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Rovos Rail's
Chronicles 1-4
2008

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Rovos Rail's
Chronicles 2-3
2008

ARTICLES & REPORT

ROVOS RAIL AND VICTORIA FALLS - AN EPIC ADVENTURE.
This 1600 kilometre journey from Victoria Falls to Pretoria onboard Rovos Rail takes you through unspoilt wilderness, infuses you with new experiences, and instils in you a renewed respect for tradition, beauty and the luxury of time. To read Toni Ackermann's article please click here. Toni is the Lifestyle Editor of Prestige Magazine www.prestigemag.co.za

COUPLE THERAPY
South African's are often in a hurry to get from Johannesburg to Cape Town in the fastest way possible and I am not always sure why.
Click here to read the article by Geniene Preston from Anytime Magazine November 2008.
ROMANCE ON RAIL
A journey aboard The Pride of Africa is a nostalgic trip into the golden era of travel, when time was never hurried. Click here to read Pippa De Bruyn's article from BEST LIFE October 2008.

 AFRIQUE DU SUD
Un Train A Remonter Le Temps. Click here to read the article from Le Figaro written by Par Laurence Lacontre with photography by Jean-Michel Voge.

PARADISE ON WHEELS
Golf Safari - Of course now everybody will think Peggy and I are millionaires! Click here to read the article by Larry Gould of On-Course Worldwide.

CAPE TOWN TO DAR ES SALAAM
The railway line from Cape Town to Dar Es Salaam - Riebeek Kasteel to Zanzibar and back by train (mostly) - July 2008 by Chris Wright. Click here to read the article
INSIDE TRAVEL
Dermot and Uschi Steyn from Inside Travel report on their journey from Pretoria to Cape Town. Click here to read the article.
EVOKING AN ERA
Berne and Grenville's vintage wedding, held last year December, certainly rates as an affair to be remembered. By Roxanne Van Eyk
Click here to read full article.
LUFTHANSA AND MILES AND MORE
Rovos Rail is pleased to announce a new partnership with Lufthansa's Miles and More frequent flyer programme. Miles and More members are now able to redeem miles (or part miles and part cash) for journeys on Rovos Rail. For more information, please contact our Cape Town office on (+27-21) 421 4020.
More information on Miles and More can be found on http://www.miles-and-more.com
MAGASIN MER AFRIKA - Text Jonas, Foto Graeme Robinson, Rovos Rail
Mässing, mahogny och magnifika fyrarätters middagar med södra afrikas vidder utanför fönstret. Egen kupé med badrum, dubbellsäng och minibar. Rovos Rail är en resa i tid och rum där ingenting saknas. Utom möjligen gym ... Lyxkryssning på räls
Click here to read full article.
BED, BAGELS AND BEST BREAKFASTS
From the Australian - edited by Susan Kurosawa. Written by Garrry Marchant
Click here to read full article.
GOLFWEEK USA 24 MAY 2007
"All aboard - Golf safari by rail may be South Africa's best track" by John Steinbreder
Click here to read full article.
GOLF & MORE - NOVEMBER 2006
Süd Afrika - In einem Zug genieBen
Mit Rovos Rail von Golfplatz zu Gofplatz
By Ms Angelika Lerche
Click here to read full article.
TRAVELLERS CLUB SWEDEN
Text and Photos Per-Olof Nyren
Rovos Rail – Pride of Africa.
Rovos Rail startades 1989 av Rohan Vos, en sann järnvägs fantast, som fortfarande vinkar av och tar emot alle passagerar-na på tåget.
Click here for full article.
GOLF TRAVELLER DECEMBER 2006
by Paul Hamblin
The Pride of Africa
The world's greatest golf holidays are not necessarily played on the world's best-known golf courses. To begin Golf World's search for the greatest holiday experiences around the golfing globe, Editor Paul Hamblin travelled to South Africa for an old-fashioned rail tour with a real difference.
Click here to read his article
ROVOS RAIL AND TITLE MAGAZINE - our first Japanese article appeared in the October 2006 issue of TITLE magazine. Click here to read more http://www.bunshun.co.jp/mag/title/index.htm
ROVOS RAIL AND ROYAL GOLF
By Michael Specht - Edition & Magazin: Golf Magazine Germany 05-2006
Im luxuriösesten Zug der Welt zu königlichen Golfplätzen. Möglich ist dies nur in Südafrika. Die Fahrt im Rovos Rail wird zu einer Reise in die Vergangenheit.
Click here to read full article www.golfmagazin.de
ROVOS RAIL STEAM SAFARI
By C A Janisch
Friday 23 June 2006 was a monumental day for steam traction in the preservation era. Not since regular steam ended in South Africa ...
Click here to read full article
REQUINTE E HISTORIA UMA AFRICA DO SUL DESCONHECIDA
By Carlos Andre Spagat
"Sai de férias por poucos dias e a escolha foi perfeita mais uma vez: a África do Sul novamente foi eleita, incluindo Zâmbia e Zimbábue. Luxo, conforto e gastronomia harmoniosamente reunidos confirmaram e expectiva.
Click here
to read the full article.
AFRICAN TIME SÜDAFRIKA
By Rudolf Melzer - Reiseaktuell Ausgabe 2/2006
"Südafrika liegt zwar in der gleichen Zeitzone wie Mittel-europa, dennoch gehen die Uhren dort anders: Im Wissen dass eine Herde Elefanten den Tagesplan schon mal durchein-ander bringen kann, liefern Zeitplänne höchstens eine grobe Orienterung. Rudolf J Melzer ist in Südafrika aber nicht nur auf Abenteuer, sondern auch auf Gaumenfreuden in Fünfsterne-Qualität gestoben "
Click here
to read the full article. www.reiseaktuell.at
ROVOS RAIL, GLAMOUR SOBRE RIELES
By Susana Parejas - Very Personal Magazine - Check In - May 2006
"ES UNO DE LOS TRENES MÁS LUJOSOS DEL MUNDO. SUS VAGONES, ORIGINARIOS DE LOS AÑOS 20, HAN SIDO RESTAURADOS AL MÁXIMO NIVEL. ASÍ, EL PASAJERO VIVE LA EXPERIENCIA DE VIAJAR POR SUDÁFRICA, CON EL ROMANTICISMO Y LA OPULENCIA DE UNA ÉPOCA PASADA, PERO CON EL CONFORT Y LA TECNOLOGÍA DE HOY"
Click here to read the full article.
GOLF FÜR ZUGVÖGEL
By Clemens Elsner - Golfstyle International Feb 2006
"Mit dem Gründer und Eigner von Rovos rail auf Golf-Tour durch Südafrika"
Click here
to read the full article.
ROVOS AIR - Piston Power Over Africa
By Andreas Spaeth - Airliner World June 2006
"Andreas Spaeth samples one of the world's last piston-engined airliners in passenger service" Click here to read about Rovos Air's magnificent Convair 440 Metroplitans www.airlinerworld.com
AFRICA UNPLUGGED - INDWE MAGAZINE MAY 2006 By Sam Weber
"From afar they descent on Capital Park, the headquarters of Rovos Rail and the place where each journey either begins or ends"
Click here
to read the full article. www.flysax.com
AFTENPOSTEN NEWSPAPER 6 MAY 2006
Damplocomotivet 2701 Brenda hveser og buldrer der hun rygges inn på Capital Park Station i den sørafrikanske hovedstaden Pretoria.
Click here
to read the full article. www.aftenposten.no
THE PRIDE OF AFRICA
The 'Pride of Africa', ono de los más suntuosos trenes del mundo, es un auténtico museo Sobre railes que conduce al viajero, con la elegancia que caracterizo el tiempo de las locomotoras de vapour, través de territories de leyenda y belleza incomparable.
Click here
to read the full article. www.romantique-magazine.com
SOUTH AFRICAN DISCOVERIES - PASSPORT MAGAZINE
By Thomas Mizer
"It's like we're on a space capsule to Mars ... " Click here to read more of Thomas Mizer's trip to South Africa.
www.passportmagazine.net
REISTE AM 25. FEBRUAR 2005 VON PRETORIA NACH KAPSTADT - LIVING MAGAZIN
By Biggi Birkner Fogelberg
Click here for full article living1.pdf
THE LOCOMOTION
By Sharon Van Wyk - Elle Magazine May 2005
In the age of bullet trains, the steam-era styled Pride Of Africa's silver service makes for a decadent journey. Sharon Van Wyk boards the ritzy ride from Pretoria to Polokwane.
Click here
for full article Elle-article.pdf. www.ellemagazine.co.za
TUN VIAJE INOLVIDABLE DE PRETORIA A CIUDAD DEL CABO EN EL "ORGULLO DE AFRICA"
Click here for full Spanish article.
PETER HANNEBERG - SCANDINAVIAN WRITER AND PHOTOGRAPHER
Peter Hanneberg travelled from Cape Town to Dar es Salaam Juy 2004.
Resemagasinet Check-in Nr 1-2005 Peter Hanneberg is a seasoned Scandinavian writer and photographer, well known for his many articles and much awarded books on environment and travel from all over the world. His latest coffee-table book "Our Magnificent Wilderness" was printed in seven languages. It covers 40 of nature's masterpieces on six continents, all of them UN World Heritage Sites. Peter is also a railway enthusiast who booked a journey from Cape Town to Dar Es Salaam with Rovos in July 2004. To read the full story of his trip to Dar in Finnish click here for Hannenberg-Checkin-Rovos.pdf

PETER HANNEBERG - SCANDINAVIAN WRITER AND PHOTOGRAPHER
Peter Hanneberg travelled from Cape Town to Dar es Salaam July 2004.
Resemagasinet Check-in Nr 1-2005 Peter Hanneberg is a seasoned Scandinavian writer and photographer, well known for his many articles and much awarded books on environment and travel from all over the world. His latest coffee-table book "Our Magnificent Wilderness" was printed in seven languages. It covers 40 of nature's masterpieces on six continents, all of them UN World Heritage Sites. Peter is also a railway enthusiast who booked a journey from Cape Town to Dar Es Salaam with Rovos in July 2004. To read the full story of his trip to Dar in Swedish click here for Hannenberg-checkin-Rovos.pdf
TRAINS, PLANES AND ENTREPRENEURIAL SPIRIT
An Entrepreneur tends to bite off a little more than he can chew, hoping he'll learn quickly how to chew it. Click here for full article by Sam Weber of Indwe Magazine Trains-Planes.pdf www.flysax.com
HERR VOS UND SEINE LUFTSCHLÖSSER
Der Luxuszug-Betreiber Rovos Rail in Südafrika geht jetzt mit historischen Flugzeugen auch stilvoll in die Luft. Von Andreas Spaeth.

Der Mann schien alles erreicht zu haben. Wohlhabend geworden im Handel mit Auto-Ersatzteilen hatte sich Rohan Vos 1989 einen Traum erfüllt und eine eigene Bahngesellschaft mit historischen Luxuszügen gegründet. Rovos Rail ist in den 15 Jahren ihres Bestehens zum Symbol für die stilvolle und nostalgische Reise über die Schienenstränge des südlichen Afrika geworden. Drei Züge aus den 1920er und 1930er Jahren schaukeln wohlhabende Passagiere aus aller Welt vom firmeneigenen Bahnhof in Pretoria nach Kapstadt, Durban, über die Garden Route oder zum Krüger Park - streckenweise gezogen von einer der Rovos-Dampfloks aus den 1930er Jahren, zwei davon 1938 bei Borsig in Berlin gebaut. Auch die Victoria Fälle gehörten lange Zeit zu den festen Bestandteilen des Fahrplans, bis schwere Überflutungen und die unsichere Lage in Zimbabwe dieser beliebten Tour vor gut vier Jahren ein Ende bereiteten. Der nimmermüde Perfektionist Rohan Vos sann auf eine Alternative und entschloß sich, zwischen Pietersburg und Afrikas größten Wasserfällen in die Luft zu gehen. Doch die Gründung von Rovos Air als logische Ergänzung der edlen Zugreise sollte den Patriarchen viele schlaflose Nächte und vor allem Unsummen an Geld kosten. Denn ein Rohan Vos mietet nicht einfach irgendein historisches Flugzeug, von denen es in Südafrika viele gibt, und nimmt den Betrieb auf, sondern er muß etwas eigenes und ganz besonderes haben. Der stolze und manchmal dickköpfige Bahnbetreiber lehnte alle Kooperations-Angebote von örtlichen Flugexperten ab und stürzte sich als Laie in das Abenteuer Luftfahrt, von dem er selbst heute als "Alptraum" spricht und sagt: "Das würde ich nie wieder tun".
Aber ein Rohan Vos gibt nicht auf, und so sind heute an Südafrikas Himmel zwei Flugzeuge unterwegs, die auf der Welt ihresgleichen suchen. Die beiden Convair 440 Metropolitan von 1954 mit ihren mächtigen Kolbenmotoren und dem eleganten dunkelgrün-beigen Äußeren sind eine Augenweide für jeden Luftfahrt-Nostalgiker. In den 1950er und 1960er Jahren flog dieses Kurz- und Mittelstreckenflugzeug auch bei der Lufthansa, SAS und American Airlines setzten es noch in den 1970er und frühen 1980er Jahren als Inselhüpfer auf Ostseediensten bzw. in der Karibik ein. Kein Passagier dürfte aber an Bord der damaligen Linienflüge derart verwöhnt worden sein wie heute die Gäste von Rovos Air. Schon die im Flugzeugbau einmalige und zeitlos elegante Flügeltür sorgt beim Einsteigen für besonderes Flair, bereits die Stufen der ausfahrbaren Fluggasttreppe sind mit dickem Teppich ausgelegt. Das durchaus beabsichtigte Gefühl vom fliegenden Salonwagen setzt sich im Inneren der Kabine fort - hier reicht der Teppich vom Boden bis auf Kniehöhe an den Wänden, 44 üppige Sessel aus dunkelgrünem Leder verströmem Clubatmosphäre und sogar die hölzerne Toilette dürfte zu den schönsten stillen Örtchen in der Luft gehören. Aus den großen, viereckigen Kabinenfenstern fällt der Blick auf die Weiten Afrikas, während die Flugbegleiterinnen zum erlesenen Essen hervorragende Weine aus Kristallgläsern servieren - so wie es die Gäste von Rovos Rail gewohnt sind, Rovos Air fügt sich nahtlos ins Luxus-Portfolio ein. Während die Passagiere nach dem Lunch vom sonoren Brummen der Propeller in den weit nach hinten gestellten Rückenlehnen ihrer Sitze sanft in ein Nickerchen gewiegt werden müssen die drei Männer im Cockpit hart arbeiten.
"Die Convair zu fliegen ist eine sehr körperliche Erfahrung", sagt Flugkapitän André Balt, "wir haben hier keine Hydraulik". Zu kämpfen haben die Piloten vor allem mit der begrenzten Reichweite und Zuladung ihres Schmuckstücks bei Abflügen von Livingstone auf der sambischen Seite der Victoria Fälle. Bei größerer Hitze, und die ist hier die Regel, und mehr als 19 Passagieren kann die Convair nicht vollgetankt starten und muß auf dem zweistündigen Weg ins südafrikanische Pietersburg oft in Botswana nachtanken. Und auch die beiden jeweils 3.000 Pferdestärken leistenden Pratt & Whitney-Kolbenmotoren machen immer mal wieder Kummer wenn etwa durch ein Leck größere Mengen Öl austreten, "aber das war damals beim Fliegen normal", beruhigt Captain Balt . Mit ihrer begrenzten Leistung und als Unikate sind die beiden Metropolitans eigentlich die falschen Flugzeuge für diesen Betrieb, das wissen sowohl die Piloten als auch Rohan Vos. Doch nachdem er eine lange Leidensgeschichte mit seinen beiden ursprünglich für die US-Luftwaffe gebauten, dann eingemotteten und später in Bolivien eingesetzten Luftschlössern überstanden hat gibt er nun nicht einfach auf. "Ich mußte einige meiner früher 13 Firmen verkaufen um für die Kosten aufzukommen", gibt Rohan Vos unumwunden zu. Bis die Veteranen, zu denen auch noch eine DC-3 gehört, nach vielfältigen Modikationen und Verzögerungen endlich von den Behörden für den zivilen Passagierverkehr in Südafrika zugelassen wurden hatte Vos im laufenden Betrieb schon mehrere Millionen Euro verloren und gleichzeitig eine ähnlich hohe Summe pro Flugzeug in die Instandsetzung investiert.
Zwischenzeitlich versuchte der eigensinnige Unternehmer bereits, die beiden Flugzeuge zu verkaufen, aber ohne Erfolg. Zur Zeit fliegen die Convairs insgesamt gerade etwa 30 Stunden im Monat - viel zu wenig um zumindest einen Teil ihrer Kosten wieder hereinzuholen. Neben den nur im Paket buchbaren Zu- und Abbringerflügen zwischen Zug und Victoria Fällen steht die historische Edel-Flotte auch für Rundflüge und fliegende Dinner-Parties im Raum Johannesburg sowie für Charter-Einsätze in ganzen südlichen Afrika zur Verfügung. Viel zu wenig hat Rovos Air seine Schmuckstücke bisher dort gezeigt, wo sie auf die meisten Bewunderer und offene Geldbörsen stoßen würden - auf Luftfahrtschauen. Aber auch den Zugreisenden ist es nicht egal, mit was sie fliegen. "Anfangs mußten wir ersatzweise einen Fokker-F28-Jet einsetzen", erinnert sich Rohan Vos und stöhnt: "Da wollten viele Kunden ihr Geld zurück, weil sie angeblich extra aus Japan wegen der Convairs angereist waren". Informationen unter www.rovos.com
WORLD-RENOWNED ROVOS RAIL TRANSPORTS PASSENGERS IN HIGH EDWARDIAN STYLE ABOARD A SERIES OF METICULOUSLY RESTORED COACHES FROM THE 1920'S AND 30'S DESIGNED TO EVOKE ALL THE GLAMOUR AND ELEGANCE OF PRE-WAR RAIL TRAVEL
Bridget Hilton-Barber travelled from Pretoria to Victoria Falls.
Sunday Independent Newspaper 14 Nov 2004 www.sundayindependent.co.za

"Pardon me boy, is that the chap that chewed your new shoes?" Yes, yes, I know those aren't the right lyrics, but we've been quaffing champagne since eight in the morning and all childish outbreaks of song must surely be forgiven when you're standing on the platform ready to board "the world's most luxurious train".
Rovos Rail departs from their headquarters in Capital Park, Pretoria, a once derelict locomotive yard that is now a gracious colonial-style railway station. A duet is playing light classical music, and like us, most of the assembled guests, have moved swiftly from coffee to champagne, and have a faraway look in their eyes, as if they're fondly recalling their first reading of The Railway Children.
The minute we step into our compartment - or "suite" as it's called in Rovos-speak - I fall in love with all 11 magohany-pannelled square metres of it. There's a huge double bed, a small lounge area with a table concealing the minibar and "tea drawer", a built-in cupboard, and en suite bathroom. There is underfloor heating and airconditioning, there are heated towel racks, white fluffy dressing gowns, even a pair of plastic goggles (very Biggles) for looking out the window without fear of nasty little specks of dust getting in your eyes. There are no televisions or radios aboard Rovos, and cellphones are allowed only in the suites, but then who on earth wants to ruin an Edwardian rail fantasy with polyphonic ringtones?
With a loud and cheery blast of the hooter, the train shudders and pulls out of the station. Rovos started out as a steam-hauled train, but these days diesel and electric locomotives are also used, mainly as a result of the decrease of suitable water and coal facilities along the railway network. All departures and arrivals in Pretoria however, are done by steam loco, and the atmosphere is delightful.
So delightful in fact, that we attack the bottle of champagne in the mini-bar and flop onto the bed to watch the passing show. From Pretoria the train travel eastwards towards Witbank, and offers a gritty and unsanitised insight into the peri-urban edges of the capital. We go past factories, squatter camps, townships and suburbs, until finally it all thins out into Highveld bush and a brass gong announces the start of lunch.
We stagger off to the dining car, a formal carriage dating back to 1911 that is an opulent affair with fluted teak pillars and arches, mahogany tables, fresh flowers, special Rovos china and silverware.The scenery outside is a bit of a contrast - we are passing through Witbank, which is hardly a picturesque spot with its belching collieries and factories, but nevertheless has a special significance for Anglophiles because it was here that a young Winston Churchill, an escaping British prisoner-of-war, jumped onto a freight train and made good his escape to then Lourenço Marques. The British couple at the next table beam intently out the window. From Witbank, the train chuffs on to Middleburg, then Machadadorp and starts descending rapidly down the escarpment, passing through the postcard pretty surrounds of Waterval Boven and Onder. Unfortunately we miss this part since we have been rendered utterly helpless by lunch and wine and have fallen asleep purring.
By sunset we've reached the Lowveld and the vegetation has changed dramatically. We head for the rear of the train to the Observation Car, which sports a mahogany bar, and colonial style furnishings, as well as an open-air observation platform. Outside there are subtropical plantations, and gentle stretches of bush. The air is hot and heady and we've completely
forgotten about things like deadlines, emails and traffic lights.
Cheerful chatter fills the Observation Car. Passengers, now merry and drinking gin, look splendid in formal attire, de rigueur for dinners aboard Rovos Rail. Along with emails and traffic lights, my husband has also forgotten his tie, but conveniently, there is a small selection on sale in Observation Car, together with other gifts like ostrich leather wallets, gold cufflinks, pens, hip flasks and limited edition hand-made teddy bears. He selects a bold tie with a charging elephant on the front despite my concerns that it may frighten the other diners.
After traversing the Crocodile River Valley outside of Nelspruit, the train travels eastwards towards Kaapmuiden and chugs cheek by jowl along the boundary of the Kruger Park, before continuing northwards toward Komatipoort and the Lebombo mountains. By this time we are tucking into our dinner.
The food aboard Rovos is excellent, the wine list discerning, the service attentive. Rovos staff are the kind of people who can serve peas while going through a darkened tunnel without a single one rolling off the plate. They make you feel special and wanted and there is certainly no rush around here although most guests head to bed early, soothed by the proverbial clickety- clack and the sheer romance of it all. The average speed aboard Rovos is about 60kms per hour, and over bad sections, the driver may reduce speed to as little as 20kms per hour. "A sleeping tablet or a wee bit more of your favourite tipple might be appropriate" according to our information pack, "and earplugs are also provided, not only for the train mind you".
The next morning we decide to skip the "off train excursion" (a game drive in the exclusive Kapama Game Reserve followed by a bush brunch) and opt instead to sleep late. We wake up to an empty train, glorious distant mountain views and the hot buzz of cicadas. This is heaven. We lie around, read books, take a walk through the bush, nibble on sandwiches. We are having a much, much nicer time than the first journalist who undertook a Rovos adventure way back in 1989. His name was Brian O'Hanlon, and according to a brochure, "His bed broke during the afternoon snooze, his early evening shower scalded his back and crossed toilet cistern pipes gave him a 'hot flush'. A meander through the train in the small hours of the morning found him wrapped in a blanket and propped up in the dining car alternately dozing and reading Jock of the Bushveld." At lunchtime, the others return and the train heads off towards Hoedspruit and once again climbs the escarpment as spectacular scenery slips past - placid dams, deep gorges and ancient valleys carved from high cliffs. We pass the cycads near Modjadji, we pass the subtropical farms around Tzaneen, we pass each more champagne.
By sunset on the second evening, everyone has warmed up another notch and we start swapping tall tales of adventure and showing off our trainspotting knowledge. The gracious clink of glasses and cutlery is punctuated by laughter and the occasional whoop and shriek of delight. After a languid breakfast the next morning we pull slowly into Polokwane Station, and are whisked off to the airport, and from there, flown to Livingstone in Zambia aboard one of Rovos Air's classic historic planes. This one, a Convair 440, was brought from Bolivia and flown over the Atlantic for restoration in South Africa. It's all pale leather seats and legroom, a wonderful reminder of the days when flying didn't mean wishing you were a bonzai.
The plane cruises at around 12 000 feet, so you can see the scenery below, in this case vast scrubby stretches of Botswana scoured by ancient elephant tracks. Just before we land in Livingstone, the plane banks over the Victoria Falls, and we all gasp at the sight of Mosi oa Tunya, the Smoke that Thunders, the single biggest curtain of falling water in the world.
The plane touches down, the doors open and the air is thick with the promise of heady adventure, but for a moment I wish that I could skip it all and just get straight back onto Rovos Rail again.
WITH THE ‘PRIDE OF AFRICA’ TO DAR ES SALAAM - WILLIBALD SONTAG DOES THE HONOURS
Railway Africa Issue 6/2003

A sprightly 82 Willibald Sontag saw service in the German navy, later in the East German state railway. In 1945 he was sentenced by a Soviet military tribunal to 25 years imprisonment on trumped-up charges. He was freed in 1956 and commenced his ' second life ' as a technical information officer. After retirement in 1987 he freelanced for DBB and the trade press. He is a member of the VDI (Veteran Deutscher Ingenieure) and for many years was treasurer and head of the technical history section of the mid-Rhine division. Having ridden the "Trans-Canadian", the Australian "Indian-Pacific" and "Ghan", expectations ran high " when booking Rovos Rail's top train for a journey which turned out to be second to none.
Rhodes's bold idea, of a Cape to Cairo railway, has today progressed as far north as Dar es Salaam thanks to rail and business pioneers quite apart from political forces. The title "An Authentic African Adventure" of some 5 OOO km really is appropriate for an unusual rail journey; one not easy to come by (nor to afford!), but worthwhile venturing.
How did this happen to me, an octogenarian? From boyhood there was this fascination with railways with their thundering steamers, glossy expresses and worldwide connections.Then: enter Africa, that mysterious continent and Cecil Rhodes's vision of Cape-to-Cairo.That this is at all possible today is thanks to the committed rail-roader, Rohan Vos, who, once a year manages to operate a very special train from the Cape to Dar es Salaam and back.
So, on June 27 2003, the polished-up old time train was waiting at Cape Town for its 30 passengers, welcomed and introduced by Rohan Vos himself and the train crew. Red carpet, classic string music and drinks, a touching ceremony repeated at intermediate stops during the journey. The train consist: a total of 15 carriages: observation car, nine sleepers, lounge, diner, kitchen and staff car, one generator van.
With electric traction up front, the "Pride of Africa" began its 13-day journey at 11am. My comfortable home was in coach No 5 with three deluxe suites of 11m2, each with its own lounge area and bathroom. My "neighbours" were an American in the diplomatic service and, at the far end of the coach the "train historian", Nicholas Schofield, from South Africa - all in all a "travelling neighbourhood". Soon after having left the western Cape and having settled in their rooms, the passengers (South African, British, New Zealand, Swiss, Danish, American, Argentinean, Austrian, and German) showed up in the diner for their first experience of Rovos Rail's culinary culture.
A stop at Matjiesfontein afforded an opportunity for a drink in the historic Lord Milner Hotel and a short visit to Marie Rawdon's museum. Proceeding via Beaufort West and De Aar the "Pride of Africa" arrived at its next stopover - Kimberley; famous for its bustling diamond industry of the 1880s. After lunch in the historic Kimberley club which still radiates the spirit of those turbulent years with the names of Rhodes, Churchill, Jameson, King George and the Queen, we c rode on an authentically restored tram car to the "Big Hole".
Later we continued into the Transvaal where the next highlight was the "Pride's" arrival at Capital Park, just north of Pretoria, the home base of Rovos Rail. Expertly refurbished, it presents an inviting station building, spacious loco and wagon sheds, a model railway, a rail memorabilia museum and also an authentic signal box.

Into the night

An 1893 Class 6 ("Tiffany"), to the delight of the steam lovers amongst us, was to haul the "Pride of Africa" into nightfall! Descending from the Highveld onto the Lowveld, electric units had again taken over, speeding through Mpumalanga along the Kruger National Park boundary towards Hoedspruit. Here passengers disembarked for an overnight stay at the luxurious private Kapama Lodge and game reserve. At nightfall a game viewing drive in open safari type vehicles with an expert scout offered exciting encounters with lion, elephant, giraffe and other wild animals.
A torch-lit barbecue dinner around a campfire in the boma marked the end of an eventful day. After a comfortable night's rest the safari vehicles once more took passengers on tours through the nearby Endangered Species Centre, home to cheetah, wild dog, rhino, hippo, marabou and others. Back at Hoedspruit, the train crew had used the layover to service bars and suites and during the night the "Pride of Africa" proceeded across the Tropic of Capricorn and joined the Pretoria - Musina mainline. Once again we were traversing historic sites of the Anglo-Boer war (1899- 1902), involving Kruger, Rhodes, Churchill, Kitchener, but also lesser ones, like "Breaker Morant". This young Australian lieutenant was infamously involved in the murder of a German missionary and unarmed Boers. Having seen the Australian version in the early 80s, this unexpected encounter with dramatic history touched me.
In the early morning the train stopped at Musina, South African border station, and, after crossing the Beit Bridge we entered Zimbabwe. The NRZ diesel electrics continued at 50km/h into Matabeleland. Later they slowed to 40 and then 25km/h due to inferior perway. This is not the only difficulty NRZ is facing. Low availability of motive power is also a major problem.
In the mid-train saloon, historian Nicholas delivered the first of his lectures on "Cecil J Rhodes - Tycoon and Visionary". A portrait was painted of that controversial character, who was an invisible companion for most of the journey. Later, the audience was treated to a stimulating lecture on "Zambia and Zimbabwe".
Entering Bulawayo, capital of Matabeleland and the rail hub of Zimbabwe, we saw the last stronghold of those mighty Beyer- Garratts, which have survived on shunting duties. The night run to Vic Falls was uneventful, passing through the Hwange National Park and the extensive coalfields.

"The Smoke that Thunders"
Just before noon we came to a stop at Victoria Falls station. It has seen so many trains in the last 100 years or so, some of them carrying famous personalities to this historic place which still has a touch of colonial empire and the Victorian era. Many of these memories are enshrined in the renowned Victoria Falls Hotel, conveniently situated just opposite the platform.
I was eagerly looking forward to the sightseeing and to the variety of activities presented at Vic Falls. Even although it was my third visit the place had lost nothing of its fascination: with a walk along the 1,7krn wide falls, thundering down 100m. David Livingstone was probably the first white man to behold that spectacular show in 1855. The spirit of this missionary explorer is detectable everywhere.
Today the Falls can be explored by chopper, canoeing, wild water, rafting and even bungee jumping. Another highlight impressed this German traveller: the sunset cruise on the Zambezi! On board guests were entertained and treated to snacks and drinks (the "sundowner" a speciality). We spotted crocodile, hippo and elephant.
African dancers followed by a sumptuous candle-lit dinner in the Stanley Room of the hotel ended an eventful day.
Following a comfortable night's rest in the old-fashioned but stylish hotel (by the way, the only night on this tour under mosquito net) I took a last stroll to the Falls park and local market before boarding the "Pride of Africa" for the afternoon departure to Zambia.

Special event
A few minutes later - the train stopped for some 15 minutes on the Vic Falls Bridge, a single-span arched steel structure, completed in 1905 bridging the 200m wide gorge 120m above water level connecting Zimbabwe and Zambia.
On the bridge, the guests could detrain while a sight for eyes and cameras alike was the "Pride of Africa" poised above the raging waters. (Ten years before I had had the opportunity of crawling through the girders guided by a chief engineer of NRZ!) Eventually, we started into Zambia, stopping at Livingstone, once the capital of the former Northern Rhodesia.
Lusaka, some 480km north, is now the capital. Again, as at Vic Falls, border formalities were no problem thanks to established relations with the border staff. As to speed, 25km/h was the average on this section of the former colonial railway to the copperbelt. The main line is now under rehabilitation as evidenced by a number of track maintenance machines. While crossing the Kafue River the next day, the train historian gave another lecture on the "Cape- to-Cairo Railway - from history to modern travel". The train stopped for about half an hour at Lusaka which is the headquarters of the now fully dieselised Zambia Railway. The afternoon saw travellers in the saloon for another history lecture on "David Livingstone - an heroic failure". Again, Nicholas led his audience through the life and tragic fate of that outstanding man.

TAZARA at last!
Kapiri Mposhi, the southern terminus of the 1800km TAZARA Railway was eventually reached. This route was built by Chinese in 1970-75 under the motto "Uhuru" - (Freedom) Railway; to give land-locked Zambia direct access to the sea for its copper exports.
Traction for our train was now by TAZARA diesels, either Chinese built or a 3 000 Krupp diesel electric. Running through the night the "Pride of Africa" maintained an average speed of 40km/h. Soon after 06hOO passengers had to rise for breakfast at Kanona station and an early start in minibuses was made into the bush. This was really tough going! After half an hour's drive through the wilderness the trail ended near the Kundalila Waterfall (65m high), on the Kaombe River.
To get a close look at the isolated site, we had to negotiate a rough path through barren stony terrain. We were amply rewarded by a Rovos style "brunch" in the open veld! Imagine, if you can, a gastronomical hot and cold buffet with tables fully set with linen, china, silver cutlery and crystal glasses together with a wide selection of well chilled beverages! All in all, a feeling of unreality - or should I really say "Out of Africa"?
Heading east to northeast, the "Pride of Africa" began traversing another very scenic landscape through the Great Rift Valley, where passengers were treated to breathtaking views. Our historian's lecture was now about the controversy around the "Discovery of the Nile" and, in the afternoon, a general overview of central and east Africa.

Tanzania - and journey's end
After the border crossing into Tanzania at Tunduma, we were enthralled by the scenery and by the location of the line on steep slopes with tunnels and bridges. Small wonder that the observation platform was again crowded with guest's whirring cameras! A late stop was made at Mbeya with its oversized modern Chinese-style station building. Here, too, Rohan Vos could be seen in his dual role: if not presiding at dinner in his black-tie, Vos could be seen creeping under carriages for closer inspection! After another overnight stop at Mazamba, our train reached Makambako. Passengers assembled for Nicholas's last lecture on "Zanzibar, Bagamoyo and the African Slave Trade". Soon afterwards the "Pride of Africa" passed Kidatu, the junction of the 1067mm TAZARA line with the southern end of the East African 1 OOO mm gauge system. A trans-shipment facility has been built here and is operated by Trans Africa Railways.
Small wonder that the last evening on board our luxury train turned into a lively and exciting one! Who could resist the Rovos team's invitation to the observation car? That night the vital centre of the "Pride of Africa" shifted to the end of the train, almost representing the "end of the line". In the lounge, as well as on the open platform of the observation car, party guests toasted one another (and some of them held their glasses up to the Southern Cross high above ...). Eventually the train came to a final halt at the crowded platform of the huge TAZARA station in Dar es Salaam. We were e welcomed by station staff, onlookers, travel agents and a uniformed brass band playing marches! The atmosphere was electric as everyone detrained from what had been a luxury "moving home" for two weeks.


SOUTH AFRICA – RIDING THE RAILS FOR GOLF AND GAME’
by Stuart and Lois Scheyer. Courtesy of ‘ The Longboat Traveller “ 17 June 2004

Eight days and nights on a train in South Africa - you have to love it or hate it - and love it we did. Of course, this was no ordinary trip or train. It was the Golf Safari on Rovos Rail, one of the most elegant railroads in the world. Rohan Vos, started rebuilding old railroad cars and locomotives as a hobby; soon his hobby turned into a full-fledged business based in Pretoria, with some 100 trips a year on the southern half of the African continent.
The three Golf Safaris a year are recent additions to the usual schedule that is built around game drives, sightseeing and leisure travel, but those features are also included in the golf trips. The full itinerary is a kaleidoscope of golf at five excellent courses, at least three game drives and sightseeing and shopping trips for everyone. Additional events are available to non-golfers. All of this is wrapped in a beautiful package of service that befits a five-star hotel. In fact, the first actual stop on our trip was at a genuine five-star hotel: Cape Grace in Cape Town, South Africa.
But first, a little background on the trip. If you are one of our relatives or dwindling number of friends who are required to read our columns and follow our travels, you probably know that we enjoy fast and frequent trips. We recently wrote about five days in Costa Rica and eight days in China (that one was a little fast, even for us). So when we first heard of the golf trip on Rovos, it had many positives and one big negative: the length of the trip. With a base of eight nights on the train and three nights on airplanes, in addition to a night in Pretoria before leaving, we debated for a year. Nevertheless, the chance to see a major new country and big game and be on a train and play golf became too irresistible. We then decided that we could not miss Cape Town and added an opening night in that great city.
So, we flew non-stop overnight to London and left the same night on a flight to Cape Town, arriving in the early morning. Cape Grace Hotel was (appropriately) quite gracious and had a room ready for us at 9:00 a. m. With only a little over twenty-four hours scheduled in Cape Town, we left immediately, after a welcome shower, for a tour of this unique city that straddles the Atlantic and Indian oceans. All of the accolades about the setting and surroundings are true. The second night we stayed at Illyria House in Pretoria, which was enthusiastically recommended by the Rovos staff, and it certainly is the Taj Mahal of B&B's, with commensurate prices.
Now, let's get to the real reason for the trip: golf and game while riding the rails. The trip was structured in a manner similar to a cruise with travel at night and a new destination each morning. We left on Saturday morning from Rovos Rail's private station in Pretoria, which is the formal capital of South Africa. Actually, most government business is in Johannesburg and Cape Town. With Champagne and canapés for nourishment, we met our staff and 37 other guests and experienced the first of what was to be many examples of the friendly efficiency of the staff. Golf bags vanished into a holding area, suitcases were placed in suites and explanations abounded. With a blast of steam and the nostalgic shout of the train whistle, we were off.
At this point, it is appropriate to describe the accommodations that were to be our home for fourteen hours a day for over a week. For obvious reasons, a train is not too wide. But any comparison to the old "bedrooms" or "roomettes" is erroneous, because there were only two "Royal Suites" in our admittedly short European style railroad car. We had a permanent queen bed in one end of the room and a desk, refrigerator and armchairs in the other end, with moderate closet and storage space. For bathroom lovers, and count me as one, there was a full shower stall, old-fashioned claw foot bathtub and ample room for the toilet and sink. This most important room on board was first class.
We settled in for a very welcome respite by getting traveling on the first day and having a chance to get acquainted with fellow passengers from Wales, Australia, Great Britain, Sweden, Switzerland and a large group from Germany. Although we were the only Americans, English was the universal language. We awoke on Sunday to find a bus next to our train loaded with our golf clubs and we were off on a brief ride to Leopard Creek Country Club…certainly one of the finest courses that we have enjoyed in the world. Golf was perfectly spaced: Royal Swazi on Monday, Beachwood at Durban on Wednesday, Champagne Sports Resort on Thursday and Lost City at Sun City on Saturday. Champagne Resort, only five years old, might be the best course that we have ever had the pleasure to play. Logistics were superb and planning excellent. The bus preceded us everywhere and we arrived at each course with our names on carts and caddies. As an added attraction, giraffes, monkeys and crocodiles joined us as we played… certainly a justifiable cause to claim a "mulligan." Golf was only one facet of the experience. Afternoons and off days were filled with sightseeing and game drives. We received a moderate education on the habits of each animal and watched their constant vigil for avoiding more voracious species: "you snooze, you lose!" It is difficult to describe the excitement that comes from close proximity to such wild animals, all from the safety of your open sided vehicle…safe as long as you stay inside the profile. A lovely lake trip to search for crocodiles and hippos filled one early evening.
All of the above was enhanced by some of the most outstanding service and facilities that we have ever experienced. In addition to sleeping cars with two or three suites each, we had an observation car, lounge car, dining car and full kitchen car. Each had been grandly restored to their original splendor. Room service was available 24/7. We were treated to superb breakfasts and dinners on the train with a wide variety of interesting, but not foolish, choices. The South African wines, which were recently extolled in the International Herald Tribune, were superb. Suites were attended to every time we left… and all of this was presented by a staff that was genuinely friendly and professional.
As we spent so much time with the South African staff and international travel partners, we gained a greater prospective on the social and political situations in the many countries of the southern African continent. Hope was evident throughout the country of South Africa and we were considerably impressed with the pride of most citizens. When we asked a cab driver about crime in Johannesburg, he answered, "There might be some, but I will never talk against my country." The change from apartheid to democracy has been remarkably peaceful, but problems abound, with AIDS, unemployment and tribal rivalry presenting major challenges. Most important, hope was the watchword and the marvelous physical assets of this country make it an excellent vacation destination.
In summary, the longest trip that we have taken in many years was also one of the best. A Golf Safari or any other travel offered by Rovos Rail comes very highly recommended. They can be reached on their excellent Internet site at www.rovos.com or by E-mail at nicole@rovos.co.za.
Stuart and Lois Scheyer are in their early seventies and are residents of Longboat Key. They each log over 100,000 air miles a year. They will be pleased to answer any travel questions and can be reached by E-mail at EnergeticTravel@aol.com
DIARY OF A SAFARI JOURNEY
By Godfrey King, www.incentiveworld.com Magazine, Vol 4 No 1

Running specialist train journeys throughout Southern Africa must be a logistical nightmare. For example, rail networks are not consistently maintained to acceptable standards which means that operators like Rovos Rail have to take exceptional care in seeing that the excursions they offer are of a high and safe standard. This they do. But, above all else, my experience is that they offer a standard of service that is simply unequalled in the sub-continent. And, frankly, this is what counts most. Rovos Rail's Pretoria to Durban run is now into its third season and combines a well-paced journey plus two interesting and very different game drives. The route from Pretoria to Durban goes via Komatipoort in Mpumalanga and also the eastern side of Swaziland. incentiveworld.com was invited to undertake the return journey from Durban to Pretoria and what follows is a train diary of the trip.
MONDAY
09h00: Arrival at Durban station. Directions to Rovos Rail well signposted. Red carpet is out, and the reception by Rovos staff is warm and welcoming, plus glass of champagne. Personally escorted to compartment onboard The Pride of Africa.
09h45: Guests gather on the platform to be addressed by the train manager, Pieter Peyper, who explains what is going to happen and also gives some "travelling rules" - for example, keep windows up and blinds closed at stations to avoid any unnecessary "shopping" by outsiders. (A sad commentary on state of affairs in South Africa, but nevertheless true).
10h00: The Pride of Africa literally glides out of Durban station on a trip north where the rails have not seen regular, long-distance trains for decades. The view, unfortunately, until we reach Stanger, is somewhat industrial and full of squatter settlements.
11h00: Drinks in the observation car at the rear of the train, watching the tracks fall away. More free-flowing champagne.
13h00: Lunch. Smoked chicken salad, roast fillet with maitre dé butter, and fruit and mascarpone bombe. An excellent meal with very good service.
15h00: Not very exciting scenery as train passes through extensive blue gum plantations. As eventide falls, there is the first sign of the Lebombo mountains and the scenery turns into typical African bush.
20h00: Dinner. Crayfish strudel, butternut and mango soup, and a really superb duck confit with sauté potatoes. A meal to die for. After dinner The Pride of Africa crosses the border into Swaziland at Golela. The Kingdom of Swaziland has the shortest railway system of any country in Southern Africa, except Lesotho, which has only a few kilometres of track. This tiny nation is bordered on three sides by South Africa and to the east by Mozambique, where the border is formed by the rugged Lebombo mountains.
20h30: Time to go to bed with the clack-clack of the rails and the train rocking into the night.
TUESDAY
05h00: Since midnight the train has been stationed at Mpaka Siding, Mkhaya. Wake-up call for an early game drive in the Mkhaya Game Reserve.
05h15: Tea, coffee, juices, fruit and pastries are served in the dining car.
06h00: Off on the game drive to see elephants (particularly a three-month-old baby elephant), black and white rhino, giraffe, nyala, sable, impala and much more. Mkhaya is a privately-owned park and Swaziland's refuge for endangered species. The game drives are claimed to be soul-enriching experiences.
08h00: A short bathroom break at the reserve's Stone Lodge Camp, where tea, coffee and muffins are served under a tree-shaded canopy.
09h30: Arrival back at the train - and after more champagne! - the train departs for Komatipoort in Mpumalanga, South Africa.
11h00: Back in South Africa and brunch is served in the dining car. The scenery changes from bush to sugar cane.
15h15: Arrive Malelane for game drive in the Kruger Park followed by an off-train bush dinner in a boma at the Malelane Sun. Bush drive unspectacular but this is the nature of a game park. Sightings of the big cats cannot be made to order. Unfortunately this did not happen, but … 18h00: The dinner in the boma at the Malelane Sun was, complete with crackling log fire, a superb success. The menu included ostrich sausages, kudu kebabs, and a guinea fowl curry. All exceptionally tasty. Then it was off to rejoin the train and … wait for it … more champagne on arrival!
20h00: The train departed for the overnight journey to Waterval Onder.
WEDNESDAY
07h00: Breakfast is served as the train begins to ascend from Waterval Onder and climbs a most attractive escarpment route up to Belfast. A pity that the very scenic route along the Crocodile River is missed overnight.
12h30: Lunch is served as the train departs Witbank and heads for Rayton, where a steam engine hauls the train into Pretoria. The final Rovos touch!
15h00: We arrive at Rovos Rail's Capital Park Station in Pretoria. The trip is over. All that is left are the memories that have been created.

AN AMERICAN ON ROVOS RAIL
By Margaret Shakespeare, incentiveworld.com Magazine, Vol 4 No 1

New York writer Margaret Shakespeare has travelled throughout the world on assignment and often in Southern Africa. Her articles have been published in the New York Times, Forbes FYI, Brides, Country Living, Opera News and Wildlife Conservation, where she is a regular contributor, among many others. Her interests and experience are eclectic - from wine and food pairing to lions in the Okavango Delta to baseball and contemporary brass chamber music. She is at work on a South African food and wine book for the American audience. Here she reports on a Rovos Rail Durban to Pretoria trip.
During the grim old days of apartheid, when most of the world cordoned off South Africa with economic sanctions and travel restrictions, certain tidings persistently leaked out. We heard about the improving quality of wines, that nowhere could top Kruger, long the crown jewel of South Africa National Parks, for Big Five game viewing and that the Blue Train remained the most luxurious rail trip in the world.
But a leaked report isn't necessarily truth-bearing. During the past decade I have been privileged to explore the "new" South Africa - to taste, see, experience, judge for myself - and pass along leisure and lifestyle recommendations to my readers in the US (sometimes a persnickety lot, with unyielding standards and lots of visa stamps in their double-size passports).
Wines: yes, from big companies such as a revamped KWV to tiny Rudera where Teddy Hall has taken Chenin Blanc to new heights and other boutique wineries, there is much to sip and sing about. Kruger: yes, the park entry fee is a virtual guarantee to see the Big Five - or almost any five Southern Africa species many times over. But the Blue Train, while still classy and classic and a worthy luxury travel experience, has got splendid competition from a newcomer. In 1989 Rovos Rail came racing - well, chugging - down the track. Rohan Vos, passionate and meticulous, collected early 20th Century rail coaches and strung them together with vintage steam locomotives.
Refurbished with lustrous wood panelling, Victorian-style ceiling fans and sconces, gold/green/red brocades and outfitted spaciously with full-size beds among 21st Century creature comforts, The Pride of Africa, as Rohan tagged his creation, gives travelers a taste of traditional Africa - served up with style and smiles.
When I stepped out of the taxi at Durban Station for a two-day journey to Pretoria, the low-key staff - always friendly but never campaigning to be my new best friend - greeted me by name and with a glass of Cap Classique. Americans don't have trains like this one, a gleaming diamond amid the rough of workaday yellow and gray huffing and puffing Metrorail trains. (Other than our more-or-less efficient commuter systems and a few high-speed Amtrak connections in the Northeast United States, rail travel for us is a rather dismal affair, avoided whenever possible.) The Rovos staff kept hitting the right notes, keeping procedural and safety briefings, well, brief and then we were off. I never had to test the emergency drill but it was nice to know help - even to sort out the many light switches - was just a phone call away.
I had most looked forward to dining - dressing up and sitting down for dinner in a real white-tablecloth dining car. I was not disappointed. The food is vibrantly South African - butterfish with orange and caraway - sometimes with a twist - kingklip and salmon sosaties. The wine list, though small, is wellchosen and I was welcome to try anything on it. Always a Cap Classique to start; Boschendal Chenin Blanc or maybe an unwooded Chardonnay with butternut
squash-mango soup. Then L'Avenir Pinotage, a wine I swoon over, especially with roast fillet, and tastes of Meerlust Pinot Noir and other Stellenbosch reds.
The Rovos company, wisely, plans their trips with topnotch off-train activities, a selling point for Americans, who never have enough time. We enjoyed game drives (5a.m. wake-up calls, Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony subtly piped in during breakfast to set the mood) in Swaziland's Mkhaya Park, with breeding programmes for endangered species (we saw lots of black and white rhino), and Kruger. After the evening drive in Kruger - through Malelane Gate, across the Crocodile River, stopping for two female hyenas to sniff around our vehicle - we were treated to a boma dinner at the Malelane Sun, with kudu kebabs, ostrich sausage and other braai foods unfamiliar to Americans. That was my only quibble - after sundowners, I would rather have showered off the bush dust and put on fancy clothes again for another dinner aboard.
The Rovos observation car, always open for drinks, reading and card games, fostered networking, a favourite pastime of Americans. The two dozen passengers on my journey came from three continents. We swapped life stories, business cards and just hung out watching the oversize orange African moon recede in the breeze on the outdoor deck. Day times, curled up with a book in my room, I could lower the window so there was nothing but fresh air between me and the waving children and oldsters we passed by.
Stretching our legs on the Witbank platform, while the crew swapped the electified engine for the coal-powered steam locomotive that would pull us into Pretoria, my new South African friends expressed shame and frustrastion at the shabbiness of most Spoornet stations. True enough. Even the pots that used to hold palms and flowering shrubs sat chipped, faded, forlorn. A pity, for mid-afternoon we arrived at Capital Park, the spit-shined Rovos headquarters, recently restored. Also a pity that there was time only for goodbys over a quick drink - a flute of Cap Classique, of course, which by now seemed seductively normal at any hour of the day.

INCENTIVES FOR AFRICA
By Godfrey King, incentiveworld.com Magazine, Vol 4 No 1

In 2004 Rovos Rail - which lays claim to running some of the most luxurious trains in the world - will celebrate its 15th anniversary. Since its establishment in 1989, Rovos Rail has earned an enviable international reputation for its truly worldclass travel experiences. Beautifully rebuilt trains offer the opulence of a bygone era, and now - with the addition of two 1954 pressurised Convair aircraft - Rovos presents a novel combination for group and incentive charters in Southern Africa.
Catering to a maximum of 42 passengers, there are many permutations combining Rovos Rail's 42-bed train with the Convair 440 aircraft as well as an historic DC3. Groups can choose two nights on the train with two or three nights in the Victoria Falls, Mfuwene Luangwa Valley, the Okavanga Delta or elephant-back safaris in Hoedspruit, Mpumalanga, South Africa.
Rovos says that from its headquarters in Capital Park, Pretoria, very successful overnight trips from one to 10 days have been undertaken in the past with business incentive groups, historical tours, private family gatherings and bird shoots. Three-to-four hour lunch and dinner excursions, entertaining a maximum of 72 guests, is another possibility. Champagne, orange juice and canapés are served on arrival while musicians play light classical music in the background.
The train and the aircraft are available independently for charter.

TAKING TO THE AIR
By Godfrey King, incentiveworld.com Magazine, Vol 4 No 1

In addition to rail journeys, Rovos has launched Rovos Air. This consists of two 1954 Convair 440s which are based at Lanseria Airport, midway between Johannesburg and Pretoria. "Delaney", a 21-seat Douglas DC3, has also been put into operation. These aircraft are used to convey paying passengers from Pietersburg to Victoria Falls in Zambia but are also available to charter anywhere in Southern Africa.

A TRAIN TRIP BACK IN TIME
By Warwick Ashford, WebBrainstorm Magazine, February 2004
www.brainstorm.itweb.co.za

In the month of Valentines, it's time to shrug off your regrets at having forgotten your new year's resolutions, and instead resolve to immerse yourself a world of luxury and romance.
If you were to imagine a five-star hotel offering the highest standards of comfort and service with the most spectacular views in Africa from each opulent air-conditioned suite, you would have a good idea of what to expect aboard Rovos Rail's luxury train, The Pride of Africa.
Having crossed the Karoo several times by train, I felt that no previous experience had come close to the high Edwardian style of Rovos Rail. Every member of the team, from creator Rohan Vos down to the engine driver, has something to teach about service excellence.
Seated in comfortable chairs opposite the writing desk and three windows of our suite as we meandered through the Karoo towards Kimberley, my wife and I sipped filter coffee and debated what made Rovos Rail special. Although this was unlike any previous trans-Karoo trip, it took us a while to identify what made it unique. Like all train journeys, our sojourn aboard The Pride of Africa freed us from the dangers and rigours of the road, affording us the ability to relax, enjoy the view, and even catch up on a little reading or sleep without having to wait for the next pit stop for refreshment or relief.

What makes the difference?
We reflected on the pleasure of afternoon tea in the observation car, deliciously accompanied by the freshest of carrot cakes, agreeing Rovos Rail has succeeded in creating a fine hotel on wheels. But considering that other trains have achieved the same, the question remained as to what makes Rovos Rail different? Shortly before Kimberley, as the vegetation grew slightly taller and greener, we reached consensus.
The Pride of Africa is more than the sum of its parts. It is a perfect fusion of the best of the past and present, combining with kilometres of unspoiled African bush to take the Rovos traveller to a new and exciting place, which, in addition to comfort and luxury, is all about nostalgia, elegance and style.
Rovos Rail offers trips along the Garden Route, an Edwardian Safari from Cape Town to Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, a 3 400km journey to Swakopmund in Namibia, and a tri-annual nine-day golf safari. The Victoria Falls trip includes a flight aboard Rovos Air, which also offers two African regional air safaris using a restored and updated fleet of aircraft comprising two 1954 Convair 440 and a 1944 DC-3 classic aircraft.

Culinary delights
Travelling on the Pride of Africa is a journey beyond reality where the best of contemporary African cuisine may be savoured in the elegance of a classic 1924 dining car, where the ambience of its gently creaking wooden pillars, arches, and panels, combined with the coolness of unobtrusive air conditioners, more than compensates for the quieter smoothness associated with more modern suspension. Although a less romantic setting for a candlelight dinner, the comparatively newer 1938 dining car offers a gentler ride and has a brighter, airy charm of its own with wide windows offering better daytime views, while still retaining some mystique of a past era.
Whether it's an informal lunch or dinner, where collar and tie is a minimum requirement for gentlemen diners, the food is outstanding. Although there is catering for special dietary requirements requested on booking, standard menus are thoughtfully balanced with a wide variety of South African flavours. Springbok with lemon honey sauce, bobotie, Karoo lamb, and the best cinnamon milk tart we've ever tasted were some of the delectable alternatives to prawns sautéed in ginger and mint, beetroot and apple soup, Kingklip in a Pernod sauce, and cappuccino cream dessert served in a basket of chocolate coated biscuit.
The Victorian style, free standing enamel baths of the Royal Suites are one of the outstanding features, and the large showers in all the bathrooms are a pleasure with their Victorian-style plumbing and steaming hot water to revive weary travellers.
Our suite's wardrobe, albeit rather limited in size, was like an Aladdin's cave of delights, packed with dressing gowns, slippers, a shower mat and souvenir toiletry case. There's even a pair of safety goggles to enable the traveller to feel the rush of fresh Karoo air in safety. "The Pride of Africa is the only luxury train in the world with windows that open!" boasts Vos.

A walk at the hole
The Rovos Rail experience is not confined to the train, with stops at Matjiesfontein and Kimberley where local guides take charge under the watchful eye of Rovos staff.
The previous evening's weather forecast warned us of an expected 36°C in Kimberley for the visit to the city's famous Big Hole, and upon arrival Rovos staff were on hand with chilled spring water to ease the transition from air-conditioned comfort to dusty mine museum. On return to Kimberley station, members of the Rovos team were waiting with silver trays piled high with refreshing cloths to mop sweaty brows and others filled with welcome glasses of sparkling wine, orange juice and bucks fizz.
Relieved to be back in the air-conditioned comfort of our suite - named after Sir Joseph Robinson, one-time mayor of Kimberley and supporter of President Paul Kruger in opposition to Cecil John Rhodes - I was able to settle into a comfortable chair and record some of my thoughts before delving into the cleverly concealed bar fridge below the writing desk, mixing a lovely G&T near Warrenton and watching the gathering dusk from the cosy comfort of our double bed.
A lack of water and coal replenishment facilities often means having to use diesel or electric locomotives, but Rovos Rail says it endeavours to ensure arrivals and departures in Pretoria are under steam. And so it was that in Centurion two of Rovos Rail's five steam locomotives coupled up to make the steam train era fantasy complete. With the steam whistle sounding, we eased to our journey's end.
Of course, back in the real world, travelling in grand style does come at a price. But, once paid, the rate includes three meals a day, all beverages, off-train excursions, 24-hour room service, as well as a laundry and pressing service to take care of any unexpected mishaps.
The newly rebuilt Capital Park colonial style station prolongs the illusion of passage back in time, and as one passes beneath the ceiling fans of the period waiting room, out of the dream and back out into reality, one cannot help dreaming of a future journey into the past.
Rovos Rail Pretoria: +27 (0) 12-315-8242 Cape Town: +27 (0) 21-421-4020
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BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT
By DEON SCHOEMAN OF TOPCAR MAGAZINE MARCH 2004
Photography: ROB TILL www.topcar.co.za

Speed thrills! At 300 km/h, time goes into freeze frame. You're concentrating so hard that every second feels like a minute, every minute like a lifetime. The landscape rushes by in a staccato blur, accompanied by the angry hiss of slipstreaming air and the engine's baritone bellow. Ahead, the horizon is rushing forward to meet you. And still, the there's more to come ...
It may have been codenamed MSB (for Medium-Sized Bentley), but there's nothing medium about the Continental GT. Yes, it is more compact than the massively ostentatious, indecently quick Arnage. Less expensive, too. But it's still every inch the bellicose British aristocrat.
More importantly, the Continental GT is a thoroughly modern Bentley: a car that acknowledges the glories and traditions of the marque's past without becoming entrapped by them. It epitomises the bolder, brighter Bentley of the new millennium.
On first encounter, it's the aggression of the Continental GT that takes you by surprise. The haughty, crusty disdain of older-generation Bentleys has made way for an altogether leaner, more challenging persona.
You see it in the clear-lensed stare of those round, recessed headlights, sense it in the way that large radiator grille symbolises an appetite for visceral, hands-on motoring. Its chiselled figure is sinewy and muscular, the metal stretched tautly over its crouching, low-slung shape.
In profile, the nose is snub and pugnacious. But from there, the bonnet's swoop to the A-pillar is majestic and pure Bentley. Massive wheel arches barely contain the equally massive alloy wheels. The haunches are athletic, exuding power and authority.
The roofline brings a smooth arc of relief from the rippling tension of the Continental GT's sculpted waistline. Its curve not only confirms that this Bentley is indeed a true coupé, but also adds streamlined sex appeal.
Brightwork is mercifully restrained to the filigree grille (which, horror of all horrors, is plastic!), the window surrounds, a sill finisher and the oval outline of the exhaust tailpipes.
The weight of the door drives home the sheer solidity of the Continental GT. It opens wide to reveal the hedonistic delights of the crafted cabin. Here, the obligatory hand-stitched hide and high-gloss wood veneer meet batteries of modern switchgear and advanced electronics.
Superbly shaped, electrically controlled front bucket seats provide support and comfort in abundance . Big, round dials set into an acre of wood veneer are clearly visible through the leather-trimmed steering wheel.
The four-spoker is also home to a battery of ancillary controls, including a scroll button for accessing menus on the centrally located display. Round metallic vents add to a sense of yesteryear déja vu, as do the pull-push vent stops, and the twee analogue clock, supplied by Breitling.
It all operates pretty logically once you get the hang of it, but the dichotomy between traditional and high-tech seems a little contrived. Still, finishes are first class, and there's that rare air of bespoke perfection that British craftsman do best.
Rear occupants get their own, sculpted seating, split by a high centre console. Accommodation is snug rather than spacious, with headroom in particular compromised by the sloping roofline. Still, average-proportioned folk won't have too much to complain about.
The real magic of the Bentley Continental GT commences when you hit the start button. Yes, thanks to keyless entry technology, you don't need to use the conventional key. The whirr of the starter is followed in short succession by the Bentley engine's bellow.
And what a bellow it is: this power unit sounds unlike anything I've ever heard. It's a mix between a V8's characteristic burble and the rather smoother growl of a straight-six - and that's only at idle. Blip the throttle, and the entire car rocks, while that growl crescendos menacingly.
The sound effects confirm the rather special nature of the engine: a W12 power unit that's both more compact and lighter than a normal V12.
Derived from parent company Volkswagen's original W12, this 5 998 cc unit effectively combines two V6 engines by sharing a common crankshaft and staggering the inner six cylinders. The angle between the two main banks is 72 degrees, but between the staggered cylinders the angle is just 15 degrees.
Twin overhead camshafts per bank, four valves per cylinder and twin 3K turbochargers with air-to-air intercoolers allow quite prodigious power and torque outputs. Bentley claims a power maximum of 411 kW at 6 100 r/min, while the torque peak of 650 Nm is already reached at only 1 600 r/min!
To make the most of all that urge, this is the first ever Bentley with all-wheel drive. In normal driving conditions, it splits power 50:50 between the front and rear axles, while a Torsen centre diff can seamlessly vary that ratio according to traction requirement.
By now, I'm champing at the bit: ensconced in leather, surrounded by the trappings of luxury motoring, I'm about to experience the Continental GT for myself. And I've got the entire day to subject the car to the widest variety of driving conditions Johannesburg and its environs can offer.
The Tiptronic-style gearshift lever snicks easily into the 'D' gate. Gently feed in the loud pedal - and we're off.
Trundling along at urban speeds is no problem: the engine is smoothly tractable, with not a hint of lag. But the slightest depression of the accelerator elicits an instant surge of power. It's a reminder of the potential lurking under that long, swooping bonnet.
On the move, the Continental GT feels more compact and firmer than its exterior dimensions suggest. There's a reassuring tautness to the ride, and the steering feels nicely weighted. Ride refinement is exceptional, given the car's huge 19-inch alloys and low-profile 275/40 ZR19 Pirelli P-Zero Rosso rubber.
The coupé's front wishbone and rear multi-link suspension are assisted by electronically controlled air dampers, which allow it to adapt to varying road surfaces and driving conditions.
Finally, we leave the city behind, and with nary a vehicle in sight, it's time to open up this British beast. Floor the throttle, and the Bentley leaps forward with an enthusiasm that's quite startling, given the car's 2,4-ton weight.
It accelerates relentlessly, with virtually no pause between the ultra-smooth, ultra-quick gear changes of the six-speed ZF auto gearbox. Ahead, the road's tar ribbon is drawn thinner and thinner, while the speedometer's red needle sweeps across the circular face.
Bentley claims that the Continental GT is the world's fastest four-seater productio