Operation Oysterhood: 25 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

Joanne Hichens, Nancy Richards, Consuelo Roland, a lucky woman, Penny Haw

It was a day of festival preparations (all in place now!), and in the evening, we gathered at Exclusive Books Cavendish for the final Karavan Press launch of the week: The Skipper’s Daughter by Nancy Richards. And it was fabulous! I could listen to Nancy for hours, and then more. She was in conversation with the wonderful Kim Cloete. To think that this book was never really supposed to be shared with a wider public beyond Nancy’s circle of family and friends – and now hundreds of readers around the world are delighting in the story – is truly something. It is beautiful to witness and to be part of this journey.

With Penny Haw and Melissa A. Volker

The evening was also a great reminder of how lucky I feel to be working with all these amazing women. Every time I meet with them, I feel inspired and encouraged. Together, we make great things happen. Thank you!

The evening ended on a delicious high – with my love and our friends at Mario’s. I know tripe is not everyone’s ‘cup of tea’, but oh, when it is prepared so well, it is a treat. And we had the most divine zabaione for dessert. The accompanying wines were to live for! But the best was the company. Especially on a day when a new variant and rising Covid-19 infection numbers were a strong reminder of the times we are living in. I am grateful to all my vaccinated friends for caring.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD

Operation Oysterhood: 24 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

It felt good to see my counsellor this morning again. I missed last week’s session when I travelled to McGregor. But I did my therapy ‘homework’ and today we discussed death, confidence, responsibility and guilt. All interconnected, perhaps strangely.

The rest of the day was devoted to different aspects of Karavan Press – the upcoming festival, reprints, new books, deliveries, a visit to Digital Action where I could witness the first encounter between an author and her book (always special), and admin – much less poetic.

This evening, however, felt like a continuation of the poetry festival in McGregor: we launched two poetry volumes at Exclusive Books Cavendish: Stephen Symons’s FOR EVERYTHING THAT IS POINTLESS AND PERFECT and Justin Fox’s Beat Routes.

After the event, I met with two writers from a writing group that used to meet regularly in the time ‘before’, but haven’t since the beginning of lockdown. The three of us had pizza and talked books, publishing and the importance of integrity and empathy in writing. We had lots of garlic – so much easier to indulge in when one walks around with a mask :) A lovely evening.

Tomorrow, I hope to begin the second last edit of the year. Everything feels delayed, but everything gets done eventually, and one just needs to be kind to oneself.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD

Operation Oysterhood: 23 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

At the launch of Penny Haw’s The Wilderness Between Us earlier tonight.

We are launching books left, right and centre :) This week, I might have just as well moved into Exclusive Books Cavendish as I will be there every evening three nights in a row. Happy days!

The preparations for our Karavan Press Literary Festival are also in full swing. To say that this is a busy time would be an understatement of the year.

It is not even ten, but I am longing for bed. Another long day ahead of me tomorrow.

Good night.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD

Operation Oysterhood: 20-22 November

I loved every second of it – Poetry in McGregor: the time with my love; the reconnecting with friends in the literary community; the readings, launches and performances; the screeching of the peacocks in the garden at Temenos; the great coffee from the coffee truck and the Clemengold G&T’s; the hearty food at Tebaldi’s; the country sunsets; and the beauty of all those words washing over us during the entire weekend. We are hungry for real live engagement and entertainment and, when it is poetry, it feels a million times more special.

It was Nadine Gordimer’s 98th birthday on Saturday. I owe her so much and have been celebrating the occasion for as long as I have known her. Her words brought me to South Africa in 2004. And who said that poetry ‘makes nothing happen’ … :)

But we also received very sad news that day from the furry family at Oudrif. Beloved Peanut, Dassie Huntress Extraordinaire, passed away. She will be missed. She was one of my favourite dogs ever. I am so glad that we saw her recently and had the opportunity to hunt dassies together (even though we never caught one, of course) …

While away, I had nightmares about Salieri being ill and our festival audience not turning up for the event and, and, and … Anxiety manifesting in weird ways at night. But we had a great audience at the festival, and my lovely catsitter was so kind to the Furry Ones that they only missed me a little. And they are all fine and happy. They were all relaxed when I returned home. And this lovely gift was waiting for me from Sue Brown, a Karavan Press author:

I do work with the most wonderful and generous people. And it is so good to be back home with my furry loved ones.

But the return was also chaos. The to-do lists are mushrooming around me. And it was time for Topolino’s 50 000 km service! ‘Your car is in very good condition,’ I was told. Thank all motor-goddesses!

Waiting for Topolino

Operation Oysterhood: 19 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

The festival is officially open and my love is here. Before the opening ceremony and my love’s arrival, I spent the day being lazy – reading and eating and drinking coffee and nice wines. I had a few ‘within’ moments in the garden at Temenos and the first few proper conversations since my arrival. I also moved to a different place, because the cottage I was staying at was not available for the festival weekend. Before I left, though, my landlady told me that we had actually met before: she had attended my launch of The Fifth Mrs Brink at the Book Lounge in 2017. Her South African father was in exile when he met her Dutch mother and she grew up reading local literature, so she knew André’s work well even before moving to Cape Town roughly at the same time I did. Small world.

Now, we are on a beautiful wine farm for the weekend. It is even more quiet here, and remote and just what is needed. Gatherings of people are wonderful, but exhausting for introverts at the best of time. And the times are not the best. Yet, I am just delighted that we can have a real festival again and celebrate poetry – food for the soul.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD

Operation Oysterhood: 18 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

My cottage on the outskirts of McGregor is located only a few hundred metres away from the local cemetery. I have never visited it before, but it was something my landlady mentioned when I moved in yesterday (she walks her dogs along the path to the cemetery in the mornings) and I decided to explore the place despite finding South African cemeteries highly depressing. I am used to more stone, order and elegance – at least that is how Polish and Austrian cemeteries feature in my memory – and I found very little evidence of any of these characteristics here, but I did find two graves of people who are most likely related to me by marriage, and there was something deeply humbling in the realisation. I also stood at the foot of a freshly (a few days ago) covered grave and for the first time ever felt unsettled by the idea of a human being’s body decomposing under my feet. When I noticed earth flying out of another grave nearby, unlike the three gravediggers inside, I was thoroughly spooked.

I still think of death when I travel, especially when I am driving on my own. I can’t help thinking that I might never come back. And every time the thought crosses my mind, another immediately follows: my loved ones, human and feline, need me – I can’t just disappear. It’s complete nonsense, of course, because life and death don’t work like that, but it is what it is.

Someone I know is mourning a sister. Someone else I follow on Twitter is all alone on her wedding anniversary today. Their loved ones left us much too soon.

The first time I came to McGregor it was because the woman who had just lost her sister told me that coming here would be healing for me after the death of my husband. It was. She was right. But there is nothing as straightforward as this about death and grief. It’s a muddled mess.

McGregor is home to many elderly people. At forty-four, grey and wrinkled, I feel like a snotty youngster here. And it is good to feel young, with nearly a whole life ahead of me, but I also understand why grief is on my mind. The first time I went to see my counsellor after my breakdown in July, she immediately recognised the waves of grief washing over me at the time, for the people and things I’d lost and for the loved ones and things I was petrified of losing: my love, Salieri, myself, Karavan Press and all else (because of health complications, crime and the pandemic). No matter how self-aware and resilient I might be, I am also only human, and sometimes running is easier than sitting still and being, with all the knowing and pain it entails. One needs calm and time to confront and process grief – real and potential.

Twenty-four hours of relative calm and I find myself walking among graves. Even the act of putting one foot in front of the other makes me think of death, of the book I read about the connection between our mobility and mortality – Atul Gawande’s Being Mortal.

These are not morbid thoughts, even if they might seem so. I am happy, more relaxed than I have been in a long time, the tension in my body is draining away with every step I take, poem I read, coffee cup I drink and meal I have in solitude and silence. I watched the nest builders outside my cottage for most of the afternoon and their movement and song brought beauty into the day. But, I am resting, and this is a good thing. Because in my case rest requires a lot of hard work.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD

Operation Oysterhood: 17 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

After the rains

I did not leave as early as I had wanted to, but once I was on the road, everything went smoothly, rain and all. Driving on the N1 out of Cape Town always reminds me of my first trip to South Africa with my brother, February 2004: we travelled on the N1 all the way up to Joburg and beyond. It was amazing.

McGregor has a different history. I have been coming here regularly for nearly seven years – for two reasons: restoration and poetry, sometimes both at the same time – like now.

The Poetry in McGregor Festival begins on Friday night, but I am here early to simply be, rest. I rented a little cottage on the outskirts of town but within walking distance of every place one would want to walk to in McGregor, like the tiny grocer that sells milk or the local garagist wine cellar, Bemind. Being here without tasting a glass of their MCC would feel incomplete.

I arrived, walked, bought milk and bubbly, watched two talks I have been meaning to watch on YouTube for a long time, had biltong and a G&T, listened to the rain, had a long, hot shower, and walked to Tebaldi’s for dinner (one can do that here, alone, without fear). On my way back, I looked at all the offers of properties for sale in McGregor and surroundings. The seeming calm of the place is always tempting. But maybe it appears like to this to visitors only?

Dinner for one, with poetry manuscript and cat.

It is going to be an early night, and probably an early morning. There will be dreams in new places, coffee, and a chocolate muffin I brought with me specially for the occasion. I also brought with me many great books to read (I always travel with a library), but I might just watch the birds build a nest outside my cottage. It’s soothing.

Good night from McGregor.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD

Operation Oysterhood: 16 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

A very long day with an even longer to-do list, but the most important stuff got done, and at the end of it all was my love and a HARU burger (two for one on a Tuesday night, and they are THE BEST burgers in town).

And tomorrow, rain is supposed to fall, so my sitting in the sun might be metaphorical, but no matter what the weather, I can’t wait for some rest. I am falling over with exhaustion, physical and mental.

Early night.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD

Operation Oysterhood: 14-15 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

Unmoored. Maybe it’s just my hormones, or the prospect of travelling again, or maybe I am under too much pressure – whatever the reason, unmoored is how I feel.

I did manage to rest on Sunday morning, but since then the to-do list has been relentless. What keeps me going is that spot in the sun in the middle of nowhere that has my name on it. It’s waiting … Soon.

Highlight of the weekend: picking up my love from the airport after his trip. Everything is better when he is near.

The last Karavan Press title of the year is at the printers and we are reprinting one other book. Ahead of us is the Poetry in McGregor Festival, three launches at EB Cavendish, the Karavan Press Literary Festival (fully sold out), and two more book launches at the Alma Café. The last event is on the 8th. It will be amazing to interact with readers on such a scale again. Then: the festive season, which in my case will be the doing-nothing season. I am putting pink bubbly on ice.

I was picking up a pizza for dinner the other day when I heard a song on the radio that just stole my heart after only a few seconds. I jotted down a few lines of the lyrics on the pizza box to find it again, and I have been listening on repeat ever since:

‘Take Me To The River’ by Connell Cruise

Great to discover that this is a local singer/songwriter. I will have to do some more research. But for now, this song is enough.

Darkness surrenders softly
The sunlight caresses your skin
You’re my forever lover
I’m your original sin

Good night.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD

Operation Oysterhood: 13 November

OYSTERHOOD is reclusiveness or solitude, or an overwhelming desire to stay at home.

— @HaggardHawks

A good day. Work in the morning and rest for the rest of the day (word repetition intended). James Leatt had a book signing at EB Somerset Mall today and I went to make sure that he had company between the signatures. I met friends for coffee beforehand, and while at the bookshop, I found The Sol Plaatje EU Poetry Anthology Vol VIII on sale: in it, poems by Lester Walbrugh and Luthando Dlamini, among others, but I bought the book because of these two poems, both stunning. I feel honoured to be working with the two writers who wrote them. And I look forward to the rest of the anthology.

My friend Debbie came to visit in the afternoon and could be persuaded to stay for a simple braai on my stoep in the evening. As a gift, she brought me the beautiful wire bird pictured above. And as always, she also brought a lot of wisdom and kindness into a few hours of our conversation. People like her are the greatest treasures in my life.

And talking about treasures: my love is coming home tomorrow.

But first: I intend to spend Sunday morning being super lazy. That’s the plan.

Good night.

Be kind. Wear a mask. Support local. Get vaccinated, please.

“Physical distancing remains one of the key strategies to curb this pandemic.”

— NICD