Tuesday, February 23, 2010

How to make friends and piss-off influential people

Last week I made friends with anemones, this week I probably made some enemies and if I didn't I'm likely to make a few by writing this. It is my forth week in the Cadet school and one of our tasks was to follow the story of Juluis Malema and carry it forward in anyway we could. For those who may not be familiar with South African politics Malema is the president of the ruling political party's youth league and he has been accused of using his influence to win government tenders for his own profit. As a result of this task I have spent much of the last few days chasing leads, phoning influential people and generally tearing my hair out. Today Malema phoned me in response to a text I sent him. Sure he refused to answer my questions but still he took me seriously as a journalist.

And therein lies the problem... My research was not for a big story it was for a class assignment and while maybe if I uncovered something major the paper would have run with it, I still felt like I was harassing busy people for sport. In addition Malema told me that he would not answer my questions because he had already commented to a journalist from our group. So you see it got me thinking that what if because I spoke to somebody they then refused to another journalist who needed the information more than I did.

Don't get me wrong I understand that this was a training exercise designed to teach us how to investigate the high profile cases and I do understand the value of it. I just feel as a journalist we also have a responsibility to not harass people unduly or we may risk losing our credibility.

Anyway that rant over, check out these pictures I took on Saturday. With the mercury pushing 38 degrees in Cape Town and the wind howling fires were inevitable. I managed to capture a Titan helicopter in the process of fetching water to douse a run-away fire Signal Hill. Enjoy!








Friday, February 19, 2010

'Bridget Jones' goes to Cape Town

Last week the cadet school was taken on a walking tour of Cape Town. We were then asked to produce a piece on the experience. Below is my piece which the facilitator remarked read like 'Bridget Jones goes to Cape Town'...

The first thing I noticed as I walk out on to the streets of Cape Town is the extraordinary number of foreign accents rising above the sounds of street vendors, cars and coffee machines. I look up between the tall buildings and notice wisps of cloud racing across a patch of blue sky visible in the gap. The on-shore wind pushing the clouds also brings the faint smell of the ocean into town. The ocean, I have noticed, smells different here to elsewhere along the coast. In the cape the familiar muggy saltiness mixes in with the smell of decaying kelp. Perhaps this not surprising considering the sheer expanse of kelp forests along the coast but what is surprising is that this is not an unpleasant smell.
As I round a street corner and I am temporarily choked by the fumes of red Cape Town tour bus that is idling while a long queue of tourists slowly boards. Emerging through the smoke we meet up with our tour guide, Ursula. Ursula is a grey-haired German lady whom I notice is wearing very sensible brown sandals. She warns us about Cape Town’s ‘irregular’ traffic which frankly I feel is like saying the universe is big. I mean, yes, the universe is big but vast or infinite may better describe it’s boundless quantity of ‘big’.
Ursula takes us at rapid speed along the streets pausing to point out landmarks and to give out history snippets. She then tells us that the next stop is below the street. ‘Oh no’ I think. I was probably the only geology student in the history of world who was afraid of going underground. Luckily I came to my senses and moved onto a career in biology which included brisk open spaces and lots of fresh air. But now, faced with my nemesis once more, my heart begins to beat quickly in my chest. As I start to descend the dimly lit stairs I detect that too many people are suddenly in ‘my bubble’ and start to feel light headed. To my immense relief I find at the bottom of the stairs is a well lit, and ventilated, shopping mall. Even I can’t be afraid of that.
Walking through the mall I am fascinated by Ursula’s explanation that the old Cape Town shore apparently used to be where I am currently standing. Midway through Ursula’s explanation a nearby shop assistant lets out what can only be described as yodelling wail and then suddenly looking embarrassed shuffles back inside the store.
Finally we emerge out into the extraordinary brightness of the grand parade. Unfortunately the spicy smell of food being cooked which wafts from the vendors is overpowered by the rancid smells emanating from multiple stagnant puddles along the pavements and by petrol fumes released from taxis as they rocket past. The music, meant I suppose to create atmosphere by the vendors selling their wares, is accompanied by screeching brakes and equally screeching shouts from the minibus operators indicating their destinations. I notice a particularly amusing sign outside one vendor promising to make you ‘Smile again!’ and depicting shiny gold front teeth in a huge smiling mouth. I also notice in smaller letters a sentence at the bottom of the sign ‘In god we trust’. I muse that, perhaps if you get your dentistry done on the side of the road, you will need to trust in god.
At this point my energy begins to fade and my legs start to ache. I still have not gotten used to my new bed and the backpackers across the road from my flat insisted on having a more rigorous party than usual the previous evening. We see the ‘Groot Kerk’, the Slave lodge, parliament and the government gardens. Here, in the gardens, the cute squirrels catch everybody’s attention and some even try to make contact. The biologist in me screams out and I try vainly to warn my fellow cadets that squirrels are likely to have rabies and are known to bite unwary fingers. Thankfully we move on with everybody still in possession of their digits and I see we are stopping at some benches. After a hopeful moment of thinking we will rest here, I notice that these are the old apartheid benches which indicate that only people of certain races may sit upon them. The smell of urine which surrounds them is not the only reason I no longer wish to rest on them.
Eventually we reach St. Georges Cathedral I do get to sit for a while. This cathedral being an Anglican church conquers up memories of my childhood. The smell of incense reminds me of one particularly disastrous midnight mass where I, for reasons unknown to all who are familiar with my inept ways, was chosen to bear the cross in the alter procession. It all ended rather badly with the large silver cross falling to earth with an almighty clatter during a silent period meant for prayer. I apparently had failed to secure the cross properly in its stand. The cross was sent in for repairs and needless to say I was never asked to serve the alter again.
Leaving the church Ursula informs us we are now heading uphill to the Bo-Kaap area. My wary legs scream, I can feel my sunburn is now reaching lobster proportions and I am more than just a little dehydrated. The Bo-Kaap, however, is charming and leaves me wishing I had remembered to bring my camera. Not so charming was the pile of what I originally thought was sick but later transpired to be somebody’s dinner cast into the street. It was only identified as such because of the heavily spiced curry smell emanating from it but on the upside the seagulls seemed to be enjoying it.
One small stop at yet another church later we were finished and I ambled off to find an ice-cream and rest my legs. Cape Town is defiantly a place unlike anywhere else and a walking tour is probably the best way to experience its true essence. Just do yourself a favour and get some sleep before you try it.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

With friends like these who needs anemones

Walking on the beach in gumboots is bound to get you some strange looks especially since it was blazing hot and perfectly sunny. This morning I donned my polkadot gumboots and hit the rocks near St.James beach, camera in hand, to cover my first story as a journalist. It is hard hitting, it is serious, oh yes, its is for the Jellybean Journal of the Weekend Argus. Let me explain. The Jellybean Journal is the kids section of the weekend paper and our first real reporting assignment is to write a story for this supplement. My story covers what kids can expect to find in the rock pools around Cape Town and how to safely and responsibly explore them.
Since spring tide was this morning and with a distinct lack of suitors beating down my door to woo me, I spent my valentines making friends with anemones.
The locals sitting on the boardwalk must have thought they had hit the morning entertainment jackpot with me on the sliding around the rocky shore. Walking on the algae covered rocks(yes, seaweed is in fact a type of algae) with an expensive camera is no mean feat when you are as clumsy as I am. Luckily for my camera I value it more than my own body. Every time I slipped, and I slipped a lot, I made dam sure my body cushioned the fall of my precious camera. On the upside if you were artistically inclined towards blues and purples you might find considerable joy in the various colours of my somewhat spectacular bruises.

I cant share the story or photos from this storey with you until its published (or if its not). In the mean time here are some pictures I took from my balcony and also some from my friends farm out in Botriver... Enjoy!






The twilight view from my balcony... now who says newspapers don't look after their staff!?






The idea of looking through windows in old or abandoned buildings and using the empty frames to outline your photos is something I often experiment with.




Old farm implements always fascinate me

Friday, February 12, 2010

Lost Near the Sea...

I like to think of myself as an acquired taste. Like olives or sushi... one of those things you either love or hate and often it takes some time for you to realise you like it at all. I have considerable trouble bonding with people when there is an entirely new crowd or I feel intimidated. Strangely this does not happen if I already know somebody in the group. This is why I love Johannesburg and would never leave. I have a great group of close friends and a large circle of not so close friends, in fact its been joked I know the entire Northern Suburbs of Johannesburg. This of course means I am able to throw legendary house parties and do so often!

The second week at the cadet school has been great with regards to work content but has been tough for reasons outlined above. The cadet school poses a challenge to me because its far away from my comfort zone and every person here is a stranger. I know I can be prickly and difficult if you don't know me because I don't have a brain mouth filter and I always say the wrong thing. People who know me understand this and know that I generally mean well. While I struggle to say what I mean, I never mean to offend or hurt anybody. I just hope the cadet school has more sushi and olive lovers than haters...

Monday, February 8, 2010

A biologist in the wrong habitat

Following the underwear disaster of my first day at the journalism cadet school I thought that second day could only be an improvement. I was, however, sorely mistaken. I quickly found myself drowning in a sea of unfamiliar jargon and even failed a spelling test. A spelling test! Let me explain: I have not written or as was more often the case failed a spelling test since primary school where my pigtails and over sized dress made me so cute that the failed tests were quietly ignored as nobody could bear to shout at me. To make matters worse many of the other cadets seemed perfectly at home, while I felt like a biologist who had wandered out of her habitat and was now unable to survive in this new wholly unsuitable one.

Walking to work the following day I decided to adopt the Darwinian view with regards to my survival in the world of journalism. Adapt or die - although this usually refers to species as a whole over generations and not individuals I think it still applies here. Since I was not quite ready to let my budding career die out before it started, I set about the task of adapting. I found that I had to adapt the way I thought, I had to get used to not knowing what I was doing and realising that it was okay. In short it does not look like this biologist will be going extinct in the newsroom anytime soon... I even managed to pass the second spelling test!

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Uncoperative underwear...

If my life was ever made into a movie it would probably be a full length comedy with the lead somewhat resembling Bridget Jones. Take my first day at the journalism cadet school. Here stands polkadotgumboots, chatting politely to journalism staff and consuming canapes, as gracefully as possible, when suddenly there is an unpleasant twang. The waist band on my somewhat small underwear has snapped, I am in a dress and the offending item is now slowly slipping down my legs. I stand frozen for a moment while I contemplate my options. The room contains many of my future colleagues and superiors most of whom seem to be between me and the relative safety of the bathroom. In addition any sudden movements on my part will result in me standing sheepishly with my frilly smalls delicately sitting above my left ankle. Behind me is a bar stool that may offer just enough cover. I sidle, slowly, behind it and as nonchalantly as possible wiggle the underwear off and flick it quickly into my handbag. Success!

The day done I arrive at my accommodation thinking smugly about my discretion. The universe, however, has other plans for my dignity because as I lifted my suitcase from my car the wind flies up my skirt, revealing my naked buttocks. One surprised onlooker laughs and shouts 'Helloo there meisie... I liike what I seeee'.