Monday, December 30, 2019

Golf Balls, Entrepreneurship, Failure

We lived in an area called Birnam in a street called Sunnyside Road.  Birnam ain’t what it used to be having  been obliterated by new age neighbourhoods and hideous car showrooms.
Then, we lived like it was an 80’s Spielberg movie. I rocked corduroys, and shirts with coloured edge-trim. Days were longer and my hair too. I moonwalked through life in north stars with Velcro straps and/or a pair of pocked pumas. I had a skateboard with gummy wheels and an all-legit hand-me-down bmx. We set up Centre court between house 16 and 18, and we skate boarded like tony hawk. We trawled the burbs waving at store owners and friendly neighbours like jayzee in harlem. We were proper neighbourhood kids. Life was good.
Birnam was a suburb of maybe two streets and we knew everyone in that duo. If we didn’t see other kids on the grassy pavements we’d see them at one of the many stores that offered coin op arcade games. And if a new kid moved into the area, or grew up to be old enough to walk the streets on his own, we’d be sure to meet their acquaintance at those same arcade-offering venues.
A 20 cent coin would get you one game. 20 cent coins were a major trading commodity. Back in those days, if you had a roll of twenties you were down-right minted. Any spare cash after the 20’s made neat piles five coins high was spent on hot chips or spicey samoosas at the local burger joint. It wasn’t always so easy coming about hard glinting currency. Birthdays were always a year away. We didn’t get much for channuka other than latkes, begging from your folks wasn’t so glamorous, and your bar mitzvah stash was probably locked up in futures or bonds.  so we needed to go about getting tom in our own very way like washing cars or ‘keep the change’ when you’ve just bought rolls at the Bakehouse for Sunday lunch.
So we had to find other means.
Our drifting radius extended as far as Wanderers Cricket Stadium to the west and to the Waverley squash courts to the east across Corlett drive.
Our primary school, Fairways Primary was well positioned for one of our many adventures.
The school sat hard up against the Wanderers golf course. By a combination of proximity and terrible golfing, stray balls would often come missiling onto our sports field like badly aimed rockets from Gaza. ‘fooooore’ would echo from the links vibrating off of the ‘protective’ eucalyptus trees forcing kids to drop hard up against the ground in that airplane brace manoeuvre. Me, I was just thinking, ‘that ball is mine’, and there i’d be running like some under-attack soldier, hands on head along the beaches of Normandy as the Germans pelted the allies.
During cricket matches while posted on the fence, or while playing gainers during break time i’d too come across these mini meteors. And so I began hoovering them up.
 I began to understand on what particular days playing was most popular by the volume of balls that went astray. Saturdays and Sundays were helluva buoyant.

And so on weekends I’d trek up Corlett Drive, sneak into the primary school and head into the no-go-zone, the Kashmir, between the school and the golf course. I used to spend hours combing the area, scouring the long grass for balls. On a good day I could come home with ten or so goons. I became familiar with the branding- which balls garnered a hefty price, and which ball’s were termed ‘water balls’-those balls that you weren’t precious about and so were happy to see them fly out of bounds .  
I endeavoured to keep my golf ball spelunking  to myself, to keep it as much of a secret as possible. I did though let my boet in on my Indiana Jonesian escapades. Once he knew, the game changed. We needed now to increase the bounty.
And with that we became brazen. At the end of a weekend’s days play we would leopard crawl into ‘Kashmir’, hack our way to the giant sluice running along the edge of the fairway of hole 11, climb into the sluice and out the sluice via steel rungs embedded in the concrete walls, mount the diamond meshed fence, flinging ourselves over to land softly on the fresh cut grass of the Wanderers golf course. Using the giant eucalyptus as cover, we skitted from one to the next, eventually scuttling across the fairway like crabs across a deserted shoreline to land at the par three water hole. We had arrived, undetected. Welcome to the pay load.

Wearing my tightest speedo which would be my ball carrier, I slipped into the water. The floor of the pond, algae slimy slippery. Walking slowly, covering ground, my feet my eyes, i’d eventually stand on one. ‘Ooh, got one’, i’d shout, the adrenalin rushing harder than the high of a raver tripping on lsd. Curling my dextrous toes around the dimpled goon, like ball and claw, I’d clench hard raising the ball up to my knees so my hands could snatch it. ‘what is it, what is it?’, i’d hear from the side lines. Titleist, Pinnacle, Ping or some scuffed up drek.
With the sun close to dipped, the water turning dark and the pond mined, i’d heave myself out the oily water, jump into dry clothes and together we’d walk our way back home, excited by our haul. Back home we’d jump into the warm bath with our new pay load, cleaning each ball till it shined. In jammies we’d inspect each ball, evaluate it, set it aside, count them and recount them. The golden jewel, the balatas, the softest ball of the day was the king pin.
My parents owned a clothing factory, my mom designed and my dad did the sales. Their factory was in Corlett Drive just a flight of stairs up from the Mi Vami take out. Frequenting the area a lot, we came to befriend the big fat dudes who managed the store. One day we walked past the store on our way to my parents with a brimful bag of our day’s catch.
‘boys, let me see what you got’. Showing him our balls (no innuendo intended), he asked if we had more. Sure we did, numbering in the 200’s.
Doing one of the worst deals of our lives, we sold our supply of balls to this guy for a paltry R40. That deal subsequently left me gutted. And i’ve never forgotten.
Had we been taken for a ride, was it bad business?.
The new owners were going to pelt those hard earned balls into the sea on their summer vacation. The balls and our start-up. Lost forever.

Tuesday, January 01, 2019

Namibian Border 17.08.2018


Scratching days off of my calendar from February, I’d finally put the last scrawl through August. It was hike time.
Bundled tight as a pack mule, and trained hard as a mountain goat, I was ever ready to beat a path through 5 days of the Fish River Canyon.
Buckled tight in the S3, the red brake callipers released, the needle flicking close to illegal, we crossed country, riding west into a setting sun.
The journey to Namibia was broke up in two with day one bookended in gravely icey Upington.

Gins and tonics, billies, beer and bbq. My neck, shoulder and back muscles released their hold. We began to ease.
Sun down. Sun Up. I arose like a lion. Goooood mooorning, Upppington.
Saddled in, we returned to tar, leaving behind some civility the ‘scape turned lunar.
The swath cut by the liquorice rope long drag heading towards the Namibian border became rockier, craggier and drier as we drove towards wilder west.
The flat-lined landscape broken by the alien like solar tower a beacon in the landscape.

2 hours and we were stopped parked at the South African border. Jumping out of the car we entered the buck teeth ugly orange face brick border buildings. The heavily treaded darker than death parquet floors lead me to the immigration officer.

Handing over my heavily thumbed passport,the immigration officer handled it deftly manipulating the pages as a card dealer in a kasbah avoiding the paper cut.

'You have a problem', he served.
Pivoting my neck to the left and to the right, then jabbing my index finger into my sternum, I returned serve straight at him, 'Who, me’?

Behind the riot-protection glass barrier, the officer smashed my shot with a flat forehand cross court, 'your passport expires tomorrow'.

Whipping it back with top spin, my eyes bulging in disbelief, and my mouth shifted far left, grinning, 'no, no, that can't be'.

Running to net for the volley placing the passport spatchcock-open against the glass he responded, 'but it is', pointing with his inked index digit at the next day’s expiry date, 'see'.

Running, lunging to retrieve the volley, I slid across the clay, coming up just short as the ball double bounced. First Set to the South African Immigration Officer.
Head in hands in disbelief , I ‘believed’ it’d all blow over.
'Please, please just stamp it', I pleaded.
Reluctantly, the South African officer stamped it. *bam bam*, 'I must warn you-the Namibians will not allow you through'.

5km later, shaking as an aging Muhammed Ali, I stood before a stern Namibian immigration officer.
Noticing I was an architect, he flashed me a tooth-filled smile. His bored demeanour turned to excitement. ‘so you can draw’?
‘i Sure can’. The guy while scanning the passport barcode was levitating with a marijuana filled joy. and then......
Then as dark clouds move vociferously to blank out a bright sun, the officer’s mood plummeted to deep anger on seeing the South Africans had led me this far.

Needing to document me, his eyes turned to rocket propelled grenades piercing skewering me stuck to the back wall, a camera firing me, my signature paving my way back to South Africa. With that all in place, I raised the question, ‘howsaaat?’ Responding, he raised his right arm parallel to the ground, looked left, then right, then finally dead at me, extending his index finger in my direction, he shouted, ‘youuuure out!!!!!'.
Game Set and Match

Deflated as a limp lung, I stepped out of the immigration building.
Yossi flagged down a pecan boer. Throwing my bag in the back, I jumped into his bakkie, his toebroodjies separating us on the long front seat. For two hours I lamented.
I hated life.
I booked a R3100 flight from upington to Johannesburg
Paid another R1000 for a 2 night stay at the BnB
and my rowing machine fund flew straight out the window.
The next day while all the okes were in the Canyon viewing the sequened Milkyway, or sipping handfuls of crystal clear stream water, and breathing fresh Namibain air, The Russian Bear Hunter was in aisle 6 of Pick ‘n Pay feeling the firmness of avocadoes.
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