On the road again.

Come and walk this road with us and I will show you some amazing sights.
Things can grow big in Africa, and we are blessed with abundant nature and beauty.
133.JPG

Even our storms are very big, and we have had some very severe flooding in South Africa lately. That was the reason for this visit, as we wanted to see if the road bridge here was still intact. Apparently, at one stage, we had 82 roads flooded and impassable, but the road teams are working very hard and most of the roads have been opened again. The real bad ones will take much longer to repair, but they are saying that the teams are working day and night. And hopefully by November, only a few roads will still be closed. Power of the rivers, flowing down from the mountain, erases everything in its way.

I wanted to firstly show you this tree that my wife was standing next to.
319.JPG

Yep! Did I tell you things grow big?
324.JPG

Right, here is the bridge and let us have a quick look around.
272.JPG

Soon that tree leaning over like that will be floating down the river.
173.JPG

Here is the tree in its surroundings.
169.JPG

Slowly but surely, that sand river bank below that tree is also disappearing.
128.JPG

And that is that tree above's surrounds.
137.JPG

Cleverly, they have stacked this line of rocks at the other side of the bridge in an effort to split the river in two parts. This should dilute the force of the water coming down a bit.
089.JPG

But it is a beautiful place, and I love this shot.
244.JPG

Finally, I wanted to show you a sample of the power of the wind. And look how it is turning this cloud back over.
516.JPG

We are, as I said, in early summer and we are sitting now at 28C temperature wise, but soon we will have to look for shade again when we go out for me to take photos. The weather man reckons that with the El Nino system around, we might escalate in temperatures in full summer to 40C. I regard that as frying weather. I feel so sorry for the people that live in tin shacks, as they become ovens in heat like that. One can pop an eye on a rock to fry it. Further inland, up north, the temperatures will even be worse under the blazing African sun.
But such is life.

I hope you have enjoyed the pictures.

Photos by Zac Smith-All Rights Reserved.

Camera: Canon Powershot SX70HS Bridge camera.

Thank you kindly for supporting this post.



0
0
0.000
9 comments
avatar

Let me share some !PIZZA with you, I know you like it, and !DHEDGE as an extra.

0
0
0.000
avatar

1


This post has been selected for upvote from our token accounts by @qwerrie! Based on your tags you received upvotes from the following account(s):

- @dhedge.bonus
- @dhedge.pob
- @dhedge.neoxag
- @dhedge.waiv

@qwerrie has 8 vote calls left today.

Hold 10 or more DHEDGE to unlock daily dividends and gain access to upvote rounds on your posts from @dhedge. Hold 100 or more DHEDGE to unlock thread votes. Calling in our curation accounts currently has a minimum holding requirement of 100 DHEDGE. The more DHEDGE you hold, the higher upvote you can call in. Buy DHEDGE on Tribaldex or earn some daily by joining one of our many delegation pools at app.dhedge.cc.

0
0
0.000
avatar
(Edited)

PIZZA!

$PIZZA slices delivered:
@papilloncharity(3/15) tipped @rak7
qwerrie tipped papilloncharity
papilloncharity tipped qwerrie

0
0
0.000
avatar

The tree your wife is standing close to is really a sign that things actually grow big over there, lol. The photos are beautiful and the sight of nature always gives us an amazing feeling.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Oh yes, that clump of trees was planted in the 18oos. Glad that you liked the photos and nature certainly has a luring habit.
!WINEX

0
0
0.000
avatar

The vastness of nature, from the giant trees to the mighty rivers, truly showcases Africa's unparalleled beauty.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thank you and very true my friend. We are blessed with an abundance of nature, and we also have the mountains and the ocean close to us.
!PIZZA

0
0
0.000