A Game Drive with an Unarmed Barefoot Dutch Cop and Other Adventures

A trip to a fancy safari lodge was something of a dream come true, but you can’t eat bon bons for dinner every night, can you? Certainly not. Besides, high end safari digs ain’t cheap, even if the meals are included. So we said goodbye to Alicia and Sipu and Sydwell and the rest of the gang. We said goodbye to high end sundowners (oh, and welcome home from the game drive cocktails – I forgot about those), and sunuppers and the gourmet meals and the outdoor shower and the pith helmets (okay, there weren’t any pith helmets), and we drove up the road to a guest house called Kerhula Lodge in the Balule Parsons Reserve, another private reserve that borders Kruger. I picked it because it was cheap and it sounded mellow.

What I didn’t realize was that it was being run temporarily by a couple of Amsterdam cops. Say what?

Yes, the owners of this place, who are from the Netherlands, were on vacation, so they left their home and business in the care of their friends, Marieke and Jovan. He’s on the Amsterdam police force, where among other things, he serves on the soccer hooligan squad. His wife is a Dutch Kyra Sedgewick – she’s the chief of detectives.

Oh, another thing. Unlike Naledi and most other safari lodges, this place has no fences. Anything can, and will, wander right through the front yard. On the day we arrived, an elephant had just passed through. Elephants are really cute and soulful and all that, but they will also kill you. Um, so can lions. And other stuff. Marieke and Jovan seemed unfazed. “Yeah, the animals come through, but it’s okay,” Jovan said, as though he was describing a visit by squirrels.

Happy, Humble, Kerhula

Happy, Humble, Kerhula. Just before we arrived, an elephant had wandered through.

They must be really good friends. I mean, would you entrust your business, which just happens to feature wild animals that can kill people, to a friend? I admit I was mildly concerned. I was expecting to find a couple who lived out in the wild and were keen to the ways of nature, and the bush, and all that. They could pick up a blade of grass, sniff it, and tell you whether the rhino that peed on it was male or female. You know, stuff like that. On the other hand, if the animals broke the law, Jovan and Marieke were qualified to arrest them.

I put my misgivings aside because they seemed very nice and I got a good vibe from the place, and besides, they were cops. Our room was not fancy, but quite clean and comfortable. It didn’t have an outdoor shower, but it had a nice porch with a view of the same river we had just come from. A resident crocodile named Bruce basked on a spit of sand at the river’s edge. This was no pet, though. A while back, the owners’ dog got too close to the water and Bruce had him for lunch. There was a family of rhinos splashing around across the way. Same nature, only cheaper.

Bruce, the resident croc.

Bruce, the resident croc.

I think the owners’ Dutch-ness had an effect on the clientele, which was like a plenary session at the European Union. There was a Swiss German couple, a Swiss Italian couple, a Dutch couple, another couple from the UK in which the wife spoke with the most enterprising Dutch/Birmingham accent, and another couple from England. I heard the words “nay,” “acch,” and “crikey” a lot.

They were all really great, though, and on the first evening we sat around a long table outside and watched Jovan grill meats on the brai, as the barbeque is called in South Africa, and we exchanged stories of encounters with the South African police, which seems to be the standard icebreaker in these parts. Here we were again, at a dinner party with strangers.

Nothing about this place is particularly formal, which is just fine with me. The bar, such as it is, is the fridge in the kitchen. Take a bottle of wine or a beer and mark it on the little sheet on the wall. Game drives and bush walks are extra, but they’re only twenty bucks. Besides, you feel less guilty for sleeping in. The game drive was every bit as low key as the rest of the joint. One afternoon I asked Jovan if we could go for a drive and he looked slightly disappointed, because I suspect he had other stuff to do. But he was game (har, har) and we climbed into the Range Rover and set off. By contrast to Naledi, which had a driver armed with an elephant gun and a tracker who sat on a special chair bolted to the hood keeping a sharp eye out for animals, it was just Jovan in flip flops, which he tossed aside to drive the jeep. No gun, either. And while Jovan seems to know a lot about animals, one can only hope that the animals act a lot like soccer hooligans, so he can put his day job training to work. I mean, let’s face it, we were driving through lion, leopard, elephant, and rhino country with a barefoot, unarmed, Dutch cop.

At Naledi, the rangers and trackers all keep close tabs on each other with walkie talkies. When someone spots something, the drivers go racing across the reserve, threatening to catapult the unsuspecting guest into the bush if she isn’t careful. We even blew a tire once. Instead, Jovan took us on a zen game drive. Janine and I hopped into the vehicle and he proceeded to meander around the reserve with a peaceful quietude. Of course, within minutes we were spotting animals left and right. Here was a herd of zebras, there a group of giraffes, and kudu, and antelope, and elephants.

In the Balule Parsons Reserve near Kerhula Lodge.

In the Balule Parsons Reserve near Kerhula Lodge.

At one point, Jovan jumped out of the jeep to inspect a dry river bed where a pride of lions had rested the day before. Janine and I wondered exactly what we would do if he found them, especially on foot. He poked around a bit then returned to the car, reluctant to stray too far. We resumed our drive for another, oh, fifty yards and there they were – a beautiful but terrifying family of lions. They got just a hair too close for comfort at one point and then one of the adolescent cubs darted off into a scamper – he was playing with one of his siblings – which nearly caused us to wet ourselves. Just another afternoon drive in the neighborhood, I guess.

We stumbled upon these lions on our game drive. Next time we'll wear adult undergarments.

We stumbled upon these lions on our game drive. Next time we’ll wear adult undergarments.

We only had scheduled two days here, but we could have stayed much longer. It’s the kind of vacation I can get behind – sit on a hammock at the water’s edge staring down at a crocodile with a beer in my hand, making sure not to fall out of the hammock or spill my beer. If I stayed here long enough, I might even read a book, or learn Dutch.

But we had to push off because we needed to get into Kruger for a three day wilderness hike. Yes, you heard that correctly – we were off to spend three days on foot in the heart of Kruger National Park. This was going to be rustic and very close to nature. We’re not really the camping and hiking sort, but it sounded too cool to pass up. And really, what could possibly go wrong?

Living the Lush Life in Some Small Dive in the African Bushvelt

Oh, Naledi Lodge, how do I love you? Let me count the ways!

You may recall that we had a bit of a rough time getting to our safari camp near Kruger National Park in South Africa. There was that little matter of the extortionist cops and the bad maps and getting lost and almost stuck in the mud and all that. There were brief moments of minor recrimination. There was sweating. Well, my brothers and sisters, all the cares of the world melted away when we finally arrived at the luxe lodge in the bush called Naledi. Upon arrival, Alicia, our Managress (that’s what it says on her card) handed us a welcome drink and led us to one of the most splendid hotel rooms I’ve ever stayed in.

People took our bags, they took our car (and washed it, we later discovered, which was good, because after our little jaunt through the mud it looked like a work by Jackson Pollock), and for all I cared, they could have taken both of my big toes. I was vulnerable little Tobias in Sweeney Todd and Mrs. Lovett was singing “No one’s gonna harm you, not while I’m around…” (Of course Tobias goes mad and then dies, but that’s not important.) We were welcomed lovingly into the gentle arms of the African bushvelt. (Okay, that’s also a rotten metaphor. In the African bushvelt things get killed and eaten before your eyes, unless it’s you that’s getting killed and eaten before your wife’s eyes.)

No matter, we had arrived at a safari camp that offered welcome drinks. Our room had indoor and outdoor showers, polished concrete floors, and a glorious view of the Olifants River.

The view from our room. There are hippos out there!

The view from our room. There are hippos out there!

Even though we missed lunch by an hour and a half, within minutes there it was, hot and delicious. Thirty minutes later we were on the safari van off to explore the bush, and forty one minutes later we saw our first pride of lions.

Ten minutes into our first game drive we saw this guy.

Ten minutes into our first game drive we saw this guy.

After another hour and a half or so of driving around looking for wild animals, our tracker Sipu and our ranger Sydwell pulled to the side of the road at a picturesque little spot, set up a table, arranged some snacks, and poured sundowners. Things were looking up.

Sundowners in the bush. I think I'm gonna like it here.

Sundowners in the bush. I think I’m gonna like it here.

Life at Naledi went like this – we received a gentle tap at our door each morning at 5. (Yes, 5. If you are not a morning person, you will just have to suck it up. Game drives start early.) Coffee was waiting in the bar and we headed off for our morning safari drive at 5:30. By 7:30 or so the trackers would pull over for coffee and cookies and by 8:30 we were back to the lodge to clean up before breakfast at 9ish. Then we would take a little nap or contemplate a dip in the pool. Before lunch, guests can go for a nature walk with a guide or be dropped off at the water hole hide for a few hours. Lunch was at 2:30, followed by another little nap and then everyone heads out for the evening game drive at 4:30, highlighted by sundowners out in the bush at about 7, and then back to the lodge for dinner at 8 or so.

The place has a capacity of eighteen guests, but there were never more than ten when we were there. It helps if you like each other. We had our meals together and we went on our two-a-day game drives together. Thus, it turned into just another version of the puertos cerrados of Buenos Aires – a great big dinner party with strangers, although this one also featured wild animals. Fortunately, the strangers were loads of fun. One American couple and their two daughters are now living in Buenos Aires, of all places. Another young couple from the UK did an eight month around-the-world trip of their own a few years ago. The people we’ve come across have been similarly situated – they have a sense of wonder and a willingness to scratch that itch. They are usually lots of fun to spend time with, although the occasional exceptions can be almost as entertaining.

The folks who work at this place have a schedule like a merchant seaman – they work forty two days straight and then take twelve days off. They’re up every morning to prepare for the 5 a.m. game drive and they sit with us at dinner – including the trackers and the rangers – telling us stories of life in the bush and other tales of derring do. I can’t imagine this kind of schedule, but the staff seem to really enjoy their work, bless them. Nevertheless, it can’t be easy to be as cheerful and helpful as they are for forty two straight days. They were also shockingly good at their jobs. One morning, for example, Janine noticed a tear in our mosquito net, but she forgot to mention it to Alicia. By the time we had returned from the morning drive, it has been mended anyway. Now that’s good service.

The Naledi game drives felt a bit like the Indiana Jones ride at Disneyland. We’d all pile into this tricked out Toyota 4Runner and go barrel-assing through the reserve looking for charismatic megafauna. Some news about the whereabouts of lions or leopards would crackle over the radio and our driver would floor the gas pedal and we’d go speeding and bouncing through the bush until we’d find our animal – and we almost always did. As I mentioned, we hadn’t been on our first drive of the trip for ten minutes when we were gaping at a small pride of lions, who were well aware of our presence, although they could not have been less interested.

On the first morning after we arrived we set out for our second drive in a very light drizzle. We were unfazed, but we should have been. After about a half hour of fiddling about, the drizzle had turn to rain, and then it was just Noah’s Ark time. Not every game drive yields a leopard, I guess.

Cold, wet, and happy.

Cold, wet, and happy.

Naledi sits on the Balule Nature Reserve, a piece of private property that borders Kruger National Park. Since there are no fences between the areas, animals are free to roam anywhere, and they do. During our three days at Naledi, we saw the so-called “big five” – lion, leopard, cape buffalo, elephant, and rhinoceros – and tons more. There were giraffes and kudus, hippos and impalas (called the McDonald’s of the bush, either because there’s one on every corner, or because everyone eats there, I’m not sure which). We saw lion cubs, a baby hippo and a very rare rhino baby.

These guys frolicked around just like little kittens.

These guys frolicked around just like little kittens.

One of the first rhinos born in the wild in this reserve in almost two hundred years.

One of the first rhinos born in the wild in this reserve in almost two hundred years.

Vervet monkeys played outside our window, and one little voyeur watched Janine take a bath. A trio of hippos spent an afternoon splashing around just outside our room. But we got nearly as much enjoyment out of watching a humble dung beetle roll his little ball of doo around as we did watching an elephant push a tree over like it was a skinny twig. The dung beetle, by the way, is a fascinating creature. It rolls a ball of elephant or rhino or some other dung around, deposits its larvae inside, and then buries the thing in soft sand, where, if it’s lucky, a honey badger won’t unearth the whole works and eat the bugs inside. The beetle will push and pull and roll that ball of doody to and fro, seemingly exerting its last bit of effort. Then, like a harrier jump jet, the thing turns into a helicopter and flies away. Ain’t nature something?

We only planned three nights at Naledi because it’s expensive, but also because we wanted a variety of perspectives on the safari experience. On the other hand, the price of our lodgings came with three very good meals a day and two game drives, so there’s that. But we couldn’t keep this fancy schmancy lifestyle up for long.

Next time – a guest house without fences (where elephants and everything else roam) hosted by a Dutch cop and his detective wife on a game reserve up river a bit.

Welcome to Shakedown Street

Where was I?

Oh yeah. We had the bright idea to rent a car in Johannesburg and drive to Kruger National Park. It didn’t go according to plan. And now for the thrilling conclusion!

On the morning in question, we took an Uber (three cheers for Uber, which we have used in Rome, Istanbul, Abu Dhabi, and now Johannesburg) to the nearby train station for a fifteen minute ride to the airport, where we picked up our Toyota Corolla for the 5 ½ hour drive to Kruger National Park and environs. We decided on a real splurge – a luxury safari camp in a private reserve open to the park on the shore of the Olifants River. From there we would move a short ways upriver to a much cheaper camp hidden deep in another private reserve. From there we planned to head to a camp in Kruger Park itself, where we would go for a three day wilderness hike. So we needed our own car to do all this, right? Sure.

We had directions from the lodge, but they were a bit cryptic, so it made sense to reconcile them with Google maps, which worked fine on my iphone. (Although for some strange reason, using GPS turns my phone into a handwarmer. This can’t be good. I half expected it to burst into flames on the seat beside me.)

I drove and Janine served as navigator. She doesn’t like navigating. This would become an issue.

I should mention that when we booked into the second lodge on our trip, I received an attachment from the place warning us not to pay bribes to the police. Huh? The fellow told me that there are cops in the area who would like to make a quick buck, which I assume is where nice tourists like us come in. I put the minor warning out of my mind, but reminded myself to be very careful about obeying the traffic laws.

After a few wrong turns out of the airport, we finally put ourselves in the proper direction, and things seemed well in hand. I made sure to always travel under the speed limit, and I was feeling pretty good. And hey, driving on the left side of the road is fun!

Google Maps had us arriving at our lodge at about 3, which was perfect. Lunch was at 2:30, after which we’d have our first safari into the bush at 4:30. Africa! Bush drives! Things were looking good.

I was enjoying the moment, doing about 100 km/hour on an easy stretch of road when I looked up and saw a man in an orange vest waving his arms IN THE MIDDLE OF THE HIGHWAY. I was being pulled over by a cop on foot standing in the highway. My first impulse, strange as it may seem, was to ignore him, but some combination of fear, sanity, and curiosity got the better of me and I eased the car to the side of the road. Then the depressing reality sunk in that I was about to take a ride down shakedown street.

The fellow in the vest approached the car and informed me that I was going 96 in an 80 zone. It seems that the speed limit goes from 120 to 80 very quickly (this is an international practice, apparently). If there was a sign, I never saw it. The gentleman handed me a piece of paper that described the fines for speeding. (Was he an actual cop? He didn’t wear a badge or a nametag. Should I press him on this point? Perhaps not.) I felt like I was being handed a menu for bribery and corruption. “Sir, can I interest you in a nice 750 Rand bribe for doing 96 in an 80 zone that comes on you so fast that you couldn’t slow down if you wanted to? Or perhaps our top of the line bribe strikes your fancy – 1500 Rand for doing 120. That’s a nice one.”

The warning about not paying bribes was ringing in my ears.

I did a variation on what I do naturally – I played dumb. This worked extremely well on our way out of the Cairo airport. After screening our bags, the customs agent asked me if I had any money. I told him that I didn’t understand the question, partly to buy time, and partly because I didn’t understand the question. It seems that the stack of brochures we’d been collecting resembled stacks of currency on the x-ray.

In any event, the more the traffic cop spoke, the more confusingly I responded until the guy gave up and called over his supervisor. The supervisor said that we’d have to pay a speeding fine and I recommended that he give me my ticket and that I’d pay the fine on my way back through town, which was certainly not a part of his plan. This went on for some time until the supervisor seemed to tire of the whole enterprise. He finally said that we could go together to the police station where I could pay my fine, but that they only had one police car that they couldn’t spare, so I was free to go. He also mentioned something about not wanting visitors to think ill of the police. Oh heavens no! Why would I think ill of these upstanding keepers of the peace? The supervisor urged me to go slow because, as it put it, “speed kills.” Indeed. I would later find out that tourists have a tendency to get pulled over and end up having to pay off the cops to be let go. Next time I’m taking the bus.

Having dodged a bullet, and more than a little jangled from the experience, we pressed on for our lodge. We were still several hours away, and, while we were making progress, the directions to the lodge showed a lot of turns ahead.

Somewhere along the line, we missed a turn. The problem is that rather than being a strong guiding force, Google Maps is at best more like a weak-willed enabler and at worst a passive aggressive son of a bitch. If you miss a turn, it does not call out, “Hey schmuck, you missed the turn! Go back and do it the right way!” No, Mr. Google takes it all in stride. If you miss a turn, Google either finds you the next best way to get there (which, as it turns out, could be a VERY BAD IDEA) or it takes umbrage at your rejection of its previous excellent suggestion and says, with Midwestern passive aggression, “Fine, if you don’t like my directions, let’s see what you think of this dirt road, bub.”

Which is exactly what it did. When we missed the turn that would take us where we needed to go, Google spat in the proverbial soup and directed us to a 12 km long dirt road. This didn’t seem right. I thought that maybe the road would be paved just ahead, or that we’d soon be on the right road, but no, this was a long dirt road. At this point both parties in the car were expressing a combination of worry that we’d miss lunch and frustration that the journey was not going according to plan. After a very cordial conversation, it was agreed that I would now be the navigator, and Janine would pilot the craft.

I recommended a backtrack – Google said that maybe we’d be interested in this other nice road a few miles back, so we decided to give it a shot. Sadly, this road was worse than the one we just quit, but for reasons that remain mysterious to me still, we advanced, hoping again that what we were seeing was not actually what we were seeing. And what we were seeing was baaad. This road was just hideous. Janine plowed through a deep rut that was filled with water. After cresting a short ridge, she gamely pushed her way through a deeper, muddier rut, nearly bogging the car down in a trough of water and mud. The mud went spitting in every direction as she span the wheels at full throttle. There was no way in hell we were getting through. I had visions of being stuck in a mud rut miles from civilization, and hours from our destination. I’m all for adventure, but I have my limits.

I suggested an about face and Janine managed to re-ford the two mud ruts and we were back on the main road, but with no good idea about where we’d gone wrong or how we’d make it right.

It is at moments like these that a couple decides whether it would like to remain married.

We gathered our wits and decided to press on. I returned to the somewhat cryptic directions to the lodge and attempted to reconcile them with the options that the Google now presented and made a series of executive decisions. If I was right, we’d make it to the lodge just in time for our game drive. If I was wrong, we’d drive straight to Joburg Airport and fly home and straight to the office of the nearest divorce lawyer.

The fates were with us. We were finally able to find the road we missed and pushed on to the lodge, avoiding any more interactions with the local constabulary. As we pulled into the lodge just in time for the evening game drive, the world’s kindest woman was standing there with welcome cocktails. I wanted to live again.