The Orient Express Bar


I love it when things simply fall into place. One day last month when Colin was here from London we were boozing on the west side when we walked by this charming looking bar that resembled a train car. Sure enough it was modeled after the Orient Express. We barged in for a drink but sadly they were not open to the public yet. We met the owner a dream Turkish Andre Balazs looking gentleman, Osman Cakir, got his card and carried on boozing elsewhere.

I pitched the spot to the NYT and they loved it.
Please see the story here and come visit me there this winter where I will be holed up with a divine cocktail and dreams of exotic locales.

Mom and the Girls Second Trip to NYC
















What a fun time we had!
Mother brought Danielle and Leah up two years ago and we had a blast so we thought we should do it again. Hope it's an annual event!

Danielle wants to go into the Air Force so we spent Friday at West Point. Besides a slight stutter with a campus officer the rest of the day was lovely. On the way home we made a quick trip to Bear Mountain for a splendid view of the Hudson.
Saturday we had a fun day twirling around town to the Met, The Frick, tea at the Carlyle and of course H&M, twice!
A highlight was South Pacific at Lincoln Center and a night with friends at the Maritime hotel and of course brunch at Melba's.
And as only Frankie and I would do, we introduced the young girls to the wonder gay cinema classic, Paris is Burning! Hope it comes in handy in high school conversations...


My tidbit on CNN


Who would of thunk last week when I was checking my emails at the gym that CNN would send a little note asking to interview me for a story on Harlem.
Cator: Sure! Sounds fun!
CNN: Great can we come up today?
Cator: No problem!

My friend Bob who works at CNN gives me the skinny: They are doing a profile on Charles Rangel and he mentioned that the biggest number of people moving to Harlem are gay white men.
In a meeting an editor asks, "Anyone know a gay white man in Harlem?"
Bob hits a home run....

Now silly Southern me assumes they are coming up for a screen test. This is a documentary for Soledad O'Brien's show after all! When I get a text that they are 10 minutes away I ask, "When is the official shoot?"
CNN: Um, NOW! Be camera ready!

ZOINKS!

Alas, I jump into some J. Crew shorts and a Burkman Brothers button down and stare in the mirror for 5 minutes perfecting my CNN smile.

Rose and Bob arrive and they shoot me on my stoop, walking down the street and pretend waving to neighbors.

Then they start dropping the political questions and I get flustered. Sure I know what's going on with ole Rangel but I thought it was going to be all about me being gay in Harlem. Hello!

But I end up pulling it off I guess. Wish they would of added a couple more of my musings but we can't have it all.

You can see the segment here
I'm at the 2:00 minute mark.

Let me know what you think!
Here's to Harlem!



My Column Debut on The Huffington Post


I am beyond excited to let you all know my first post went up today for my column- A Gentleman's Guide to Life.

Sadly I cannot use 'Colonel Cator Sparks' as my byline since they do not recognize 'Honorable Titles'! But I of course had to include it in my bio.

I will be posting several times a month so be sure to keep a look out.
Thank you all for your support and cocktails!
Love-
The Colonel

5th Annual Jazz Age Lawn Party













I finally did it! After five years of wanting to go, I was finally in town, not hungover, didn't forget about it, and had someone to go with to the Jazz Age Lawn Party on Governor's Island.
Gee Wiz what a dream!
If you could forget the random cell phones, water bottles and tupperware, I felt like I had taken a time machine. Everyone was in period clothes, the Dreamland orchestra had the crowd doing the Charleston, Foxtrot, Swing and Lindy Hop.

Fay and I took the ferry out around 1pm and stayed until 5. We met up with the darling PR for the Frick, Heidi Rosenau and her husband who were doing costume changes because they were dancing so much they had to put on fresh duds. We also found my favorite man of fashion journalism, Robert Bryan and his chic flapper friend Kyle.

We found some food, lots of water, took in the automobile show, the pie contest (yum apple!) and made a mad dash to the vintage clothing tent where I bought a bathing suit (houndstooth and high wasted!) and Fay bought a 1920's black dress that Mame Dennis would die over.

The rest of the day we just sat and dreamed. It was so lovely to watch people dance, sway and adjust their boaters and stockings. We are looking forward to the next one happening the 28-29 of August.
Sweet!

4th of July Perfection

I can't count how many years I spent at the Drake Estate in Easthampton celebrating Rod's birthday fordays on end over July4th weekend.
But all great things come to a close. Jamie's house has been sold and this year Rod is spending his birthday in the
Mediterranean Sea.
So this year I spent it with four of my favorite people and some of my oldest New York 'family.
Mark and Mary invited me out to Southampton for a long weekend with them and the kids.
Couldn't of been more relaxing or m
ore special.

Started off with rose wine and a sunset on the beach and toes in the ocean...




















Followed by playtime in the sand...





















Then pool time! Alistair is so big now that his toes touch the bottom
of the shallow end. A MOMENTOUS day for him, and a sad day for parents that their baby boy is bigger.



















An evening at the Carnival was pure
horror for Mary and me (sorry, we are still snobs and those trashy rides, nasty food and poor hermit crabs piled in cages still turn our stomachs)
but the kids were ecstatic. Alistair was jumping up and down and Bea was shrieking on the carousel. All worth while although bedtime was not happening on time due to hyper activity.

















And of course the parade which was (sorry mom and dad) the most Americana event I've ever experienced! Not that my childhood parades were anything to look down on, but one that has been going continuously for 234 years is well impressive!





















And it all ended with turkey apple burgers, white wine and home bakes brownies.
And to make it all a happy ending? No traffic all the way home on the Jitney!

Thank you Mark, Mary et famille for a relaxing, inspiring and memorable 4th.

London Life Revisited












Forgive such a long time from post to post.

Life simply gets in the way, as it has since I last left London, my love, my life, my place of renewal. Paris was well Parisian and New York has been a blissful reunion especially this weekend in Southampton for July 4th.

But it was so so great to be back in London. Looking back it was such a blur. Lets see if I can remember without notes.

Sunday- Arrive from Dublin to Anna’s house where she is having a photo shoot for her Prism Glasses


Monday- A tour of my favorite London spots- a beard trim at Taylor’s of Old Bond Street, a tour of the Wallace Collection, a walk up Marylebone High Street, drinks at Clarities, dinner at the Wolseley with Anna and Adam.


Tuesday- oh dear… I can’t remember.

What I remember most are friends. Drinks with Leela and a tour of Grace Kelly's exhibit at the V&A, Dinner with Charlotte and Perry, a day at the cemetery with Colin and dinner, drinks and gay bars with Angela and Colin, more drinks with Ashleigh and Billy (who got engaged whilst I was there!), a very boozy lunch at The Travelers club with Colin, Sarah Aaronson (in from LA!), Ian and another Ian, Christies with Lars and Marius, The Lanesborough with Kelley and Ruthy, running about Westbourne Grove with Rebecca and Horsemeat Disco with Gary.

Every moment was pure joy, every night filled with ale and every friend, so great to see.

As I told Fay and Lucy when I returned to New York, its wonderful to spend time with such close friends who are so far away because we download so much personal stuff much more rapidly than we do when seeing friends every other day. I had so much more time to think about life, where I’m going, what I’m doing and to hear how my friends lives are changing and forming. The quote I will remember most is when I asked Rebecca how she is enjoying living in London again after years of the social scene in New York. She looked at me with a caring smile and said, “You know I am really enjoying being unfabulous.” I love that. More dinner’s at home instead of dinners at THE spot. More nights at the local pub than at THE coolest bar. It sounded so refreshing, and so appealing.

God I’m getting old.



And once again I debated with selling it all, taking the QM2 to Portsmouth and starting fresh in my favorite city. But then I got my bill and then I checked the weather, and then I saw the rents.

Maybe one day, but not today.

This is why I have so many friends in Blighty. A reason to return.

A Bit of Craic in Ireland

















Here I sit in Dublin Airport quite possibly experiencing the worst service I’ve ever had in a restaurant. Well there simply isn’t any service. I just waved down a waitress and she just waved back!

I guess this is the ying to the yang of a week of every whim fulfilled, every wish granted and every order taken in the speed of light. Since last Sunday the good people of Tauk Tours have carted mother and me around Ireland. We have been thinking about Ireland for quite some time and I was making every effort to plan the week myself, but with deadlines abounding mother suggested we make it simple and just book a tour. I have to admit I’ve become quite a tour snob after traveling with Rod and Philip over the past 10 years, but I surrendered to mothers idea and with a couple of clicks we were booked on ‘A Tour of Ireland’.

I’ve always wanted to visit this Emerald Isle. I am such an anglophile that its been top o’ the bucket list for quite some time. Without researching a thing we arrived in Shannon to see where the week would take us.

Day one in Ireland I was hooked. It may have been because we were plopped off at a castle where we would spend our first three days. Dremoland Castle is my idea of doing it right. We arrived at 9am and since rooms were not ready for several hours we were deposited in a drawing room with tea bubbling, fire crackling and windows cracked to hear the faint sound of the fountain splashing. Yes please.

Everything about this place suited me just fine. They offer riding, rowing, bikes and the most magical, mysterious trails where every tree looks like little Alice could pop out a hole at the trunk. Highlight? The Falconer! There he is, in his gaiters, cords and Barbour coat just meandering the manicured grounds with his trusty Peregrine.

The first evening we met the rest of the rather large group of guests and we luckily fell in with a fun crew. Our posse for the week included some highly amusing adults who often had me choking on my wine when they surprised me with their racy thoughts and quotes. There was a lesbian joke running all week between two women! Also there were some damn funny kids on the trip too. Two were 18 and 19 and made me feel very old when I heard when they were born, but Daddy Cator pulled his Mame magic and introduced them to their first gay bars and many a new dance move. Mother really enjoyed everyone and it was fun to meet up every night for dinner in a castle or pub and recount the day’s events over the national drink, Guinness.

After falling in love with Dremoland, I fell in love with the Irish countryside. Yes, it’s not too far off that that of England and Scotland, but nobody can beat its intense green! I mean, I simply couldn’t get my head around it. Everything is just covered in green and if it’s not green then it’s a pink rhododendron, my favorite plant. The Cliff’s of Moher were simply enchanting and gazing out over their tops and watching the waves crash and the gulls swoop made me yearn for a Bronte book (or Yeates as it were). While touring the ring of Kerry I welled up with tears of happiness when we gazed over Ladies Lookout where Queen Victoria’s Ladies-in-Waiting decided to picnic in another gilded era where the mountains, mist, moss and rivers all came together in a picture perfect landscape. I was rather annoyed that the weather here was to be cold and rainy the entire week but I don’t think one should see Ireland any other way. To make the day even more perfect, at one stop an old drunkard had tottered out a herd of little lambs for tourists to touch for a Euro or two. I had a cuddle moment with a two-day-old lamb and held him tight as he snuggled into my Mr. Nils sweater and I listened to the wind and watched the glittering sea. Nope, can’t get much better than this dear Lord.

I had a hard time leaving Dromoland but Dunloe Castle wasn’t too bad of a place to land. Sadly it’s not a castle you stay in but a very well done 1960’s resort. There is a twee castle on the property but the real highlight is the hotels cows and horses that graze all over the property and render the television pointless when the foals are prancing about in front of your room.

In case you are wondering, yes I did kiss that bloody Blarney Stone. Not on purpose mind you. I needed a bit of exercise and decided to climb to the top of Blarney Castle. But when I got to the top, the only way to get back down was to line up to kiss the stone. So I took off my glasses, laid on my back, held onto the rails and gave that stone my best pucker. But the real excitement at Blarney wasn’t the castle but Blarney House, a 19th century pile that is still lived in by the family who own the Castle (if the young man who’s picture I saw on the mantle ever reads this, I’m available!). Apparently it’s rarely open to the public but we lucked out and got a tour of the elegant estate. It’s so refreshing to see an old home like that lived in with a flat screen in the grand bedroom and L’air du Temps in the loo.

We did enjoy Dublin but as my cab driver said, a city is a city! And the temptation of bars and dancing lured me and my sprightly friends out till a tad too late two nights in a row. But it is a lovely city and I feel like I am just a little bit more whole after paying my respects to Oscar Wilde’s birth home. I also feel that my closet is a bit more whole after the purchase of my first kilt. I did a story on one of Dublin’s oldest tweed shops and couldn’t resist the purchase. Needless to say I wore it all over town and yes, underwear was definitely an issue. If I wore it I was yelled at, if I didn’t then I ended up getting drunk and doing cartwheels, forgetting I had forgone the drawers. Yes, in honor of the World Cup draw between the US and England some of us got drunker than Cooter Brown. I pray there are no pictures (and Karen if there are DO NOT post on Facebook!).

Alas our time here has come to a close. I have fond memories, major mom time and new friends to boot. One thing I wont miss, potatoes.

Jason Rodgers Father Figures Exhibit






Last Tuesday I headed down to Envoy Gallery in the Lower East Side for a very special opening. My handsome friend Jason Rodgers was having his first photo exhibit and I was happy to support him. Ok, and another reason was, I was in the show!

Jason is the photo editor at Out Magazine and has been a friend for several years. He is one of the smartest and funniest men I know and always is up for a good time. He's one of those people you see and you get that warm fuzzy and you just want to squeeze him for eternity. No shade, no bad vibes, no sorrow, just glitter and baseball caps.

He asked us all to pose last winter and of course the day I agreed to trek out to Brooklyn was blizzard central! But no worries, it was a pleasure to sit for him and of course to visit with his roommate LadyFag

As the artists statement explains: Through the use of repetition and a consistent setting and lighting environment, background details retreat allowing Rodgers's subjects to engage the viewer in intimate moments characterized by gestures that range from the coy to the awkward to the mundane. Furthermore, the wide range of subjects (friends, acquaintances and perfect strangers) reveals the many levels at which personal preference and attraction may be manifested.

I'm not an artist and I rarely understand artists statements but I will tell you in layman's terms that when I asked Jason what this show was all about he said, "It's men who I look up to and some who I have crushes on." Now that's what I'm talking about!

Regardless, I'm proud of him and hope the show does well.
The opening was very funny, everyone looking to see who was there who was in the show and how long they could stare at their own picture without someone snickering.

In typical Jason fashion we celebrated at Envoy from 8-10, at the VMan party from 10-1 and at Beige from 1-3. Well done babe!

NYC hits Lake Lanier


















It’s been ages since I posted something on the blog. Seems like airports are the best places to catch up on personal writing. So here I sit at Hartsfield in Atlanta, while Fay and Olivia are finding food, Justin already left on AirTran and we are all ogling the stud sitting in front of us. But we realized he wasn’t more than eye candy when he pulled out an eight-track cell phone. Hello, no Blackberry or iphone?

See, I’m already loosing my Southern gentility and I’m not even out of Atlanta yet. But lets recount our halcyon weekend, shall we? This was Olivia and Fay’s third annual summer trip to the South. We have spent St. Patrick’s Day here and usually spend a day at the farm riding. But this year was all lake time and it was heaven. We invited Justin for this round and he proved amusing enough to invite back next year! Justin, you at the grocery store causing a debacle with the cashier was classic, not to mention mom and dad adore you.

I arrived on Thursday and took care of lots of friends and family time before the crew descended late Friday night. Justin and I had a drink on the dock at midnight and the girls invaded the now famous gift-wrapping room before we all hit the hay. Saturday morning we lounged, mother made fruit salad and a massive gooey cinnamon-y monkey bread that we devoured. Calories be damned! At 11:30 we headed downtown for lunch with my grandparents, Pop and Dorothy. They had just returned from a three-week tour of South East Asia and the Middle East and provided a cournucopia of stories to regale us with. Justin and Dorothy had especially a lot in common with their shared love and talent in the art world.

After lunch (where we splurged on mozzarella sticks and nachos!) we zoomed back up to the lake for serious respite. Dad took the boat out and we motored over to our favorite spot, Cocktail Cove. There we were both disturbed and delighted by the cigarette boats, massive yachts and barely there bathing suits worn by some of Georgia’s less appealing peaches. Fay’s favorite boat was named ‘Slap & Tickle’, naturally. We took the sun, plunged into the water, drank some Budweiser and simply enjoyed life.

After several hours it was time to putter back for dinner at the club. We bathed, changed, packed up the booze (mother made Charleston Tea, a recipe from Southern Living consisting of whiskey, rum, Triple Sec and iced tea-yes please!) and drove down the road for dinner. Our feast was rather uneventful but pleasant, mostly because we were all stuffing ourselves on steak, potatoes, booze and the salad bar. But once we were wrapping up, a pile of club goers wobbled into the dining room and plopped down at our table. The Duke's and their English friends Robin and Trisha had been drinking from the cup of Bacchus for several hours while making pizzas at the Dukes house (they have a pizza oven in their backyard!) and decided to come by for a hello. Drinks were poured, desserts were ordered and vivacious voices persisted for another hour until we were all fairly tight and decided home was the best idea. Of course with Dad not drinking he was a steady pilot for the five-minute drive home, so Mom could take one more swig of the Charleston Tea!

Fay and Olivia decided the fireplace was the newest spot for a photo shoot and the Missus Clauses’ never looked so good. Justin passed out (that boy can sleep!) and we all had a nightcap and a walk down memory lane in many a scrapbook.

This morning we were awake in time for CBS Sunday Morning, mother made cinnamon toast and we lulled until it was time to head to the dock to lull some more. And that was that really. A weekend of complete relaxation save for the major exercise of fork and cup to mouth repeatedly. We did take a trip to Publix for sammiches for lunch (and where Justin made the cashier turn red with his purchases- hey they are cheaper in the South!) and I took a dip around the dock. But most of the day was simply spent catching up on gossip, on reading, of watching the ducklings patter around and soaking in the sun.

I always promise myself I will come back more often to this land of serenity, silliness and seclusion, here is hoping to one or two more trips before Christmas!

Thanks mom and dad for another love filled Southern sojourn.

Easter 2010














Another fun Easter with Bea and the family! Well, we had a good time, but poor Bea was in a Motrin haze. Poor Lamb.

I met Mary and Alistair at church for the 9:30 service, then we met Mark, Bea, Ian and Barge at Gusto Organics for brunch. Bea got a nap in long enough to be in good form for Easter Egg Hunt, although the poor thing would pick up an egg, look at it for about five minutes, then teeter off for another one. In the ZONE.

Et voila! It was short but sweet. I had a closet to build, Ian had shirts to buy and Barge had wine to open. Next year I hope we can spend a little more time together, but what fun is that when the baby's in a funk?

Next year!

(I had to take some extra snaps of the other kids who, although they aren't as cute as A and B, still were sporting quite dashing looks)

Out of My Old Closet





Living in this home for nearly a decade I have gone through several phases of dress:
From vintage Dandy, winklepicker/skinny jean Dandy, Bear Daddy Dandy and as of late, Prepster Dandy. Thing is, I've kept nearly all of it! (As you can see in this photo taken by Rose Callahan)

Needless to say my closet is bulging.
I called the fine people over at the Container Store just to see what the possibilities were and four hours later I had an Elfa unit being delivered to my house.
SUCKER!
Well, I did possibly get too excited and just go for it, but everyone who I mention Elfa too says they are great. I concur! Of course installation was never as easy as they say. Thank God there are videos on the website.
But tearing out the generic closet that was built in resulted in massive glue stains and nail holes on the wall.
What does any quick thinking closet case do to hide those rotten relics? Cover them with gift-wrap of course! I found the perfect Paul Smith like stripe in my collection et voila.
After realizing someone has nicked our drill (Rod you still haven't emailed back!) I borrowed one from a neighbor this morning after Easter services and got the job done.
I'm super happy with it and I can always move shelves and bars if I like. Much more room and of course a reason to clean out.
If you see a man strutting through Harlem in Plus Fours and a vintage silk scarf, you know where it came from.

Fun in Florence











You can see here, I really enjoyed meeting Natalie in Florence but the real reason of the trip of course was family time!
Happy and I swept into town on Thursday since travel time (lengthy connections) were so long, we figured it would be nice to have a little more time.
That little more time consisted of chilling with the lions at the University campus, chowing down at Trowbridge’s (egg and olive sammich plus Caramel Pie milk shake!) and getting absolutely blitzed at On The Rocks, the local bar. Did we really have 10 Long Island Iced Teas? I haven't had one of those since Thanksgiving Day in London in 1998. But we jammed to the country band, chilled with the locals and giggled alot.

The next morning I was still drunk, but breakfast at our B&B was divine. After our visit with Natalie, Mom and Angela showed up and we walked around town, ate at Trowbridge’s again and saw the lions again. Do you see a trend here? There ain't much to do in Florence! Sadly, recession has taken this town by storm and many stores were closed.

We did check out the Frank Lloyd Wright house that was fascinating and a local restaurant that wasn't too exciting, but they tried.

Saturday we headed to the very grand sounding town of Tuscumbia to tour the birthplace of Helen Keller. That was interesting as well. Lots of original clothes, furniture, portraits. Unfortunately, there is little of the family china left, since as a child, when Helen lost her sight and sounds she often became frustrated and took it out on the china. Mother was not pleased.

A real highlight for me was going through ALL of my Africa images with mom and the girls and reliving the trip over several bottles of wine each evening. Only put them to sleep once!

And yes, I did mention we visited the lions. At the University of North Alabama they have a male and female black manned lion on display in a swanky cage with waterfall, pool, shade and play toys. It's true; I went all the way to Africa and didn't see one lion and travel to pokey Florence Alabama and see them daily. Sigh.

Was a good time as usual! Looking forward to next year, destination Miami!

Appraisals of African Adventures











Well this was a long time coming. I don’t think I have ever taken such a long sabbatical from the Sugar Dandy Diary, but then again, I have never taken such a long trip.

I so wish I was back in Africa. You have no idea. Really. Coming home to the chaos of fashion week, covering 35 events, dealing with winter weather, with friends, family, bills, bugger it all. Of course I missed everyone and not talking to my mother for a month was terribly frustrating. But to have a month JUST for yourself. In ones own bubble, with no newspaper, phone, TV, internet, f****ing Facebook. You know what, I really don’t need to know so and so just ate a sandwich on a profile update. And I don’t care if it was good.

I certainly hope this doesn’t sound cermudgion-y. But I had a taste of what I feel like life is supposed to be, ideally of course. So many of us on the trip mentioned the word ‘Human’ almost daily. Yes, I felt human.

I would wake up at 6am every day, save the day after the wedding (that day was about noon!). I went to bed almost every night by 10. And I never had an alarm clock. The most incredible sound I have ever heard was at 6am every morning. It was that perfect moment when the night animals sing their last song and the morning animals wake and begin their melody. For just several minutes, when all the animals were at fever pitch, it was the loudest, most magical orchestra I have ever heard. It’s hard to not wake up with a smile on your face when you hear such sounds.

Most mornings I would bath in our outdoor shower. In Mozambique it was fancy and had running water. I would wash myself up while a massive monitor lizard sat and watched in the already intense heat. But in Botswana I would bath by filling up a bucket, hoisting it up a tree and turning the spigot to have a fresh cold shower outside. The most memorable shower was on my last day at Mena a Kwena when I was showering and heard massive plunges in the distance. I looked out and saw the elephants had decided to join me in my morning ritual.

Days would consist of delightful meals with friends, quick chats with locals and in Mozambique a constant ‘Buondia!’ to any local you may run into. That’s a variation of Portuguese that means- Good day! We would then take a hike up a mountain taking paths that had been forged by Arab slave traders thousands of years ago to majestic peaks or local villages.
Interesting fact- Of course America was not the first country to take slaves from Africa, but do you know why there are no Africans in the Arab world even though they brought thousands of slaves over? They castrated all the men.

The rest of the day woulnd’t consist of much but what we fancied. Taking a mokoro out in Lake Niassa or grazing at the bar for hours with friends imbibing gin, champagne, tequila or whatever suited our fancy. Even though it was the rainy season (it only rained one day in 25) we did see a fair amount of game. On safari in Botswana we saw a giraffe and her baby, a heard of zebra, a lonely old bull elephant, vultures, loads of spring bok, whart hogs and a very rare sighting of the great eagle owl. Sadly no lions were seen, but we heard them roar late at night.

Evenings were always consumed in amazing food and an abundance of drink. No wild drunken nights (save for the wedding!) but just cozy times with friends and sometimes all alone. I made sure to have me time at least once or twice a day. I would venture into the wild and just sit. Sometimes I would hang out on the river in the Okavango, sometimes on the beaches of Lake Niassa and sometimes in a canoe, alone with the water lapping and my paddle idle. And you know what? I didn’t think of a damn thing. I asked Chloe at the end of the trip if I sounded shallow that I didn’t think about one thing for a month. She smiled, patted my arm and said, “That’s Africa.” She admitted to being asked some in depth question and giving the most mundane response. It’s not a place to think or do, just to be. I should clarify. I did think. A lot. I thought about what that Vervey monkey was doing in the tree. I thought about where that hippo was going when he plunged under water. I thought about the millinea of migrations of these animals that white people came along and fenced, off, destroyed, and ruined not even 100 years ago. I thought of the amount of racism that is still such a part of South Africa and I thought about a life as simple as the one’s lead in many of these small towns we saw. It’s the kind of thinking one should do more often.

Since the trip was such a long one, such an intense one and so life changing I don’t think I can really transcribe my diary all onto this blog. Half of it wouldn’t make sense probably and it would take weeks to do. If only I could go back to Africa just to have the time to do it! Instead, I hope this gives a little insight of what Africa was and is to me. Yes, I have put on the rose tinted glasses. I have become a total stoner hippy and when fashion week got too wild, the wind beat to hard and my body was about to fall apart I just closed my eyes and thought of that elegant boat ride we had on Lake Niassa after a three hour hike gazing at the hills dotted with rondavels, drinking an ice cold Coca Cola, barefoot while my river soaked shoes dried. And I think of wonderful and amazing Francis, our guide and our friend who in the thick of the bush, turned on his phone to play Michael Jackson’s best hits as we trampled past ancient Baobab trees and dodged massive spider webs and simply felt alive.

Africa Itinerary

Well kids, the time is almost here.

Another epic journey is about to begin. I am beyond excited, curious, the slightest bit nervous (snakes in my tent!).
But no matter what I am sure it will be life changing as Egypt and India both were. And this trip has the added bonus of an amazing wedding of a dear darling friend.

In case you would like to follow along I have attached my tour below with links to hotels/resorts/etc.

I dont leave until next Thursday but I'm already drifting towards the Dark Continent in my head. I just finished reading- The Bolter, am about to start on a bio on Denis Finch Hatton and recently bought Nelson Mandela's auto bio. Needless to say I'm loving my new Kindle!

Since I am not bringing my laptop with me I wont be posting until I return. So until then- Re Tlaa Bonana!

Mr. Sparks on Safari:

January 14: Depart city of origin

January 15: Arrive Johannesburg in the afternoon where you will each be met by a driver from the Safari Club and taken to the lodge
January 15-16: Stay at the Safari Club



January 16: You will have an early start back to Oliver Tambo International for your flight to Lilongwe
January 16: Upon arrival you will be met at the airport and taken to Heuglin's Lodge
January 16-17: Stay at Heuglin's Lodge


January 17: 8:00am flight departure on a private charter will take you to Likoma where you will be met by Manda Nkwichi Lodge
January 17-22: Stay at Manda Nkwichi

January 22: Fly to Lilongwe
January 22-23: Stay at Heuglin's Lodge and enjoy a half day tour of the city

January 23: Arrive Johannesburg from Lilongwe and carry on to your 1Time flight to Cape Town
January 23: You will be met at Cape Town International and brought to Liberty Lodge
January 23-24: Twin occupancy at Liberty Lodge

January 24: Road transfer with Winelands Experience (about 1 hour) to Franschoek and the Winelands
January 24: 7:30pm reservation at Le Quartier Français - The Tasting Room (three minute walk from Les Chambres)
January 24-25: Les Chambres Franschoek



January 25: Earlish morning transfer will take you back to Cape Town and the Liberty Lodge
January 25-27: Stay at Liberty Lodge in Cape Town
January 26: Cocktails at Planet Bar and Dinner at Cape Colony at The Mount Nelson Hotel

January 27: 6:30 am flight to Johannesburg (lodge departure around 5:00am)
January 27: 10:10 flight on Air Botswana to Maun Botswana where we will meet you

January 27-28: You will stay in Maun

January 28: Fly to Nyoga Island with Delta Air
January 28 - February 1: Stay on Nyoga Island at Oddballs Camp for the wedding



February 1: Fly from the bush into Maun
February 1-3: Stay in Maun

February 3: Road transfer to Kalahari
February 3-5: Stay at Meno a Kwena Lodge

February 5: Road transfer will take you back to Maun
February 5: Fly from Maun to Johannesburg and onwards home