Thereafter, we had the privilege
of caring for our grandchildren over the following two weeks. Unfortunately,
their parents had barely left when Finn went down with a bad cold that quickly
spread. Our flu jabs obviously hadn’t
time to build up immunity and we all steadily dropped like flies and battled to
get back on our feet. However, the weather was magnificent and the time spent
with Ella and Finn infinitely special.
Ella and Finn helped
with dinner particularly cowboy stew – arms raised as they dropped in their
chopped up vegetables to avoid burns from the frypan edges!
Their mornings were spent out and about Cape Town with their delightful au pair Tanya whom they loved to bits and she too, quickly found a place in our hearts. During these hours of free time -George fixed and sorted a list of household jobs in the flat or at Ruth’s home. This enabled Lea to spend sociable hours with her cousin swopping family history. It was guava season so if Ruth was busy with George, Lea collected up the stung guavas for the compost heap and picked a basketful from the tree for home consumption... After peeling and closely checking a double load of guavas it was inevitable to find only half were suitable for stewing. We never tired of guavas with ice cream each night though. One Saturday, Ella and Finn thoroughly enjoyed a picnic lunch under the spreading guava tree after they’d cleared the rotten ones away and resupplied our basket from the branches above - naturally Ruth became Mrs Guava to them! After the daily midday story-time Ella would speed up her brother’s slumber by singing or tickling him to sleep so that she could escape from her bed at first opportunity, to do home-schooling with Gogo. On waking, Finn would slot in for his share of school time doing plenty of cooking together and rapidly fell into a delightful routine with swimming lessons on Mondays and evenings down in the Rosebank Park after skype conversations with their parents on the other side of the world.
Ella and Finn never
tired of stories and Gogo loved reading to them morning, noon and night, quite
literally!
The wretched cold lurgy put paid
to socialising and we had to cancel lunch with Cousin Bev and Tom Fair on
George’s birthday and disrupt arrangements Great Aunt Holly had made for Ella
and Finn to meet up with similarly aged friends and sadly prevented us from
contacting many old friends. Foolhardy Holly insisted on nursing us over
weekends especially the long Easter weekend and of course she suffered the bug
at an inopportune time. At least Easter in Somerset West allowed us to catch up
with our niece and nephew Talya and Bion but, ever mindful of our great nephew
Chad we sent a flu warning re Easter Sunday which failed to reach Sally and
Adrian Gildenhuys in time so they came through and that made Easter,
regardless.
Easter Sunday was very
wet and miserable and thankfully Finn, Ella and Chad were able to keep busy
painting and decorating eggs.
Then there was ‘Stuart Little’ –
a baby grey squirrel taken into safekeeping by the family in the flat below-
David, Leigh, Joshua and Kirsten Pender. As they were a working family away
from home all day the Begg family had taken over the day care of the little
creature and we simply continued when Keith and Colleen left for America. By
then “Follow” (as Ella and Finn were
apt to call it) was fast maturing, leaping around the flat leaving trails of
poo or finely grated fruit and nuts in his wake. Surprisingly, Squirrel was
not a tidy eater! Over our two weeks he spent the vast majority of time in
our care charming and annoying us in turn, with his antics. Panic stations if
he disappeared – a habit of curling up within folded ‘throws’ slowly changed to
our beds or behind furniture - the relief of finding him made us realize what a
hold he had on our hearts! One afternoon he was banished to the tiny balcony
for bad behaviour and we left him curled up asleep while we ‘took the evening
air’. On our return he was no-where to be found. The little chap had fallen
from the first floor flat with a loud plop onto the cement below. Fortunately
David was home, heard the odd sound and looked out to see perky Stuart Little more or less dusting
himself off. We felt it was time to rehabilitate this little squirrel back into
the wild with two safe choices being available. The Pender family were
reluctant to part with Stuart and more keen to let him go free within their
patch of garden before eventually joining other squirrels roaming the park like
garden belonging to the blocks of flats as a way to go. We were fearful of the
cats!
Sadly this dear little
creature came to a sticky end within days of being given his freedom thanks to
the neighbouring cat who had spooked him often enough.
Keith and Colleen returned from a
tiring but most successful ‘talking’ trip in America and we returned to Ruth by
night. Autumn chills were setting in and we all enjoyed lunch in the
magnificent surrounds of Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens despite bouts of rain,
their first weekend home to celebrate
Ella’s fifth birthday. The following day, her party was held at the Hout Bay
Clay Cafe. What a setting! What a special party for one very excited little
girl! Her group of friends chose a piece of pottery and enjoyed painting before
being given a party box to enjoy eating out in the little playground.
Our family in
Kirstenbosch Gardens.
Colleen, kids and Gogo returned two weeks later to collect all the fired products and couldn’t resist spending another couple of hours painting up plates to go with Ella and Finn’s cups with the best coffee and carrot cake in the Cape! Of course, that entailed returning again to collect the finished product two weeks later which tied in with Mothers Day so Holly and Talya joined us for a Mothering Sunday on that glorious mountain perch.
Holly collected us after the
party and we moved out to Somerset West to stay with her. She was heavily
committed all week followed by a long weekend up in Durban to attend a wedding.
There was little to keep us busy and despite occupying ourselves with a mass of
books during the week and George doing artwork experimenting with pastels, he
felt a measure of frustration not to be helping Keith in the countdown to their
departure for Mozambique the coming week. ‘D day’ was to materialise immediately
after the return of the Toyota truck that last week of April. It had been in
for major overhaul and service during the past months.
We walked into Somerset West to see our dearest Italian friend Pauline Chisin and were shocked to discover her husband Giuseppe had died three weeks before.
An unexpected call from
Keith inviting us on a family weekend out at Greyton created excitement.
Come the end of this year, Keith
and Colleen were keen to buy a house in Greyton, a good hour beyond Somerset
West. We knew nothing of this village set within the mountains and this was a
good chance for us to see the place, look around with the family and see what
was available on the market. Their good friend Mike Kock, a wild life vet had
given them the use of his home in Greyton and would join us for Sunday lunch on
his return. Initially we all fell in love with a house backing onto a nature
reserve giving panoramic views proving unsuitable as a family home with its two
bedrooms although we spent the rest of the day wondering how to convert it... Travelling back down the main street the
Agent happened to point out a thatched home that had long been on the market
and far out of their price range. It ‘spoke’ to Col and out of quizzical
interest we wondered if it could be seen next day along with another, the Agent
had already set up. Ella and Finn loved Mike’s wonderful garden and more house
viewing didn’t appeal so their parents went off alone that Sunday morning. It
turned out to be the ‘dream home’ and we all drove back to Cape Town with heads
buzzing with a million thoughts. We camped on the lounge floor preferring to be
together in these last hectic days of unbelievable logistics enabling the men
to travel by road to Mozambique; the final papers for their Niassa Concession
pending; An Offer on the Greyton
house went in and, despite seeming unbelievably impossible... finances had to
be considered. Heads swirled in mighty confusion. Before anything was resolved
Keith and George departed in a wake of difficulties and a heavily laden
vehicle...
The following day, the bargain of
the century was declared – their offer had been accepted.
Holly collected Lea
for lunch with Bev and Tom Fair where we were joined by Robin and Jill Hartley
and a delightful family gathering of cousins marked this exciting “Begg”
day. Col had to sort out all the
paperwork before she flew to Maputo for important meetings. In her disbelief,
she was not prepared to think beyond...until the transfer was a done deed! That
took place two months later.
Keith, Colleen, Ella
and Finn’s Greyton home, seen all too briefly, now waits until the end of the
year for them. Hopefully it holds all their dreams and aspirations.
Between the care of Gogo and
Tanya – Ella and Finn got on with their lives while their Mom was away the four
days. With all that Col had on her plate the busy days of May slipped by until
the 20th when Gogo, Col and children flew to Johannesburg for two
nights and a day with her parents, Rod and Gill Zank. They had very recently
moved into a unit within a secure Aged complex and they enjoyed showing us
around. In a dawn temperature of 1.8⁰C we left Johannesburg, steadily
shedding layers of clothing as we flew north to Pemba. Keith and Oscar were
waiting for us.
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