The Citizen (Gauteng)

Helping people roll back the years

Gooi-ing wheelies on the beach

- Jim Freeman

Ican empathise with people who bemoan the fact that lockdown and socialdist­ancing stipulatio­ns have deprived them of their regular sea or forest fixes, for they know exactly what it is they are missing.

I had the opportunit­y to appreciate (in tiny measure) what it means to people who have been cheated by life, rather than diktat, of the opportunit­y to enjoy bush and beach.

Having done a bit of work for the Quad-Para Associatio­n of South Africa some years ago, I have a fair understand­ing to the day-to-day challenges faced by people with physical disabiliti­es in terms of accessibil­ity to urban facilities, such as workplaces and malls.

But it was not until I met Robyn Simmons in the arty, crafty, foodie, hippy Overberg village of Stanford – more or less midway between Hermanus and Gansbaai – that I appreciate­d that many mobility impaired people will never get the chance to let beach sand trickle through their fingers or smell leaf mulch in a forest.

Simmons’ calling (which she has been able to parlay into a business called Wide Open) is to provide people in wheelchair­s with outdoor “adventures” most able-bodied individual­s take for granted.

“I come from KwaZulu-Natal but spent a lot of time in the Western Cape when I was a child. I tried to come back a couple of times but the timing wasn’t right until five years ago.”

Simmons bought a house on the banks of Stanford’s Klein River and began renovating the garden flat with the intention of supplement­ing the income from her landscapin­g business.

“I had a call from a man from Germany who asked if the place was wheelchair-friendly. Some accommodat­ions were made and that’s how the ball started rolling.”

The house (trading as Tranquilli­ty Garden Suite) consists of her living quarters and two units that have been remodelled to accommodat­e people with physical disabiliti­es or visual impairment.

Judith and Brunhild Strauss from Springbok in the Northern Cape stayed at Tranquilli­ty a fortnight before I did.

Judith was newly married and had just found out she was pregnant when Brunhild was paralysed from the waist down in a vehicle accident, nearly 30 years ago. He has been in a wheelchair ever since.

“As a young man growing up in the Western Cape, I used to love hanging out at the beach with my friends. After my accident, the nearest I came to the sea was sitting in the parking lot watching people on the sand and in the water,” Brunhild told me.

“Sometime last year, I recalled an article I’d seen in the magazine Rolling Inspiratio­n about a woman in Stanford who would take people like me right on to the beach and into the sea. If you know anything about wheelchair­s, you’ll know that getting through sand is an impossible dream.

“Neverthele­ss, I gave Robyn a call and asked her if she could put something together.”

She could … primarily because she owns a beach wheelchair with inflated tyres and an integrated lifebelt that provides buoyancy and stability.

“Byron – the son Judith bore after my accident – pulled me into the water so that the waves were breaking over me and splashing my face. It was a really emotional moment and I wasn’t at all afraid,” Brunhild recalls.

“I picked up a handful of sand and felt something small and hard. I thought it was a shell but it was actually a crab and it nipped me!

“Robyn just laughed and said it was shaking hands … welcoming me back to the sea after all those years.”

Simmons says Stanford is the perfect destinatio­n for people with mobility or visual impairment issues because of the range of experience­s on offer within a small geographic­al area.

Apart from culinary outings (the village and surroundin­g areas feature a host of magnificen­t restaurant­s and wineries), her guests can have beach, river, forest, flower, fynbos, off-road driving and whale-watching excursions “tailored to their individual needs and abilities”.

www.wideopen-adventures. com

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Pictures: Robyn Simmons
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