Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Whistling Jimmy, the mysterious Pied Piper of Cape Town
Farmer's Weekly
|November 25, 2022
Lawrence Green, a prolific South African author of the mid-20th century, was renowned for his true’ tales of the unusual and bizarre. His story of Whistling Jimmy’, a rat-catcher who claimed to know all the tricks, was exactly in this mould. Graham Jooste looks at Green the author and retells the story of the rat-catcher.
-
Well-known South African journalist and travel writer Lawrence Green (1900–72) once owned a yacht, the yawl Amelia, which he kept moored at Table Bay Docks. One day, while inspecting his boat, he was annoyed to see that a rat had gnawed a sail, badly damaging it. Green set a trap, baiting it with tomato. (Apparently, rats find this difficult to resist.)
When Green returned to his yacht the next day, he found the rat dead, lying stiff beside the trap. But the bait was uneaten and the trap unsprung. Puzzled, he went to visit the port authority, which in turn sent a rat-catcher named Jimmy to help him. He was precisely the kind of individual who fascinated Green, who went on to interview him and add yet another tale to his remarkable collection.
LAWRENCE GREEN: A UNIQUE WRITER
Green’s travel writing, which included Strange Africa (1936), Old Africa Untamed (1940), and In the Land of the Afternoon (1949), are more than mere travelogues; they are vivid and evocative accounts of an Africa that was already receding into the past even as Green was writing. In doing so, he rescued from oblivion many amazing stories and strange tales.
Doubtless many of these were apocryphal. But few of his readers, then or today, cared; that is not why one reads Green. He never purported to be a historian dealing in dates and hard facts; he was first and foremost a storyteller who produced compelling descriptions of nature and the ocean.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 25, 2022-Ausgabe von Farmer's Weekly.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Farmer's Weekly
Farmer's Weekly
The foot-and-mouth disease threat is growing
Foot-and-mouth disease poses a growing threat to the livestock industry, especially communal farmers, with devastating economic consequences unless awareness and compliance improve, writes Shane Brody.
3 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Shipping conditions to ease in 2026, but risk remains high
Early signs suggest a more favourable export season for South African producers, as easing global shipping congestion and improved performance by Transnet point to higher throughput at local ports. Lindi Botha reports.
2 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
A path of accelerating land reform in South Africa
Delivering the ANC's January 8th Statement a few weeks ago, President Cyril Ramaphosa noted, amongst other things, that: “Land reform remains one of the most urgent tasks of the National Democratic Revolution. While progress has been made, much more is required to give effect to the constitutional requirement for redress and equitable access to land.”
2 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Reflections on 2025 and the policy space for 2026
The year 2025 was a year characterised initially by a wave of misinformation, particularly relating to legislation and tariff issues. This year some big moves are expected in the trade space.
3 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
From planning to peak lay: building a profitable egg business
Mpumalanga poultry farmer Lebogang Mashego spoke to Octavia Avesca Spandiel, and shared practical insights on planning, building systems that work, breed choice, feed management, and markets to build a profitable and sustainable egg business.
5 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Impofu Wind Farm becomes a canvas for community connection through Enel's Blowing Art Initiative
Enel Green Power South Africa has introduced the Blowing Art Initiative at the Impofu Wind Farm in the Eastern Cape, a creative community project that turns renewable energy infrastructure into a living gallery.
2 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Geely is intent on hanging around
Having fallen off the radar around a decade ago following a short local stint, Chinese manufacturer Geely has announced its proposed return to South Africa towards the end of 2026. The Citizen's Jaco van der Merwe reports.
4 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Great reads to enjoy during ‘me-time'
Patricia McCracken has plucked an assortment of fascinating titles covering different areas of interest, from coastal exploration and dining in the wild, to African traditions surrounding love and marriage.
3 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Thokoman Peanut Butter marks 25-year milestone with R500 000 commitment to food security
Thokoman Peanut Butter, one of South Africa's biggest producers of peanut butter, celebrates 25 years of consistent quality and community support, marking the occasion with a significant R500 000 partnership with Hot 102.7's Hot Cares initiative for 2026.
2 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
South Africa's famous wandering hippo
From 1928 to 1931, a hippopotamus trekked 1 600km from what was then northern Natal to the Eastern Cape's Keiskamma River near Peddie, where it was shot dead by a posse of farmers. As Mike Burgess writes, this journey would immortalise the hippo in South African history.
3 mins
January 30 - February 06, 2026
Translate
Change font size

