Monday, June 29, 2009

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Saturday, we woke up late after a long night and went on a late tour of Robben Island. Visiting Robben Island is something everyone must do when they come to Cape Town. It highlights the political activists of the apartheid era. The Robben prison has been often been compared to Alcatraz in San Francisco. Today people still live on Robben Island which mostly includes the tour guides and their families. Children in elementary and middle school have school on the island. We took a 45 minute boat out to the island and then had a 2 hours tour with a guide that was actually a prisoner in the jail during the apartheid era. His name was Michael Ntando Mbatha. The political activists were regarded as more dangerous than murderers and rapists. I thought the tour was an amazing experience but I was a little disappointed in my guide. His presentation was very impersonal and sounded too rehearsed. He used words like “in conclusion” and “thus” that were just a little awkward for the type of speech I expected. He talked little about himself so I really could not tell you about what he was actually in prison for… Most of the information he gave highlighted Mandela. This was frustrating because many people already know something about Mandela before going on this tour and therefore, I was more interested in learning about the other people that were in the prison. After the tour we had lunch on the pier and happened to see fight at the restaurant at the bar next to us. They were fighting over a soccer game....silly... Anyways while we were waiting for the cab to come pick us up I thought I was going to have to use my mase. This man was begging for money but we said no and I gave him some food instead. But then he got mad and jumped at us and swung his arms in our faces. He was speaking another language so we could not understand what he was saying. We all got up real fast and ran off...

We later had dinner with Jessica and her friend Ntombi. Jessica cooked for us at her house. Ntombi works with Jessica. I met her at church my first weekend there. She lives in Gugulathu. Ntombi also invited us to an R Kelly concert before the night was over but we will see if we can get tickets for this week. We stayed there for a couple hours and then went home and watched a movie. Sarah, Liese, and I were all tired but we stayed up all night talking after the movie, knowing the next morning we had to wake up at the crack of dawn for a wine tour.

Sunday, We got up at 8am to leave for a 10+ hour wine tour in the surrounding suburbs of Cape Town. The Boogie Bus took us around to the wineries. The Bus is a taxi/cab service that was referred to us by my advisor at school. Our driver’s name is Steve; he is a character….He gives us really cheap fares and does not try to rob us like most of the cab drivers here. I cannot tell you how many times I was cheated out of money before I met him. Luckily most things are cheap here so cheating me out of money means like I paying $12 opposed to $8 for cab fare. Steve took my roommates and I and a group of Notre Dame students to 5 farms in three different small towns. We also went to a cheetah farm. I got to pet an adult cheetah. Cheetahs are endangered because of poaching but mostly due to the evolution of its habitat. There is only 850 cheetahs left on the continent of Africa. Cheetahs also only live for about 8 years. Later we continued to go from farm to farm wine tasting. To test about 5-8 different kinds of wine; it costs around $2-4. I found that wine is very much an acquired taste. Most of the wine tasted like finger nail polish remover to me… I learned today that I only like the sweet wines which were mostly desert wines. I also prefer white wine. We finally got home around 8pm. We were all tired and some of fell asleep on the Boogie bus. Sarah's head was on Emily and it was kind of funny because we had just met her and the other Notre Dame students that morning and we had grown so comfortable over the course of the trip. We got home we talked to Janine about our day and then went to bed...

5 comments:

  1. Britt, I enjoyed you trip to the winery.Do not voice how you feel politically.
    to the locals.Be careful for me. Millie will be here tomorrow nite. So it is winter there?
    You need to give us your address if you need us to send you somerthing. That must have been a tamed lion. Love Goose

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  2. hey britt read your journal entries. seems like your having a fun yet eye opening experience thus far. I swear you can find Stanford people in every corner of the world.How do you look at your pictures? theyre soo small can't really seen anything. The first day of EPASA was today and I was nervous, but it was pretty fun (also tiring cuz its soo hot and middle schoolers are crazy). Taught two periods of english class, then chilled with the kids for other activites. I will be a professional speaker when I'm done, hopefully lol. Anyways just checking in with you. Continue the exploration.
    Peace
    arantxa

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  3. Wow you've already done so much! I pet a cheetah last summer--that's awesome. I definitely want to go to Robben Island when I'm down there too. Ohh and it's scary about the guy swinging his arms at you--was that in the middle of the day? I haven't had any bad experiences yet, but the other day a girl came up to me on the street and said "Are you scared?" trying to be intimidating. Talk to you soon! this got me really excited about Cape Town!

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  4. Yea that was in the middle of the day.... lol the girl saying that to you got you excited about ape town lol?

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  5. Arantxa, I do not know how to look at the pictures, I can see them clearly on my computer. Maybe it shows up differently on different computers. I will post all of them to facebook when I get a chance. My first thought when you said they were too small was that you are probably the blindest person I know, always squinting, lol it might be a personal problem lol

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