Dear Family and Friends,
Travel East of my home town on a Monday and it's beer day. Travel West on a Tuesday and it's their beer day. Hard to believe that this one simple event, using such primitive methods still goes on in this modern world. A rusty, battered ox cart loaded high with blue plastic crates each filled with brown plastic beer bottles emerges from the long grass alongside the highway.
It's usually a couple of young men who are doing the chore: unload the empty beer crates on the side of the road, let the oxen graze under the tree and then sit and wait for the brewery truck to arrive. The young men should be at work but there aren't any jobs and so this is their lot in life. When the truck comes the crates are swopped, empties changed for full, a handful of dirty US dollars, the oxen whipped into action and off they go with their load of beer: back into the long grass.
It's glorious out there on the country highways at the moment: the grass is golden, the sun warm and the lucky bean tress ablaze with red flowers. Overhead eagles soar, glide, circle and swoop in the deep valleys and across the wide open plains. Savannah the geography teachers called it; to us it's just the magnificent African bush full of delights, secrets and surprises.
As you cross over rivers there's almost always someone to see: washing clothes in the pools, collecting water in bright plastic containers or kids stripped off and lathering up for a bath or having a splash about if it's warm. The wet rocks glitter in the sun, our jewels in the bush. Further along the road two little poppets walk to school; small pink satchels on their backs they try and hitch a lift from every car that passes - regardless which direction it's going in.
A woman appears out of the long grass, a twenty litre yellow plastic container of water on her head, a little lad at her side carrying a one litre orange juice bottle filled with cloudy brown water.