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Vasco da Gama opening soon in Tofo…

Vasco da Gama opening soon in Tofo…

With a beautiful swimming pool and a genuine Herbie parked in the restaurant, Vasco da Gama in Tofo, Inhambane is firing up their restaurant again.

Famous for it’s genuine Portuguese cuisine and ice cold draft beer – Vasco’s now has resident chef Henrique who has been creating culinary masterpieces for decades. Henrique has cooked all over the world and blends different methods and ingredients to create his unique and international flavour.

We were served grilled pork fillet basted in a mango sauce and almost ate our fingers right off!

Check back soon for more information…Vasco da Gama opens on Valentine’s weekend.

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Vasco da Gama opening…Friday the 13th February!

 

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Sardine correspondent Renske Massing tries out the genuine Herbie parked in the Vasco da Gama restaurant and pool area.

 

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Barra on your desktop…

Alternative surfing accommodation in Tofo - in da barrel

Barra on your desktop

A little something to inspire. And more news of the cyclonic conditions in southern Mozambique…

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Click on the image for the highest resolution image, download it, and save as your desktop…
On Barra…- it’s not as tame as it looks. The sand comes up real steep as you can see through the wave in the photo, and breaks real fast as it unfolds onto the bank. Some 6ft waves break in 2ft of water – sending sand and foam 20ft into the sky – like an explosion.
On the recent cyclones… – The last one just screamed past us to the south making 1000 kilometres in no time flat. It sent us all the usual enticements – SSW winds, ENE swell but is now disappearing around Madagascar a bit too quick. If it hangs around anywhere in that sector of ocean though, the waves will never stop! Today it’s gonna be about 4 ft at Neptunes Bar and Restaurant, carefully positioned right in front of the heaviest barrell section on that almost famous strip of sand.
On Tofinho…- Tofinho also gets herself some lovin’ from the east swells. Invariably more hollow but sectiony down the point. The bay has been full of surfers sharing the magical conditions and crystalline water with baitballs and kingfish.

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Beware the bluebottle!

Beware the bluebottle!

The Story

We were releasing a sailfish off the Umzimkulu one afternoon. The North Easter had been blowing for days and was finally stopped by a buster South Westerley – ideal conditions for a billfish on the dirty water line, especially in February.

Stepped over and into the engine well which is always full of water. Had a deep cut between two of my toes from an earlier incident that day – and a devillish bluebottle floated in and got its tentacles right into that cut. Right in. The initial searing sensation – which we alI have experienced hundreds of times, was nothing like anything I felt in the past. The poison had a marked advantage as the blue bottle injected its lethal payload of poision right into my raw flesh.

My lymph glands in my thigh started to swell with excruciating pain, and stupidly with my fingers I put pressure on the golf ball size gland – it seemed to burst and the poison entered the rest of me – searing pangs of pain right through my consciousness. Which I nearly lost a number of times.

6 Hours later and the pain finally subsided. There was just nothing to be done . Just crawled into the cabin and lay in asemi- paralysed state – unable to move or anything, until we got back in. Normally the pain only lasts 20 minutes, before it becomes barely an itch. Not this time!

Beware the (blue) bottle! They love this time of the year.

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Bluebottle. Even when lying on the beach like this one…they are a danger.

 

Bluebottles vs Portuguese man-o-war

The Portuguese man-o-war is a monster – with up to 30 cm long float sometimes, with numerous long stinging tentacles and one fully loaded main stinger.  Lucky for us, we don’t get them in our waters. These guys really leave you with problems. The stings open into wounds like welts and all sorts of complications can, and do arise.

Our Bluebottle is much smaller and more friendly, normally an inch or two, but up to 15 cms sometimes. Their single stinging tentacle is proportionately longer – the bigger the bluebottle. And fortunately, the sting is a lot less severe.
They both shoot tiny hooks into your skin which unfold and squirt the poison into you, with no chance of stopping it, once it has found its mark.

Continue reading Beware the bluebottle!

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Great walks: Maputo Boulevard

Great walks: Maputo Boulevard…

Having finally, after many years, made friends with dear old Maputo – I thought it would be great to enjoy a walk along the east facing beaches – from Clube Navale, to Clube Maritimo.

I started at Club Navale, with an ice cold 2M. And then another. Then paid my honest bill of R30 per beer – beautiful frosty drafts, and headed north into the tropical sun.

The wall along the beachfront reminds me of the construction method so prevalent in old Cape Town – stone construction. Huge stones. Rocks. Hewn and woven together to produce a beautiful angled wall that runs the entire stretch and beyond. A sea wall. Rick in textures, colours – and character. You could almost hear the slaves slaving away, rock by rock.

Along the wall are many openings, with stairs taking you down to the ocean’s edge. You could imagine, in days gone by, people using these stairs to access the unspoilt waters of Maputo Bay. Not anymore – the water is putrid and brown, flavoured by the many storm water drains that drag the city’s scourge down into it’s own waters, like a child pissing in it’s nappy. As I merrily closed my nostrils and walked on the top of the wall, a rock moved in the distance ahead of me. I then passed a pile of old clothes and realised that the black rock moving in the distance, was a human being – taking a dump. Right there, 5 m from the road, and in full sunlight. Hastily I scarpered past, snapping off one ugly shot as proof.

So after a kilometre or so, just blazing heat, passing cars, palm trees until finally I come across the gold. Three beautifully old looking structures that look just like the cottages found in the deep Transkei. Some pilgrims journeyed all this way back when, and invested their fortune in these holiday rondavels. You could hear the laughter. Smell the fire. Feel the music. They are now some sort of offices for something tourism, but now stand as a reminder to the days when Bob Dylan might have walked these very same streets.

At this point, things got a bit confusing. A huge excavator was on the beach and throwing around huge rocks into some sort of formation. As I climbed through the construction area, the new revamped sand anchoring piers lay before me. Extending a hundred metres into the ocean, the certainly will stabilise these beaches – some serious planning here.

Then the wall becomes populated atop with restaurants and hotels. Some big hotels mind you. With Chinese writing all over them. Construction projects seemingly financed and carried out by huge development entities. The tentacles grow. All the way around Africa.

I stopped for a refreshing beer. Small bottles only. 120 Mets!? That’s hard to swallow when beer drinking is so much fun, so I rapidly shoot that one and keep moving. It’s been an hour or more now, and still no Clube Maritimo. Just vaste tracts of huge developments. Huge. Towering. Abusive looking. Ugly.

And then I finally spot another fortress looking complex, to find Clube Maritimo. A final cold beer, a delicious draft served on the verandah over the slipway. More images come to life. People wining and dining. Tourists cruising. Boats launching. Birds squawking. And I look around me, and there you have it. Except for the development and smells – I could have been sitting here 40 years ago…

Stay at Fatima’s when in Maputo. Clean. Fun. Central. And a major source of local information…

fatimas logo

 

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Anthony Bourdain on Mozambique

Anthony Bourdain on Mozambique

Charismatic and informed – Anthony Bourdain of the Travel Channel is thoroughly entertaining and it’s going to be an interesting show tonight, as he scours our Mozambique – for cullinary and cultural treasures.

Anthony Bourdain in Mozambique (c) The Travel Channel
TUNE IN FOR THIS EPISODE
  • FRI JAN 23 02:00:00 EST 2015 Fri fri jan 23 02:00:00 est 2015 | fri jan 23 02:00:00 est 2015c

Check out NO RESERVATIONS with Anthony Bourdain!

 

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