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In this fascinating and entertaining memoir, the legendary White Bushman, Peter Stark, writes about his experiences in the former German South West Africa: first as a farm manager and lion hunter, and later as nature conservationist.
Stark's fearless personality and phenomenal knowledge of the veld, combined with an intimate knowledge of the San people and their culture make for stories and experiences that most people can only dream of. Whether it's about lions chasing San trackers, elephants trampling a campsite or the spearing of 32 scorpions with a kebab-skewer - Stark's stories are bound to awe and entertain.
With Peter Stark's unique and genial narrative voice, The White Bushman presents an important cultural-historical perspective on the country that became Namibia. The photographs, taken either by Stark himself or his fellow game wardens, contribute greatly to enhancing the images conjured up by these captivating adventures and anecdotes.
Die legendariese Wit Boesman, Peter Stark, skryf onderhoudend oor
sy belewenisse in die destydse Duits-Suidwes-Afrika. Eers as
plaasbestuurder en leeuvanger van formaat (wat Natuurbewaring by
Etosha grys hare gegee het) en later self as natuurbewaarder, het
hy ’n formidabele kennis van die veld, die San, die wild en die
mense opgedoen. Hierdie kennis spreek mee in die staaltjies en
verhale oor sy ervarings, opgeskryf in die gesellige trant eie aan
Namibie. Peter Stark is in Duits-Suidwes-Afrika (vandag Namibie)
gebore en was vir baie jare natuurbewaarder in die
Okaukuejo-omgewing. As ware seun van die veld het Peter hom
onderskei as onverskrokke grootwildjagter, uitnemende ruiter en
spoorsnyer van formaat. Hy het in 1974 by die destydse
Suid-Afrikaanse Weermag aangesluit as kommandant in die
rykunsvleuel, waar hy 'n enorme bydrae gelewer het tot die
opleiding van ruiters. Vandag woon op die plaas Vogelsang naby
Ventersdorp.
A memorable tale of adventure on the turbulent seas of the Great
Southern and Atlantic oceans-on one of the most historic voyages of
our time-finds its way into paperback. This is William F. Stark's
engrossing memoir of the last leg of the Grain Race, and the
Pamir's rounding of fearsome Cape Horn-the storm-tossed tip of
South America just 600 miles from Antarctica-the veritable Mount
Everest of sailing. In 1949, the crew of thirty-four sailors from
around the world experienced the shipboard life of the seventeenth
century on a four-masted vessel that carried hundreds of acres of
sail. In 128 days the Pamir journeyed 16,000 miles from Port
Victoria, Australia, to Falmouth, England, through the world's
stormiest seas, as Stark worked on decks awash with huge swells,
and scrambled up ice-coated rigging to manhandle sails on masts
that were up to twenty stories high. Contrasting romance with the
realities of life at sea, and poignantly evoking the love affair he
left behind to join the Pamir, while punctuating his tale with
illuminating photos, maps, and details of maritime history, Stark
has written a thrilling book that climaxes the fabled era begun by
Cape Horn merchant sailors more than three centuries ago.
This autobiographical novel is not only the true story of a child's
upbringing by his grandparents in the 1920s, but is also a story of
the villagers of Wootton on the Isle of Wight. Through Charles
Lansley's meticulous research related to the manuscript written by
his late father Peter Lansley, most of the characters have been
identified along with their places of residence, memorials and
other places of interest. We learn about the local milkman, the
butcher, the shoemaker and other trades persons who made up the
community, including Peter's nursery teacher at Hillgrove House.
But also, through his grandfather's love, we gain a child's
understanding of God, the afterlife and the cemetery at Mount Joy,
Carisbrooke. We join Peter at Christmas time for stir up Sunday,
sips of Guinness and many amusing misunderstandings as well as
various misadventures with his girlfriend Victoria in the grounds
of Fernhill House and at Wootton Creek. There are also visits to
Ashey races and muses on the Dairyman's Daughter at Arreton and on
Tennyson's Maud at Wootton. Through the stories and anecdotes we
gain a greater understanding of what family and village life was
like in the 1920s when the steam train ran supreme, when there was
no electricity or telephone, where the house was lit by an oil lamp
and candles, where the 'range' was used for cooking and when it was
safe for a five year old to walk into the village alone. This book
is a delight to read both as a story and as a description of life
on the Island. It should appeal to both those who want a good read
and those who want to find out a bit more about the local and
social history of the Isle of Wight.
This autobiographical novel is not only the true story of a child's
upbringing by his grandparents in the 1920s, but is also a story of
the villagers of Wootton on the Isle of Wight. Through Charles
Lansley's meticulous research related to the manuscript written by
his late father Peter Lansley, most of the characters have been
identified along with their places of residence, memorials and
other places of interest. We learn about the local milkman, the
butcher, the shoemaker and other trades persons who made up the
community, including Peter's nursery teacher at Hillgrove House.
But also, through his grandfather's love, we gain a child's
understanding of God, the afterlife and the cemetery at Mount Joy,
Carisbrooke. We join Peter at Christmas time for stir up Sunday,
sips of Guinness and many amusing misunderstandings as well as
various misadventures with his girlfriend Victoria in the grounds
of Fernhill House and at Wootton Creek. There are also visits to
Ashey races and muses on the Dairyman's Daughter at Arreton and on
Tennyson's Maud at Wootton. Through the stories and anecdotes we
gain a greater understanding of what family and village life was
like in the 1920s when the steam train ran supreme, when there was
no electricity or telephone, where the house was lit by an oil lamp
and candles, where the 'range' was used for cooking and when it was
safe for a five year old to walk into the village alone. This book
is a delight to read both as a story and as a description of life
on the Island. It should appeal to both those who want a good read
and those who want to find out a bit more about the local and
social history of the Isle of Wight.
Transformations of the Welfare State gives a new twist to the
longstanding debate on the impact of economic globalization on the
welfare state. The authors focus on several small, advanced OECD
economies in order to assess whether (and how) the welfare state
will be able to compete under conditions of an increasingly
integrated world economy.
Small states can be seen as an 'early warning system' for general
trends, because of their dependence on world markets and
vulnerability to competitive pressures. The book's theoretical part
innovatively integrates the literature on the political economy of
small states with more recent research on the impact of
globalization on social policy to generate a set of ideal-typical
policy scenarios. In the main body of the book, the authors
systematically test these scenarios against the experience of four
countries: Austria, Denmark, New Zealand, and Switzerland.
The comparative, in-depth analysis of reform trajectories since the
1970s in four key policy areas; pensions, labor market policy,
health care, and family policy provides, according to the authors,
substantial evidence of a new convergence in welfare state
patterns. They go on to argue that this amounts to a fundamental
transformation of the welfare state from the old Keynesian welfare
state positioned 'against the market' to a new set of supply-side
policies 'with' and 'for' the market. Yet one of the big lessons to
be learned from this timely study is that the transformation does
not match the doomsday scenario predicted by neo-classical
economists in the 1990s. There is no evidence of a 'race to the
bottom' of social expenditure and standards of social protection,
nor of a convergence towards a 'liberal' social policy model.
Looking to the possible future of the welfare state in an era newly
marked by profound uncertainty, the authors sound an optimistic
note for states of any size.
Well into the nineteenth century, Arctic explorers believed that
they need only their ships through a ring of ice circling the top
of the globe, and from there they would tack easily on soft breezes
to the North Pole. Instead, hundreds of adventurers were crushed by
ice, wasted away by scurvy, and frozen to death on the ice floes in
pursuit of their misguided belief. This European notion of the
Arctic -- a ring with a hole in the middle -- also represents a
void in which native voices have drowned. Now, this vibrant
collection celebrates both the unheard voices of the Inuit and the
trail of words left by the Europeans as they pushed northward to
fill the hole in their knowledge.
"Ring of Ice" begins with the adventures of European explorers
such as Captain Tyson and his crew, marooned by their own shipmates
and forced to float precariously on a tiny iceberg for five months
before being rescued. Later, twentieth-century explorers are
confronted with other obstacles: Duncan Pryde, a fur-trade
bachelor, finds himself unwittingly caught up in the Eskimo
tradition of wife exchange and faces a difficult dilemma.
Juxtaposed with these adventures are native stories and legends
that add another, much needed dimension to Western understanding of
polar acquisition.
This unique handbook covers over two dozen cold-weather sports,
from snowshoeing, snowboarding, sledding, ice-sailing, and winter
camping to dog sledding, skijoring, animal tracking,
igloo-building, and even how to make the perfect snow angel.
Special sections treat staying warm, equipment, technique, safety,
and tips for maximizing fun. Every winter adventurer will find
something new here, from novice to thrill-seeker to kids and the
entire family.
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