Thursday, September 6, 2012

A wedding on the bush



Finally, the event announced since I arrived came, the wedding of the leader & the co-leader.

Two days before, we even had a 'hen party' (The perversion of language never will end up of surprising me...). The typical games of toilet paper bride dresses among others reminded me once again that marriage is not for me (I remit you again to the  Nina Simone's song) and that the Western (well, probably worldwide) idea of what is feminine needs an urgent review. Sigh. Anyway, people seemed to enjoy it, specially the bride and that's the important point, plus everyone should do whatever makes her/him happy (or thinks that would), being the limits other people's freedom (the most simple theories seem to be the hardest to become true), so don't let my analytical habits to ruin you the party.

The Doomsday arrived (name that the French-Spaniard used to use to joke with the groom). The couple and its family and friends went to town to see if Home Affairs decided to marry or not (still burocratic nightmares are to Africa what H to water).

In the mountain, however, we had other business. After a morning drowned in the database of the monkeys, I went to meet the Belgian at Wilderness; the main course of the wedding dinner had arrived, a warthog.

The Owner and his son started to prepare the corpse inside the 'roasting machine', while the Belgian and I tried to make coals. Once everything was ready, our task was watching the machine so it didn't stop rotating the hog and, each half an hour, change the coals if necessary and poor some alcoholic mix on the meat so it didn't get dry. Given that it takes 6h to cook, choosing the people that can spend 12h watching monkeys seemed a logical resolution.

Around 15h, people had come back from town and we were preparing things for the dinner. After, I went to get dress (I always feel like a travestite when I have to wear skirts and related) leaving the warthog on the Belgian's hands until I came back  to replace her. Later she came back and I could go for a while to the reception.

There I could taste, finally, the mopane worms. With coating they are fine, no much flavor and slightly crunchy...without, they don't look very yummy and is kind of difficult to chew the legs and hairs. I could eat them on an emergency, but they are not my cup of tea.

After sunset and accompanied by a big orange moon, we headed back to Wilderness in procession lighting our way with oil lamps.

The dinner was amazing, a kind of buffet of South African specialties: pap with tomato sauce, pumpkin balls, gems with butter and sugar, babootie, and, of course, the warthog (though, unfortunately, was a little bit dry, even if we followed all the instructions). The cake was rather original.

And finally, dance and chat around the fire, drinking Amarula and chewing some biltong on of the cliffs.

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