Thursday, April 29, 2010

Goodbye Cape Town.....homeless souls

Budget Philantropy or "Real Life" Tourism

I have always classified the homeless into 3 groups : drug addicts including alcohol; intellectually challenged; and kids, who my friend Di would say, don't wish to obey home rules anymore.

However, in Cape Town I thought these might not apply as every Wednesday I saw from my window overlooking the street a procession of homeless men coming up our street


 inspecting and removing items from our rubbish bins before the collection truck arrived an hour or so later. They didn't appear to somehow fit, being reasonably well dressed and groomed. I did suspect that there may be a sort of "Eldorado" influx into Cape Town as those living in remote parts of the country thought the streets in the big cities were paved with gold. Publicity attached to the construction boom for the pending World Cup could be an extra factor.



Once in the city, they would discover that life here is much tougher, getting a job is not easy and getting by might be difficult. The unemployment rate in the country is very high..well over 25%.  
And without resources, they couldn't get back home.

Since meeting David ( in earlier story ), I decided that I could provide a "day at home" treat to suitable other homeless folks. So after meeting many on my walks around the beach, I discovered there is quite a large community of homeless men along the Atlantic seaboard. I did ask why there are very few women and was told they have other options to earn money to get by and besides, safety would be marginal. I gradually became aware that there is a definite deterioration in their physical well being as they spend time as "homeless" and as they age. Many of the younger ones, say 18 - 22, are still relatively fit and active and could be seen having fun with their mates on the beach or swimming. I discovered that their "well groomed" appearance was helped by the fact that many black Africans don't start shaving until well into their 20's and like Asian men, many have little or no facial hair for their whole lives. There are fresh water showers on the beach so this group usually spent time on personal appearance even though there were bylaws against folk using the showers to bathe with soap and wash clothes instead of just rinsing off after swimming in the sea. Some appeared as if they were on a "boys own adventure" without realising what the future may hold!

Into their mid 20's, you see the affects of living on an inadequate diet and the stress of losing any semblance of personal pride or social standing with all the knocks of being rejected in almost everything they may attempt. This leads to a lethargic appearance with long periods lying around either sleeping or chatting with friends. They have absolutely no mental stimulus. The body gets thinner and learns to cope without an adequate intake of food i.e. the body goes into a mild form of hibernation. A sense of humour fades. They may now partake in alcoholic binges. Someone within their group earns a few rand and it is spent on cheap booze once a week or so. After 30 or so, this seems to turn into full alcoholism and these sad folk seem to survive totally on alcohol and generally make a nuisance of themselves around town. At this stage, I don't believe there is any turning back and they are really are a lost cause.

Hence in this story and those that follow you will not find any of the late stage homeless but those in the 1st two stages.

To generalise, most were either coloureds or blacks though there were a few whites. Indeed the very first beggar who came to my door on the day I moved into my apartment was a Afrikaner lad offering sewing kits in exchange for a donation and there was a regular old white man in the retail area of Sea Point who I ran into on most occasions there. He had all the appearances of being an alcoholic but with a pleasant smile. His short shuffle walk indicated he was in early stages of Parkinson's disease. As he always wanted money, he got nothing from me though I did notice someone gave him a new set of clothes at Christmas.

Most were believers, mostly christian with some moslems, smoked but could only afford one or two at a time, occasionally smoked "gangga", had very smelly feet ( they slept in most of their clothes including their footwear )and unreliable ( time is of little importance ). I naively thought the marijuana was a hunger suppressant. I am reliably informed the opposite is the case but it does do wonders for the head! They came from two sources, either from far away in the Eastern Cape or from out on the Cape Flats, near Cape Town and had some sort of difficulty with their home life. Surprisingly most managed to get food everyday, either purchased from the little cash they earned from looking after parked cars, begging or doing odd jobs around town, being given food or finding scraps during their rounds of rubbish bins. Bread is the staple. Indeed, the younger and more active ones could earn quite a bit on the weekends when laundries and furniture removal companies were much busier and took on casual labour. As well, near the centre of Cape Town there is a site where building contractors or sub-contractors pick up labourers on a daily basis. However, I was told this was not easy as the "Nigerians" fight to get the good jobs and often, the payment after the job is not the same as that promised at the beginning. On an honest job, they could earn R100 - 150 per day. On the subject of Nigerians, they seem to be the bad boys of Africa. Most know of the e-mails scams but they seem to run the drug distribution business for all of Africa and have the reputation for being aggressive in most endeavours.

The homeless lived in a small community with all the back stabbing, gossip and fluid allegiances that go with these. Most slept in groups of 2 or 3, obviously for security reasons and theft by one with few possessions from another with few possessions did happen!

As all who came to my place emptied their pockets out before I washed their clothes, I noted that the amount of cash-on-hand would usually just be 1 - 10 rand...20 rand tops!  

Prior in inviting anyone for " a day at home" I had to make some sort of assessment of safety and would chat for some time. There was one rule..they must never turn up uninvited at my door. I would collect them at an agreed place and time and this usually coincided with a return from the supermarket so I could get them to carry my bags ( which I thought might alleviate any concerns of neighbours! ). Some were invited several times, others only once. The routine was breakfast, bath or shower, cloths washed and wearing borrowed cloths they would watch TV. Favourite programmes were music channels, cartoons and Nigerian soaps. Nigeria seems to be the Bollywood of Africa. Some would snooze off. One or two were very interesting to chat about their lives, family and background. Then another meal by which time their clothes would be dry. Some  received discarded clothes to keep. Both Tommy and Lyndsay left clothes after their travels...Tommy will recognise his pigeon poo T shirt above. Henri also donated ( you will meet Henri later ) as well I had lots to discard before leaving South Africa. Should I return to Cape Town later this year, any visitors will be required to bring clothes suitable for the "cause".


Most living along the seaboard were actively hassled by the police and the local "law enforcement officers". Bylaws ban sleeping on the beach, loitering in one place for too long, begging and anyone can be stopped and searched at any time. One of my guys was given an instant fine of R100 after being caught over-nighting in his A frame. He has no chance of raising this so will be issued with a court summons and when he doesn't appear, an arrest warrant will be issued. The police carry portable finger print machines so next time he is stopped, it's straight off to jail or a week or so!

To balance this though, I did see white people given infringement notices for having unleashed dogs and for drinking alcohol on the beach.

To my initial surprise, all could only eat small amounts of food in one sitting. Obviously their stomachs had shrunk to match the small meals that they got by on.

With competition very high, how do you get a permanent job? No telephone, no address, preparing a cv is difficult.....

Now to meet some of my cases :

John, a Zulu about 27 and sounded and acted like a white South African. Well educated at a religious school and mad keen about cricket and rugby. His parents and sisters have migrated to Australia ( his father sells time share on the Gold Coast ) and he does communicate via email with some of them. He had a Italian surname so I did wonder if he was adopted but the Australian authorities had found something in his background to deny him entry. Anyway, I found him seeking food on New Years eve so invited him home for something to eat and he spent the night on the couch, watching music shows. He had been living in boarding houses but had somehow got himself kicked out of one and was attempting to find another, I suspect because he didn't pay. He was looking for a job as a sound engineer in a recording studio. He had previously worked in a company supplying computer services but it had lost a contract and he his job. He visited again about a week later, bringing 2 white friends, she a makeup artist trainee and he a trainee photographer. They both lived in one of John's boarding houses. Then he made a big mistake of asking to borrow R50 so they could get home...not because of the amount but because I knew he wouldn't have the money to return so would not be able to visit again. He would have been better to ask for the money outright. Though he did phone me once later to ask if I wanted to buy some champagne!!

Vuzi, a Xhosa, also about 27. Has been homeless and living around Sea Point for some time. Tall and well built until you discover he is wearing several layers of clothing, to keep warm as well as safe guard them. Occasionally he went round to the point where building contractors collected casual labour but mostly spent his day sleeping or lying on the grass with friends. I saw him very drunk a couple of times. He was from the Eastern Cape and talked reluctantly about his personal circumstances and often fell  asleep watching TV.

Shaun, another Xhosa about 28, a friend of Vuzi. His was a sad story. He had contracted TB and was obviously diagnosed late. A surgeon was planning  to remove one damaged lung but decided against this at a late stage. He received some sort of compensation package from the government which I think included a regular pension which if the same as an old persons pension, is in the range of R200-300 per month...not a lot ( US$ 27 - 41 ). He foolishly then purchased a TV on hire purchase with his pension going on repayments. He lived at home with his mother, a partly crippled woman who had produced several children, all with different fathers over the years. One of his brothers stole his TV to finance a drug habit so Shaun reported him to the police. His mother gave him an ultimatum to either withdraw the case or leave home. He left home. I'm not sure how he will survive a Cape Town winter outside as he gets out a breathe easily just climbing a couple of flights of stairs and is very frail. One lung is very badly damaged. He was about to attend his brother's court case just after I left as he wanted me to clean some clothes for the court appearance.

Andili , Xhosa lad, only 18, slight, very active, cheerful and courteous. He was my last case, only visited once so I didn't get a chance to find out much about him. He was a friend of David so he still lived in the same A frame.

One funny aspect to giving is the "up selling". You have heard of the upselling when you purchase a shirt " and will there be a tie to go with you shirt, sir?".  I gave away 3 pairs of footwear and each time received the follow on " you don't have pair of socks...."! I guess each has learned to take what ever opportunity as it arises.

There are 3 more stories to go in this series so keep looking...



Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Off to an offshore island...








Trying to look inconspicuous



Interisland ferry

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

An end to the American Empire...

I wrote earlier of the difficulties I experienced with Dell. Now my favourite printer company, Hewlett Packard or HP is giving me grief, though in principle this time as the cost is minor. I was planning to dump my South African sourced HP printer before leaving but at the last moment decided to lug it around the world to Croatia knowing I would exceed my airline baggage allowance. I said I would remove the cartridges and dump the printer if any airline ( there were 3 ) wanted excess baggage fees. None did so it arrived here and works fine, until now. I have discovered that HP have divided the world into 4 markets and sells slightly different but incompatible products in each zone. Here is their story :

I understand from your e-mail that you bought the printer in South Africa and now have it with you in Croatia and want to know how to use the cartridges bought in Croatia.


Peter, I realize the importance of the issue and will make sure that I give you appropriate information.


With the introduction of some new ink jet print cartridges in Fall 2004, HP is implementing a program to enable customization of printers and supplies products to better meet specific local customer needs. There will be different selectability numbers in each of four geographical zones in the world, and your printer will only perform when using cartridges for the zone in which the printer was designated for sale and use.


The HP Deskjet F4283 All-in-One Printer is a regionalized printer. The printer can be reset to a particular region to the maximum of 3 times. Once the printer is reset for the third time that will be the permanent zone in which you will be able to use it.


If you wish to regionalize the printer, please print a 10 tap test and scan it and send it to us.


Printing a extended self-test page


Follow these steps to print an extended self test report from the control panel. Make sure you have plain white paper correctly loaded in the product before beginning the procedure.


· Press and hold the Power button and the Cancel button.


· Release both buttons. The extended self-test report prints.


Now scan the self test page, attach it with the e-mail and send it to us.

If you need further assistance, please reply to this message and we will be happy to assist you.

For information on keeping your HP and Compaq products up and running, please visit our website at: http://www.hp.co.uk/diagnostics

Sincerely,

Max

My reply :


Hello

Finally got the print out to work though it shows low black ink cartridge ink levels! It is attached.

Cheers

Peter

Dear Peter,

Thank you for your reply to HP Customer Care.


I appreciate that you took time to reply back to HP Customer Care with the requested information. This will surely help us to provide you with a more appropriate resolution to the issue at hand.


I like to inform you that the extended self test page is not clear as we need the codes in that page for regionalizing the printer. If the pages are still not clear then please buy Croatia cartridges and print the test page using that.

If you need further assistance, please reply to this message and we will be happy to assist you further.

For information on keeping your HP and Compaq products up and running, please visit our website at: http://www.hp.co.uk/diagnostics

Sincerely,

Max

My reply :

Thanks Max,

Now we come to the centre of the problem...which Croatian cartridges should I purchase?

Cheers

Peter

Dear Peter,

Thank you for your reply to HP Customer Care.


I gather from your e-mail that you want to know what cartridges you can purchase in Croatia.


You can purchase the below HP Cartridges in Croatia.


Black Cartridge


HP 300 Black Ink Cartridge (CC640EE)


HP 300XL Black Ink Cartridge (CC641EE)


Tri-color Cartridge


HP 300 Tri-colour Ink Cartridge (CC643EE)


HP 300XL Tri-colour Ink Cartridge (CC644EE)


For more information on cartridge compatibility, please access the below HP Web link.


http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?docname=c01766411&cc=uk&lc=en&dlc=en&product=3571321


NOTE: Clicking the link(s) may give an error indicating it is invalid. If this occurs, copy the portion of the address on the remaining line(s) and paste it at the end of the address showing in your browser until the complete address is displayed in the Address box.


If you need further assistance, please reply to this message and we will be happy to assist you.

For information on keeping your HP and Compaq products up and running, please visit our website at: http://www.hp.co.uk/diagnostics

Sincerely,


Max

My reply :


Thanks Max,

As you know, cartridges are the big expense with printers. If I purchase a HP300 cartridge, it will work in printing a test page? Will be work with other print jobs? If not, can you please describe the process I will need to carry out to make it work on my printer. I will be going back to South Africa in November, so if these processes are too difficult, it may be easier to purchase another branded printer!

Kindest regards

Peter

Dear Peter,

Thank you for your reply to HP Customer Care.

I gather from your e-mail that you want to know whether the cartridge you buy in Croatia will work with you computer.


I like to inform you that once the printer is reset to use in Croatia, then you will be surely able to use the cartridges purchased in Croatia (HP 300). But when after you return to South Africa you would not be able to use the South African cartridges as the printer is regionalized to use Croatian cartridges that time you need to regionalize the printer again to South Africa. The printer can be reset to a particular region to the maximum of 3 times. Once the printer is reset for the third time that will be the permanent zone in which you will be able to use it.


If you need further assistance, please reply to this message and we will be happy to assist you further.

For information on keeping your HP and Compaq products up and running, please visit our website at: http://www.hp.co.uk/diagnostics

Sincerely,


Max

My reply :


Thanks Max,

Maybe I wasn't clear in my earlier message. What are the processes I need to undertake to make a HP300 cartridge compatible in my printer? I will print a test page and send it to you. What happens next? Is the software altered in my computer or are adjustments made in the printer?

Cheers

Peter

Dear Peter,

Thank you for your reply to HP Customer Care.


I gather from your e-mail that you want to know the processes you need to undertake to make a HP300 cartridge compatible to your printer.


I like to inform you that after we receive the extended self test page, we will take the codes in the page and input in our internal tool and in return it will generate a code which will be sent to you and you need to enter the code in the printer properties page. A detailed step by step procedure will be sent to you when we send the codes. You have no need to alter anything in the software or the printer.


If you need further assistance, please reply to this message and we will be happy to assist you.

For information on keeping your HP and Compaq products up and running, please visit our website at: http://www.hp.co.uk/diagnostics

Sincerely,


Max

My reply :

OK, one final question. I still have lots of ink in the colour cartridge. Will changes to the code affect this cartridge as well?

Cheers

Peter

Dear Peter,


Thank you for replying to us.

As I understand you still have lots of ink in colour cartridge and hence wanted to know if resetting the printer will affect the colour cartridge.


Peter, once the printer is regionalized to Croatian zone, you will not be able to use the South African zone cartridge. So it will affect the colour cartridge, as the printer will not recognize it.


Note: While printing ten tap test page, please use both the cartridge of same zone either South Africa or Croatian.


If you need further assistance, please reply to this message and we will be happy to assist you further.


For information on keeping your HP and Compaq products up and running, please visit our website at: http://www.hp.co.uk/diagnostics


Sincerely,

Sandy

Notice how Max has dropped out!!

My reply after finding out my printer will work without the black cartridge installed :


Hello,

Therefore it makes sense for me to use the printer without the black cartridge to use up the 121 colour cartridge first. Will contact someone when this also runs out. Wish I had been given the full picture, 1st when I purchased this machine and 2nd when I first contacted HP for assistance on this matter.

Bye


Peter

Dear Peter,


Thank you for getting back to us.

I gather from your mail that you will wait till the colour cartridge is empty to reset the printer to the local zone.

Peter, I request you to use the printer till the colour cartridge is empty and then get back to us to reset the printer to the local zone.

For information on keeping your HP and Compaq products up and running, please visit our website at: http://www.hp.co.uk/diagnostics

Sincerely,

Martin

Now Sandy has joined Max in hibernation!


You judge for yourself. Are they in terminal decline or not? Though they appear to come through the UK site, the English composition indicates a cheap call centre elesewhere.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

More views around Rovinj

There is also a video on facebook

I had 2 of these in my youth - Fiat 125

My apartment top floor in yellow building

Goodbye Cape Town....it all started with David

I first met David one evening on the rocks in mid December. My dinner was in the process of cooking. I had noticed him earlier using a cut down version of a plastic Woolworths supermarket trolley as a luge down one of the nearby streets. Luckily the street was one-way. During our chat, he told me he had recently been caught "stealing" a train journey ie he had traveled without a ticket and had already been to court. He showed me a document that indicated he had been remanded to appear again early next year. At that stage, I didn't know he was illiterate. He was 20 years old and seemed to have been 'homeless" for some time. He told me he slept around the foreshore and eventually asked me for R5 so he could buy some bread. He was pleasant with a sense of humour and easy to speak to even though his first language is Afrikaans. He often spent time at the rocks to swim in the pool and to wash even though there were some fresh water beach showers nearby. He told me he occasionally got casual building work for a day at a time but was often ripped off by the employers. It appears as if they are promised R120-140 per day but sometimes paid less at the end. He and his fellow homeless mates were often hassled by the local police.
( 1$US = R7.3 )


Before going back to my apartment, I decided I would give him some of my now cooked meal so told him I would be back shortly ( or "just now" in the local vernacular ). I packed a bag with half my evening meal, bread and fruit and he happily went on his way back to his own "home".

I thought afterwards that probably the best I could have done for him was take him down to the railway station and buy him a ticket to get back to his real home, assuming this was far from Cape Town.

A week or so later, I met another couple of lads who we discovered in conversation were David's "house mates". They knew I was the one who gave him the food parcel which he shared with them. He also told them I was praying for him ( a lot of good that would do !! ). When I questioned them further on where they slept, they went to great pains to make sure I didn't think they slept in a cave but within a pile of large rocks..like a A frame structure. There must be some sort of social class structure within this community. There were lots of small loose stones near so they could hear if others, including the police, were approaching at night. One of these guys was David's cousin and he indicated that David's mother ( his father was dead ) had a problem with alcohol. She lived out on the Cape flats, not all that far away. David had been a serial offender on the trains and was just not smart enough to know where to jump off the train to avoid the transport police.

I met David again a few days later and decided to give him a treat...a day at home. Instead of bringing him some food, I arranged to collect him and bring him home next morning. I then cooked some food, let him have a shower, wash his cloths and watch television while his clothes dried. Before doing this, I went and bought him a T shirt and shorts to wear while his clothes were being washed. This turned out to be a big success. He was so happy and appreciative. He insisted on cleaning the house and when I said I had a maid, he still went ahead and cleaned the kitchen anyway. Asked what he wanted to watch, he said cartoons or anything with fighting. It turned out his favourite programme was Popeye cartoons. During our conversations, I learnt he was not only illiterate but had terrible problems with numbers as well. His schooling was not a pleasant experience and had been the butt of class jokes though he did talk fondly of one teacher. He had worked as a plasterer for a relative in the past and appeared quite knowledgeable about various plastering techniques as he pointed out the features in my apartment. I took some photos of him in his new clothes and he just fell in love with his own image when I printed out a few.

As it was getting close to Christmas, he did indicate he wanted to go home so at the end of the day, armed with a food parcel with jam specially for his mother, his new clothes, his clean old clothes, his images and some money, he said he would go home. I received a short phone call later in the day to say he had arrived home and I have not heard from him again. Nor have his mates on the beach. This I consider good as I did expect to see him on the beach again. I did think his best chance in life was to again to work in the building trade hopefully with a relative who would not rip him off.

Later I met others at the rocks who knew I was the man who helped David. One older guy, Lennox, said David had been homeless off and on for many years..up to 7. He himself was pleased for himself for, after several years of being homeless, had recently found a job and consequently could afford a small place to live.
 
At this stage, little did I know where this would lead.....

Saturday, April 24, 2010

A spot of vainglory

Photos taken by Robert :

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Trying to Live the Mediterranean Lifestyle

It is soooo difficult.....



During the war of the dissolution of Yugoslavia, Blanka lived in the east of the country and can vividly remember as a child sheltering in the basement of her grandfather's house whilst the war in which her father was fighting, raged around the village. Eventually her grandfather's house was destroyed.

Goodbye Cape Town....Interesting Characters

Cedric
I wasn't sure I would write this as it may be construed to be a breach of privacy. However, as my readership is very small and only one other person knows some of these people ( and he is a discrete lawyer ) here goes. As you know from earlier blogs and facebook videos, my apartment was very near the coast, just 3 houses up from the beach or more accurately the Saunders Rocks. I would often relax there in the late afternoon and frequently commenced conversations with others. As well, my almost daily trek to the supermarket was along the foreshore and again I would meet people on this route as well as my longer bike rides to another beach much further out of Cape Town. This first story will concentrate a group I met that are not classed as "homeless" and for this group, there are few photos.


I have already mentioned Mickey, the student from Johannesburg, down in Cape Town for the holidays with his family. Both of his parents worked for an extremely wealthy property developer. I also met another student at the rocks. Cedric had been swimming in the rock pool for too long and had developed a bad case of the shivers. Remember the water off Cape Town is always very cold. I offered to let him have a shower to warm up. It turned out he was a refugee from Congo with his parents. I learnt South Africa is strangely very generous to refugees and seems to accept them from all over. Obviously there are millions in the country from Zimbabwe and other nearby countries but I also met a group of 4 Indians who all had jobs in Jo'berg and were down in Cape Town on holiday! With local unemployment over 25%, I don't understand why the SA government does this and though they don't receive money from the government, children are permitted to go to state schools. Cedric's father made some sort of living from trading between Mozambique and South Africa and lived in a middle class area of Cape Town. As he had no money during the school holidays and nothing much else to do, he came around for lunch a few times and we discussed his former life in Congo. However, in common with those who have been away from their home country for a while ( he had spent time in Mozambique before coming to South Africa ) he painted quite a rosy situation of the education system and life in general. In his view, the only big problem was a terrible political system ruled by so called big men, in this case Joseph Kabila. One story he conveyed and it is one I heard quite often from others was on the brutality of the SA police force. It appears as if refugees and others considered lower on the social scale are open to abuse, usually from black police officers. Cedric related two incidents in which he was harassed for being found without an ID document ( he doesn't have one ) and on another occasion of being "roughed up" for no apparent reason not far from his house. The police have the right to stop and search anyone at random. If they don't like the look of you, you can be stopped and searched!!

Cedric did also show me how you collect facebook friends. He searches for anyone, say Belinda Green and receives a long list of people with this name. If he likes the photo, he sends a "will you be my friend" request and often they reply "yes". I mentioned this to another equally young person or responded " how to think people get 3000 friends?...it's impossible to meet that many people...duh!"


In a spot of self interest, I befriended Douglas, the parking attendant and Zemi, a local community security guard at Llanduno beach, at the end of my regular bike ride. Even though I did lock up my bike whilst I spent time at the beach, extra personal security didn't go amiss. However, Douglas did give me a spot of bother. I invited him to drop into my home for a meal if he happened to be over in Sea Point area. He rang late one afternoon and said he was on his way now. I did suspect, by the sound of his voice, that he had been drinking. He turned up quite late, drunk and expecting to stay the night. I immediately and diplomatically escorted him back onto a minibus heading back in the direction of where he lived and he was his normal friendly self next time we met at the beach, as if nothing had happened.

One interesting character I met at the beach was "Congo", not his real name but stage name. A Zulu man, in his 20's, a stripper and sex worker. From what he told me, it appeared as if he was quite "open minded" in what he would do and with whom. He earned about US$100 per session to strip in either gay or straight venues and his most regular customers were middle-aged asian women who just wanted to touch! He was based in Jo'berg but had been flown to Cape Town for a week as company by a "boy friend" who apparently was a well known organiser of musicals in South Africa.

As most will know, during the apartheid period, most beaches around the Atlantic seaboard were designated "whites only" so now there is still a sort of tourist trade whereby those that live in the poor parts of town come round to these beaches as a "tourist" day out...to see how the top 2% live!! So I met several groups doing just that but whether by design or not, most were terrible litterbugs. One particularly interesting group I got into conversation with was a group of self described drug dealers and one in particular who was a pious christian. I attempted to get an understanding of the  dichotomy of this but was not succesful. Several worked in night clubs where I assumed they conducted their business. One had recently been released from prison, serving a 6 month sentence. Whilst inside, he learnt his girl friend was pregnant and now he sayes his daughter is what keeps him alive and looking forward to a better future though he didn't appear to have plans to achieve this.

In the next story, there will be homeless people, "good works" and more photos.

Monday, April 19, 2010

First Visitors

Robert & Blanka from Zagreb, Croatia. Robert was on my Everest Base Camp trek last year. He and Blanka have only been married since February. They are obviously very well connected as the President of the Republic of Croatia attended the wedding during the last few days of his 10 year term. Robert is currently working in the police force after completing a degree is philosophy but is still on his way to completing a law degree and PhD is philosophy as well. Blanka is a fine arts student. They picked me up in Rijeka yesterday and are staying here until Wednesday morning. Rob & I went out on a long bike ride this morning.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Last Explorations with Car

Thursday traveled down to the southern most point of the Istrian peninsula, a wind swept national park. There were several people there collecting herbs and wild aspargus.

Yes, I am still wearing a North Face fleece


According to Lonely Planet : " Kolombarica Beach, on the southern end of the peninsula, is popular with daring young men who dive from high cliffs and swim through the shallow caves at the water's edge." Daring young women are probably just smarter!!

Today, I traveled the coastal route to return the car in Rijeka. Stopped in the old town of Labin and here are some photos :


And some shots of Rijeka :


Clock Tower and old Roman gate


View from Trst castle and view up to castle above city

And now it is back to bicycle and buses!