to me. Thus far, my favourite day of driving. Namibia has brought everything that was promised and then some! 600k’s today and about 500 of it was on gravel, and it was the most beautiful gravel roads ever: wide, smooth, no potholes. On tarmac we sit at about 107-108kph and on the straights the roads were good enough to do the same speeds. It was just heaven. And over the entire day we only dropped about 17 minutes over 6 time controls, and we even cleared a few of the sections. I was so chuffed about the results. And now we have jumped up to 31st position! Movers and shackers over here, watch out leader board! haha.

We were also about 1minute before our schedule time to leave after a lunchtime stop, and we see that one of our rear tyres was de-laminating and falling apart. And because we don’t have any spare wheels, the only thing to do was change the tyre, with levers and lube. We mananged to change a tyre and tube and be back on the ground in no more than 12 minutes, then a mad dash to the next time control (luckily they moved that time back 8 minutes) to be 1 minute early. So in all, changed a tubed tyre with no loss time! Bonus!

The Namibian’s take their stop signs at police checkpoints very seriously as well. We got hardcore yelled at because we didn’t stop on the line and started rolling forward. It looked like he waved us through, but no, eveidently he didn’t. And then proceded to tell us that a stop sign actually means STOP instead of ‘please, keep rolling through.’

Heaps more warthogs on the roads today, we were flogging it up a hill, dad was looking behind us taking a picture of the scenery and then BAM, a family of warthogs dashes out of the scrubs, sees us and thinks we are a giant predator and then scuttled away again. All in the blink of an eye.

 

James

Hakuna Matata

What a wonderful phrase, Hakuna MAtata, Aint no passing craze, It means no worries for the rest of your days! – Timone and Pumba, The Lion King. Well, we saw a Pumba today. He wasn’t a very big warthog, but a real one none-the-less, with big tusks and all. Running along in the scrub next to the road.

12 Hours 17 minutes, 1045km and 3 police stops to check licenses, 2pee stops 1 fuel stop, 1 border crossing and a partridge in a pear tree later we have made it. Today was long, not terribly difficult as such but just ridiculously long. For the entirety of the day i turned 3 intersections and i was hanging out for tiny kink’s in the never ending road just for something to do. As an Australian i thought i knew what long straight roads were like, wrong! There was a section today which was just under 200k’s long without a single undulation, kink, bend, bump, hole, wind, rise, dip, bridge or tunnel. Just straight, scrub’s and bushland on either side. Tomorrow would be a good day for another rest day… But not long now, only a 600, 800, 600 and 350km day remains between us and Table Mountain Bay Hotel.

We also saw an Elephant!!! He was just chilling on his own, right next to the road amongst some trees (he was probably about to push one over). And he has massive long tusks! It was awesome! Seeing him made the massively boring drive seem totally Irrelephant (see what i did there? Ahahaha).

Patrick and Christine in the Karmann Ghai had some problems this morning. I feel for them a bit, they have been having a constant stream of minor/medium issues that force them to be late in all the time (after midnight sometimes). But they keep on trooping, and this morning everything was looking good, they were about to start on time and slog out today with ease….. but that wasn’t to be. Patrick opened the boot of his Vee Dub and saw petrol leaking out of his carby. Me and dad come over to help investigate as Patrick isn’t a big Karmann (see what i did there? Car-man! Hahaha i’m on fire!) and it looks like overnight the carby float in the bowl didn’t seat correctly, and it was gravity dripping all night from the fuel tank. We wipe up all the excess fuel and tell him to start it, but it goes Whurrrp and it doesn’t turn over. Because the Vee Dub’s have a downdraft carby, situated above the flat-4 engine, the dripping fuel has filled his pistons and the liquid compression won’t let it turn over. He ended up getting towed to a local mechanics place for someone to take his plugs out to drain the engine and change the oil for him. But he still isn’t at the hotel yet, hopefully see him at breakfast.

Still no problems for us 😀

James

Livingstone I Presume?

Livingstone I Presume?? We are at the infamous Victoria Falls….. And it is amazing. The size of these falls is incredible, 1.7km long!!! We are only 5 minutes walk to the top of the falls and the it is just spectacular. I have been to Niagra Falls but this is a whole another scale of big. No footpaths or anything, just tracks through the forest that lead you to a little bridge that is immersed in a forever cloud of mist/spray. The flow is at about 50% and the sound is already booming/deafening when you’re close. The Zambezi Sun Hotel (where we staying) has a beautiful lawn all around the place, and animals roam around! So far i have only seen zebras but apparently there are some regular elephants and giraffes that sometimes choose to make themselves seen. No luck yet  But you can definitely see giraffe and elephant poo on the edges of the forest.

The bungee-jump is temporarily suspended because about a month ago the rope snapped and a chick plummeted into the water, luckily surviving.

Today was just another transit day, no timing. But on the road we saw a tortoise crossing it! He was a bit cute. And at a local cafe we pulled up to for about 45minutes, Matt and Owen (MG) pulled up and said they saw the same tortoise but about 30cm further away from where we saw him. Little trooper! Hahaha.

Tomorrow is the dreaded 1050km day, including a border crossing. It will be lonnnngggggggg.

On another front, the father/son beard growing is hilarious. Dad now succsessfully looks homeless, and i look like a ruffian. hahaha.

James