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SUMMER 2012 R39.95 SUMMER CLASSIC THIS SEASON IT’S THE DRESS TASTE OF FRANSCHHOEK BUY YOUR OWN ISLAND JEREMY CLARKSON RYK NEETHLING ARTHUR GILLIS + MAGAZINE THE ART OF INVESTING

Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

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Page 1: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

SU

MM

ER

20

12

R39.95

SUMMER CLASSICTHIS SEASON IT’S THE DRESS

TASTE OFFRANSCHHOEK

BUY YOUR OWN

ISLAND

JEREMY CLARKSON RYK NEETHLINGARTHUR GILLIS

+

M A G A Z I N E

THE ART OF INVESTING

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Shop 1, High Constantia Shopping Centre, Main Road Constantia 7806, Cape Town, JHB Showroom call 082 411 9588

Shop 1, High Constantia Shopping Centre, Main Road

Constantia 7806, Cape Town, JHB Showroom call 082 411 9588

Page 4: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012
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Val de Vie 3

VAL DE VIE | CONTENTS

6 FIRST WORD 8 THE IT LIST Don’t be seen without IT this summer

12 ZEN AND FLY-FISHING It’s skillful but peaceful, stylish and strangely sexy; and suddenly everybody is trying it! So let fl y... 16 THE ART OF INVESTING As capitalism crumbles and investments dry up, those in the know are returning to art as the aesthetic investment 22 CLARKSON’S ODE TO 911 Top Gear’s Jeremy Clarkson describes his love-hate relationship with the Porsche 911 and fi nds one he loves!

26 CHANGE OF LIFESTYLE Ryk Neethling swaps sport’s star status for modern businessman and a new role in a new environment

30 VEUVE CLICQUOT MASTERS Who was lucky enough to witness the most prestigious polo game on the planet?

34 THE SMARTER HOUSE Lights that follow you around the house, mood music from the ceiling, curtains that open to command... So how smart is your house?

ON THE COVERMODELS MARIA PAYMAN/ ICE MODELS (LEFT), VANESSA MARAWA/BOSS MODELS (CENTRE), NINDHI/3D MODELS (RIGHT)PHOTOGRAPH JACQUES WEYERSCREATIVE DIRECTOR PAUL KERTONSTYLING ISABELLA NIEHAUSHAIR MARY GOUVEIA MAKE-UP ALGRIA FERREIRA

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4 Val de Vie

VAL DE VIE | CONTENTS

41 PASHION - THIS SUMMER’S CLASSIC This season the dress is the thing. The colour, length or fabric is immaterial, just be sure to wear it well

50 HOW TO BUY AN ISLAND Yes, you can buy an island, and realise the ultimate dream of the rich and famous

54 TASTE FRANSCHHOEK Founder of Rossouw’s independent restaurant guide, J P Rossouw takes us on an epicurean journey 58 CAPTURING THE MOMENT It’s been a busy season full of fun, love, style and celebration at Val de Vie’s top events

62 VALLEY LIFE What’s in the Wineland’s in the upcoming months

64 INSIDE THE HEAD OF… Athur Gillis CEO of Africa’s largest hospitality group

PAUL [email protected] [email protected] MEIKE [email protected] FRENCH, JACQUES WEYERS, MARIA PAYMAN, VANESSA MARAWA, NINDHI, ISABELLA NIEHAUS, ALGRIA FERREIRA, MARY GOUVEIA, JEREMY CLARKSON, RYK NEETHLING, MEIKE MANN, SHONA BAGLEY, WERNER RYKE, JEREMY BROWNE, JUSTIN PATRICK, TAMLIN WIGHTMAN, ANGELA SIMPSON, BLANE VENTER, GARY HIRSON, CATHERINE BOWEN, CARLA GERSIE, JACQUES VAN ZYL, SVEN JURGEN, BEEZY BAILEY, PAUL DU TOIT, MARIE VERMEULEN-BREEDT, ARTHUR GILLIS, FARHAD VLADI ARINA [email protected] [email protected]É DE [email protected]

PAARL MEDIAwww.paarlmedia.co.zaLUXE [email protected]

LUXE MEDIA is a bespoke publishing company specialising in lavish upmarket books and magazines www.luxemedia.co.za

ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDNo part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in an electronic system or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, digital or mechanical, including scanning, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher and the copyright owners as featured.

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EDITOR

ART DIRECTOR

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

CONTRIBUTORS

COPY EDITOR

AD SALESAND MARKETING

PRINTED BY

PUBLISHED BY

Page 7: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

I AM THE NEW NIKON 1 V1. I am built from scratch. I capture images before and after you‘ve fully pressed the button, so you will never miss a moment again. I am a small system with interchangeable lenses and innovative features, an electronic view-fi nder, and a super high-speed autofocus system. I am a new era of imaging. www.nikon.co.za

Page 8: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

CHUKKA Khans

6 Val de Vie

VAL DE VIE | LETTER

Welcome to this edition of Val de Vie magazine in which we embrace the wonderful Paarl-

Franschhoek Valley in all its splendour. Val de Vie is beginning to resemble a vibrant village

with the Polo Club restaurant and lounge bar as its hub, providing casual yet delicious

dining in an exceptional setting. Our award-winning winery has found recognition for its

exceptional wines with over 11 diff erent Rhône varietals celebrating a noble southern

French heritage. Earlier in the year we celebrated the launch of Ryk Neethling’s blended

red, which was an instant success. Ryk has joined Val de Vie as the new marketing director

and is making a big contribution in positioning the estate as a world class destination.

The estate is abuzz with

building activity as scores of

families from around the globe

now make use of good buying

and building opportunities to

relocate to the estate. We also

receive thousands of guests a

year to various events, sporting

matches, weddings, wine and

whiskey tastings and social gatherings and we’ve had a marvelous year so far. Prestige

polo matches included the Veuve Clicquot Masters, the BMW polo classic, and recently

the Blackberry Pink polo. The estate was the wedding choice of socialites and celebrities

including JP Duminy. Ladies with marriage on their minds should book for the upcoming

Célébrer, Estée Lauder wedding workshop that provides incredible insight into planning

and surviving a wedding, from a host of expert dress designers, stylists, caterers and

other experts.

The magazine is an eclectic mix. The feature on art as an investment caught my

attention. One of my favourite artists is Marie Vermeulen-Breedt who loves to portray

the special relationship between horse and man, and who’s honest approach and way

with light and colour is exemplary. The real beauty of art is one gets to enjoy it as it

appreciates over time.

Jeremy Clarkson expounds on his love-hate relationship with the Porsche 911 and

admits to fi nally falling in love with one; while slightly less speedy is the tranquil sport

of fl y-fi shing, something that is gaining real popularity everywhere. JP Rossouw takes us

on an epicurean journey through Franschhoek, and every time I visit I am amazed at the

choice of places to eat and the high standards of cuisine and service available.

Apparently, this year the dress is making a comeback in all it’s many elegant forms,

and with that a wave of fresh femininity.

I hope your summer journey will bring you to our lovely corner of the continent

where you can celebrate life with us.

Martin VenterGroup Chairman

“THE MAGAZINE IS AN ECLECTIC MIX. THE FEATURE

ON ART INVESTMENT CAUGHT MY ATTENTION.

FIRST WORD

Page 9: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012
Page 10: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

8 Val de Vie8 Val de Vie

the it listDON’T BE SEEN WITHOUT IT THIS SUMMER

STYLE ICONFormer Editor of House

& Garden Magazine, Paul Duncan, believes that many

SA interior designers are better than their European

and American counterparts. Proof lies in the super-styled

pages of his lavish new tome, STYLE ICONS - Top South African Designers & their

Interiors. Just out.Random House Struik

R330 192 Pages

feminine

ITALIAN FLAIR Luxuriously feminine and enveloping, designed in refi ned Hollywood style. Roberto Cavalli does it again with The Clivia, in four colour variations. POA, www.robertocavalli.com 021-464-5400

STILL OR SPARKLING? From the latest collection by Jenna Cliff ord, green tourmaline neckpiece and ring handcrafted in solid white gold with diamonds (top). A collection of signature engagement rings (below) handcrafted in solid white gold with semi-precious stones.POA, www.jennacliff ord.com 011 523 6600

BEST KEPT SECRETBorn in Beirut, Elie Saab has made a major

impact on the fashion world with his signature celebration of femininity. His new perfume will make any woman feel sexy and loved.

R1 150 90ml, available at Edgars, Woolworths, Stuttafords and Foschini

Page 11: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

Val de Vie 9

boy toy

ULTIMATE COMPACTThe brand new revolutionary Nikon 1 range of cameras are the world’s fastest, smallest and lightest. This next generation pioneers amazing photography with ground-breaking new shooting modes that mean you’ll never miss a moment again. Moving photos like children are captured with ease and photos become living images. The lenses are unique - designed with portability and movie-making in mind. Nikon 1 J1 R6 499 (inc VAT), Nikon 1 V1 R8 999 (inc),www.nikon.com

MIND INTO GEARThe mind-reading Prius X Parlee bike uses telepathy to change gear. The rider wears a special “neuron helmet”that uses eletrodes to pick up neuro signals and send instructions to an electronic gear changer. Says design house Deeplocal “The system uses an off-the-shelf brainwave reader”. Awesome! www.toyotapriusprojects.com

JET PROPELLEDSo you need to get to a meeting in Hong Kong and then back to Cape Town for breakfast and on to a romantic dinner in Paris? Who you gonna call? Execuject will propel you to a new level, literally, providing a full menu of air services from charter, maintenance, sales and VIP hospitality all the [email protected] +27 (0) 11-516-2466

VAL DE VIE | SHOPPING

HELI PAD Slow day at work? Use your

iPhone or iPad to control this full-on helicopter and be the star

of any open-plan office. With remarkable maneuverability you

can use it to deliver memos to the in-trays of your underlings.

Children will delight at the sheer simplicity and ease of flight.

Griffin HELO, R699 available from Apple iStore. www.myistore.co.za

Val de Vie 9

Page 12: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

10 Val de Vie

BELLE DU JOUR A sophisticated classic with cuir leather, intricately woven handle and woven leather bow is the Gucci Bella medium Tote Bag. Deliciously decadent for those with an eye for exquisite detail. Gucci - Nelson Mandela Square, Sandton; V&A Waterfront, Cape Town R18 760 www.gucci.com

SOAP OPERAStinking hands from chopping garlic? Wash them with Sagaform’s Edge stainless steel soap. Iron in the steel reacts with the sulphides that cause the obnoxious odours, forming small amounts of iron sulphide (an odourless solid), which washes away while you rub the steel bar. This is not a joke, this is science.R230, www.sagaform.com

OH SO HANDSOME Horological excellence combines with the pinnacle of the jeweler’s art. The latest minute repeater with a perpetual calendar boasting 158 baguette diamonds totalling 5.27 ct. Complete with the “cathedral” gong- extra long gongs producing voluminous sound. Ref 5073. POA, www.patek.com

DEFENCE OF THE REALMStalwart Defender drivers will quake in their CAT boots at the sight of this

Land Rover DC 100, the trendy, sexy, version of their sit-up-and beg farmer’s utility vehicle. Once Evoque hysteria has died down, this is next.

www.landrover.com

the it list

Page 13: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

Val de Vie 11

VAL DE VIE | SHOPPING

COPPER BOTTOMEDJust launched, this elegant bowl named Sling Man - is one of a new range with a copper fi nish by Carroll Boyes, called the Fire Collection. The perfect colour was created to resemble pink gold. POA, www.carrollboyes.co.za

BLUSHING PINKSAfter the success of Polo’s boys’ collection, Polo introduces a new girls’ range. Girls will look charming in blushing pink, with the golfer dress a fi rm favourite. POA, www.polo.co.za

WHITE MISCHIEF Mont goes Blanc for Summer with their outstanding new commemorative collection of bright whites. iPad holder and fountain pen.shown here. POA, www.montblanc.co.za

TABLE TALK A tribute to Charles Renie Mackintosh, this Renn Side Table is made of solid walnut with a clear glass top. The perfect platform for a seasonal gin & tonic or glass of wine. OKHA Solid walnut R9 462; solid oak R11 627.46 www.okha.com

BOURBON HITS TOWN Hand dipped with a red wax, Maker’s Mark has been making its presence felt on the streets of South Africa recently, with its inimitable bottle

and recipe of corn, malted barley and winter wheat instead of rye, for smoother fl avour.

www.makersmark.com

LIGHT READINGThe Etoile standing lamp has a naturally oiled solid walnut or oak base with copper or brass stem and drum shaped cotton shade. R6 658.51 (inc VAT), www.okha.com

Page 14: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

12 Val de Vie

WHILE THERE ARE STILL THOSE WHO SWEAR UPON THEIR UBER-trendy Louboutins that they will come no closer to fishing than poking sushi around with a chopstick, true adherents of fly-fishing cannot get enough. Eric Clapton – less renowned for his fly-fishing hobby than for his late 70’s drug habit – told Vanity Fair that “fishing” would be how he’d most like to die.

And fly-fishing’s famous fans don’t end there. After filming the 1992 movie version of A River Runs Through It, Brad Pitt was hooked. During his presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised he’d return to Montana and learn fly-fishing if he won the election, which he promptly did during his last summer break. In The African Fly-fishing Handbook (Random House Struik) Cyril Ramaphosa even admits to being “addicted to the sport”. And, in November 2010, Oprah dipped into the waters of fly-fishing while on a trip to

the Yosemite National Park.

What is most surprising, however, is how much popularity the sport is gaining among the wealthy and slightly less wealthy alike. “The number of fly-fishers has increased exponentially,” says Bill Hansford-Steele, the Godfather of fly-fishing in Africa and author of many books on the subject. “Nowadays, women and whole families are an integral part of what was once an exclusively gentleman’s domain.” Steele estimates that women now make up 30% of fly-fisher numbers and, with South Africa’s first ever women’s fly-fishing team recently participating in Wales. Fly-fishing and the fairer sex are undoubtedly becoming better acquainted.

So what, exactly, is this hobby’s appeal? “Calling fly-fishing a hobby would be like calling brain surgery a job,” James Hensall, a doctor with a penchant for the sport, admonishes with a grin. “Fly-fishers are usually the ‘brain-workers’ of society, and fishing on the banks of a stream, or under the shadow of an over-hanging tree, gives you permission to just be,” he explains.

Is it this almost godly peacefulness that makes angling so alluring? There is, undoubtedly, a certain Zen to be found in the art of fly-fishing. As Tom Brokaw, American NBC news anchor, quipped: “If fishing is like religion, then fly-fishing must be high church.” And in a world of ever growing to-do lists and deadlines, an all-season pass to relaxation does indeed sound like a level of previously unknown holiness.

Admittedly, though, there’s a fine line between fishing and just standing thigh-high in water like an idiot – but how is a beginner supposed to know it?

ZEN AND THE ART OF

FLY-FISHING

TEXT MEIKE MANN PHOTOGRAPHS JEREMY BROWNE

“IF FISHING IS LIKE RELIGION, THEN FLY-FISHING MUST BE HIGH CHURCH”

FLY-FISHING HAS BEEN THE ULTIMATE GENTLEMAN’S SPORT FOR CENTURIES. FOR SOME, IT VERGES ON A SPIRITUAL

EXPERIENCE. THE SPORT IS ATTRACTING AN UNPRECEDENTED RENAISSANCE WITH

CELEBRITIES, WOMEN AND FAMILIES DONNING THEIR WADERS

Page 15: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

Val de Vie 13

VAL DE VIE | FLY-FISHING

Fly-fishing in Val de Vie’s Berg River

Page 16: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

14 Val de Vie

“If you want to catch a fi sh, then you must think like a fi sh,” says Steele, “and a mature fi sh more than likely has less intelligence than the average farmyard hen.” The best maxim, he says is “to fi nd the fi sh, be quiet, keep low, dress quietly and give the fi sh what it wants. Do this and you’ll soon be catching trophy sized specimens.” And, he continues, don’t be overwhelmed by the thought of tackle. “Fishing tackle is, in essence functional: it should do a job, do the job well and be reliable. The very best fl y-fi shers carry very little.”

Luckily, South Africa boasts some of the world’s most spectacular locations in which to do so. The Drakensberg mountains in KwaZulu-Natal are home to an impressive collection of crystal clear dams and rivers where there are plenty of bass and trout to be caught. Of course, Dullstroom in Mpumalanga is renowned for its abundant trout and aspirant fl y-fi shers will fi nd themselves in good company among more experienced anglers. However, for slightly less commercial options, the Western Cape offers fl y-fi shing opportunities that are appealing precisely because of their isolation and solitude. The Boland especially offers great fi shing destinations such as Bo La Motte Farm in Franschhoek, Welbedacht Nature Reserve in Tulbagh, Val de Vie in Paarl, and Gaikou Lodge and Malvern Manor Country Guest House, both in Swellendam.

Of course, no fl y-fi sher – experienced or otherwise – goes fi shing without the hope of catching the elusive ‘big one.’ Steele laughs at this. “Everyone loves to catch a whopper,” he says “but some believe you need access to the best waters, or a lucky break, or even a doctorate in Ichthyology – and it’s just not true! Catching big fi sh is indeed a specialised business, but it is also one that anyone can master.” And with that, a somewhat Zen fi shing idiom comes to mind: bragging may not bring happiness, but no man having caught a large fi sh goes home through an alley.

1Fly-fi shing was initially developed as an angling method to catch

salmon and trout. In modern times, the method has been adapted to include pike, carp, bass and, in South Africa, most species of indigenous yellowfi sh.

2 Fly-fi shing rods are a lot lighter than standard fi shing rods, while

the lines used are heavier and are sometimes even tapered. At the end of the line is an almost weightless ‘fl y’, which acts as the fi sh lure.

3 In order to fl y fi sh you will need a rod, reel, fl y line or two, some

leader and tippet materials, fl ies, a net and outdoor accessories like a good hat, scissors and fl y boxes.

4 Know the diff erence between wet and dry fl ies. Dry fl y-fi shing

is the type most often portrayed in pictures of the sport, and is considered to be the “purer” of the two forms by some. This type of fl y-fi shing is done with a fl y that

will fl oat on the surface of the water, luring fi sh to hit the surface before they can be reeled in. A wet fl y is one that goes underwater and generally moves around in the current to attract fi sh.

5 In his seminal work on fl y-fi shing, Still Water Angling, Dick Walker

lists fi ve essentials for success: fi nd the fi sh; avoid frightening the fi sh; use the right tackle; choose the right time; and choose the right fl y.

From the African Fly-Fishing Handbook by Bill Hansford-Steel (Random-House Struik)

Essential reading by Bill Hansford-Steele: African Fly-Fishing Handbook and Fishing Flies for Africa

VAL DE VIE | FLY-FISHING

BEST FLIES FOR WESTERN CAPEFRESHWATER FISHING

FLY

AN

D B

OO

K C

OV

ER

IMA

GE

S C

OU

RTE

SY

OF

STR

UIK

DDD (DUCKWORTH’S DARGEL DELIGHT)“If there was a prize for the most useful African Fly

developed – the DDD would win it hands down”

Steele says. Originally designed as a dry fl y it can

also be used deep with slow-sink lines to lure trout,

yellowfi sh, bream and bass.

RAB (ROUGH AND BUOYANT)A great dry fl y for both trout and yellowfi sh, which

“fl oats very well, and sits right up on the surface”

says Steele. Distinctly South African versions also

exist, such as the Mark Mackereth RAB.

GRIZZLE HACKLEThis little dry fl y was designed specifi cally for use in

the mountain streams of the Western Cape, although

it works well on the trout of other areas too.

PEACOCK AND BLUE WOOLY BUGGER The most popular version of the Wooly Bugger in

Africa, (luring trout, bass, bream, yellowfi sh, and

catfi sh) this fl y is used in both still water and rivers.

“This is an extraordinarily successful fl y and also very

forgiving in terms of retrieve.” Steele says.

FIVE THINGS EVERY BEGINNER SHOULD KNOW

GOLD-RIBBED HARE’S EARSteele believes that “In any of its forms, the Gold-

Ribbed Hare’s Ear is truly one of the world’s greatest

fl ies. Almost every African fl y-fi sher will use it at

some time”. An immensely old pattern, it is known

in both wet and dry forms and lures trout and

indigenous yellowfi sh successfully.Lazy fl y-fi shing at Val de Vie

Page 17: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

val de vie plots priced from R600k | off plan homes from R1.995m | completed homes from R3.2m

email [email protected] or ph 021 863 6101 or 082 55 333 96

our on-site sales office is open seven days a week from 10am - 5pm

Let us introduce you to the unsurpassed LIFESTYLE

that is Val de Vie

Page 18: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

16 Val de Vie

TEXT ANDREW FRENCH

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THE ART OF INVESTING

Art has never been taken seriously as an asset class by serious investors since it neither generates income nor pays dividends while you own it, the money is only ever realised when you

sell it. And with serious collectors hanging on to their prize paintings for an average of 27 years, art can often cost money in terms of insurance, storage, transport and the odd very expensive accident, like when owner Steve Wynn stuck his elbow through Le Rêve, a $139 million (£88m) Picasso. There are some very obvious differences between a Picasso and shares in Google. Art is far less liquid than stocks: you can’t simply call a broker and sell a Picasso tomorrow.

Page 19: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

Val de Vie 17

However, as millions of pensioners in the West have seen their savings evapourate and investors scratch their heads wondering where to squeeze a premium from contracting capital, art is once again enjoying a renaissance. Good art never depreciates.

Even Old Masters are making a comeback as Old Money seeks a safer haven. Although the recent global trend towards supporting “living artists’ as opposed to “only buying when dying” has turned the art world upside down and filled collectors and investors with renewed excitement and vigour. Especially with the addition of well-to-do families who are feeling the pinch and selling off priceless family treasures under the radar at a

Main: Beezy Bailey’s The End Of Winter, part of Icon-Iconoclast his tribute to Mandela featuring

classic news photographs screen printed in oil over landscapes.

Left: The unmistakable style of William Kentridge, South Africa’s best known artist.

bargain price, creating a lucrative sub market. For those with an eye for aesthetic beauty, and a bargain, the time has never been more right to indulge in your passion and start a collection.

As advertising guru turned self-confessed art-aholic, Charles Saatchi, advocates; “Buy what you love and the money will take care of itself`”. This way, you at least get to enjoy a work of art while it is appreciating in value.

VAL DE VIE | ART SMART

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18 Val de Vie

HOME-GROWN TALENT

“WHEN A COLLECTION OF MY PAINTINGS CAME UP FOR SALE AT A RIDICULOUS PRICE, I BOUGHT THEM ALL BACK. IT WAS MY BEST INVESTMENT EVER”

Not many can afford $100 million for a platinum skull encrusted with 8 602 fine diamonds, fashioned by media darling Damien Hirst, but most can afford to start a collection however modest. You can pick up signed prints by greats like Roy Lichenstein and Keith Haring for between US$5 000-10 000, and something quirky by Jerry Garcia or John Lennon for the same price. Andy Warhol original signed prints start slightly higher at $50 000 upwards, but you can still pick up one of his sketches for $6 000. The main items from the classic Warhol or Lichenstein archive though will set you back tens of millions.

Photography has fast become a collectible and valuable genre with values creeping up. The most expensive photograph to date was sold in February 2007 and was Andrew Gurky’s “99cent II” diptych that fetched over $3million. Oddly enough, it was sold at a Contemporary Art auction and not as part of a photography exhibiton. Erotic photography has always captured the imagination and Helmut Newton, who died in 2004, remains the master of the decadently undressed, his work constantly hitting the $70,000 mark.

South Africa’s most famous living artist is William Kentridge. His charcoal etchings are dark and moody with only a hint of relief in the form of blue or red pastel, often depicting the pain and anguish of the human condition. An R8 000 etching from his formative period would now fetch half a million.

The nation is awash with talent whether it be the classic styles of Marie Vermeulen-Breedt, the essential quirkiness of Beezy Bailey or the modern touches of Paul du Toit or Marlene Dumas, with her exquisite haunting faces. Dumas is South African born but lives in Amsterdam and has quickly gained an international reputation.

Firth Street Gallery describes her work as the “painterly gestures of Expressionism while combining the critical distance of conceptual art with the pleasures of eroticism”. The relationships between art and female beauty, and between historical art models and twentieth-century supermodels, are recurring themes of hers.

Each artist has made their mark in what is a very small but powerful domestic market as well as internationally. Marie Vermeulin-Breedt paints from her studio on a farm just outside Pretoria. Famous for her stunning portraits and landscapes she once saw the other side of the business when she opened a gallery in Laguna Beach, Los Angeles. She hated every minute of it and says; “Running a gallery is such hard work. You have to start over every month.”

Beezy Bailey’s style is classic with a pop art twist. And always a sense of humour. Icon-Iconoclast, his latest exhibition, went on show recently at Johannesburg’s Everard Read Gallery, and was a sell out. The collection, which centred around classic news photographs of Nelson Mandela screen printed in oil over moody South African landscapes, had all the ingredients of a must-have for investors and collectors – Nelson Mandela, one of the most recognisable icons on the planet, combined with the eccentric talent of Beezy Bailey and a selection of classic, memorable news photographs by Sunday Times’ lensmen Benni Gool and legendary Drum magazine snapper Bob Gosani.

Ironically, Beezy has just bought a collection of his own paintings. Says Beezy, “A woman who bought 40 of my paintings died of cancer in the USA. The paintings came up for sale at a ridiculous price so I bought all forty of them back. It’s very comforting to know that the best investment I’ve made all year is buying my own art.”

Marlene Dumas’ Barbie (with pearl necklace)

The inimitable style of Paul du Toit

������ ��

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Val de Vie 19

RISING PRICES – PAUL DU TOIT

PAINTINGSIZE

AVERAGE PRICE FOR STATED YEAR (RANDS)

%INCREASE IN VALUE OVER 12 YEARS

AVERAGE GROWTH PER ANNUM2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

500 x 600 mm 23 000 26 000 28 500 32 000 40000 55 000 1,209% 100.75%

800 x 800 mm 28 000 32 000 42 000 48 000 50000 72 000 1,100% 91.67%

900 x 1 500 mm 38 000 42 000 54 000 75 000 75000 101 000 381% 47.63%

400 x 1 220 mm 25 000 30 000 35 000 40 000 45000 60 000 179% 29.83%

500 x 1 950 mm 27 000 35 000 42 000 50 000 60000 80 000 196% 39.20%

1 400 x

1 200 mm43 000 45 000 50 000 60 000 85000 125 000 1,289% 107.42%

2 400 x

1 500 mm70 000 75 000 125 000 150 000 175000 255 000 467% 51.89%

HOW TO BUY1 Explore art magazines,

galleries, exhibitions, and auctions without buying to gauge value and what you like

2 Once you have decided on a painting make sure it is authentic. Expensive art works may need expert analysis

3 if you are a pure art collector rather than a dealer there are no taxes on resale

4 Look for a new talent that is on the way up. The price should

be affordable but set to rise5 Buy early for biggest returns

Paul du Toit, who has made his name with his signature childlike multicoloured faces has seen his prices sky-rocket as a result of a deliberate

and uncanny two-year strategy. “My wife, who was then in financial planning, drew up a two year plan and said ‘stop wasting your time windsurfing and get painting’”. Paul only sleeps four hours a night and is very pro-active and productive. With no formal training he claims to have modelled himself on a hybrid of a number of very successful artists, developing his own signature style of modern heiroglyphics combined with disjointed multicoloured faces. “I spend hours studying the art markets and researching and targetting networks and buyers,” he says, and he certainly knows how to control the business side of art. His big break though came when CNN featured him on an arts programme focusing on Cape Town. During his short interview he had the presence of mind to wear a T-shirt with his web-address emblazened across it. When the programme aired to 10 million viewers the phones started ringing and they haven’t stopped since (see table below). “I got calls and log-ins from Japan, Russia, Isreal, America; the CNN programme exposed me to collectors around the world that would have taken years to reach.“

The result is a phenomenal rise in the price and status of his work. Which will only continue upwards. Hot Tip: Paul is just about to break into America in a big way, which should see him reach a new plateau.

There is much healthy competion and often friction between artists and dealers as they compete for clients, so beware. There are some unscrupulous practises that do go on but if you research what you like, talk to genuine enthusiasts and surround yourself with known experts you can’t go far wrong. Also, don’t be afraid to approach the artists themselves. They lead quite solitary lives and are often very approachable. You might get an invite to their studio, a personal assessment of their work and the inside track on new work. And you will certainly get a better price from them than you would at a gallery.

VAL DE VIE | ART SMART

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1.£68 millionPicasso Nude, Green Leaves and BustChristie’s, New York, May 4One of a series of highly prized, intimate portraits Picasso painted in1932 of his lover, Marie-Thérèse Walter, this painting was always going to fl y. Four years ago, Le Rêve, was about to be sold for $139m (£88m) when its owner, Steve Wynn, stuck his elbow through it by mistake.

2.£65 millionGiacometti Walking Man 1Sotheby’s, London, Feb 3Estimated at £12m to £18m,

this was the work that set the season alight, sparking a lengthy bidding battle before selling to a telephone bidder.

3. £51.6 millionChinese vase Bainbridge Auctioneers, Ruislip, Nov 11Discovered in Pinner, north-west London, this rare, fl ashily decorated porcelain vase, probably made for a palace of the Emperor Qianlong in the 18th century, epitomised the taste of China’s new rich.

4. £39 millionAndy WarholMen in Her LifePhillips de Pury & Co,

New York, Nov 8Experts are puzzled how this painting, the most expensive in New York’s recent contemporary art sales, made more than Warhol’s trademark soup can paintings in the same week of sales.

5. £29.7 millionJ M W Turner Modern Rome — Campo VecchioSotheby’s, London, July 7The fl ow of treasures from Britain’s stately homes continued unabated when this painting, from the collection of the Earl of Rosebery, sold for an artist’s record to the J Paul Getty Museum.

6. £22 millionSir Lawrence Alma-Tadema The Finding of MosesSotheby’s, New York, Nov 4Highly prized when painted in 1904 but rejected when offered for nothing to British museums in the Sixties.

7. £2.4 millionJohn Robert CozensThe Lake of Albano and Castel GandolfoSotheby’s, London, July 14The star lot from a collection formed by fertility doctor, Prof Ian Craft, this panorama saw David Thomson, pay a quadruple estimate.

8. £2.3 millionFrank Auerbach Mornington Crescent - Summer MorningSotheby’s, London, June 28Auerbach, who will be 80 next year, has been enjoying a recession-proof price boom.

9. £692,000Rubens? Portrait of a Bearded ManBonham’s, London, April 28Catalogued as a 19th-century painting in the “manner of Rubens” with a £1,500 estimate, this sold to dealer Philip Mould, who believed it to be a genuine Rubens but has yet to exhibit it as such.

10. £187,250Ged Quinn, Jonestown RadioSotheby’s, London, Oct 15A good investment by White Cube gallery’s Jay Jopling, who bought it for £20,000 in 2005, this was only the third painting to appear at auction.

TOP 10 BIGGEST ART SALES 2010

THE HORSE WHISPERERMarie Vermeulen-Breedt has been painting for 35 years. Famed for her portraits and landscapes Marie Vermeulen-Breedt is nothing if not diverse. Horses, children, landscapes, interiors, she paints with inctricate detail and subtlety combined with broader strokes. Renowned for her mastery of light and a rich unique palette she is particularly fond of her interiors which she refers to as “portraits by ommission” in that they say much about the person who is absent. “I’m often drawn to interiors that are not especially beautiful” she adds and her passion is for the very ordinariness of the setting - the tables, chairs, rugs and loving personal effects. She can become fascinated and slightly obsessed by an environment. Her other love is horses, which form a big part of her life. “They are the most beautiful creatures to paint” says Marie who had a serious riding accident

at age 16 and has never really ridden again. But she did marry a horse breeder and trainer so the connection remains strong. “I love seeing them running at the bottom of the garden and I visit the stables everyday. No matter what settting they are in it is always physical. Painting is

often a journey in which I visit the same canvasses over and over. It’s a journey that never really ends and I’m often drawn to rework canvasse that I thought were fi nished a long time ago. “Her landscapes are often bathed in late afternoon sunshine which brings a calming infl uence. When she paints portraits she likes the subject to sit and won’t copy from a photograph, with the exception of Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo and Thabo Mbeki. “It was impossible to have them sit for me, but I’d met them and had a strong visual sense of their public personas.”

“PAINTING IS A JOURNEY IN WHICH

I VISIT THE SAME CANVASSES OVER

AND OVER”

Marie Vermeulen-Breedt

specialises in painting

horses. she thinks they

are the most beautiful

animals to paint

20 Val de Vie

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22 Val de Vie

CLARKSON’S ode to theHIS LOVE-HATE RELATIONSHIP WITH THE PORCHE 911 IS LEGENDARY. FINALLY JEREMY CLARKSON FINDS ONE TO LOVE

As you may know, I have always loved the Porsche 911, in much the same way that I have always loved Peter Mandelson, mouth

ulcers, Greece, marzipan, caravanning holidays, the smoking laws, British Telecom, pointlessly complicated gadgets, tea before four, Piers Morgan, sweet white wine, ramblers, liberal democrats, beards, the Boeing 777, global warming scientists, average speed cameras and, I don’t think I’ve ever mentioned this one before, the feel of a cow. In other words, I have always rather disliked the 911.

Jokingly, and mainly to make them go away, I always tell fans of the breed that my dislike is based principally on the fact that James May and Richard Hammond both have one. But this isn’t true. James and Richard both have trousers, but I have no problem with those.

I’ve also argued that my dislike stems from the fact that it’s really a squashed Beetle and as a result, was designed by Hitler. But this isn’t really true either, if I’m honest. So is it the styling then; the look of the thing? No actually. If you look at Porsche’s recent efforts with the Coxster, the push-me-pull-you Boxster - which should really be called the Palindrome - the woeful Cayenne and that wheeled gargoyle known as the Panamera, we have to be grateful they don’t ever change the basic shape. And anyway, I rather like the sit up and beg windscreen and those eager West Highland terrier headlights. Most of all though, I’ve come to like the size. As other cars have swollen and

become fat, the 911 has remained fairly small. That’s a good thing.

No, the problem is the location of that engine. Putting it behind the rear wheels is as wrong as trying to invade Russia when you haven’t closed down the Western Front. It can’t work and it looks like belligerence to endlessly try to overcome the inherent problem rather than simply giving up and starting again. Yes, putting the engine at the rear means you have more weight over the back wheels so off the line, when the tail of a car squats, that means more grip, less wheelspin and quicker acceleration. Lovely. You will arrive at the corner in front of your adversary... but then what? You will turn the wheel, there will be no weight over the front wheels, you will understeer, and if you lift off to correct that, the nose will pitch down, the rear tyres will lose grip and any attempt to correct the resultant slide will be pointless because the engine’s in the back acting like a giant pendulum.

If you see a corner coming up in an early 911, the best thing you can do is follow these two steps: 1 Undo your seat belt2 Get in the back

I don’t remember what sort of 911 I drove first, but I’d heard so many horror stories about the wayward handling that I didn’t dare go more than 4 mph. Which meant I had more time to examine the ridiculously basic dashboard, and the heater controls which appeared to be connected to nothing at all.

9TEXT JEREMY CLARKSON PHOTOGRAPHS PORSCHE

Porsche GT3 RS 3

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Val de Vie 23

The first time I drove a 911 on a race track was extraordinary. Because I was a new boy back then and had no idea how to hold a slide in a Cortina, I was petrified. I felt it would be safer to try to set a lap time on a bear.

As the years wore on, I drove many different 911s and never had a single moment to worry about any of them. But that’s because I knew what would happen if I went near the limit and consequently stayed very far away from it. In much the same way that your mother always stays very far away from the edge of a cliff.

Eventually and thanks to Tiff Needell’s kindly encouragement, I did learn how to make a car slide and hold it there. But even when I’d been doing it week in and week out for years, I still never dared try it in a 911.

I’d hit a cameraman. Or a tree. Better to say I didn’t like them and drive something else. But then the day came... and it was easy. It was brilliant. Because I no longer felt intimidated by 911s, I could start to drive them quickly, which meant I was less likely to be hit by the blizzard of spittle from jealous onlookers.

Despite this advantage, I still didn’t like the interior, the heater still didn’t work, and the cars that worked well on the track really didn’t work at all on the road. Plus, by this stage, Porsche had started making an almost unbelievable number of variations. You had the Carrera, and the Carrera S, and the Carrera with four-wheel drive, or no roof, or fat wheel arch extensions or a combination of all three. It was all designed, I thought, to make Porsche

“THE FIRST TIME I DROVE A 911 ON A RACE TRACK WAS EXTRAORDINARY. BECAUSE I WAS A NEW BOY BACK THEN AND HAD

NO IDEA HOW TO HOLD A SLIDE IN A CORTINA, I WAS PETRIFIED.”

911

Porsche GT3 RS 3

VAL DE VIE | DRIVING

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24 Val de Vie

owners even more dull. As the beginning of this year dawned, I admired the way the cars looked, and the size they’d become. I admired too the way many of them drove but like them? No. My prejudice was too entrenched for that. But then along came the new GT3 and I won’t dwell on the whys and the wherefores, but I loved it. Not liked it. Loved it.

It had a stupid front splitter that was so low it could give a spider a haircut, scaffolding instead of rear seats and an idiotic rear spoiler which could very obviously be adjusted. No. No. No. Having a rear spoiler that can very obviously be adjusted means that someone, one day is going to ask why. And then you’ll have to tell them. And they’ll think you are mad. However, despite the aesthetic shortfalls, and the fact it is a 911, this is a great car. It goes round roundabouts like nothing I’ve ever driven. In a test of pure handling and grip, it would be a match for anything. And it only costs £86,000. That’s just shy of half what you’d pay for a Ferrari 458. Half. I was so enamoured of the GT3, I thought I’d try some more 911s, so I started with the GT3RS. With different inlet and exhaust manifolds, this develops 15 more horsepower, the wheels are wider, so’s the track, and it weighs 55lb less too. You can cut another 22lb if you specify a £1,268 lithium-ion battery instead of the standard lead-acid item but I wouldn’t do that because a) you won’t notice the difference and b) again, someone, one day will ask why. Which is always irritating.

I didn’t like the RS at all. The GT3 rides properly. This doesn’t. The GT3 has a radio and a brilliant satnav. This doesn’t. The GT3 has door handles. This

“BUT THEN ALONG CAME THE NEW GT3 AND I WON’T DWELL ON THE WHYS AND THE WHEREFORES, BUT I LOVED IT. NOT LIKED IT. LOVED IT.”

doesn’t. And, worst of all, the GT3 can be used in Britain, and this cannot. No really. It is fitted with tyres that don’t work below 10 degrees centigrade. Which means, now that we know global warming is nonsense, they don’t work here at all, ever.

I took it for a spin, in the rain in early May, and on several occasions, it was very nearly just that. A horrid car. Made for track-day enthusiasts. Or as we know them: bores. I then tried a 911 Turbo convertible. And this was fairly nasty as well for reasons Richard Hammond explained. The 911 is supposed to be a sports car. Fitting a turbo tries to turn it into something it is not - a supercar. It felt loose and wobbly. So it seems then that the GT3 is not an indication that after all these years, Porsche has got it right. It’s just proof that if you keep on churning out endless variations of the same thing, one day, you’ll get one of them right. In short. The million monkeys have finally come up with The Merchant of Venice.

©To

p G

ear

Pub

licat

ions

– B

BC

The new GT3

Porsche 911 Carrera S

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Coming SoonFIRE COLLECTION

www.carrolboyes.com · www.facebook.com/Carrol.Boyes · www.twitter.com/carrolboyes

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26 Val de Vie

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VAL DE VIE | LIFESTYLE

from cityscape to paradise

FOR OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST, RYK NEETHLING, 2011 HAS BROUGHT A MAJOR TRANSFORMATION IN HIS LIFE. SWITCHING FROM THE COMPETITIVE

WORLD OF PROFESSIONAL SPORT TO THE EQUALLY COMPETITIVE WORLD OF BUSINESS. IN

THE PROCESS HE HAS RELOCATED FROM URBAN CITYSCAPE TO THE PARADISE THAT IS VAL DE VIE...

TEXT PETER KNIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY MARK CAMERON

Val de Vie 27

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28 Val de Vie

Did you find it hard adapting to the so-called “real” world of business from the world of professional sport? No not really. I retired from international sport not because I had to, but because I felt that I had achieved more than I ever thought was possible in the pool and that I wanted to pursue some of the opportunities that I had passed on due to my training and competition commitments. After I graduated from university I made a point to get some good work experience in the US and worked for a commercial real estate brokerage and development company, so getting back into business was a smooth process really.

You have made a major change of lifestyle, what was the trigger that prompted you to change? I didn’t want any more opportunities to pass me by and I wanted to prepare myself for the next chapter in my life.

What made you decide to settle at Val de Vie? - Since the first time I set foot on the estate I felt that it was a very special place. I travel a lot but the Franschhoek Valley is like no other place I have ever visited. Every morning I am thankful for this opportunity to live and work surrounded by this beauty.

“THE PAARL-FRANSCHHOEK VALLEY

IS LIKE NO OTHER PLACE I HAVE VISITED. EVERY MORNING I AM SO THANKFUL TO BE

LIVING HERE.”

Ryk finds that wine is a serious business

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What about the Paarl-Franschhoek valley do you find particularly envigorating and pleasing? Its natural beauty, the people and the variety of things to do. I don’t think I will be able to do everything in my lifetime!

What else besides swimming do you do to relax or to seek the thrill of adventure? I am just about to start taking mountain biking seriously. I also enjoy fishing, running and photography. Whatever the challenge, I am always up for adventure and trying new things.

What is your main business role at the moment? Marketing Director of Val de Vie, working on real estate sales and new developments, wine, the Polo Club Restaurant, the magazine, polo and events. I also have two swimming academies (Pretoria and Paarl) and four learn-to-swim franchises.

Do you miss the world of sport and the competitive edge or can you find the same sort of vibe in business? - Through my academies I am still involved in sport, but business provides plenty of opportunity to be competitive and I love it.

Do you feel that warm, fuzzy feeling when you are returning to Val de Vie after a business trip? Absolutely. I have been travelling a lot the past 15 years but Val de Vie has become my home now.

Would you, at some stage in your life, like to start a family? Yes, definitely although I can’t see it happening in the very near future.

What qualities do you look for in a woman partner? Somebody who is confident, independent and smart.

Could you describe your daily routine, or is every day different? One of the great things about my life is that every day is different. I try to exercise at least once every day and then I start the day which can range between marketing wine, property, our restaurant, swimming schools, doing motivational talks to corporates or attending events for sponsors.

Given that it’s ok these days for men to cleanse, do you have a “grooming routine”. No, I am definitely not a metro sexual. I keep clean but spend the minimal amount of time getting ready.

With clothes, do you have a certain favourite look that works for you? Is there anything you look bad in? Anything that is comfortable and not too flashy. It is hard for me to find clothes that fit, so when I find a look, I usually stick with it.

Do you have any animals in your life? No. Not at the moment.

How are you on social media- Facebook and Twitter? What do you think is good and bad about it? I am on Facebook and Twitter. It is a good way to keep in contact with your friends and fans, but you also open yourself up, and can attract a lot of abuse if you are not careful. Just like traditional media, it can work for you if you handle it right but can also turn against you.

Looking back over your career to date, is there anything you would have done differently? Maybe one or two things towards the end of my career, but it is technical swimming stuff. I am very proud of the way that I handled myself throughout my career and I know that I made the most of my opportunities. I have no regrets, no “what if” thoughts.

In terms of cars, what do you drive and what would you prefer to drive if you already don’t have your dream car? I drive a Mercedes C200 and have done for about five years. It suits my lifestyle perfectly.

What is your idea of a perfect summer holiday? Somewhere with good weather, a nice beach, not too crowded and that has great wine.

Could you describe the Val de Vie ‘Ryk Neethling’ wine that you blended with Harold Versfeld, the winemaker? It is a delicious, very easy drinking red, that goes well with Kudu, beef and lamb. But it is equally delicious on its own.

VAL DE VIE | LIFESTYLE

SUPERIOR AWARD-WINNING WINESInspired by the acclaimed vintages of Châteauneuf-du-Pape, Val de Vie wine estate has fast become recognised for its exceptional wines, with the most comprehensive collection of Rhône varietals in South Africa. In September Wine Of The Month ranked the Val de Vie Shiraz ‘08 as its number one wine. Head winemaker Harold Versveld joined forces with Ryk to produce a winning red blend and says; “I was astounded by the way Ryk approached the whole blending process, with great intent and purpose. From the outset he knew what style of wine he liked and what style should be linked to his name.”

We invite you to visit the estate and discover our fine wines at the historic tasting room. They can also be ordered directly from our website and delivered across South Africa. If you’d like to find out more about our wines, we’d love to hear from you: [email protected]

Tasting room trading hours Monday to Sunday 10:00 – 16:00

PRODUCE YOUR OWN WINEVal de Vie offers corporate clients and its residents the unique opportunity to produce their own wines. Winemaker Harold Versfeld assists in selecting your own grapes, followed by the exciting process of blending, bottling and labeling your own boutique wine.

Val de Vie 29

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30 Val de Vie

Veuve Clicquot MASTERSTHE MOST GLAMOROUS POLO EVENT OF THE YEAR WAS A MAGNET FOR THE STYLE ELITE, CELEBS, FASHIONISTAS & MOGULS

18

15

76

13

14

5

16 17

2625

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VAL DE VIE | PEOPLE

K Day1

2

3 4

11

1210

22 23 24

2928

21

20

19

8

27

9

1 Ryk Neethling, Leonhard Jones 2 Claire Melvill,

Elana Drago 3 Sonia Booth 4 Jessica Ferreira

5 Roxy Burger 6 Brigitte Williers, Vanessa Marawa

7 Gretha Scholtz, David Donde 8 Leigh van den Berg,

Jeannie D 9 Polo player 10 Jess Ross, Amy Hopkins,

Jacqui Pawson 11 Nad Shahid, Jeannie D, Jon Firth

12 Sonia and Matthew Booth 13 Tumi Makgabo

14 Riaan du Plessis, Herschelle Gibbs 15 Helga

Otah, Ibe Otah, Elana Afrika 16 Anina Malherbe,

David Sharp 17 Thulane Hadebe, Lee-anne

Summers 18 Polo players 19 Mike Minkley

20 Alana Rabie, Paschal Phelan 21 Lizel Strydom,

Lucy Kenny, Richard Hardiman 22 Jessica Ferreira

23 Malcom Kluk, Georgia Donde 24 Didi Kolane

25-27 Décor and branding at the venue

28 Claire Melvill, Malcom Kluk, Christian

Gabriel du Toit, Elana Drago 29 Jeannie D

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32 Val de Vie

Veuve Clicquot Masters

Names

30 Polo Players 31 Lindiwe Suttle 32 Lieschen Botes, Warren Windsor

33 Bjorn Steinbach, Lee-Anne Summers, Thulane Hadebe, Rosie Motene

34 Jasna Zellerhoff , Jean-Marc Lederman, Vanessa Marawa 35 Caroline

Schulze, Vanessa Haywood 36 Lucy Kenny, Jessica Ferreira 37 Alyssa

Buettgen, Lindsay Lombard, Lauren Smith 38 Michael Roy, Sianna Wu,

Bjorn Steinbach, Jasna Zellerhoff , Ross Twisted, Anina Malherbe, Malcom

Kluk 39 Gretha Scholtz, Jessica Donde 40 Leigh van den Berg 41

Ross McDowell, Pollyanna Townsend-Rose, Melanie Martin, Jennifer

Bonar 42 Mike Minkley, Karen Balestri de Verrand, Martin Venter, Gavin

Kanigowsky, Tessa Moxon, Joseph Bronn, Gavin Watson, Matthew Moxon

43 Jenna Dover 44 Michelle Reitz, Terra Smith, Jessica Webb,

Delfi na Ladeira, Michelle Bajurny, Nicole Hart 45 Pawel Kanigowski,

Karen Balestri de Verrand 46 Polo Players 47 Bjorn Steinbach,

Sandra Jorge 48 Julia Freemantle, Jessica Webb, Sarah Martin

30 31 33

32

34

35

36

40

44

45

43

39

3837

4241

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32 Val de Vie

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HOUSES GET SMARTAS TECHNOLOGY EXPLODES, HOUSES ARE BECOMING EVER MORE INTELLIGENT, IMPROVING SAFETY, CONVENIENCE AND EFFICIENCY. SMART TECHNOLOGY GOES DOMESTIC TEXT DAVE STEWART PHOTOGRAPHS PAM GOLDING

In the ‘50s the common idea of a smart house was to have a comical sci-fi robot running around doing the washing and ironing, making tea, opening and

closing curtains and other mundane chores; allowing the nuclear family to enjoy more quality leisure time together in the garden.

The robot never really caught on and it wasn’t until the ‘70s when a Scottish company developed X10 technology that houses started becoming really smart. The X10 system piggy-backed on existing house wiring to connect domestic appliances with a series of remote controls, keypads and transmitters. The reaction time ranged from the promised split-second to extremely slow depending on the “chatter” along the cables, but X10 did take smart technology to a new level and really defi ned the smarter house.

Today, with the explosion and miniaturisation of sophisticated technology, together with the proliferation of WiFi, there is nothing a smart house cannot do. Want to tap into your security cameras at the house in Claremont from the villa in Mauritius? Use your cell phone. Want your favourite TV programme or rock band to follow you from bedroom to living room to study? Punch a button. Want to conserve energy and extract every last kilowatt from every dying ray of golden sunshine to heat and light your house? Easy.

The list is endless. Convenience and effi ciency are the watchwords of this modern system and as more and more people are demanding smarter homes, the cost is coming down. Of course you can go to excess but a basic smart system involving heating, lighting, security and a handful of domestic slave devices is now relatively inexpensive. And the savings in terms of energy and wastage can quickly outweigh the costs.

SMART PEOPLE NEEDSMART HOUSESYou don’t have to be a Billionaire like Bill Gates, who’s “Pacifi c Lodge” styled family house in Seattle, overlooking Lake Washington, is possibly the world’s smartest yet. It is a 40,000 sq foot mansion hewn into the side of a hill, that took seven years to build. Visitors to the Gates’ household are fi rst surveyed before being given a microchip upon arrival. This small chip sends signals throughout the house, and regulates each room’s temperature and other conditions according to preset user preferences. Lights automatically come on when you enter a room and fade when you leave. Speakers

are hidden beneath “porous” wallpaper to allow music to follow you from zone to zone. Portable touch pads control everything from the TV and entertainment systems to temperature and lighting, which brighten or dim to fi t the occasion and mood, or to correspond with the outside light. The chip keeps track of all that you do and makes adjustments as it learns your preferences. When two different chips enter the same room, the system tries to compromise on something that both people will like.

SMARTER PETS TOOIt doesn’t end there. Wealthy people with pampered pets or horses can also choose smart kennels or stables whereby the lighting and temperature are monitored and food or medication is made available at critical times. It sounds over the top but if you are a top polo player with 16 ponies needing attention, you need all the help you can get.

“SMART HOUSES ARE THE DWELLINGS OF THE FUTURE. AND THE FUTURE IS NOW”

Monitor all systems in the entire house from your couch with a super remote-control.

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VAL DE VIE | PROPERTY

Val de Vie 35

VAL DE VIE | PROPERTY

There are any number of smart home products that deliver various domestic duties. You can literally devise a system to suit your needs and budget. The main areas of focus though are:

Security cameras can track your home’s interior and exterior even if it’s pitch-black outside and transmit visuals to anywhere in the world; alerting your security company if you are not around yourself.

A video door phone provides more than an alert and call to action – you get to see who’s at the door. Some even take a photograph or record video of visitors.

Motion sensors send an alert when there’s unwanted movement around your property, and they can tell the difference between pets and burglars.

Locks and doors can be opened with scanned fi ngerprints or a four-digit code, eliminating the need to fumble for house keys in pockets and handbags.

Audio systems distribute the music from your

Concealed music speakers in the ceiling and behind ‘porous’ wallpaper, and con-trolled heating and lighting, create the right dining room ambiance whether for family, business or romance.

Subtle security systems can monitor every zone of the house, inside and out and respond on their own

iPod or CD player to any room in the house with cleverly concealed speakers; matching your mood.

Channel modulators take any video signal – from a security camera to your favourite TV programme – and make it viewable on every screen in the house or even your smart phone.

Remote controls, keypads and tabletop controllers are the means of activating the smart home applications. Devices also come with built-in web-servers that allow you to access key information online.

If the sunset gets too bright, the blinds will glide across the window, or the window itself will darken

Modern WiFi eliminates the need for messy cables and wires

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36 Val de Vie

The private residential market is typified by the quest for unique designs and exclusive luxury which are often beyond the

client’s desired budget. We offer real solutions to maintaining a budget without compromising the look and feel of the home.

Our turnkey offerings include complete project management, delivery support and design services through all phases of the

development process. We evaluate the brief with regard to time, cost and quality, devising a procurement solution to suit

individual needs. At the same time we administer a suitable contract between the respective parties, ensuring that a binding

legal agreement is in place.

We offer consistently high standards of services, on appointments ranging from modest homes to luxury residences.

Please visit our offices at The Polo House, 268 Les Lions Street, Val de Vie Estate, Paarl, 7646.

“At Guardian Development Projects we understand the emotive nature of building a dream home.

We provide that vital independent and professional service to plan, lead, organise and control the management of

projects and programs, from inception to reality.”

T: +27 83 641 8887 F: +27 (86) 665 1813 [email protected] www.guardianprojects.co.za

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Val de Vie 37

SAFETY AND CONVENIENCE Who wouldn’t love being able to control lighting, entertainment and temperature from their couch? Home networking can also provide peace of mind. Whether you’re at work or on vacation, the smart home will alert you to what’s going on, and security systems can be built to provide an immense amount of help in an emergency. For example, not only would a resident be woken with notifi cation of a fi re alarm, the smart home would also unlock doors, dial the fi re department and light the path to safety.

Other examples of cool smart home tricks include: Light a path for nighttime bathroom trips Instantly create mood lighting for romantic

evenings with that special someone Programme your television so that your

children can only watch certain programmes at certain times

Access all your favourite DVDs from any television in the home

Have your thermostat start warming the bedroom before you get out of bed so that it’s nice and toasty when you get up

Turn on the coffee maker from bed

EFFICIENCYSmart homes also provide some energy effi ciency savings putting various devices at reduced levels of functionality. Domestic appliance can literally go to “sleep” and wake up when commands are given. Electric bills go down when lights are automatically turned off when a person leaves the room, and rooms can be heated or cooled based on who’s there at any given moment. A smart homeowner will fi nd heating bills reduced by about one-third compared to the not-so-smart house of comparable size next door. Also, it is incredibly useful to track how much energy each appliance is using and command it to use less.

SMARTER SOLUTIONS FOR THE ELDERLYTechnology promises tremendous benefi ts for the elderly living alone. Smart homes can notify elderly residents when it is time to take medicine, alert the hospital if the resident falls and track how much the resident is eating. If the elderly person is forgetful, the smart home would perform tasks such as shutting off the water before a bath overfl owed or turning off the oven if the cook had wandered away. The system works out much cheaper than a full-time nursing home.

LOCAL EXPERTAt Val de Vie, Leonhard Jones of Guardian Development Projects is the resident expert who can make your house very smart and design a system tailor made to suit your individual needs and your budget. Guardian Projects: 083 641 8887 [email protected] www.guardianprojects.co.za

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At Val de Vie the homes are getting smarter by the day

VAL DE VIE | PROPERTY

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VAL DE VIE | PASHION

SUMMER CLASSIC

MODELS NINDHI/3D MODELS, MARIA PAYMAN / ICE MODELS,

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MARIA Long dress by Stefania Morland with

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Val de Vie 41

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42 Val de Vie

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Val de Vie 43

VANESSA long dress with adjustable straps R1 995,

Slate; platform shoes R1 290, Errol Arendz NINDHI short

coral bubble dress R645, Slate; shoes R2 750, Kobus

Dippenaar MARIA long dress POA, Stephania Morland, shoes R925, Errol Arendz.

VAL DE VIE | PASHION

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44 Val de Vie

NINDHI short strappy dress with leather trims R7 600, Errol Arendz; shoes R2 750,

Kobus Dippenaar VANESSA ankle length tight fitting dress in animal print R1 500,

Philosophy; shoes R1 390, Errol Arendz.

THE DRESS IS YOUR MOST VERSATILE PIECE

OF SUMMERWEAR. DRESS IT UP OR DOWN,

CASUAL OR SMART. BE BRAVE WITH COLOURS AND

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Val de Vie 45

VAL DE VIE | PASHION

VANESSA short body hugging dress R 1 200, Philosophy

MARIA long knitted petticoat style dress R1 500 House of Fashion NINDHI short

layered dress in greys and gold POA, Stefania Morland.

Val de Vie 45

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46 Val de Vie

opposite page MARIA short fringed dress R 995, Slate; shoes R1 390, Errol Arendz.this page NINDHI pink and brown colour dye dress R 3 900, Philosophy MARIA black and white polka dot R1 995 Slate.

46 Val de Vie

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Val de Vie 47

TIGHT FITTING OR LOOSE, LOW

CUT OR HIGH, THE DRESS

CELEBRATES THE RETURN TO

FEMININITY. BE SEXY AND

SENSUAL. GO ON, CAUSE A STIR!

VAL DE VIE | PASHION

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NINDHI short purple bubble dress R 745, Slate MARIA black dress with bling fringing R4 800, Kobus Dippenaar; shoes R 1 390, Errol Arendz VANESSA sequin black dress with low back and strap detail R5 200, Kobus Dippenaar.

Contact details:SLATE 021 914 14448ERROL ARENDZ 021 461 1385/ 021 423 7973PHILOSOPHY 021 671 7661KOBUS DIPPENAAR 021 423 7810HOUSE OF FASHION 021 422 4479STEFANIA MORLAND 021 422 2609

48 Val de Vie

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Get connected at the following stores: Data stores near you:Tygervalley Data Store Tel: 021 914 9743Canal Walk Data Store Tel: 021 555 3580Bayside Data Store Tel: 021 557 5397Cavendish Data Store Tel: 021 674 5314Zevenwacht Data Store Tel: 021 903 0815Sandton Data Store Tel: 011 784 4283

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50 Val de Vie50 Val de Vie

ISLAND LIFETHE IDEA OF OWNING YOUR OWN ISLAND HAS TO BE

THE ULTIMATE DREAM OF ANY PROPERTY OWNER.TEXT SVEN JURGSON PHOTOGRAPHS FARHAD VLADI

It was Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis who is credited with instilling into public consciousness the concept of the island as the ultimate

getaway; and today’s high-profile island-owners include Ted Turner, Brooke Shields, Bjorn Borg, Nicholas Cage, Charles Heidsieck, Malcolm Forbes and Sol Kersner.

In the past 35 years, Island agent Farhad Vladi has sold over 1,200 islands and has a worldwide database of over 10 000 exotic and often eccentric escapes. The most expensive island that Vladi brokered was Norman Island in the British Virgin Islands that he sold for R78million, but he has sold many lesser islands for less than R200 000. The cheapest island he ever sold was a 500 square metre rock on Lake Charlotte, Nova Scotia for a mere R9 750.

Farhad Vladi was still a university student, working towards a doctorate in Economics, when he made his first island deal: “I’d spotted a newspaper article saying that a tropical island in the Indian Ocean had been bought for just two thousand dollars. Nothing! But it really captured my imagination and it was this small news snippet that completely changed my life. I knew from that moment on that I just had to have an island of my own.”

Vladi wrote to the Seychelles Bulletin newspaper to say that he was planning a visit to the Indian Ocean in the hope of buying an island. Unfortunately, most of his capital was used up just getting there.

This was in the days before low-cost air travel and the Mombasa to Bombay steamer was the only way. When he arrived, the cheapest deal he was offered was Cousine Island, an idyllic palm-fringed, white sanded

paradise but the R650 000 price tag was far more than he could afford. Today the island is owned by a South African businessman, who turned it into a luxury holiday resort. Disappointed, Vladi returned home to Germany where, to cut his losses, he approached a prominent Hamburg businessman to see if he was interested in buying an island. The man bought Cousine Island together with two others - sight unseen - and paid Vladi five percent commission; which was the start of his amazing lifetime business. His favourite saying is, “You don’t have to be a millionaire to own your own island! Indeed if you can afford a car you can afford your own island.” And in the last 35 years, billionaires have been joined by those of more modest means, in recognising that a private island is the only reliable means of escaping the crowds and pressures of modern living.

The majority of Vladi’s transactions have been between R1.3 million and R5.2 million with the average price being around R1,95 million. The largest Island he ever sold was the 3 000 hectare Eigg Island on the west coast of Scotland; then there was the large and ultra-expensive island Musha Cay in the Bahamas complete with, arguably, the most luxurious resort in the world (approx 150 acres for R400 million). One of the last untouched paradises in the Seychelles, Therese Island, was also on the market (150 acres) for R34 million. But the island with the oldest existing deed is Long Coco Cat, in the Caribbean waters of Belize, a snip at R2.3million. The same price as a luxury one-bedroomed apartment in central Cape Town.

Here is a selection of current mini paradises on offer to whet your appetite.

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Val de Vie 51

VAL DE VIE | LIVING

Val de Vie 51

BONE FISH CAYSize: approx. 13.5 acres Price: US$ 14 500 000Location: Abacos, BahamasThis unique 13-acre island is located in the Abaco Islands in the Bahamas and takes its name from its interesting shape and the amount of bonefish in this region. Over the past seven years this formerly deserted island was turned into a first-class luxury getaway. Five buildings totalling 15 000 square feet were constructed of the finest materials imported from Europe and the United States. The entire complex is hurricane-proof. The property is fully air-conditioned, and Bone Fish Cay generates its own electricity and has its own desalination plant. All communication services (telephone, fax, internet) are provided. A newly and very solidly built jetty and several boats are included with the island.

MOTO MEUTE Price: US$ 1 350 000Size: Approx. 1.6 acresLocation: In the lagoon of Tahaa, French PolynesiaThis is the textbook circular “dream island” in the lagoon of Tahaa with views of Bora Bora! It has that certain island romance as if Robinson Crusoe were sharing the magnificent sandy beaches, crystal-clear waters, palm trees and superb vistas. There is a wonderful Polynesian-style shuttered bungalow already on the island with one large room, a kitchen, large terrace and sheltered barbecue area. area. The place to revel in the magic of the South Pacific!

ILHA SAPOEIRASize: approx. 0.67 acres Price: US$ 399 000Location: 50 miles South of Rio in the direction of Angra dos Reis The island is located 10 minutes by boat from the mainland, gas station, town centre, yacht club. It includes three small private beaches facing idifferent directions, fresh water piped from a natural spring, bamboo bar, storage rooms, a variety of fruit trees including bananas, papayas, and avocados.

On one side the island is mostly flat but the other side has a hill surrounded by trees to ensure privacy. A dock can be built to moor boats that require depth, while smaller boats are docked right onto the sandy beaches. The island is situated in a large bay surrounded by other islands, making the waters very calm and clear. The island views include other islands, the mainland and an uninterrupted view of a spectacular waterfall cascading over the mountains. The crystal clear waters are excellent for boating, swimming, snorkelling, scuba diving, fishing, jet skiing and sailing. The area is very safe, quiet, relaxing and beautiful.

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52 Val de Vie52 Val de Vie

THE DÄMMAN LIGHTHOUSE Price on requestSize: approx. 0,14 acre + lot on mainlandLocation: KalmarsundA highly unique property, developed by carefully renovating and modernizing an old open-water lighthouse - there is nothing quite like it in the world! Operated as a luxury hotel and conference centre, it can be returned to a single family residence. The secluded location offers tranquillity and silence interrupted only by the sound of the waves.

TESSERA ISLANDPrice: US$ 4 500 000Location: Lagunna di Venice, ItalyBeautifully located in the Venice Lagoon and just five minutes by water taxi from the bustle of St Mark’s Square, Venice’s waterways and cultural and historical heritage. Tessera is probably the only part of Venice that isn’t sinking and offers spectacular views of the city. An 18-century villa boasts a vine-covered loggia and a cultivated garden with roses, pines, magnolia, palm tress and fruit tress. The villa and outbuildings were renovated in 1985 to a very high standard. A boat and boathouse are included in the sale.

L ITTLE IRONSIDE ISLAND Price: US$ 975 000Size: 1.3 acresLocation: Thousand Islands, St. Lawrence River, New YorkThis is one of the finest island retreats in the Thousand Islands region. The waterfront house features five bedrooms and six bathrooms and is currently configured to sleep 11. The great room features a massive stone double-sided fireplace that opens into the large screened-in porch. The kitchen is modernised and includes a large pantry and laundry on the same level as the bedrooms. There are two additional cottages each with a bathroom and 5 additional beds. A 375 sq ft floating dock is used for recreational purposes.

KAULBACH ISLANDPrice: US$ 14 500 000Location: Nova Scotia, CanadaKaulbach Island is peaceful, private and sheltered. The Island is part of the drumlin formations along the south coast of Nova Scotia etched by glaciers millions of years ago, leaving behind a fifty-seven acre island, now transformed into softwood forests and meadows. To walk the perimeter of the island you will cover a mile of shoreline. The island hosts a magnificent Cape Cod style-home with 11 000 square feet of luxurious space. Other major features are a double garage with chef’s quarters, a beach cottage, farmhouse, utility outbuildings and a solid pile-driven wharf with deep anchor-age – everything you need is here, including a motorboat and a sailboat.

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Page 56: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

FRANSCHHOEK IS – BY A COUNTRY MILE – THE SOUTH AFRICAN TOWN WITH THE MOST RESTAURANTS PER SQUARE METRE. AS A FRENCH-FOUNDED VILLAGE, FOOD AND WINE IS TRULY IN ITS GENES.

54 Val de Vie

TASTE FRANSCHHOEK

To this day it lives up to its heritage with aplomb, offering guests wonderful gourmet experiences, from simple cafés to the

grandest fine dining, and everything in between. Many great restaurants are located on the pretty

main road, but as South African wineries have developed, a number of fantastic and beautifully located eateries have been established on the historic wine farms of this scenic valley.

To appreciate the full spectrum of Franschhoek’s food, repeat visits are in order. To get you started, here’s a meander through some of my favourites for a taster of what’s in store. This dining itinerary begins at the Paarl entrance to the valley and moves into and through town, then up the Pass out to Villiersdorp.

First stop is Val de Vie’s excellent POLO CLUB restaurant set in an exquisite estate, boasting an easy-going but delicious café menu at lunchtime. At night things get slightly more formal – read kudu carpaccio with roast fennel to start followed by baharat lamb rump on sautéed potato. The selection of wine is well chosen as you’d expect from a celebrated winery with a variety of award-winning Rhône varietals. Lunches are very children friendly and the overall ambiance is casual, friendly and romantic. Eat and watch polo on Wednesdays and Sundays.

Next, is one of the most interesting wineries in the Cape, home to one of the most traditionally-themed restaurants. FYNDRAAI AT SOLMS-DELTA boasts a glossary of terms on the back of the menu, describing all the fabulous flavours of the Cape used in the dishes, like: boegoe; frikkadelle; katballetjies; koeksister; slaphakskeenjies and

Pierneef

Polo Club restaurant, Val de Vie

Fyndraai at Solms-Delta

Fyndraai at Solms-Delta Le Bon VivantLe Bon Vivant

TEXT JP ROSSOUW

vetkoek. Many of the herbs and vegetables are grown on the property and the colourful menu is a delightful melange of tastes. Don’t worry, if the ingredients are unfamiliar, the plates are solidly based on comfort cuisine.

PIERNEEF at La Motte Estate is a showpiece restaurant where the indigenous cuisine of the Cape is re-interpreted and given pride of place. Named after the famed painter, there is a wonderful gallery of his works on the property, along with a “farm shop” that stocks luxury food and cooking items. While Pierneef is a sophisticated dining space, and the plates are works of art, it is by no means stuffy.There’s a patio menu of easy eating choices and simpler meals. It is a very family-friendly space.

Another quality winery eatery, but altogether casual, is MÔRESON’S BREAD & WINE. As the name suggests, it’s about the basics – all very well done. For summer’s days they have a delightful courtyard under trees; while the interior takes the form of a country kitchen complete with cats and jars of preserves on the shelves. Daily plate meals offer really hearty eating, of flavour there is no shortage.

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VAL DE VIE | FOOD & WINE

Val de Vie 55

ALLORA is one of a chain of Italian restaurants and there is so little Italian eating in Franschhoek. This is a reliable option for those basics we all love, including pizza – but the main reason it’s included is for the fantastic olive shed on the property where you can select from dozens of olive oils and olive-based products from the surrounding farms. There’s also a small outdoor café here for tasty sandwiches.

GRANDE PROVENCE takes us back to finer dining, with attractive modern-meets-classic French décor on a wine farm that also boasts a very good art gallery. Service is very good and well able to guide you through the menu where there is no conventional sequence of starter, main and dessert: you choose whatever takes your fancy in the order you prefer. Try a caramelised eel and foie gras terrine or stick to a slow-roasted lamb neck with crushed peas...

MON PLAISIR is très French – a real bistro menu served by a veritable Frenchwoman and cooked by her Francophile husband. It’s up the hill at Chamonix Winery, home to some of the Cape’s best Pinot Noir, which is most suited to the duck dishes, like the confit and cassoulet. Be prepared, however, for a languid meal. In continental tradition, they like to ease you into a very long lunch.

Fittingly, FRENCH CONNECTION marks the beginning of the main road’s restaurant strip and it’s a very reliable café-style eatery where you can enjoy baguette sandwiches, delicious burgers and steak frites with café de Paris sauce, plus a very well-priced wine list. Lovely street-side seating allows people-watching, but it also has a garden patio which is great for more private meals.

Then you have the SALMON BAR, which sits inauspiciously down a side alley but is home to Franschhoek’s best coffee and absolutely fabulous soups. The breakfasts and sandwiches are very good (from the in-house bakery) and they have a number of specialist salmon dishes, including gravadlax and sushi. This is a great anytime option.

LE BON VIVANT says it all, yet this gem is often overlooked because it’s located just off the main strip. In a lovely old house with a tranquil garden for daytime eating, Dutch chef Pierre Hendriks presents very creative cuisine of a

high standard: try the chef’s “surprise” five course menu for full impact – but also highly recommended is the oysters “three ways” for sure-fire delight.

REUBEN’S is a justly famous name for great bistro-style eating, the signature style celebrates the chef’s proudly Franschhoek heritage. The courtyard is a fabulous space for lunch, while the interior sets a contemporary scene that’s easy to return to and the wine list is really good. Try as he might, diners won’t let him drop his chilli salt squid from the menu.

Le Bon Vivant

Allora

Reuben’s

Grande Provence

Le Bon Vivant Haute Cabrière Haute Cabrière

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56 Val de Vie

VAL DE VIE | FOOD & WINE

THE COMMON ROOM at Le Quartier Français is the first of the two restaurants at this renowned guest house, and its a winner – really tasty, everyday comfort cuisine (the signature dish is roast chicken to share) presented beautifully and much of it in tapas-sized portions for mix-and-match eating. The risotto is good and for something that fuses Dutch with South African, try the springbok “bitterballen” - desserts are fantastic too. At THE TASTING ROOM, the famed fine diner, the chef’s menu changes regularly and presents the exciting, cutting-edge cuisine rooted in local and seasonal ingredients. There is no à la carte here, you’re seated, and after drinks are ordered, you are in for the chef, Margot Janse’s, journey into tastes... and what a journey: this is international quality cuisine with very friendly service to add even more value. Franschhoek’s finest dining.

Up the road, RYAN’S KITCHEN is a newcomer, occupying the front room of a pretty guest house. The style is casual contemporary, with an open “show” kitchen so that you’re entertained even before you sample the team’s creations – contemporary food with a couple of fancy twists. Chef Ryan is a whizz with game meats.

THE GRILL ROOM is the place if you’re in the mood for a great piece of meat. There’s an in-house meat locker and butchery (a great option for take-home prime rib eye, fillet or sirloin) and the restaurant is lovely inside and out. A private room is perfect for groups or business lunches. The theme is upmarket grillhouse, happily far removed from any “ranch” cliché and the service is solid.

Take a right at the end of Main Street and you’ll find CAFÉ BONBON – one of the finest breakfast, brunch and lunch options in town. It’s set on a beautiful garden property next to an interiors and décor shop; there’s an oversized

table in the rustic-chic dining room for a relaxed social, complete with fireplace, while the patio is absolutely bucolic. The menu features many health options, also great for coffees and baked treats.

Drive up the Pass Road to HAUTE CABRIÈRE, recently renovated and refreshed. It’s one of the most romantic restaurants in the country, a cosy, cathedral-like space with views on to the cellar. The estate is well-known for its sparkling wines and Pinot Noir and these lead the menu – because here the food is tailored to match the wines. So if you are in the mood for romance, this is the place.

A bit further up the Pass, LA PETITE FERME lives up to its name as one of the smallest boutique farm wineries. The style is country cottage and the homely, easy-eating food will please most comers. Trout is a speciality and there’s a kids’ menu plus a lovely lawn to stretch out on after a long lunch.

“THE GRILL ROOM IS THE PLACE IF YOU’RE IN THE

MOOD FOR A GREAT PIECE

OF MEAT.”The Common Room

Café Bonbon

Ryan’s Kitchen

Haute Cabrière The Common Room Grande Provence

Page 59: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

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Page 60: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

58 Val de Vie

BMW International Polo

CAPTURING THE MOMENTSIT’S NO FUN IF WE CAN’T SHARE IT WITH YOU…

BMW INTERNATIONAL POLOPolo is an incredible aphrodisiac, and it always attracts a sensational crowd, whether families picnicking on the lawns, celebrities gossiping in the corners or delectable young ladies and handsome, dashing horsemen sharing the ultimate social vibe. When there’s polo at Val de Vie then Val de Vie is the only place to be.

Page 61: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

Val de Vie 59

VAL DE VIE | PEOPLE

K Day

3

4

K-DAYK-Day was a spectacular open-air concert on the hottest day of the year, with some of the hottest local bands and singers performing, including Freshly Ground, Arno Karstens, Danny K, among many others. Hosted by divine Elana Afrika and the eff ervescent KFM 94.5 crowd, the thousands of fans were hosed down at regular intervals and it proved to be one of the major events of the year.

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60 Val de Vie

Ryk Neethling Wine Launch

RYK NEETHLING WINE LAUNCHWhen Ryk Neethling and head winemaker, Harold Versveld, got together we knew there was going to be trouble! Luckily what transpired was a divine new Ryk Neethling red wine to add to the winery’s stable of winning wines. The prestige Blackberry sponsored launch attracted its fair share of desirable fi llies, including Nico Panagio , Roxy Louw, Christi Panagio, Sianna Wu, Jessica Webb, Sarah Martin... And the lovely Lindt promo girls.

Page 63: Val de Vie Magazine - Summer 2012

The wedding of JP Duminy & Sue Erasmus

Val de Vie 61

VAL DE VIE | PEOPLE

The loving couple after the ceremony

The fi rst danceStyle was everywhere

With best friend Habana

BEAUTIFUL WEDDINGSA cricketer JP Duminy and long-time girlfriend Sue Erasmus hosted their beautiful winter wedding at the spectacular Val de Vie Estate just outside Franschhoek on the 25th of June.

On their big day they shared their joy on Twitter. Sue tweeted “On my way to the chapel to get married. Best day of my life.”

Duminy tweeted Bryan Habana saying how being a married man is a very “special feeling, I am now part of an elite group”.

Other cricketers present at the wedding, included Francois du Plessis, Morné Morkel, Mark Boucher, Robin Peterson as well as Graeme Smith.

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62 Val de Vie

FOOD FESTIVALSTake your pick of the Season’s most inviting festivities

2 – 4 DECEMBERCap Classique & Champagne FestivalFranschhoek MonumentLovers, epicures, Champagne afi cionados, merrymakers, curiosity cats and anyone who simply loves the good life will be heading to Franschhoek for this “Magic of Bubbles” festival.021 876 2861

2 – 4 DECEMBER Apricot Picking at De KransRobertsonFrom 24 Nov to 4 Dec, bring your own container to pick your own apricots at De Krans Wine Cellar, situated along the upper reaches of the picturesque Gamka River Valley near Calitzdorp. And whilst you are there enjoy a barbeque lunch. 044 213 3314

3 – 4 DECEMBER Crayfi sh & Seafood FestivalSport Grounds, PaternosterThis annual festival includes snoek braais, seafood poitjie kos and of course delicious crayfi sh. The day’s focus is on seafood, however there is a beer garden and arts and craft stalls with sea shells and ornaments.Jenni 083 692 2201

ONGOINGThe Screening RoomFranschhoekLe Quartier Français’ intimate 40 seat movie house shows nightly fi lms, in and out of season. Enjoy a glass of selected wines and snacks and see a free movie. Sunday night’s Supper Club, eat at Le Quartier’s informal Restaurant The Common Room and watch a movie. Booking advised.021 876 2151 www.franschhoek.org.za

MUSICFrom relaxing rural tunes to local and international rock legends

5 NOVEMBER– 13 FEBRUARYKyknet Backsberg Picnic Concert SeriesBacksberg Estate, Paarl Backsberg, in association with Kyknet, announces the return of its picnic concert series featuring a superb musical line-up of South Africa’s best-loved artists.Backsberg is the perfect summer outing for a leisurely afternoon spent with family and friends.www.computicket.com

14 JANUARY - END MARCHRural Cape Music Saturday Sunset Supper ConcertsSolms Delta, Franschhoek021 874 3937www.solms-delta.co.za

FESTIVALSSome of the nation’s best festivals happening right on your doorstep

14 NOVEMBER Voor-Paardeberg Annual Wine FairPaarlLimited tickets for this event, so book your place early. Enjoy live music for the entire day while you experience tasting some of the pre-released wines. There will be more than 40 wines to taste from different producers. 021 869 8339

17 – 21 NOVEMBERThe Cape Town Spoken Word FestivalBaxter Theatre, RondeboschIncludes storytelling, performance and movement poetry as well as some interesting acts such as beat box masters providing the soundtrack for poets and to enhance stories.021 438 2595

25 – 27 NOVEMBERCape Town Festival of BeerHamiltons Rugby Club Green PointA gathering for beer enthusiasts, connoisseurs and those just wanting to learn more about beer. Set against the scenic backdrop of Table Mountain. A variety of food stalls provide sustenance and there is secure parking for all. Public tickets for each of the three days at R50, gates open from 17:00 on 24 November and 12:00 on Friday and Saturday. 26 NOVEMBERWinelands Film Festival Spier, Stellenbosch Ten day programme of timely and fascinating fi lms that evolve organically from the programming process. A host of special events, tributes and symposia are in the works. While its perspective is clearly global, the Festival is also a showcase and forum for the South African fi lm industry.083 792 4320

2 – 4 DECEMBER Paarl Festival of LightsPaarlPaarl hosts the annual Festival of Lights for the Drakenstein Community with local artists performing, stalls, merry-go-round and more. Fabulous family fun that won’t break the bank.021 863 3555

FRESH PRODUCE MARKETSFind the best food, wine and organic gems at these quaint Saturday markets

Stellenbosch Slow Food MarketOude Libertas Estate, Oude Libertas RoadEvery Saturday, 09:00 – 14:00

Holden Manz Wine Estate Farmers’ MarketFranschhoekTwice a month on Saturdays, 08:00 – 15:00

Hathersage Market Gordon Road, Somerset WestEvery second and last Saturday of the month, 09:00 – 14:00

Laborie Lazy Days MarketLaborie Wine Farm, PaarlEvery Saturday 09:00 – 13:00

VALLEY LIFECOME DOWN TO THE PAARL-FRANSCHHOEK VALLEY FOR WINE, FOOD, MUSIC, MARKETS AND OTHER WINELAND FUN THIS SUMMER...

VAL DE VIE EVENTS

October 30: Val de Vie Fun Run, 5km and 10km

November 4,5: Célébrer Luxury Wedding Workshop

February 25 2012: Veuve Clicquot Masters Polo Tournament

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VAL DE VIE | DIARY

16 – 19 DECEMBERCape Bonsai Kai Show at KirstenboschNewlandsThe show will display over 100 trees of the highest standard – with the concentration on exciting indigenous trees. There is also an education table and demonstrations on how to design bonsai and how to maintain and care for them. Open daily from 09:00 – 17:00Dorothy Franz 021 797 8972

SPORTING EVENTSWhether you’re walking, running or socialising in between chukkas, the area ensures fun-fi lled days for the whole family

10 – 13 NOVEMBER Animal To Hell and Back MTBfDe Hoek holiday resort Oudtshoorn, PaarlProved to be a very popular event with the mountain bike fraternity and is now fi rmly established as an annual cycling event, but not for the faint hearted.044 871 4455

11 – 13 NOVEMBERWines2Whales MTB RaceSomerset West3-stage race across 13 wineries, 26 private farms, six mountains, beautiful historic roads and passes, as well as exquisite nature conservation areas before fi nishing near Walker Bay in the picturesque town of Hermanus.021 883 2413 Stillwater Sports

19 NOVEMBER Global Diabetes Run / WalkGreen Point, Cape TownTake part in this superb Diabetes Run/Walk. Not only will you be creating awareness but you will also be encouraging the low cost physical activity of walking. There is something for everyone. 021 425 4440 11 MARCHCape Argus Pick n Pay Cycle TourCape Town CentralThe largest timed cycling event in the world. Attracting in excess of 35 000 cyclists each year, this prestigious event is defi nitely a unique experience for participants and spectators alike.021 681 4300

Polo Club RestaurantTreat the little VIPs Polo Club Restaurant, Val de VieWe invite our “Little VIPs” to have fun with a pony ride (weather permitting), a meal and a drink at only R60!Share a relaxing afternoon in beautiful surroundings with delicious easy-going dining and, of course the iconic pizza, at a very affordable price. Executive Chef, Dewald Hurter provides a sensational café offering to suit all tastes at lunchtime, and an inspired evening dinner menu.

POLO CLUB RESTAURANTBring the family to Val de Vie’s superb Polo Club Restaurant

The Célébrer Luxury Wedding WorkshopVal de Vie in association with Célébrer and Estée Lauder, is marking a brand new concept in high-end wedding planning for the bride-to-be in South Africa. Top wedding experts will all be under one roof, sharing their valuable industry expertise, offering a very personalised and unique workshop. This luxury wedding workshop in association with Estée Lauder will be hosted by Val de Vie. We will lavish the ladies with fi ne foods, wine, and pampering gifts and fully equip them with a superior wedding strategy, empowering them to take charge of their special day. From Estée Lauder sharing secrets to the best beauty regime in the run up to a wedding, top fashion designers such as Kobus Dippenaar and celebrity stylists such as Marelize de Clercq giving advice on fashion and styling, through to the top wedding planners, stationary designers, cake designers, chefs to the stars, décor specialists and honeymoon planners; all will be under one roof, for two days only.

Bookings: Contact Val de Vie Events: 021 863 6191 or 072 72 655 21 or email [email protected] price: R550 per person. November 4th, 5th.

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VAL DE VIE | LAST WORD

Being MD of Africa’s largest hospitality group, I am motivated business-wise by the challenge to create the right kind of opportunities to benefit every one of the 14 000 employees in the group, and every guest who stays with us. We are committed to service excellence and providing the best guest experience possible.

The business environment is constantly changing – technology, trends and tastes change over time but fundamentally, hotel guests want what they’ve always wanted – which is a fresh room, excellent and efficient service, comfort and safety. And that will never change.

We haven’t made that many mistakes in business but we have sometimes been sucked into the negative external energy prevailing at the time. And we have learnt from that.

I’m very optimistic about the future of South Africa and Africa in general. Across the network of our hotels and through the thousands of people who make up the Protea family, I see the beauty and potential of Mzansi* every day. In fact I’m more than optimistic.

And with regards to the new world order – change is the only constant in the world. Nothing new there.

People talk about the China phenomenon but there is no such thing as a phenomenon in economics. It’s either good business or it isn’t and China is here to stay.

I do not believe that the Euro-zone is doomed. It certainly has the potential to collapse but I’d like to think that wise heads will prevail and economic prudence will return as that is what really matters.

MD FOR AFRICA’S BIGGEST HOTEL GROUP – AND A BUSY MOTIVATIONAL SPEAKER, ARTHUR EXPLAINS SUCCESS, FAILURE AND ECONOMIC MELTDOWN

ARTHUR GILLIS

Whether or not the Euro has a future, in our amateurish view, is dependent entirely on whether or not any sovereign debt defaults or countries withdraw from the currency, but we are simple purveyors of beds, so please consider our views with caution.

South Africa is a globally recognised tourism destination and our market is now growing in popularity with exciting new feeder markets from the Far East and South America.

The private sector should have a far greater stake as to how Brand South Africa is promoted and sold internationally. This is our industry and we need to have a seat at that table.

If I were to invest R1million today I would invest it in more training for our staff. You can never do enough training.

In South Africa there is a well-documented over-supply of hotels

in major metro areas. However, those that are appropriately capitalised with the right fiscal planning and long term strategies in place will see this cycle through.

The global financial crisis has reaffirmed my belief in doing business based on the collective wisdom of the talented team at Protea Hotels.

To switch off and relax I spend time with the people who count.

My family is incredibly important. It is everything to me.

The secret of running a successful hotel business is having a brand with strong equity that is well managed, with talented staff at every level to deliver on the brand promise and meet our guests’ needs.

Hoteliers generally make three common mistakes; They pick the wrong location, they are the wrong brand for that location and they do not have the brand correctly capitalised.

Being the driver of the winning car at Le Mans is a personal fantasy of mine but, they are not looking for elderly hoteliers as drivers at the moment, unfortunately. *”Mzansi” is slang for the South African vibe

inside the head of…

OUR MARKET IS GROWING WITH EXCITING NEW FEEDER

MARKETS FROM THE FAR EAST AND SOUTH AMERICA

“”

ACCOLADES

recently Chief Executive Officer for Africa’s largest hotel group,

Protea Hotels.

World Travel Awards.

Brand in the South African Sunday Times/Markinor Top

Brands Survey.

a best-selling book on service excellence, entitled “Juiced! How

to Succeed Through Spectacular Customer Service” co-written

with Mike Lipkin.

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