25-26/12/2018. From Cape Town, I plotted my last fling with Africa. I wanted to drive from here to Johannesburg, from one end of the country to the other. At the car rental company, the service person looked at my driver’s license, unamused, and said, “It expired two years ago.” Left with no choice, I next moved on to Mossel Bay by bus at 6 a.m., arriving at 12 noon.
The caravan army was in town, with locals and foreigners joining the holiday merrymakers. It was a southern-hemisphere summer, a time for Christmas and New Year’s, all wanting a piece of the beach. Accommodation was harder to come by, the caravan parks filled, the roads more congested, and shops barely open. And I had to be extra vigilant to avoid being picked on and my pocket picked. Not a good time, but I did have a good time—beach, rocks, Africa with a strong European flavor, people who were genetically friendly, like much of Africa.
I began the well-known Garden Route here at Mossel Bay. So cheery and relaxing. It felt like a walk in the park. A stroll on the beach is one of the simplest forms of pleasure, even if no one holds your hand. I started at a beach that looks like a half-moon, then welcomed by an open barbecue seafood restaurant at the edge of the sea, where diners were enjoying a summer get-together of the sea and seafood, of beer and the season of good cheer. I then walked across the front lawn of some big houses, privileged and deserved, looking out to the vast sea that extends to Antarctica, the sea stopped by a wall of rocks that have been chiseled by nature and perhaps even humans, to make it an outdoor diving platform. Further along, beaches were filled with holidaymakers there to unwind after a year stressed out by money-making and everyone else.
After the long walk, unexpectedly, I came to a most unusual swim area. Rocks protruded out of the water, or submerged below the surface, tells of this as a most unlikely place to swim, often tossing swimmers between a rock and a hard place. The tides and waves crashed into the walls and rocks to shatter into foams that filled the top of the pool. Behaving like sea urchins, big and small, they dived into the tidal pool, being carried hither and thither, thrusted around; they were roughed up, but undeterred. They dared the waves, taunted the rocks, emerging above the foams bursting mirth and laughter. I climbed up the hill to have a bird-eye view, it looked like an ideal place for shipwrecks. This is a climax of a most unexpected kind.
25-26/12/2018从开普敦我又开始转移目标,本打算再来一次独驾游,从这里到约翰内斯堡,西到东横跨这国.可是出租车公司人员瞄一眼我驾照后,一板正经的说“你驾照两年前已过期”。垂头丧气,我只能六点早搭上大巴到摩梭湾,六小时后抵达。又是圣诞又是年终, 又是夏日盛开,南非人和非南人都挤到海滩占一席,于是住宿一床难求,道路拥挤,扒手又开始毛手毛脚,特别是金光闪闪的华人抢眼也枪手。
这时候到这里玩是时候也不是时候。这里有美丽的海滩,壮观的山,欧洲风味,异常友善的南非人。我选择摩梭湾开始南非著名的花园路线 (Garden Route)。身处乐园,忘记了非洲的苦,尽享眼前欢乐。
Mossel Bay 摩梭湾 Seafront restaurant in Mossel Bay 面海餐厅,摩梭湾 Million-dollar sea view from the front yard and living room, Mossel Bay 主卧大厅前无价海景羡煞人, 摩梭湾 The rock formation becomes natural outdoor swimming pool, Mossel Bay 摩梭湾自然岩石形成室外泳池 Holidaymakers on Mossel Bay beach 摩梭湾沙滩度假人群
They dived into the tidal pool, undeterred Narrow plank bridge over water hidden with big rocks at The Poort 过深水和多大岩石独木桥 Outdoor swimming pool, The Poort 摩梭湾室外泳池 Diving into the rocky but calm water 布满岩石水池跳水 Foamy water of Die Poort 摩梭湾浪花气泡泳池 Queuing to jump into the rocky water 排队跳进翻滚和充满岩石的水池 Post card view of Mossel Bay, The Poort 摩梭湾著名景观Die Poort Die Poort viewed from the top 摩梭湾景点自然潮水池