How will South Africa keep up the tremendous spirit of goodwill, ubuntu and patriotism … the morning after?
Now that the dust has settled after the final match at Soccer City last Sunday, and Spain have emerged victorious as the new world soccer champions, many South Africans are feeling a little bit at a loose end. Like something’s missing. Almost as if your charasmatic best friend has left the country …
But South Africans are definitely ‘a boer maak ‘n plan’ (a farmer makes a plan) type of people. And already resourceful and forward-thinking South Africans are finding creative ways to keep the momentum going.
One of these is “Keep Flying the Flag” - a campaign that launched on Friday 9 July 2010, and already has the support of more than 60 local businesses - from giants like Vodacom, Toyota, Sasol, ABSA and Primedia to smaller alternatives like eBlockwatch (SMS-based community crime prevention) and Dial-a-Nerd (phone-in IT support).
The campaign calls for individuals and businesses to incorporate the Keep Flying logo into their advertising (which can be downloaded from their website - www.keepflying.co.za); buy Keep Flying buttons to hand out to staff, customers, family and friends and a customised email signature to use on your correspondence. A manual is also available on the Keep Flying site - which details how companies, brands and caring South Africans can join in the campaign.
The campaign is the brainchild of advertising agency, DraftfcbSouth Africa, in an attempt to stave-off any ‘post-World Cup depression’ that has affected other host nations. So far, the site has received over 8 000 hits and they have responded to more than 200 emails from companies wanting to get involved.
As Draftfcb’s Group CEO, John Dixon, said: “I am amazed and delighted by the response our call to action has prompted and can only encourage more and more companies and fellow South Africans to embrace the flag in this manner.
“The FIFA World Cup was our chance to show the world Africa’s potential; now is the time to maintain that momentum, to show them that we can achieve, and will. Let the end of the World Cup be our beginning.”
Another great initiative is the “Fly the Flag Fridays” campaign organised by the International Marketing Council who are also responsible for Brand South Africa site. This campaign calls for South Africans to wear their country’s colours and fly the flag on Fridays. It continues the spirit in a similar vein to their earlier campaign during the build-up to and the duration of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, “Football Fridays” - which called for South Africans to wear their favourite teams football colours (hopefully those of Bafana Bafana!) every Friday. The campaign which was a big hit all around the country - especially with corporates like banks, supermarkets and stores where you’d be sure to greeted by staff sporting Bafana-yellow shirts on Fridays.
Any more ideas you can think of? And c’mon South Africans - keep the flag flying high!
Before you double, treble or even quadruple your normal rates for the upcoming 2010 FIFA ™ World Cup, please consider these few points:
* Germany didn’t inflate their prices hectically during the 2006 - especially for accommodation. Many of the visitors would just bus home again after matches so it was never really an issue. Besides, there was never a shortage of accommodation to begin with.
* Host nations experience a boom in tourism in the years immediately after they’ve hosted a FIFA ™ World Cup. This was especially true in Germany in 2007, although tourism slowed down in 2008 with the global economic crisis.
* South Africa - and Cape Town especially - is already perceived by some as ‘overpriced’. While we all know that South Africa is the most beautiful country in the world with the most exceptional, nicest people, potential visitors may easily be swayed by other destinations where they can get top accommodation and great scenery for far less than they’d pay here eg especially destinations like India & Asia. 5-star resorts cost around US$ 400 - 500 whereas a similar 5-star option in Cape Town costs about US$ 700 - 1100 - more than DOUBLE the price?! Surely, a room is a room is a room at that kind of level?
* South Africa is a ‘long haul’ destination - and the largest expense in getting here is the airfare. If people perceive it to be expensive on the ground too, we’re losing the battle!
* South Africans are known as some of the most hospitable people on Earth. Let’s nurture that - rather than become known as the most money-grabbing.
And lastly, please let us not lose sight of what the legacy of tourism can be like AFTER 2010.
The 2010 FIFA ™ World Cup is a once-off, amazing opportunity to give the rest of the world a taste for our rich and diverse smorgasbord of wildlife, scenery, culture, history, adrenalin and adventure.
Let’s do whatever we can to make sure that it makes them hunger for more! Not leave with a bad taste in their mouths …
This year, why not get into the true spirit of Christmas? Give gifts that matter - and bring hope to a the millions of South Africans struggling for a better life.
It’s a great idea - and it is affordable. The gifts start from as little as R50 and then R100, R250, R500, R1000 (you can also buy several different ones or several of one kind) - and include a range of items that can make a difference to communities, people personally, education, health and environment. Like compost or seedlings for food gardens, educational toys and soccer balls, HIV tests, family food parcels, crutches and tractors.
Once you’re happy with your gift/s, you can send a personal message to the person you’re buying the gift on behalf of - to let them know you’re making Christmas matter for others - in their name.
It’s that simple. And it feels that good.
And you KNOW it’s helping to make a difference.
“Make Christmas Matter” is an online campaign that lets you choose a range of alternative gifts that make a meaningful addition to the lives of many South Africans - from social development to community upliftment and education.
As Communications Manager for GreaterGood SA, Roxy Mitchell, says through this campaign they want to let people know that there is an alternative way of giving - especially at this time of year.
“Everyone has something to give and many people have the desire to give to those in need, but don’t know where or what to give.”
Mitchell says they chose 4 beneficiaries for 2009 from a shortlist of projects that had passed a strict evaluation process including site visits and peer reviews.
These are:
* an educational toy library for the Mbuba community in rural KwaZulu-Natal
* a food garden, recycling program and conservation field trips for Dargle Primary School in the Midlands Meander area
* new kitchen for the St. Josephs nursing home for chronically ill and disabled children in Cape Town
* mobility canes, signature guides and liquid level indicators for 96 visually impaired people in the Free State.
So far, this annual campaign has contributed over R2 million to 22 social development projects in South Africa since its conception in 2005. According to Mitchell more people are starting to think twice about buying into the commercialism around Christmas, and starting to think about those who have less than themselves.
Go on. Make Christmas Matter - and visit Gifts 4 Good
There’s no way you can begin to compare Halloween in South Africa to Halloween in the USA.
For starters, we don’t habitually grow those oversized, pregnant-looking orange pumpkins. If you do get them, they’re usually imported and cost the earth.
And ‘Trick or Treating’ is not really considered a safe practice because of our unfortunate high crime rate.
In one camp, there’re the sceptics who believe that it’s just one more American-inspired commercial rip-off where you’re coerced into buying scary costumes, plastic vampire teeth and kiddie-sized, play-play orange buckets.
In another, there’re the staunch Christians who believe it’s an evil, Satanic celebration and anything to do with Halloween should be avoided at all costs.
But there’s another school of thought: it’s the ONLY day/night of the year where kids are allowed to dress up collectively - AND get sweets. Do me a favour. And they are allowed to be scary! Which kids don’t get shivers of delight down their spines while scaring the pants off each other with ghost-stories after lights out? Or getting their fill of horror and teen-vamp movies when they’re a little older?
Perhaps it all comes down to intent. If you just intend to have some scary, harmless fun with friends and family, hey, what a pleasure.
And some of the complexes and safe, gated communities make a special neighbourhood thing of it - getting all the kids to go off Treak or Treating in safe numbers, while all the parents get together in the common for a bring & braai. Whether they’re in Fourways Gardens or Fancourt.
If you do want to do something this Halloween, there are loads of good happenings - from the usual family stuff at Randburg’s Brighwater Commons and the Johannesburg Zoo to the Horrorfest Film Fest at the Labia in Cape Town to Halloween Balls to Pink Train Rides to hectically horrific house parties.
Check out your local newspapers to see what’s happening in your area or visit What’s On website and search for ‘Halloween’. GOTRAVEL24.com also has a great list of festive Halloween ideas.
With all the recent hype about Eskom requesting to increase electricity prices at around 45% a year for the next 3 years (supposedly to prevent a once-off increase of 146%!!!) emails, petitions and outrage have been heating up the airwaves.
Which is why I was pleasantly surprised to see that I’d been cc’d on the following email from a good friend who works for City Power in Johannesburg. He was answering the concerns of another mutual friend. The writer’s a dedicated, highly intelligent and thoughtful soul. I say he’s wasted working for the municipality. Evan (my husband) says we should be way thankful that he does.
With minimal editing (for length) & highlighting (my emphasis), I’d like to share it with you as it cuts through the rants and just makes good common sense, offering logical reasonings, ideas and solutions. And a whole lot of stuff we should all be DOING already …
Although this was written for the private house in mind - the principles can just as easily be applied to guest houses, lodges, hotels and so on.
Dear XXX,
Glad to see you’ve decided to take some action instead of the usual South African whinging - we still have the cheapest power in the world and have not realised its true value, nor the environmental benefits of reducing consumption in addition to controlling the electricity bill.
Don’t get me wrong - we are also not happy with Eskom’s suggested increases, but urgent action is required to reduce consumption through investments in energy efficiency, otherwise I predict that by this time next year, we may start to see load shedding, getting progressively worse over the following 3 years. The key is for everybody to invest in energy efficiency measures - not generators - that’s the wrong investment.
I thought most of us, with a fondness for the bush, would realize that to generate one kWh of electricity requires the combustion of almost a kilogram of coal and the evaporation of 1,2 litres of precious fresh water. When you realize that Eskom last year alone burnt more than 200 million tons of coal, which released about 260 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, to generate electricity for our country you would have to be really thick to think that this is not having an effect on the atmosphere and the environment. After all, it only took Mother Nature about a billion years to trap all the prehistoric carbon dioxide into the ground as oil and coal and convert the atmosphere into the oxygen rich one so essential to life as we know it. In another short, 200 years we will have burnt it all and put a lot of the prehistoric CO2 back into the atmosphere. Ironically, we have all seen the strip-mining activities next to the Witbank highway on our way down to the lowveld game reserves - this does not look pretty - have we not made the connection between this and power generation?
The concepts in the power4home scheme you refer to are right, but the prices are exaggerated. Sure, you may pick up a photovoltaic panel for $100 in the States, but unfortunately not in SA just yet. Before you invest in these, rather go for a solar water heater system. We probably have the best sunshine in the world for this, but seem to ignore it completely. The energy yield and offset of your power bill will be much higher than with photovoltaics, even if you build them yourself, which is not as easy as they claim. Solar Water Heater prices are coming down too - a 300 litre system will set you back around R15k at the moment, but will pay for itself in less than 5 years if there are four hot water users in the house - and it’s yours - forever, and free as long as the sun shines.
Starting from zero cost to most expensive, do the following to minimise your electrical energy consumption:
Do this at No Cost:
Change the household’s energy-saving culture - if a room is empty, no lights should be on. If an appliance or computer or computer game or TV set is not currently being used, it must be switched off. This costs nothing, but you may have to keep up the pressure to sustain this ‘energy conscious’ behavior. What puzzles me is that we as South Africans seem to have lost this culture somewhere in the 70s and 80s. We had to make every cent count before then.
If you have a domestic worker, educate him/her about appliance usage. She can play a significant role in energy efficiency, which we often overlook. They are willing to learn too. Irons left on, half loaded washing machines, habitual use of only the hot water tap regardless of the water requirement, over-cooking food and using hot water to thaw frozen food are but a few of the bad energy habits of an uninformed domestic worker. Whatever energy they save can be used more productively by industry to grow the economy.
Get to know which appliances chomp power. The biggest is the geyser, followed by space heating or under-floor heating in winter (air conditioning in summer), followed by swimming pool pumps, then cooking, followed by fridges and deep freezes and lastly lighting. The most obvious is to reduce the time spent using these appliances.
Deliberately make less hot water by turning down your geyser thermostat. 55 to 60 degrees is sufficient. Plumbers (who don’t want call-backs) and housewives (who can never have enough hot water, especially if there are newborns in the house) always want them set to 70 degrees which is unnecessary and runs the risk of scalding unsuspecting people and small children especially. Also the less hot water is used, the less you will need to make - this is so obvious and yet people don’t realize it. Only pour out as much hot water as you need - again this is a culture thing, quite difficult to get people to change their habits without confronting them. You’ve got to be cruel to the humans to be kind to the environment.
In a similar vein, a leaking hot water tap - even just a drip - consumes a lot of energy and wastes water too. These are simple to fix.
Monitor use of space heaters in winter Most heaters - typically the oil-finned type - chew energy. They are left on when nobody is home, and the thermostats are usually set to maximum by default - again kids and skinny women are the culprits. Heaters should be used only to make a house comfortable - to keep warm, simply dress properly. (If it’s your lucky night - well, that’s a different story …)
Use a plug-in timer (R100) to automatically control when the heater is ‘allowed to be on’. This solves the problem of remembering to switch off when rushing to work in the morning.
Look for duplicate appliances and disconnect them. The least thought-about are fridges and deep freezes - many houses have two (of each). Usually the old one is relegated to the garage to keep a six pack of beers cool. What a waste. Old fridges consume way more than modern ones - often 3x more power. Get rid of them - preferably scrap them and don’t sell to the pawn shop - this just passes the problem on to a less affluent person and doesn’t reduce the total load which is what we do need to do.
Only use second geysers for guest rooms when guests are actually staying there. Switch them off otherwise. The trick is to plan things properly. It is a complete fallacy that this action will shorten the life of the element or use more energy to re-heat the water. I’m not convinced that switching off your operational geyser is really worth the hassle if there are more than three people in the household.
Reduce the running time of swimming pool heaters to the minimum required to keep the water clean. Apparently 3 to 5 hours a day should do.
The next lot of interventions will cost you money up front, but will actually pay for themselves in relatively short times:
Insulate at least the first 3 metres of hot water pipes leaving the geyser. If possible, insulate all the hot water pipes. If you go to the right supplier (Air-o-Thene in Langlaagte, Johannesburg) this will cost about R9 a metre for the ‘zip-lock’ pipe insulation which is easy to install. Don’t look for it at the usual hardware megastores, they’ve lost the plot, asking R35 per metre - #**s.
A geyser blanket, if properly installed, will pay for itself (R350) in a year or two, although the saving depends where the geyser is installed. Just think of a hot ceiling in summer, where the heat in the roof void is probably hotter than the water in the geyser - the blanket will stop the heat going into the geyser as well. It solves the problem for us as electricity suppliers in winter though, so we support it.
Replace all old incandescent (hot to touch) light bulbs with energy-saver Compact Fluorescent Lamps (CFLs). Go through your house and count the number of light fittings you have. It is not uncommon to have more than 30 in an average middle class house. Costs about R500 to replace them all, one of the quickest payback interventions. Tip - write the date on the base with a koki pen when you install them - this way you may be able to return the odd faulty or early failure lamps at no cost. Caution though - for some stupid reason, it is difficult to find the warm-white variety for use inside the house, which have the more cosy look and feel of the old light bulbs. There seems to be a glut of Cool-white (very stark and to some extent unpleasant to the eye, but suitable for security lighting) lamps in our market - perhaps buyers are ignorant of middle income preferences. Also, buy the right base - count how many bayonet fittings vs edison screw type you have before you buy.
The popular downlighters are a problem though. For now, these are best left alone as the CFL or Light Emitting Diode energy efficient replacements are just too costly at the moment.
For outside security lights, get the day/night switched type (R200). You can also get an electrician to install a photocell (R700 - a bit of a rip-off)
Replace your conventional shower head with an aerating, low-flow shower head
(R300 for a good quality one). This feels the same as a regular shower head but uses much less hot water. Good energy and water savings. Avoid the drip type (smaller holes without aerating system) - this will make you unpopular in the household.
Install a gas cooking hob (not oven - electric ovens are still more energy-efficient) which is better than electric. A 2-plate hob will cost about R1400, but you will need a registered gas fitter to install - about another R1500 minimum. An added attraction of this appliance is that you will still be able to cook in the event of future load-shedding.
Install the think pink ceiling insulation (R6000 for the average house). Benefits in winter and summer.
Finally - again - install a solar water heating system (R15 000).
Hope this helps - please pass on to anyone you know.
Twitter is great for some things - like flagging some really awesome pics of some really crazy South African dudes from Cape Town ’slacklining’ on Table Mountain. I’ve never even heard of it before (cos clearly I live on the g-r-o-u-n-d!) - but it looks like it’s only for the certifiably insane … or those who live, breathe, eat and sleep adrenaline.
The photographer, Greg Beadle, has captured these step-by-step (no pun intented!) images admirably. I think I was actually holding my breath as I looked at them.
Here’s one just to give you a taste … now go and visit Cape Town Tourism’s blog to see the rest of these heart-in-your-mouth photos.
There’s a lot to be proud of as a rainbow nation. And as one that boasts 11 official languages. While English is kinda accepted as the official language, there are lots of people who would prefer to see at least 3 languages offered in schools - (me, for one!) - instead of just the regular fare of English and Afrikaans. How else will the sharp edges between the cultures begin to blur?
Saw this amazing, phonetic translation of the South African National Anthem (sung in FIVE of our languages) but again, it’s assuming that the reader is English. But definitely think it will help people get a better pronunciation of the languages they’re not fluent in.
The Natal’s newspaper, The Mercury, first picked up & published the story that the traveller’s bible, Lonely Planet, has listed Durban as one of the top 10 family beach holiday cities in the world in its latest guide book which has just hit the bookstores in the USA last week.
Other global cities to crack the nod in this prestigious list are: Kauai in Hawaii, Cottlesloe in Australia, Karon Beach in Thailand, Portugal’s Tavira, Mexico’s Sayulita and Bali’s Sanur in the latest edition of Lonely Planet’s“Travel with Children”. Pretty impressive company to keep!
“Durban resembles a gigantic resort holiday paradise, raised for the sole purpose of entertaining families,” the Lonely Planet publication says of the city in its section on South Africa. “Lined with safe beaches watched over by lifeguards, the Golden Mile is great for swimming, snorkelling and water sports.”
Good for Durban. It’s a friendly city with a hot, tropical climate (don’t think Durbanites know what long pants and jerseys are!). It’s pouring money & resources into its new beach-front complex. It’s also going to have one of the best-looking new stadiums for the FIFA 2010 World cup, in my opinion.
I think many tourists bypass Durban in favour of her more famous & beautiful sister, Cape Town, and the loss is definitely theirs.
It’s got an awesome climate - you can enjoy a holiday there at any time of the year. It’s got miles of golden beaches and the sea’s actually WARM to swim in!
Ah-ha. Looks like the rest of the world may be waking up to one of our best kept secrets - and the beach paradise we are blessed with on our eastern shores.
I did know that this was one of the first FIFA 2010 World Cup Stadiums to be finished. But I hadn’t seen that many photos of it. It really is a spectacular stadium.
The pictures below were supposedly taken on the 25 July 2009. You can see these and more on Nelson Mandela Bay’s official Port Elizabeth 2010 FIFA World Cup site.
I think even if you haven’t get a football-watching bone in your body, you can’t help but be super impressed … and a little awed by these incredible architectural feats - and the awesome designers, technicians and labourers who made it all happen!
Good one, Port Elizabeth!
Viewed from the ocean, the new Nelson Mandela Bay 2010 World Cup Stadium looks like a magnificently-crafted space ship hovering just above the water.
This view is from across the city and shows the stadium at the shore’s edge.
Cape Town Stadium (formerly known as Green Point Stadium) is nearing completion … and it’s starting to look really good. So if you’re in Cape Town, be sure to go to the stadium’s visitor centre for a comprehensive insight into the building of the stadium, its history and its shining beacon of hope for the future of sport in South Africa (yes, there will be life after 2010!).
School groups are also welcome. At the 2010 Cape Town Stadium Visitor Centre, every effort has been made to share and stimulate a sense of soccer and national pride in the build-up to the FIFA ™ 2010 Soccer World Cup.
There’s lots to see and absorb - a multi-media theatre performance, historical pics of South Africa’s rich soccer past, an official 2010 Stadium architectural model and a virtual tour of the 2010 Stadium.
Visit the Green Point Stadium website for the latest pics and more details …
Note: Unfortunately, the Visitor Centre has been closed to make way for a new athletics track post 2010. However, a new Visitors Centre is planned for the near future. See Cape Town Government websute for the full story.
Please also visit the Cape Town Blog for some a-Ma-Zing pics of the stadium - by day & by night, viewed from nearby, from Table Mountain and from Signal Hill: 2010 Green Point Stadium pics