I arrived at my bed and breakfast in Cape Town on June 4th after twenty four hours of travel. The manager – during her tour of the beach front guest house – pointed out the candles and matches provided in case of load shedding. Having friends in South Africa and following many South African social media sites I'd heard of load shedding which in simple terms is a rolling blackout; an intentionally engineered electrical power shutdown to various regions of the country at seemingly sporadic times. Truly though it is a last-resort measure by the power company used to avoid a total blackout of their power system.
The house manager's note at our B&B |
As I tooled around Cape Town I took note of some hefty generators in front of condos and construction sites expensively supplying themselves with backup power for when Eskom, the power company pulled the switch.
My short three
days in Cape Town ended with no load shedding. I then headed to Kruger National Park; one of
the largest game reserves in Africa covering more than 7,500 square miles
housing 147 species of Africa’s greatest and largest mammals. I started
my 16 night adventure with two nights in Skukuza; no load shedding. I wanted to experience it for some strange
reason and was prepared with long stem slow burning candles stuck
in tall bottles lit just as the sun set each night.
From Skukuza I
headed to the Biyamiti bush camp where I had a lovely cottage on the
fence-line where herds of elephant, kudu, and waterbuck wondered by. The camp is far from anything and load
shedding there would offer amazing star gazing opportunities. But after a nice dinner cooked - instead of
in the little cottage kitchen - over an open fire I retired to bed quite
spoiled with the ceiling fan blasting. At
10 o’clock as I was falling asleep it happened.
Boom. Everything went dark and
the fan blades came to a slow stop. “Load shedding,” I said aloud in darkness that replicated blindness; there was no difference
between eyes open and eyes shut. I was too tired at that point to do any star gazing though so I went on to
sleep.
The next morning I
went to boil water in the electric coffee pot but there was no electricity. The power was still out. I was shocked. I thought load shedding was for at most two
hours; eight hours had passed. I soon discovered though that what we
thought was load shedding was a tripped breaker. After I made sure I hadn’t lost any of my
frozen or cold foods due to the outage which would have sent me scrambling many hours down dirt roads to restock, I laughed. Seemingly I wanted to experience load
shedding so bad I made my own that night!
Two nights at
Biyamiti Camp; two nights at Tamboti Camp; then a night in Lataba on my way up
to Shingwedzi Camp where I spent three glorious nights and still no load
shedding except for the one I created.
On the 17th of June I arrived for a two night stay in Satara Camp. At this point, after ten nights in the park,
I was not even thinking of load shedding anymore.
Out of habit though I lit my candles at sunset and placed them on my patio table. I was
just about to put dinner on the table when – at exactly
7:30 – the camp went black dark. From
the hut down the way I heard a woman shout, “LOAD SHEDDING. LOAD SHEDDING,” like the town crier. For thirty minutes all you could see were
flames from candles and cooking fires and the shine from flashlights. Those thirty minutes that night in the darkness were quite magical. For two nights in a row at Satara I experienced the long awaited and quite talked
about load shedding.
My last three
nights in Kruger and in South Africa were spent in Pretoriouskop Camp where on
the second night I had my third load shedding experience darkening the camp
of all things mad-made; highlighting the waxing crescent moon, the gasses of
the Milky Way and the gazillion stars. By
happenstance I learned that on that night, June 20th, the Moon, Jupiter
and Venus were to form a perfect triangle in the sky, and although I don’t have
the best camera for shooting stars, the darkness of load shedding allowed me to
capture this rare event.
The Moon, Jupiter and Venus in a rare triangle |
I am sure for
local South Africans trying to carry out their daily life load shedding is not
a desired experience. But out there in
the bush of Africa it was a welcome event.
Perhaps Eskom should concentrate their power switch flipping on the
areas of the country where those of us seeking nature in all its glory welcome
the darkness. For me it made an already
magical place even more so.
No comments:
Post a Comment