Re: Spring 2014 | Page 70

we stopped for lunch, we had driven the distance from Eastbourne to Birmingham and were only half way to our overnight destination, the Royal Hotel, in a one horse dorp called Bethulie in the Orange Free State. I should say at this stage that the entire expedition was very much a step into the unknown; apart from Kenton on Sea – our first ‘proper’ stop for a few days on the Eastern Cape coast – neither Paul nor Carol (and certainly not me) had been to any of the towns we were destined to stay at, let alone the hotels. My brother had, with a bit of vague advice from friends and a helping hand from Booking.Com, managed to cobble together various locations which – on paper at least – looked OK, but we were in unchartered territory, as we were about to find out. The first thing we discovered about the Royal Hotel was that it didn’t seem to exist. We drove up and down the designated street in Bethulie (not a long journey!) but could find no sign – literally – of it. Carol then pointed to a building that she said looked more or less like the one portrayed on the town’s web site, so we pulled up. Paul noticed a door flapping open, and we walked in. “ What happened next was like something out of a Stephen King novel; “ What happened next was like something out of a Stephen King novel; the place was a ghost hotel, fully furnished, but totally empty. A few dining tables were laid, but the bar had been stripped down to the optic holders, glasses removed. Bedroom doors swung open as we walked down the corridor, and all the beds were made up, but not a sound anywhere apart from our echoing footsteps. The three of us looked at each other, and could see we all thinking the same thing; some places are best left alone. We got back into the car and went in search of less frightening accommodation. Considering the area around Bethulie and the Gariep Dam is meant to be a tourist spot, hostelries are somewhat few and far between, but after an hour or so we found a place that looked almost reasonable although we were really too hot and tired to care; “It’s licenced,” 68 said my brother, “that’s good enough for me.” It turned out to be a very pleasant B & B run by friendly Afrikaaner couple, and after a couple of frosties any reservations I had started to fade, until Paul nudged me and said “Check out the view above you.” Looking up, I saw a huge Swastika flag pinned across the ceiling. South African politics are still as diverse as ever, it seems… Following “Dinner with Nazis” we arrived in Kenton on Sea the following day at lunch time, and settled in to a Hospitality – Mosel Bay style really stunning holiday house lent to Paul by a colleague. High up on the hill, it commanded beautiful views of the coastline and the Bushman’s River mouth; the weather, although typically windy in true Eastern Cape fashion, was kind to us overall and we spent four glorious days either chilling out, walking along the beach for miles, or visiting nearby Port Alfred, where an old friend of Carol’s owns a micro brewery. The scenery in the Grahamstown/Port Alfred area is rather English, reminiscent of the Sussex downs, and you can imagine the