Friday, 31 August 2012

✉ Old Dutch Charm

Old Dutch blue and white tiles; and wine. (Spier, Stellenbosch Valley, August 2011)



TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

An old Dutch tile backdrop for a wine bar in Spier's tasting room. The wonderful detail that goes into the reception spaces on these Stellenbosch wine farms, are characterful, each in their own way. Where some wine farms preserved the old Dutch Charm, also upholding age-long traditions in their wine-making, others have built platforms for new design and the Drama of New World Wines. Making the acquaintance of a wine in its context of home, is something pretty special. And in such breathtaking natural surroundings, good wine tastes even better.        

- WEEK IN THE WINELANDS -
*t

Monday, 27 August 2012

✉ The Road Trip

Passing Trees. Hemel en Aarde Valley. (Hermanus, South Africa. August 2011)


TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

The road trip: packed bags, water, supplies, specially made mixed tapes, ready cameras, blanket in the back. It is such a simple pleasure to go on a road trip with a good friend; a safe drive, of course the biggest grace. A space stretches out in front of you. A space where the passing trees can filter your thoughts, the valleys clear your head. And the breathtaking views that unfold 'round every turn, every bend, inspire new thoughts. With the window down, you whistle to the song, and wonder on.        

- WEEK IN THE WINELANDS -
*t


Friday, 24 August 2012

Week in the Winelands

I can melt in the beauty of the South Western tip of Africa in late winter. In this green season, the Western Cape is a place where the quartzitic sandstone escarpments are often veiled in a soft white cloud. Fynbos on the heath of the lower skirt stretches down past the steep grey crags towards white beaches that meet the cold Atlantic. The air herbaceous, fragranced with dark wood. But you soon identify the scent of a culture in this area: the wines, and the exquisite cuisine. How fitting that the Table of the Cape is set as an invitation for those who love to taste. 


* * * * *

It was thus a simple decision. A Cape Townian was going to go on a week long winter Wine Tour. The route well researched, guest houses booked, four season outfits and reading material packed, and a mixed tape made with love for the road trip.   
Standing beneath a blue sky in front of Helderberg. (Uva Mira Wine Estate, Helderberg, August 2011).
In 2011, a snowless Winter passed. But as the end of August approached, I was wishing for some white frosted mountain tops. But the sunshine over the green was also welcome. The second cold front that I wished for never came to pass that year. But there will always be beautiful Winters to come. 

Beautiful early blossoms of Spring. (Hidden Valley, Helderberg, August 2011)
And yes, the more you wish for snow, the earlier Spring will come. But luckily early Spring has its perks too. 

On a Wine Tour before tasting the wines in the warm sunshine. (Helderberg, August 2011)
Learning more about the wine making process.

Finds along the way. (Helderberg, August 2011)
Red needly Proteas on the back of a pick up farm truck. 

The Dutch Reformed Church, built in 1686, rises above the leafless oak trees. (Stellenbosch, August 2011)
It was sunny, the day we arrived back in Stellenbosch, my old University town. This was the base for the first few nights, as the charming old Dutch town lies in the heart of the Winelands. In the evenings it was still chilly, and we thought at some point it might rain again. But the thought of a rainy night sounded wonderful, because somewhere in Dorp Street there was a fireplace waiting for you in a secluded little library, leather couches and a tough choice between Whiskey on ice and the finest Red with two wine glasses. 

Late afternoon sun. Perfect for a walk. (Stellenbosch, August 2011)
Going for a walk in Jonkershoek after a day of good wine and good food in the Greater Simonsberg wine region. 

Pine cone on the walking trail in Jonkershoek. (Stellenbosch, August 2011)
At first we thought we might be able to squeeze five wine farms in a day. But less was certainly more. Two to three wine farms a day, which included time spent over the wonderful meals at their Restaurants, seemed like the perfect amount of indulgence to contain. Which was why walks in the natural world seemed to balance all out quite well.  

Resting among Spring's new flowers in J.S. Marais Park. (Stellenbosch, August 2011)
(And how beautiful this place is). Almost beckoning 'just add wine' and a picnic blanket. Instead, we rested among Spring's new flowers.

A chilled Sparkling Wine was enjoyed on a boat, before we went to Rietvallei for their Estéanna Red blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot. (Robertson, August 2011)
Stark, and theatrical, the tree lined banks of the Breede River that passes through Robertson Wine Valley. The forecast of a cold night with the promise of a warm fire place and a glass of Rietvallei's 2008 Estéanna Red blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot. 

Red Wine. (Hemel en Aarde Valley, Hermanus. August 2011)
The beauty of a glass of Red. 

Adding notes to the Wine Journal in context. Bouchard Finlayson barrels in the background. (Hemel en Aarde Valley, Hermanus, August 2011)
The Wine Journal: my Moleskine Notebook now not only filled with blank ink cursive notes, but a Journal of all the Wine farms we visited over the week. It contains every wine we tasted, our own made up little poetic verse of the taste, the nose, the notes, amateur but personal star-ratings and splashes of different translucent reds and plums and purples. (Most White Wines left no stains, but made the paper curl up with pleasure. A wonderful pastime indeed.   

The best holiday at home. Our chosen route started in Stellenbosch Valley, then Helderberg, and Greater Simonsberg in the Stellenbosch region. After that: Franschhoek, then Rawsonville, Robertson and ending off in the 'Hemel en Aarde' Valley in Hermanus. A highly recommended experience.
*t



Thursday, 23 August 2012

✉ I ♥ NY

I ♥ NY (New York, September 2010)



TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

It is a simple infatuation. Someone loves New York City.              

- TIED UP WITH STRINGS (*BY DAY) -
*t

Wednesday, 22 August 2012

✉ Cheeseburger Bank of America

Brooklyn Bridge through the fence. Playing travel games on our way back to JFK International Airport. (New York, September 2010)


TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

On the bus back to JFK International Airport, a friend and I played a travel game for driving through big cities. It is simply a word connecting game, where the one person reads a word from somewhere in the moment of travel and the second person reads a second line to add to the first. We chuckled all the way to the Airport with new and daring concepts like Fresh Dentists and Cheeseburger Bank of America.      

- TIED UP WITH STRINGS (*BY DAY) -
*t

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

✉ River Alight

River alight. (New York, September 2010)


TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

One of the reasons why New York City has this filmic quality to it, is perhaps because of how the city is lit. The sunbeams reflect in glass gilded sky-scrapers, casting a gleam back and forth. And with added luster from the cars that move by, there is always a play of light. When I looked towards Lower Manhattan from Brooklyn Bridge on that fine summer's morning, the city shone gloriously, setting the river alight. Blinding me at first, and then, as if light could fall nearly silent, spoke in tones that I have seen before in photographs by Steven Meisel and heard in songs by Sondheim. There is light that inspires.                  

- TIED UP WITH STRINGS (*BY DAY) -
*t

Monday, 20 August 2012

✉ Pas un Chapeau

Manhattan bridge swallows the Empire State Building. (New York, September 2010)


TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

When I saw that Manhattan bridge had swallowed the Empire State building and made it appear like a tiny bird in a cage, I looked around, expecting to see the Little Prince nearby.            

- TIED UP WITH STRINGS (*BY DAY) -
*t

Sunday, 19 August 2012

✉ An Ode to Good Solitude

Before the others were around. (Brooklyn Bridge, New York, September 2010)


TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

Before the others were around that morning, I got to stand next to the most beautiful bridge. Taken by a breeze, sunlight streaming in from the East, the sound of the water, the peace. It was a wake in a while of good solitude.           

- TIED UP WITH STRINGS (*BY DAY) -
*t

Friday, 17 August 2012

✉ A Morning Stretch



TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

I was smitten with New York City in the early morning light. Both the Empire State building and the Chrysler stretched out their necks to see who was waving a 'hello-good-mornin' kind of wave from Brooklyn Bridge. I think they noticed me, for I felt like a little ray of sunshine at that moment. But looking back, I might be mistaken. Perhaps they just had their morning stretch. Reaching up into the sky, ever so high. Well I sure noticed them.               

- TIED UP WITH STRINGS (*BY DAY) -
*t


Thursday, 16 August 2012

Tied Up With Strings (*by Day)

Completely smitten after my encounter with Brooklyn Bridge that night, I decided that I wanted to see the bridge again in the first light of the next morning. It was dark when I rose at 04:30. I just got ready and went in my own time. This was perhaps a little too early for some. But for me: I needed to fulfill this wish of simply seeing this bridge again at sunrise. Just another secret little mission. I walked down the Subway and walked onto the bridge just to see the red dot sun rise from the horizon. As if my journey was timed to precision. Timing seems to be accommodating in that way sometimes, and helps you realize your passions if you dare to rise early enough. I'll cross these bridges one by one. And so followed the day, passionately:  

The station on Lexington and 51st street. (New York, September 2010)
For the future nostalgist.

A cyclist crosses Brooklyn Bridge in the early morning sun.
And as the soft glow announced the break of day, New York suddenly got a whole new character. 

The sun rises over the East River.
As if the sun was rolling along Manhattan Bridge in that expected rhythm, the ball of fire almost not making it to the next height, but then reaches there in an almost pause, just to roll over the next suspension.

Somehow one tends to think of New York City in black and white, in steely greys, in canary yellow or in neon lights. Pastels never really came to mind.
My New York in colour.  

Cable.
I needed a good coffee here, but only had wild cherry gum. Note for next time: Grab a coffee before crossing such a long bridge. 

The Empire State and the Chrysler as seen from Brooklyn Bridge.
Suspense. 

On my way to Pier 17.
There is only < ONE WAY . 

Approaching Brooklyn Bridge.
The scale of this bridge is hard to describe. All I can say is I felt really really small. 

Stretches of bridges crossing the East. (Brooklyn, Manhattan and Williamsburg).
Stretches of bridges crossing the East. (Brooklyn, Manhattan and Williamsburg). Most suspension bridges look like musical instruments. I usually wonder what they would sound like if they could be played. 
I still regard this as one of the most-liked mornings of my life, even though I was by myself. The morning made me feel whole. To be awed in the presence of these structures is something I hold dear. It is now added to my insatiable list of "Favourite Things". 
*t  

Wednesday, 15 August 2012

✉ The Lovely Lower Manhattan

Lower Manhattan. (New York, September 2010)


TODAY'S TRAVEL PHOTO OF YESTERYEAR: 

This was the view over lower Manhattan from Brooklyn bridge right after sunset. It took my breath away. Simply so.              

- TIED UP WITH STRINGS (*BY NIGHT) -
*t