Wednesday 6 August 2014

Signs of the Times

Most of us are familiar with most of the road signs. However, in the last few years, new signs have started appearing on our roads.  This one is quite new to Cape Town:




 There are also signs which we don't see too often in suburban Cape Town, like this one:

However, when driving from Port Elizabeth to Mthatha last month (a 5-hour drive), I realised that road signs actually tell a story...  

Often, this is the only indication that you are approaching an inhabited area

This sign is seen regularly between PE and East London. There are none after East London.  Is it because most of the land after EL has been given over to cattle grazing, or because the vegetation before EL provides better opportunities for concealment?
This is quite a common sign along the N2, so it may not always be a good idea to travel at 100kph as the sign in the background suggests.
  The first time I saw the 'Cattle Crossing sign, I was reminded of this call to a radio station in America:  
 

After a while, it seems as if the authorities got a bit fed up with putting a 'Cattle Crossing' sign every kilometre or so, and changed their strategy:


But even that, they decided at the Great Kei River, was too onerous to repeat every 10km, so they just put this one up, to get the warnings over and done with:




This one makes statements about several things:
  1. There are quite a few schools in the rural areas
  2. These kids have no means of transport to get to school
  3. They walk along the N2 
  4. They have long distances to walk to school and back each day

This was my absolute favourite.  It ranks up there with the 'Toads Crossing' signs in Noordhoek and the 'Tortoises Crossing' signs on the West Coast

But there's no sign like the sign that tell you you're home.  Ads like this are nailed to the trees all along the N2 as it comes into Mthatha.



Hunnee, I'm home!

3 comments:

  1. Thank you for remembering to tell this tale of the signs! I am sure many of us notice such things and note them on our journeys, but promptly forget them by the time we have driven for 5 hours. Kudos to you [no, not kudus crossing] for remembering and sharing with us.

    As for the deer crossing call video. It is never ceases to amaze me - and there is a lot of this about, even over here in SA, how many stupid people there are out there in the world. I consider myself highly intelligent after listening to things like that. Eish.

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  2. Your comments are spot on! Love the little warthog sign. Perhaps you should have one for your garden gate? :)

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  3. Ecoecho, taking th pics was made a lot easier because I was travelling by myself. If I'd had a passenger, there would probably have been a lot og muttering at all the slowing down, stopping, reversing and turning around.Heaven knows what the passing motorists thought.

    Thanks Marg. I'd love to have a sign like that. And I'd also love to have a warthog in the garden. Along with a few of those white chickens. But Bob has made his opinion quite clear on the matter...

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