But just because this season in our lives is coming to a close, doesn't mean the adventure is over. We are settled in a new town and a new house, with new opportunities, new friends, and new memories to be made laying ahead. It's a good reminder of the saying,
So without further ado, here follows some of our individual reflections - check out the full pieces on Parents' Thoughts, Elna's Musings and The Boys' Corner.
Of the 20 months we didn't know where we were going to end up, for about eight we were nomadic and living out of bags and boxes (bags for clothes, boxes for books and food, literally), or working as volunteers on workaway.info farms. The other twelve months we lived on a farm in the Kammanassie. Therefore highlights will be separated into these two categories.
Highlights during our 8 months of travel:
- The 3 farms where we volunteered – the people, the work we did and to experience farm life
- Being together and getting to know each other as a family in every new adventure or exploration of the unknown
- All the interesting people that we met and got to know better. Our whole understanding of what ‘normal’ means changed radically and we discovered that people are unique and choose their specific lifestyles for a reason they consider ‘normal’
Dad
~ While doing a treetop tour near Stormsriver I happened to see chameleons in the wild for the first time - a few small and large ones in the treetops very close to us – that taught me to always be on the lookout for the little interesting things you may discover unexpectedly on a journey!
Mom
~ Every hike (whether short or long) in forests, on mountains, seasides, ‘veld’ or ‘vlaktes’
~ Having coffee in a jail cell at the Provost in Grahamstown
~ Camping on the sea at Stormsriver
~ Reading to colored children in Piketberg
Elna
~ Listening to Nama stories around a campfire, seeing the moon come up, and go down again (when you wake up), having splash wars with Michael (our guide) on the Orange River
~ The Strand's giant ice creams (best in South Africa, if you ask me)
~ The single, gorgeous Disa flower we saw at the Groot Winterhoek Nature Reserve, and the scenery too
Theuns
~ I'll never forget the spectacular New Year's Eve fireworks at the Cape Town Waterfront
Maarten
~ We saw a lot of fantastic places, but the Knysna Lake really made a big impression on me. [when we drove into Knysna, Maarten's first comment was that he'd like to live there]
Highlights during our year-long stay in the Kammanassie
Dad
~ Enough time to really spend hundreds of hours focusing on developing better trading skills
~ Simple farming experiments where the plan is easy and everything makes sense, and then the reality turns out otherwise and usually more complex than planned!
Mom
~ The view from our stoep on the place where we stayed
~ Experiencing four seasons on our doorstep!
~ All the animals we had – the ponies, the pigs, the chickens and little Nassie the kitten who grew into a cat
~ To have met wonderful people of different cultures and building relationships with them
Elna
~ The safety on the farm – I could take long walks all alone, wherever and whenever I wanted to
~ The quiet, the wind, the mountains, and the darkness at night (one can see millions of stars there)
~ Really developing and practising my photography skills, despite not having a proper camera (it goes to show that it's the photographer that counts, not some fancy camera)
Theuns
~ I really enjoyed to make such good friends with the local workers' children, particularly Brendon, Brayton and Jaylin
Maarten
~ Having JanDiesel as a 'little brother' (though not biological) was really special for me
Lowlights in General
Dad~ Process of figuring out a new career
Mom
~ Sometimes we did not have enough space to pack out and find things
~ Sometimes we worked on each others’ nerves in confined spaces and being with each other 24hours per day
~ The over-commercialization of some tourist spots
~ Stopping projects that are not working out according to plan
Elna
~ school chaos in a tent at PE,
~ seeing the after-New Year's Eve-party mess and the huge amount of garbage being blown into the ocean at Cape Town's Waterfront, despite trash cans standing everywhere(!)
~ being exhausted but I don't even know why
~ friendship disappointments
Theuns
~ I missed Potch (the known), and the stability it'd always represented for me
~ All the hiking (I don't like hiking)
Maarten
~ I missed our old house a lot. [both boys were born in that house, by the way – thus much sentiment]
What Could We Not Do Without?
Dad
~ My laptop and smartphone, definitely.
Mom
~ The portable washing line and a kettle
~ A cup of tea or sometimes a glass of wine
~ My really warm jacket and buff (for the cold) and
~ always having a book to read!
Elna
~ my camera (during most of the trip, it was a Samsung Galaxy S3 smartphone),
~ my earphones (ATTENTION, this is a lifesaver), and
~ my 'kamerjas' (so fluffy)
Theuns
~ A place that I can go to, to be by myself.
Maarten
~ My soft toy 'Perdjie', which I got when I was 2 years old.
What We Learned About Ourselves
Dad~ I realized how bad I actually knew myself, as the times the real person inside come out is when you are in different, challenging and sometimes stressful situations
Mom
~ I don’t enjoy cold weather
~ That I enjoy beauty around me and function better in wide open spaces/areas – small spaces makes me moody
~ Things can work out ok even without a longterm plan for everything
~ Sometimes unplanned experiences are the most exciting
Elna
Getting to know myself, I realize that I loved:
~ watching a whale leap for joy from one end of the horizon to the other,
~ tapping my foot to a colourful musical fountain,
~ the Kalahari and it's different beauty, with red dunes and plains of waving golden grass ('goue grassies') in the evening sunlight,
~ pasta the proper Italian way (made by an Italian – we visited them on a farm near the Kammanassie)
Theuns
~ I didn't know I could row the Orange River. That was quite a personal victory for me.
Maarten
~ I didn't know I could operate a TLB machine – that was awesome! ['oom' Jan let them work with the TLB once on the Kammanassie farm]
Some Lessons Learned
- One’s attitude will determine your experience!
- One needs very little stuff to experience things
- People are very adaptable – whether to adapt to living conditions (we stayed in a variety of places ranging from shacks, tents, flat, houses and even in an industrial area) or food or clothes or routine.
- You design your own lifestyle by how you spend your time and your money
- Sometimes you can be really lucky (as in the Kruger National park when we saw all the animals in one day)
- You have to reach out to people, they seldom do
- Men don’t pack logically
- You have to be prepared for change – it's an attitude, and a skill.
- When you start something new, it's exciting and fun, but after a certain time it's not as wonderful any more and can get too much.
- To notice and appreciate the little things in life is precious
Life is a million little things, not one big thing. Once you realize that, and start living out each day as your own, the journey begins.
Our journey is not over, but we hope that this season in our lives will inspire and encourage others. A final THANK YOU to all the readers, we really appreciated your comments!