The Highveld is a high plateau region of
inland South Africa which is largely home to the largest metropolitan area in
the country, the Gauteng City Region, which accounts for one-third of South
Africa's population.
Go out by yourself, face the wind, hold up your head and thank the Universe for this world we live in.
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My Africa experience
Saturday, 10 October 2015
Saturday, 19 September 2015
African bushveld sunset
"Every sunset brings the promise of a new dawn."
Aloe Marlothii and Giraffe watercolour in hand-made sketch-book - ©Maree Clarkson
The fiery aloe in full bloom, the smell of the fragrant wild sage on a dewy morning and one of Africa’s tallest animals in the back-ground – a typical African Bushveld scene that makes one’s spirits soar!
Tuesday, 15 September 2015
Africa's wonder
“Let a Person Walk Alone With Few Wishes, Committing No Wrong, Like an Elephant in the Forest.”
Watercolour on Bockingford 300gsm 16” x 12” - ©Maree Clarkson
Africa’s wild animals are a constant source of inspiration and for me elephants symbolise Strength, Solitude, sense of loyalty to the family and Intelligence. Looking into the eye of an elephant, one sees Wisdom beyond our understanding.
Friday, 11 September 2015
A Windpomp in the Karoo
Ink sketch and watercolour on Amedeo 200gsm – ©Maree Clarkson
A depiction of a ‘windpomp’ (windmill) in the Karoo. They are such a part of our countryside here in South Africa and they play a specially important part in dry areas like the Karoo where both humans and animals are very dependent on them for water.
These windmills extract the life blood of the earth and it is usually poured into a cement dam close-by the windpomp. Many farm children swim in these cement dams on sweltering days and I have seen flocks of Egyptian Geese taking a quick, cool dip on their way to somewhere.
Saturday, 5 September 2015
An African sunset
Day is life,
As the roars of lions echo,
And the galloping of the antelope fade.
Night is death,
As the laughs of the hyena haunt you,
And the bush is filled with the sounds of terrorized creatures.
But between the beauty all is quiet,
As the sun disappears,
And the land lights up in the most spectacular display,
An African Sunset.
- by Robert G. Fetters
Once you have lived in or visited Africa, visions of Africa become indelible in a visitor's memory. Vivid sunsets... warm and welcoming people....
As the roars of lions echo,
And the galloping of the antelope fade.
Night is death,
As the laughs of the hyena haunt you,
And the bush is filled with the sounds of terrorized creatures.
But between the beauty all is quiet,
As the sun disappears,
And the land lights up in the most spectacular display,
An African Sunset.
- by Robert G. Fetters
Watercolour on Bockingford 300gsm ©Maree Clarkson
Once you have lived in or visited Africa, visions of Africa become indelible in a visitor's memory. Vivid sunsets... warm and welcoming people....
Wednesday, 26 August 2015
African silhouettes
The shadows now so long do grow,
That brambles like tall cedars show,
Molehills seem mountains,
and the ant Appears a monstrous elephant.
- Charles Cotton
Watercolour on Amedeo 200gsm – 12″ × 8″ - ©Maree Clarkson
Elephants (Loxodonta africana) in the shadow of a mountain on their way to water in the northern parts of the Kalahari desert (South Africa). This is how I imagine their trekking in their relentless search for water.
Tuesday, 25 August 2015
African Leopard {Panthera pardus}
Black Pilot FineLiner ink sketch and W&N watercolour on Amedeo 200gsm - ©Maree Clarkson
An African Leopard (Panthera pardus pardus) sunning himself on some rocks. Powerful, graceful and arguably one of the most beautiful of all the large cats, the elusive leopard is a master of stealth and survival. I have ever only seen a Leopard once in my life, and that was in the Kruger National Park, but I recall many tales my Dad had to tell about this magnificent animal when we live in the Northern Transvaal whenI was a child.
Monday, 24 August 2015
African Joy and Sorrow
"The triumph of life is the joy experienced thereafter."
- Maree
Watercolour on Bockingford 300gsm ©Maree Clarkson - done from a photograph of Guinea standing on the wall, forlornly calling his missing wife.
A couple of years ago, one of my guinea fowl sitting on eggs was killed by a dog, leaving 10 eggs, on the pint of hatching, without a mother. I gathered all the eggs and put them in a basket with a hot water bottle, trying to keep them warm to see if any of them would hatch. Two days later still nothing, but on the third day I heard a weak peep-peep from one of the eggs. None of the others showed any sign of life, so I decided to take matters into my own hands and open the one that was peeping. I gently peeled away the shell and lifted out a perfectly formed little guinea fowl, and placed him on the warm towel, drying his little body with a soft cloth until he lifted his little head and stared me straight in the eye...
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