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How to survive Load Shedding

Load shedding. Power cuts. Rolling blackouts. Call them what you will, they’re a reality and Eskom has warned they’re here to stay for most of 2015. Load shedding is about Eskom balancing the power scales; it needs to be able to supply enough electricity to meet the country’s demands. When supply matches demand, everything is fine. But when the country needs more power than Eskom can generate, either because of an increase in demand or a drop in supply, then we’re in trouble. If the country’s demand outstrips the amount of electricity that Eskom can supply, power stations start taking some serious strain and the system can be badly damaged. That, in turn, can lead to a national blackout – a truly worst case scenario. LOAD SHEDDING STAGES AND WHAT THEY MEAN Stage 1: Eskom needs to shed 1000MW to keep the national grid stable. Stage 1 is the least disruptive of the schedules. Your area is likely to be hit by 2.5-hour blackouts once every second day**, Monday to Saturday between 05:30 and 21:00. Load shedding won’t take place overnight or on Sundays. **If you live in an Eskom-supplied area in Johannesburg, you’ll be in for a 4-hour cut once every 4 days. Stage 2: Eskom needs to shed 2000MW to keep the national grid stable. Stage 2 involves double the amount of load shedding planned in Stage 1. Your area is likely to be hit by 2.5-hour blackouts once a day, Monday to Saturday between 05:30 and 21:00. Load shedding won’t take place overnight or on Sundays. Stage 3: Eskom needs to shed up to 4000MW to keep the national grid stable. Stage 3 involves double the amount of load shedding planned in Stage 2. Your area is likely to be hit by 2.5-hour blackouts up to three times a day. The load shedding will take place 24 hours per day and will also happen on Sundays. Stage 4: Eskom needs to shed more than 4000MW to keep the national grid from collapsing. Stage 4 is as bad as it gets in terms of load shedding. Eskom starts additional, unscheduled power cuts wherever it needs to and outside of its schedules. This means your area can be hit by blackouts at any time without any warning. The country hasn’t reached this stage since 2008. Stage 4 load shedding is the final option for Eskom to prevent a national blackout. BEYOND STAGE 4: WHY LOAD SHEDDING IS THE LESSER OF TWO EVILS Power cuts are inconvenient and frustrating but compared to the worst case scenario that load shedding is designed to prevent, the rolling blackouts that we have to contend with are child’s play. If load shedding fails to protect the national power grid, South Africa runs the risk of a complete national blackout. Eskom says the chances of this actually happening are exceptionally remote, but they are there. Plainly put, power cuts are a form of short-term pain that needs to be endured to prevent long-term disaster. The utility has been very careful so far to prevent the country from reaching this point of no return; load shedding is one of the tools being used to protect South Africa from a national blackout. If the national power grid were to collapse it could take at least one week – and as many as three – to get it back up and running, meaning that South Africans could be without power for a prolonged period of time. Other countries are able to rely on help from neighbouring nations and tap into their electricity systems in an emergency, but South Africa doesn’t have that option because its neighbours aren’t strong power providers. We import very little of our electricity. Eskom would have to restart its own power stations from scratch. This process is called a “black start” – when a power station can’t rely on an external electricity supply to get itself back up and running. Essentially it has to pull itself up by its own bootstraps. But one of the problems is that not all power stations in South Africa are equipped for a black start. In some cases a small in-house generator at a power station (usually diesel-operated) can be used to start larger generators, which can in turn get the station’s main generators back online. Once one station is back up and running, it can help provide the jump start that others need. Gradually, these power stations can be linked to form an interconnected system. But this process would take time, lots of time, because each island of power created by a black start would need to be synchronized and reconnected. In the meantime, South Africa would be in the dark. If a complete national blackout were to hit, it would have severe consequences. At the moment, when load shedding is implemented, facilities like hospitals, train networks and airports are spared; but in the worst case scenario Eskom would not have this option. Within hours or days, most UPS systems and backup generators would run out of juice. Hospitals would close, trains would not run and airports would shut down. Police and fire stations would be unable to function properly. Banks would be unable to operate. Cell phone towers would run out of power within hours so even if you had a charged handset, it’s unlikely that you’d be able to make calls. After a while, some water reservoirs would start running dry because there would be no power to pump water into them. Sewage systems would be hit as well; fuel pipelines (and eventually your car’s tank) would run dry. Sounds like an almost doomsday-like scenario, doesn’t it? That’s why Eskom is so dogged in implementing load shedding where necessary. So the next time you’re hit by a rolling blackout, it’s as well to remember that the alternative could be far, far worse. TIPS AND TRICKS TO SURVIVE LOAD SHEDDING: Go Solar. Install a solar geyser, get solar lamps to put outside in the garden

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Emdoneni News

Incredible offers at Emdoneni Lodge NOT TO MISS!!!

FURTHER REDUCED RATES | FIRST 10 CONFIRMED BOOKINGS ONLY Stay with us on the 24th or 25th of December and only pay R875 per person sharing per night in a luxury room (breakfast and a special Christmas dinner included)! To book, email us on info@emdonenilodge.com Above mentioned rate valid ONLY for stays on the 24th or 25th of December Minimum of 2 nights’ stay required Terms and conditions apply BUT WAIT, THERE IS MORE!!! No plans made for the holidays yet? Wow! 2016 Prices in 2018! | Emdoneni Lodge in Hluhluwe, KwaZulu-Natal R998,00 per person sharing on a dinner, bed & breakfast basis in a luxury room – SAVE R627 per person! R798,00 per person sharing on a dinner, bed & breakfast basis in a standard room – SAVE R827 per person! Single supplement of R300,00 per person per night To book or check availability: Email us on info@emdonenilodge.com Children Policy: 0-4 years: Stay for free on a dinner, bed & breakfast basis 5-10 years: Flat rate of R250,00 per child on a dinner, bed & breakfast basis 11-13 years: Flat rate of R350,00 per child on a dinner, bed & breakfast basis Minimum of 2 nights’ stay required Rates are valid for stays until 15 January 2019 Terms and conditions apply

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Emdoneni News

Emdoneni Lodge Valentine’s Special

Love and be loved at Emdoneni Lodge ❤️ Don’t let Valentine’s Day be a CATastrophe… book a romantic two-night getaway for the love of your life, and receive 50% off your second night! We’ve also specially created a spa promotion for our guests and/or their loved ones. Champagne and strawberries included! 90 minute full body massage  R1700 per couple R850 per person 90 minute Esse Facial plus a back massage  R1600 per couple  R800 per person To book our spa promotion or to enquire re availability for the two-night getaway, kindly email us – office@emdonenilodge.com Please note: Specials are valid ONLY for the month of February Terms & conditions apply

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Emdoneni News

Luxury Travel Guide Awards

Luxury Travel Guide Awards is an international awards programme in recognition of all accommodation options from large hotels & resorts to small luxury properties. We are pleased to announce the Emdoneni Lodge has been nominated as a potential winner. The Luxury Travel Guide is an exclusive, fully interactive publication focussing on where to go and what to do during your holiday or business trips. Since our maiden Global Luxury Travel Guide we have delved further into each country with every guide focussing on a specific region or continent. Taking the very best in luxury travel, the guide covers every meticulous detail on the best destinations and activities on offer to assist in making your vacation remain in your memories forever.

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Area Attractions, Emdoneni News

Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park: Game for something different

Need a break from the Kruger? go! suggests the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park in northern KwaZulu-Natal for a totally different game-viewing experience. You might even see the elusive black rhino…  Hluhluwe and Imfolozi were proclaimed in 1895, and since 1989 they have been managed as one park. Their history goes back even further. Before 1895, this was the hunting territory of Dingiswayo and Shaka. Hunting was limited to royals and was only permitted in winter. The two reserves are quite different. Hluhluwe has densely grown, green hills and is said to be the best place to see elephants. Imfolozi is flat and open. You’ll see plains game like impala, kudu, blue wildebeest and zebra. And predators like wild dog and lion, if you’re lucky. Rhinos and Hluhluwe-Imfolozi are synonymous. After all, this is where the massively successful Operation Rhino kicked off in the 1960s, with the aim of saving the white rhino from extinction.  Black rhino, however, are seldom seen.  They’re shy creatures and there are lots of places to hide. You have to have an eye for detail to distinguish a black rhino from a white rhino. Don’t be fooled by the names; both species are the same shade of grey.  The most obvious difference is that a black rhino has a pointed upper lip and a white rhino has a wide, square upper lip.  The name “white” rhino is apparently a mistranslation of the Afrikaans word for wide – “wyd” – in reference to the lip.  A black rhino also has a concave back, whereas a white rhino has a flattish back. And although white rhinos are bigger, black rhinos are more aggressive. At the reception at Hilltop Camp there’s a map of the reserve where visitors can indicate their sightings. Set out early, because it’s a bit of a drive to the Imfolozi game-viewing routes: about 50km of tar road to Mpila Camp (the main camp in Imfolozi) and then another 12km to the lookout over the Black Mfolozi. The last remaining lion in the reserve was shot in the early 1900s. Then, in 1958, game rangers were astounded to see a huge male. He was believed to have walked south from Mozambique, dodging hunters out to bag “the last lion in Zululand”. Safe and sound in the reserve, he spent a few lonely years checking out his new territory until a few lionesses magically appeared – apparently smuggled in by conservation-minded staff. The rest, as they say, is history. Certain prides in Imfolozi have developed an unusual habit – the lions climb trees. Reserve ecologists aren’t entirely sure why they do this. The most plausible theory is that the extra elevation allows them to cool down more easily. They might even do it for fun. Maybe they’re hiding from the black rhinos? Rhino poaching has escalated dramatically in the past few years and Hluhluwe-Imfolozi’s population has been targeted too. Rhinos have been killed, despite the best efforts of the reserve authorities to curb the scourge. To spend time with a rhino in the wild – white or black – is yet another reminder of how fragile our natural heritage is, and how important it is to preserve it. Source: network24

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