SA Country Life

Aloha Algoa

Thwack! Thwack! We’re inundated by a huge school of dolphins feeding in the waters around St Croix Island. Their soft whistles and grunts of satisfaction fill the air, but every now and then one will thump the water with its tail. Thwack!’

“We don't know why they do it,” says Jake Keeton, manager of Raggy Charters and our skipper for the morning aboard a sleek catamaran in Port Elizabeths Algoa Bay. It could be to communicate, or to dislodge an irritating parasite, or to herd fish. Science hasnt worked it out yet.

These are Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins and were extremely lucky today. It looks like two pods have come together to feed and mate. He puts the number at around 200. For every one you see on the surface, there

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from SA Country Life

SA Country Life1 min readAutomotive
Wheelspin
A tyre blowout is something that many drivers may experience on the roads at some point. The most common reasons for blowouts are hitting potholes, underinflated or worn tyres, and second-hand tyres that do not meet certain standards. If you do have
SA Country Life6 min readCooking, Food & Wine
Dragon with a Soft, Sweet Heart
It was against the distant backdrop of the Drakensberg – the ‘mountains of the dragon’ – that I saw my first fruit of the same name. Dragon fruit. Or pitahaya, a member of the cactus family that originates in parts of South and Central America. Its
SA Country Life3 min readAutomotive
The Little Car that Could
When I first met my curly-haired wife, Emily, she was living in Joburg, as was I, and she would regularly drive home to her parents’ farm in Winterton in the KwaZulu-Natal Drakensberg for weekends. She did this 800-kilometre round trip in a silver Hy

Related Books & Audiobooks