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And so to the West Coast for a short break from the rigours of life in the Overberg. It’s a family outing – the good doctor and new pup Cleo are on board. The open road lies ahead! My late aunt Gisela, a staunch Capetonian, never had anything good to say about the West Coast. As we traverse the outlying industrial wastes of Cape Town and the scorched earth wheatfields towards Malmesbury, I have to agree with her. Close to the West Cape nature reserve we catch sight of some giraffe leaning into the wind near the road. They strike me as anomalous, out of place. They should surely be browsing the leaves of tall acacias, not scrubbing it among the treeless fynbos. After all, it was only much closer to the Gariep River, way to the North, that Francois le Vaillant encountered his first Cameleopard, which he promptly shot and skinned. But I digress.

Fifteen kilometers before Paternoster is the town of Vredenburg. It is surprisingly large, the coastal equivalent of say Newcastle or Rustenburg, with an extensive, abject shack settlement rolling over the parched hills. Where did all these mense come from? What the hell are they doing there? Closer to Paternoster, there are clumps of huge rounded Stonehenge – type boulders jutting out of the earth, the only thing in sight for the eye to fix upon. Pods of sheep dot the barren wheatfields, while crows circle overhead. Never a good sign that, when crows are the only birdlife.
Coming in to Paternoster, there’s no “wow” moment, no indicator that we’ve entered the idyllic realm of fishing boats- on -the -beach, as depicted by many a local artist. Having brushed off several loud crayfish salesmen of the street, (Kreef! KREEFFF!!) we find ourselves in a comfortable flatlet, surrounded by white houses in a faux-mediterranean style. They have names like “Duintjie” and “Strandloper.” There’s a strict aesthetic conformity here. Voelklip, where I live, is an architectural calamity: kak facebrick houses, grandiose concrete bunkers, this and that. I’ve always thought strict aesthetic controls would have been a good idea but now I’m not so sure: this place looks too much like, well, a theme park. With old fishing boats strewn on every other corner to give it authenticity. The wind is blowing and yes, your aging artist sees nothing to sketch and is grumpy.
Next day, we find out a bit more about Paternoster. The original inhabitants, mainly coloured fisherfolk, woke up one day to find white people offering wads of cash for their cottages. They took the cash and next thing they were on the street with large nouveau- Greek houses going up around them. Fancy eateries too. ( Kreef! KREEFF!!) But the fisherfolk smartened up and stopped selling their houses. So now, uniquely in South Africa, there’s an interesting mix of class and culture, as the rich bastards are cheek by jowl with the hardscrabble fisherfolk. Across the way from the Paternoster Hotel, (an authentic – looking place, by the way,) there’s a group of Kreef sellers. They gather every morning under the shade of the bloekombome. It is thirsty work on these hot summer days, and the manne keep quarts of beer close at hand. They joke and jest loudly, en hulle vloek mekaar lekker. I did a little sketch of that scene, thinking that a real artist would go right in there and do a series of portraits of those fellows. Francois Krige, perhaps, would have risen to the occasion.

There’s a Paternoster waterfront, better than the Cape Town one. It’s a warm day but under the shade it’s just right and, surrendering to the boats -on-the-beach cliche, I get on with a little watercolour. I’m working on 300g hot pressed paper and mixing in a bit of gouache. My painting gear is simple and portable: everything I need fits in the satchel. The sea is flat and iridescent and there are those beautiful big luminous rocks out there. The sculptor Henry Moore would have cried to see those. Everyone here is relaxed and in browsing mode, so I get several onlookers. I’m happy to interact with them and hear their stories. I meet a man from Namibia who is finding his extended family who came from the West Coast. Also a few watercolourists from England. They are polite and encouraging. I’ll take any morale – booster. After all, plein – air work is mostly destined to fail and disillusion always lurks. There is a German man too. ” Ah, malerei,” he says, surveying my handiwork. ” Ja, very good. Und such a light equipment too.” How very Teutonic, to asses the means as well as the result! Thanks my broer. We live to paint another day…..

Portjie pic
I’m in Cape Town, walking down Main Road, Rondebosch. Its 9am. I’m looking for some place to get something to eat and I have a back spasm.
The early morning drive from Hermanus to the airport didn’t really help, and neither did getting stuck in the traffic into the city. I catch a glimpse of some wasted old geezer in a window as I walk. Oh shit, that’s me shuffling along there.
After a while I shuffle into a place that offers a breakfast begel. I get a packet of Panado from the Checkers and settle down uncomfortably. The Panado helps and I continue on my mission, which is to get to the Italian Art Shop. I aim to get some Gum Arabic, for I have embarked on the strange mission of making my own watercolours. Despite that, I buy some marked – down Maimeri watercolours. They’re very good and are no longer being brought in. I also invest in a lovely Rosemary quill brush. Then, full of visions of swashbuckling watercolours issuing forth from the new brush, I head back to Hermanus to see my chiropractor.
That evening, sitting on the beach near the estuary, I give the new brush a bit of a turn. Still in pain and sitting weirdly. the little colour sketch is distinctly un – straight, the whole thing subsiding to the right. Ja nee, skeef back, skeef everything else.

The recent weeks haven’t been exactly prolific. A long niggling flu virus has afflicted our household and badly affected everything. I’m trying to organise and finish work for an end-of-year show. I think I’ve spotted a gap for all these watercolours that I’ve done over the past year or three. They need to be seen, and with a bit of wandering around the back roads of the Overberg, I can put together something meaningful. And these back roads need to be explored. Within a 50 kilometer radius of where we live, there are all sorts of undiscovered gems.

So I get over the back spasm. I get over the niggling flu. I get on the road a bit and do some drawing. Then off to the airport again to fetch Cathy. Turns out she picked something up on the plane. Then I get it too. Another viral malady, all over again, like Groundhog Day or something out of Kafka. We just can’t get going. things are just adamantly SKEEF. There’s not much time left before the end of year crowds invade our town, bringing money to buy art. Am I going to make it or will the viral onslaught prove to be my undoing?
Watch this space….


