Sunday Times

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T’S fair to say I tell the occasional white lie. Don’t we all? I am also scared of heights. It wasn’t so long ago that these failings of mine colluded against me with long-term consequenc­es …

It was during a road trip by car from Montagu to Prince Albert, when we stopped at a farm store not unlike any other, brimming with produce, home-made goods and offering a trusty cup of tea and sweet treats.

This, however, was where the stereotypi­cal niceties ended because we were served by an Afrikaans-speaking nun. She was elderly, intensely forthright and wore a strange headdress. I was interrogat­ed as to my lack of Afrikaans (I grew up in the UK) but praised for my attire — a dress that covered my knees.

Though not the product of a convent education, I was immediatel­y subdued and on my best behaviour. And so, the white lie came to pass. The pancakes I’d ordered were simply the worst I’d ever eaten: thick, rubbery and tasting of burnt sugar and cinnamon. I forced one down while scurrying the other into a serviette and into my handbag.

“How were your pancakes, Madam?” the nun asked. “Lovely,” I lied. I just didn’t want to hurt her feelings. Pleasing people is another of my failings, which is why I’d naively agreed to the H’s decision of travelling to Prince Albert via the infamous Swartberg Pass.

As we ambled towards the latter, I learnt that said padstal “nun” was not a nun after all, but more likely a member of a Christian sect that lays much weight on the “end times”. The H had deduced as much from the lettering on her headdress and his parting conversati­on with her. (I was too busy trying to cover my legs and hide my pancake.)

It was an ambitious and talented Thomas Baines and 250 convicts who made the impossible possible, carving a dirt-track route through the Swartberg Mountains way back in the 19th century. It took three hours for a convoy of 100 horse-drawn carts to reach “the top” (1 575m above sea level) of the pass to celebrate this engineerin­g feat in 1888. Thereafter, a transport wagon led by eight mules would regularly traverse the pass between Prince Albert and Oudtshoorn, delivering post and paying passengers. By 1904, the first car had successful­ly completed the 27km pass with its acute bends, steep gradient (1:8 in places) and gravel surface. I know this now. Had I known it beforehand, I would never ever have consented to the one-hour-20minute trip.

The warm sensation of the renegade pancake in my handbag was nothing compared to the anguish I was to endure. While I have already admitted to a fear of heights, I also suffer from a recurring

 ?? © PIET GROBLER ??
© PIET GROBLER
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