Loose forwards on the loose in Cape Town in the unwoke '80s

By Harry Jones / Expert

Some ideas gain traction after the sixth beer. Others need a joint. The best ideas of adolescence take shape with both, in a group of teammates passing a dagga pipe after the beer tent. Loose forwards drink like they scrum: messy.

Those late night ideas failed, but how majestic they sounded on the ear, in the cool, sodden Cape air.

Paul spawned the notion of buying a few dozen mice, affixing tiny parachutes to their squirming bodies, and softly tossing them from the projection room in the auditorium during morning prayers to set the school into panic.

Paul was an openside with sloped shoulders, so he had that kind of mind. Early onset of rugby brain.

The parachutes did not open. God, acting through his proxy, the principal and prefects, were not as amused as anticipated.

Our other flank conspirator, who usually went two-for-one on the beer ratio with Paul and me, had no ideas at all. Blindsides don’t. They just tie parachute to mice. And forget to open them. And chuck.

But this one Friday, I had the prank to end all pranks. It had layers, each corresponding to an empty bottle of dark beer. Number eights are visited by strange apparitions; it happens because they are less forward than other forwards except when in a bar with Catholic girls, but also, they have more time to ponder large ideas, and are often whispered to by diseased halfbacks, about the ancient longings of shorter men.

But I had an idea, as we leaned on the canvas tent, quite sloshed, and listened to the Bay City Rollers singing bye bye to their babies.

We would break into the bowling alley in Claremont, the only ten-pin place in Cape Town, on Main Road.

Why there? They had bowling balls; lots of them. Bad ones, too. Bowling balls they should discard, but didn’t. They gave those to the ‘non-European’ bowlers, who were on the other side of Main Road, in a tiny replica of the Cavendish alley.

Did I call us social justice warriors? No, I would’ve styled as Robin F—— Hoods.

And then?

We would each have three bowling balls in our three backpacks, and mount our 50cc Kawasakis to go to the drive-in theatre. Not to go in. But to park behind the screen.

At midnight, this being the only city in prudish South Africa that allowed blue movies, soft porn films were shown on the tall screen. It was tall enough to see from the second floor of our flyhalf’s house, but who wanted to watch naked people with a flyhalf?

So, I unwrapped my plan on how to use our pilfered bowling balls. I told conch-shelled Paul and massive monosyllabic Johan: “We can climb up, hey. The back of the screen. One, two, up. No worries.”

Johan asked ‘why’ with his eyes.

“Then, we drop the bowling balls on the wankers in the cars!”

“They gonna catch us!” noted Paul, as he sucked on the pipe, and watched some jeans bounce by.

“No boet. There’s a wall in between the screen and the park. And behind the screen it’s just bush. It’s strange, man. We can bowl, then be down and gone in the bush one time, hey.”

Johan nodded. What was he agreeing with? We will never know. Paul put his thumb up, as he broke away from our planning scrum, and did what all good opensiders do: chase the prettiest players on the field.

Thus, the great caper was set. All we had to do was keep drinking until midnight, pick up three backpacks from Johan’s garage, and whiz over to the bowling alley, which closed at midnight. Johan and I slammed Carlsbergs, and hunted for Paul.

After a few more dops from the bota bag of rum in Johan’s pocket, and a long snoggy goodbyes to girls with liberal numbers and tolerant senses of smell, we were on our weak dirt bikes.

Now let me say, in our defence: we were young, silly, drunk, a bit daft, and full of hormonal ennui.

It was 30 minutes after midnight, and eight hours before our match against Rondebosch, when we parked our buzzy bikes at the leafy square.

We lifted Johan to the lofty cracked window like illegal lineout operators, wobbling under his thick mass and the weight of our young beers.

He fell into the building. Then we stood, waiting in the cold, with open backpacks, under the window. Johan was going to throw the balls out. “Here it comes!”

A tiny security vehicle rounded the corner. The mustachioed man peered at Paul and me. We waved.

He stared. Then, he waved, and kept driving, just as the first bowling ball sailed out and hit Paul in the back, who swore impressively.

A few minutes later, we had our nine liberated balls. They seemed new. Spotless. In fact, they were.

Robin Hood probably made a few mistakes in his targets, too. Not every victim was a fat friar.

We reached the drive-in as the raunchy flick was reaching its first of many plot denouements. Hearing the amplified panting and slapping and spooging from a hundred car speakers made us giggle.

We climbed up, at almost the same rate, up the trellises and buttresses of the giant screen. Who can stop young lads trying to find trouble?

What cracked logic had led me to this point?

Reaching the top, we stared at the tops of the randy cars.

We realised there was no way we could throw a bowling ball far enough to hit a car. But oh how we tried.

With the seventh throw, I hit the roof of the tuck shop. Paul followed with a smashing hurl: taking out a pole with an unused sound system.

A torch shone at us. Shouting mixed with ecstatic utterances.

Down we slid and slipped, to our bikes. Nobody even came close to catching us. Kicking and starting and bzzzzzzing away, we made our escape, to the dark fields of our own grand old school.

By this time, we had sobered up a bit. So it was time for the captain’s run. The dewy pitch our dreamscape.

The last bowling ball had to serve as a rugby ball. Johan had unimaginably kept it. A few lengths later, I threw up.

We anointed the cricket pitch with a territorial puddle. And left the last bowling ball under the high jump bag.

Then it was g’night, see you in the morning in our togs.

We would have a good match, as a trio. Johan tackled sickly, silently. Paul was everywhere, with his sticky hands. I scored a try, from a dribbling kick through and fall on the ball. The game was won by oranges, allowing plenty of biff in the second half.

We were not good boys. We were classic loose forwards: a bit worrisome, erratic, and lost. But then it was back to ideation over a beer or three.

What if we could get Miss Lennett’s Mini Minor inside the tennis courts?

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2020-08-04T18:17:12+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Robbie Blair underrated. Fabulous kicker

2020-07-22T09:55:40+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Boys will be boys.. I worked actually for a photographic laboratory in Main Rd Rondebosch in the 80s..had a well trodden triangular route between The Pig n Whistle, work and my flat.. Those days no international rugby but the rivalry between Provinces as fierce as anything I have experienced before or since.. Originally from Johannesburg I supported Transvaal but kept it to myself.. Used to buy budget tickets in the standing room section of Newlands under the main stand where pro Proooovince passions ran deep. So was rather muted in my exhilaration when Transvaal scored.. Even won a game once at Newlands.. A rare occurance. Can only remember a few TVL players from that game. Wahl Bartmann and John Robbie standing out.. Province had the likes of The Du Plessis Bros, Robbie Blair and who can forget Calla Scholtz with those white boots.. I’m probably boring the heck out of Roar readers but having lots of selfish fun remembering.

2020-07-22T09:53:30+00:00

Jokerman

Roar Guru


Ha funny Chooks. Memories huh. I used to to take my mums car at night. Gently rolling it down the driveway, then start it up and go to the girl in the country 5kms away and return silently at 5:30am. She wanted to be my girlfriend...arh ya’ wonder huh? :)) ...but the end wasn’t that pretty. Then a cop, a drink in mum’s car, a cops daughter.... poetic justice ! (very short version of a story) Sometimes I wish I could go back with my wisdom now...but so be it. The mind always wonders to the past, a bit to the future too. It’s the moment man. Right now! That’s the heart cuz. Anywayz back to roaming the Welly town ! So far it’s been an awesome nite. Take care be safe Chook. And one thing, if I may ask, you haven’t replied to a few posts, any offence? I know I can be tough on Australia...but it really is being align with the All Blacks ...finding the weakened in the opposition!! I need them to remain mystic, always evolving. But it’s not how I play life - I mean focusing on the weakness part that is, truely - evolving yes! . I am with the ‘I am’ ... searching for the one. Peace out !!

2020-07-21T22:10:25+00:00

stillmissit

Roar Guru


Mz: The sailors welcome back on board was a classic in 'effing idiot' buttered with utter scorn and topped with an occasional guffaw!

2020-07-21T11:38:27+00:00

mzilikazi

Roar Pro


” the silliest of many silly things I did was to jump off a cross channel ferry in France for a 5 pound bet.” That’s pretty impressive, sm. Bloody long way down to the water from the deck of a ferry. Hope your mates shouted you all the brandies ! “45mins swimming like a lunatic in a toilet!!!!” Jeez, thats a long time. Can just imagine the crowd thinking it was funny for about 5 mins, and then “wetting themselves” in fear of you drowning…or being swept out to Heaven knows where.

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T11:08:23+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


And full of mad people! Cheers, MZ. Hope all is well with you and yours.

2020-07-21T10:00:40+00:00

mzilikazi

Roar Pro


Great tale, Harry. Cape Town...only place on earth I have gone back to years later, and the place was more beautiful than I remembered !

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T08:52:12+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Sounds like you guys had your own sacred rituals. Who needs mass?

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T08:50:23+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


That’s a deep layer! Our scrumhalf is now the CEO of a Chinese chain of shops which sells cheap (really cheap) party supplies, all over Africa. He also believed he was part feline.

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T08:47:04+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


What became of them?

2020-07-21T06:20:17+00:00

Pickett

Roar Rookie


Harry That sounded like some ribald escapade from an 80s American teen movie like Porkys or American Pie. The Bay City Rollers.... I love it!

2020-07-21T04:29:14+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


Yeah.. your old man was all over that eh? Mate's Mum probably wouldn't know what an 'odometer' was... or that you read it!? :laughing:

2020-07-21T03:56:47+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


My big takeaway from this is just knowing that a former Cape Town schoolboy scrumhalf is still dining out on the day he convinced his entire backrow unit to break into a bowling alley for the purposes of disrupting self-satisfying filmgoers - and that they still think it was their idea!! :laughing:

2020-07-21T03:27:41+00:00

Rugby Tragic

Roar Rookie


Haha! I can imagine ...

2020-07-21T03:23:20+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


Love a good ten-pin bowling story! And this one in the spirit of John Goodman and the Dude! Great read thanks, Hazza!

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T02:57:15+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


This is brilliant! Paratrooper pigs! The mice did not fare as well.

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T02:56:30+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Ha! My old man always looked at the odometer. But we found an abandoned car in the bush, by the old vlei. Burned, only second and third gear worked, doors didn’t open. Was a grand ride at age 14; hell on the stick up the hills. It gave up the ghost at the beach.

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T02:53:49+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Amœba in the eye! Could’ve been in a bit of a bother!

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T02:52:51+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Yes. So earnest, woke, and sincere.

AUTHOR

2020-07-21T02:52:29+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Wasted youth. Vivid memories.

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