Harare International Festival of the Arts (HIFA) 2011

28 04 2011

As I write this HIFA 2011 is in the closing phase (please see the page on the right for a gallery of photos). The final HIFAlutin (get the pun?) newssheet was produced last night so I am no longer required to take photos and though I have a pass to get into anything there was nothing in the programme for today that I thought warranted a trip into town. As a photographer I was required to take photos of shows that the editorial staff wanted to cover; either a special interest or something that needed coverage to sell a few more tickets so quite a lot of it I would not have attended out of choice. But that’s OK, I got exposure to some interesting stuff and I got some nice photos – well I think so!

So today has been a slow day. I even had to go grocery shopping as I’d done nothing during the week. I abhor shopping at the best of times so it really was a drag to do on a day off but well, the cupboard was bare. Kharma watched me with some trepidation – poor girl, she’s a real person dog and hated being left alone all day and well into the night while I was at the Festival. She leaped into the back of the ‘Cruiser with alacrity and kept guard whilst I did the shopping.

“Hello Sir!” says an opportunistic vendor looking for an opening to sell me somthing.

“Hello and no thanks I don’t want, knives, or steering wheel covers, or brushes, or my car painted, or mats, or superglue or padlocks. In fact I don’t want ANYTHING! You could GIVE me what you are trying to sell me and I would give it back to you!”

Silence.

“That’s a big dog you have.”

“Yes it is a VERY big dog.”

“What’s it’s name?”

“It’s name is BITE and it wants to bite you!”

“Ah!” He takes a step back and turns away. I grin at the accomplice who can see I am joking. He smiles but says nothing.

It’s a rathy tatty supermarket and not my first choice but today is Africa Day and the other one was closed. I cut short my shopping list when I walk past the meat counter and am assailed by a rather meaty sort of smell. I grab three newspapers at the till to read on the way out.

There are no real Sunday papers in the tradition of the UK. The Sunday papers there took a full week to read, they were so full of information. In fact the three papers I have picked up are weeklies – the Zimbabwe Independent, The Standard and The Financial Gazette. It’s just the same old news from slightly different perspectives. The political impasse in the country is dominant and I have no trouble in getting through them all in half an hour – I need newspapers to clean windows and light fires. There is one piece on the HIFA opening show that got a few of the senior organizers arrested and released without charge and the police apparently denying that anything happened at all. The rest of the coverage of the Festival is minimal. A page is dedicated to the day’s programme and highlights but the photos are small and of little interest.

HIFA is much more than an annual Festival. There are lots of outreach programmes and skills exchange which culminate in the Festival. And the Festival is much more than that – there are lots of workshops and master classes on the go too. It will take a few weeks to clean up in all senses of the word, the permanent staff take a break and then it starts all over again.





Cosmos season

17 03 2011

It’s comos season again though this year they are not as showy as in the past. I don’t know why – maybe something to do with the erratic rains. I enjoy photographing them, there is always something happing – bees, flies and even an optimistic spider!





Death by honey

5 02 2011

Not a happy bee

There are hundreds of little balls of honey covering this bee on the windowsill of my lounge this morning. It must have got confused in the night and fallen or flown down the chimney where there is a hive and somehow got covered in honey. Despite all the energy it is carrying in the honey it will likely die – it was certainly very subdued when I took this photo. Hmm, death by honey is not necessarily a nice way to go!





The sad country

3 02 2011

I always enjoy the drive out to Mazowe. It is undoubtedly pretty, especially at this time of year with the trees in full leaf and the bush lush and green. Yes, the photos don’t lie – it really was that green. It’s also a chance to get away from the nursery and just feast my eyes on the open spaces that I so love about this country.

I was going out to the Plant Protection Research Institute for another import permit, this time to import some coir growing medium from India as it is nearly a third the price of the pine bark we have been importing from South Africa. As usual there was precious little happening at the PPRI and the weather was perfect so I wandered outside whilst the permit was processed.

I took these photos on the way back into town, dawdling along on the mostly empty road. The once productive farmlands were also empty.





Convergent evolution

21 01 2011

A shore fly of the Ochthera species

I spent a very relaxing hour taking photographs of flies this afternoon whilst an American guest climbed the Domboshava rock just outside Harare. The flies (pictured) were hunting along the edge of a very shallow rock pool. It’s a shore fly of the Ochthera specis and interestingly the forelegs closely resemble those of the mantids in a case of what I would call convergent evolution. Their prey was much too small for me to see but they had some pretty aggressive behaviour towards each other and appeared at times to be territorial. They are also the only flies I have ever seen with the ability to walk sideways!





Flame lilies

9 01 2011

The wild red flame lilies, Gloriosa superba, are coming into bloom now. I picked this one near the micro light club last Sunday and it lasted a good 5 days which is impressive considering it was already a few days old (you can see the stigma is dying back). Even more impressive was the completely undeveloped flower bud on the same stem that coloured up and opened whilst in the “vase” (in reality a water bottle on my bathroom window). There used to be a commercial grower in the Mvurwi area but I know that he is no longer in business though before Christmas vendors were selling small quantities of commercially grown flowers by the side of the road. Colours vary quite a lot too. This was an unusually dark one (it should be more crimson than this photo portrays) – they are more usually an orangey-red.

The red flame lily - Zimbabwe's national flower

They do exist elsewhere in the world. Many years ago whilst doing the backpacker thing I noticed one growing close to the beach on Koh Phangan in the Gulf of Thailand. I don’t know if it was the same species but it certainly looked the same.





Trash metal origami

2 01 2011

We had a very relaxed New Year’s Day lunch at the Gallery Delta. People wandered in and out bringing something to eat and drink and we just sat around and chatted in the perfect weather. A youngish black guy “call me George” came past later with his wares of folded metal objects. He had an interesting history of working as a soap-stone sculptor and had lived for some time in Mozambique where one day he got the idea of using old drinks cans to make objects.

His tools are only a pair of kitchen scissors and a small pair of pliers. The mosquito (and other models not shown) are folded out of a single piece of metal.





Unusual

27 12 2010

I couldn’t identify this moth/butterfly on the glass doors this morning. I particularly liked the gold colouration and the way it holds its wings vertical to its body though I cannot think why it does that. Anyway, it escaped the attentions of the paradise flycatcher that comes past regularly to see what’s on offer and yesterday, even came into the diningroom, hovered less than 2m away from me and picked an insect off the inside of the door before flying out! This was not quite the effect I was looking for but in the end I had to settle for holding a piece of paper in front of the flash to diffuse it. There was just not enough natural light otherwise.





Butterflies are free to fly

26 12 2010

My sympathies to the snow-bound northern hemisphere but I had fun on Christmas Day photographing migrating butterflies.

Mylothris agathina - "Common Dotted Border"

This is a male of the species and curiously I only saw males. My lawn is dotted with dandelion flowers (it IS a batchelor lawn!) to which the butterflies were attracted. I was just a case of sitting still and waiting for butterflies to land on a nearby flower. There can be worse ways to spend an hour or so on Christmas Day!





Skies at night

28 11 2010

The rains are late in starting as predicted. They are still very patchy too but at least there are some spectacular sunsets and clouds about.

A microlight aircraft comes in to land at Komani Microlight Club near Harare

I took this this evening after flying models. There were a number of storms about which disrupted flying of all types of aircraft for a while.

 

I have no idea what these flowers are but they open very quickly late in the evening. I first noticed them last weekend when I was packing up my models and looked up to see a whole lot of flowers that I was certain were not there when I arrived. The next evening I actually watched one open over a period of about 20 minutes. They don’t last more than a night.