Erna van Wyk
de Vries
Meintjeskop
Courier, Volume I, 1993
It is summer in South Africa. Everybody you
come across is moaning about the terrible, intolerable heat. I just smile, put a
smug "I know better" look on my face and reply: "On the
contrary, this is wonderful. Very pleasant. Obviously you have never been to
Keetrnanshoop."
I am not going to advise anybody to visit
Keetmanshoop. Apart from being as hot as that place we do not want to proceed
to after this life, Keetmanshoop has its one foot in the Kalahari desert and
the other foot in the Namib desert.
When my husband and I were newly engaged
and very much in love, I told him that I'd follow him to
"Putsonderwater". Ha. I had to eat my words. Surely, Putsonderwater
cannot be as hot and as isolated as Keetmanshoop is.
I do not like the smirks on the faces of
some people when they learn that I had to move from "gay Paree" to
Keetmanshoop. A friend of long standing suggested that I write a book titled:
"From Paris to Keetmanshoop". Very funny.
I always inform these smirking people that
at least, in Keetrnanshoop, the air is much fresher, there is lots of parking
space and to top it all, I did not have to open, even once, one of the
halfdozen umbrellas I had to acquire in London and Paris.
To get back to the heat. Wytze, my husband,
put a thermometer in the official car, basking in the sun like all the others
for lack of shadow space, and it reached 86 degrees Celsius. The veranda of the
office, in the shade, measured over 50 degrees Celsius. That summer, the summer
of late 1987 up to about April 1988, happened to be the hottest summer in
living memory for Keetmanshoop. First, the birds started dropping out of the
trees,' dood soos mossies'.
Then the
kids complained that their bunnies had keeled over, the poultry died and I have
to confess that when I heard the first pig had died, I panicked. It is said
that the human anatomy and that of the pig are very similar.
Inside the office it measured 42 degrees
when we started at 08:00. We had the dubious honour of having our offices in a
historical musewn. Die Kaiserliche Postampt , i e the old post office. A
handsome building, built with thick rocks, each close to half a metre. These
boulders would absorb the heat admirably effectively during the day and manage
to retain most of it all through the night.
These amazing boulders also had the
ability to absorb cold in winter and retain it equally admirably during the
winter nights. And you have guessed it. Being such a captivating historical
museum, it could not be 'vandalised' by the installation of air conditioners.
We managed to work during the mornings, but
just dropped down over our newspapers during the afternoons. One afternoon a
funny feeling took hold of me. I had a very strong instinct to jump up and run
away, to get out and to get as far away as possible. Of course I controlled
myself - with effort
The next day I discovered to my relief that I was not
going crazy: the national newspaper. "Die Republikein" was kind
enough to list all the symptoms of heat exhaustion. One of them was acute
anxiety.
Going outside was like having a giant
hairdryer turned onto you. Eyeballs burned. A water pipe broke on the gravel
road one day and I saw the water streaming down the street, boiling vigorously
as it streamed.
No, please do not complain about the heat.
You might just end up in Keetmanshoop one day. Despite all this, the people are
so very friendly, genuine and kindhearted, that I did come to love the place. I
also brought along a live souvenir - my only son, who will forever be stuck
with Keetmanshoop" indicated as his place of birth on his passport. ( oh
well, it could have been "Putsonderwater" ).
One of the best written. most enjoyable. Short, not laboured - Jim Steward.
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