Road trips filled with ART, flowers, family, friends, farming and even more art; travelling Chilo, Chimanimani, Chitungwiza and so many places in-between, as we reminisce on the last six months of 2025.

As a family we have a lot of ups and downs in the last part of 2025, as have all families, but in this blog I dwell on the positives – looking forward always!!!

Our family plot (Kaya Nyala) at Mahenye Village is a lot of hard work, especially for Clive whose investment into the crops, livestock and our Mahenye community is immense. Glenn, Jade Rayne and myself and Kelli are committed to help him towards this vision of a plot model that can be easily replicated into community for improved food security and quality of life. We maintain strong community and staff/guest relationships with the nearby Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge as well.. Chilo being such a unique and spectacular tourism product on the edge of the Gonarezhou National Park.

My art is also my passion and my lifeline (and Kelli’s!) so we pursue our artworld committments with equal intensity!!! A wonderful mixture of community, conservation and art.

After the excitement of immersive Tsonga (Hlengwe, Changana) culture at Budula Dance festival end of June 2025, I thought that would be the highlight of the year- but, no… more to come!! FNB artfair, Jozi, was as always an interesting art experience, including meeting up with truly singular artists such as the one and only Nelson Makamo in his Jozi art studio, plus a walkabout with friend Gresham Tapiwe Naude of First Floor Gallery who had his solo at Johannesburg Art Gallery (more on that in retrospect, in my next blog…!)

The last six months of 2025 go by in a flash…so there is a lot of reading here, and many of my photographs, for those who wish to follow our ART, family, flowers, friends and farming activities these last six months!

I head to Chitingwiza (Chi-Town) and collect the Black rhino made of wire and found objects that Johnson Zuze has masterfully created for our Burnt Offerings Collective “Summer Studio Walkabout.. “

Chitungwiza (Chi-Town) to Harare (H-Town) – the travels of a wire rhino….here carried by Johnson and his son Armani

Kelli’s vibrant yellow florals add to the intensity of our “offerings” for the studio walkabout..

Burnt Offerings Studio Walkabout…

Our Harare home and studio are filled with lovely friends and supporters …

Kelli hosting guests

Studio 214, Summer Walkabout, Johnson Zuze’s “Bottle Bird” is sold to a happy buyer..

Studio 214, Summer Walkabout, Johnson Zuze Bottle Bird sold

At Studio 214, Kelli, Johnny and Lin, the Burnt Offerings team…

at Studio 214, Kelli, Johnny and Lin

Johnson at work on his life size sheep in the studio garden, helped by an aspiring young wire artist… (she has since been given her own pliers and wire to work with!!)

Studio 214, Summer Walkabout, Johnson Zuze, wire Sheep and an eager apprentice

Friend and art collector, Ropa, vibrant as always, in the garden with a glass of hibiscus iced tea..

Studio 214 summer walkabout with Ropa and my earth pigment Fibonacci “Heart” painting

“Phoenix reclinata palm leaves”… my painting.. hanging beneath the real thing in the garden…

Lin Barrie, “Phoenix reclinata palm leaves”

Johnson’s wire “Burnt Offerings Crocodile”, created from an inner of burnt wood, remnants of a crocodile sculpture retrieved from my house fire in 2014, soon to find a new home in Seattle…

Johnson’s wire “Burnt Offerings Crocodile”

Save Valley Conservancy (SVC), holds a childrens art exhibition at Art@84, a delightful array of powerful art from schoolchildren surrounding the SVC..

Elephant by Salma Maronga

And thinking crocodiles, here’s a stunning carved wooden beast from one of the schoolchildren… truly ‘art for impact’ and this piece was quickly acquired by Julie Taylor of Guns & Rain Gallery, Jozi.

carved crocodile, child art

In October, Kelli and I attend friend and poet/painter Samantha Vazhure’s delightful art exhibition in Harare, Nzwisa, at PaMoyo Gallery, 24 East Road, Belgravia, her art embracing homecoming, storytelling and myth as powerfully as her poetry does…. but this time with the colourful impasto textures of her paintbrush instead of the vibrant nuanced layers of her words….

Sam (Chitende Fine Art and Carnelian Heart Publishing) and Lin in front of one of her vibrant works, the half tree….half winter/half summer…half night/half day….my favourite piece on her show.

Returning to Kaya Nyala, I collect some wonderful palm fibre mats from Sarah Mhlanga of Mahenye village… I can’t resist craft that is made with such skill and care, a fine art indeed….

palm fibre mats from Sarah Mhlanga of Mahenye village

I accompany Clive, hosting good friends Ollie and Nicole and their guests, who have come to Chilo on a road trip from Cape Town, on a safari into Gonarezhou. We are lucky to spot African wild dogs, who grace us with hours of their family life. We sit with them into the late afternoon, that mellow light burnishing their coats as they stir from their siesta and start to think of the hunt to come..

African wild dogs, who grace us with hours of their family life

Always I will sketch and paint these beguiling, endangered creatures; they are my “totem”. A painter’s dream, long legged, multicoloured and graceful and they are such social, caring predators..family comes first with them, a lesson we all could live by…..

Lin Barrie sketch , African wild dogs, pep rally

From Kaya Nyala where I have worked with Chef Makokwe’s wives to create a delightful earth pigment wall painting around my art studio…

Photo to come..

From Mahenye and Kaya Nyala, I drive north through the Jamanda Community Conservation Wilderness area at dawn…

Mopani trees are unfurling tender lime green leaves in response to the first rains ….

I drive north through the Jamanda Community Wildernes area at dawn…

Elephants are very active here and roadblocks abound

Elephants are very active here in the Jamanda Conservancy and roadblocks abound….

Exiting the Jamanda Wilderness, into villages and towns again, November flamboyants flame red against the houses and stores that I pass…

flamboyants, flaming red and my Flamboyant painting, 110 x 180 cm, acrylic on canvas

Can not resist a stop at my friend Obey Munhutu’s roadside craft stall, where he makes baobab mats. I deliver some ripe pawpaws from Kaya Nyala to his family, and I buy his mother’s woven sisal rugs enhanced with beautiful natural dye, the very leaves of which he shows me…

Sisal leaf, and a woven sisal rug enhanced with beautiful natural dye from the leaves of the bush behind!

I head onwards to Mutare to collect Kelli on the Air Zimbabwe flight from Harare.. and we spend a night with dear friends Bron and Jerome.. (Peri peri chicken at the Portuguese Club is a must for our meal together).

Road trip back to Kaya Nyala, and we stop at Hivu Deli and plant nursery in Mutare for a coffee and garden break… Flamboyants shower a friendly bench with pre-christmas colour, and it is a delightful surprise to meet friend and fibre/stitch artist Georgina Maxim and her son, in for a milkshake from their inspiring Village Unhu artspace at the old Drifters Lodge ‘last’ Resort…

Thereafter we take a leisurely trip back to the lowveld, some shopping therapy needed… Kelli is spoilt for choice at JP & Sons. With difficulty she resists the hand carved drums (ngoma) but purchases some leg rattles (for dancing of course), and I buy a goatskin dancing skirt, of course…….

Kelli is spoilt for choice at JP & Sons General dealers, and I’m very pleased with my goatskin skirt. watch these spaces to see the end use of it!

Onwards towards the Save River we go, and past one of my favourite baobabs, the ‘Car Wash’ baobab outside the local pub, near Tanganda Junction…

The ethereal white flowers fall to the hard ground and briefly shine white before deepening to deep red crisp old age …

Lin Barrie, baobab flower sketch..

Back at Kaya Nyala, our village subsistence plot, we are farming chickens, turmeric and goats, With the happy support of our little family, Clive is trying out different models of farming which could easily roll out to replicate within our Mahenye community. Living with wildlife and livestock, just as our neighbours have to, is a balancing act. Already we have lost some goat babies to hungry male baboons… but at the goat (mbudzi) pens many new kids have survived, and Kelli is in love….

baby goats at Kaya Nyala- kelli is in love

At the goat pens too, we smell the wild jasmine before we see it, and our noses find wild jasmine bushes, covered in deliciously scented white sea anemone spiky petalled offerings…

Goat smell plus Jasmine Scent…who can beat that?!

we smell the wild jasmine before we see it….

A watery sunset looking upriver, on the Save River, November at Kaya Nyala…the river has risen with some rain last week, but fallen again, awaiting more rain…

sunset on the Save River, November at Kaya Nyala

Kaya Nyala is solar powered, totally self sufficient; costly but essential also to have a simple electric fence to keep the elephants and hyenas to their corridors and us to ours!! ..

While at Kaya Nyala, Kelli gets the welcome media news that Rise, the short boxing movie she created special effects make up for, is in line for the Oscars 2026!!

Rise, the movie, is in line for the Oscars

Flowers galore are budding forth at Kaya Nyala. The Taberna montana (Toad trees) burst forth into starry offerings and rain little helicopter stars down on our sand pathways. A ‘Van Gogh’ starry night painting inspiration for me….. a dance of life, a dance of starry flowers….

starry night, Tabernae montana flowers on tree and ground

Butterflies are everywhere at Kaya Nyala and this Pearl Spotted Charaxes is found on my desk, a faded but still magnificent beauty … A delicate dance of life and death in nature…dance is everywhere I look..

beautiful even in death – Pearl Spotted Charaxes butterfly at Kaya Nyala

In my studio I am building on sketches and ideas for Dance; dance transcending boundaries, from traditional to contemporary hip hop, and am here working on a sketch inspired by the Dans6T and AfriKera Arts Trust show at Alliance Francais earlier this year… see my previous blog for more on DANCE!

Lin Barrie, Hip Hop charcoal sketch of a dancer from my sketch session with the French hip hop dance troupe Dans6T at Alliance Français in Harare. Seen here with my paintings and rag/xibelani dance skirts in my studio…

After various interviews this last few months in the Mahenye Village, with Passmore Ndhlovu and the Lowveld Media Trust, (and after National Culture Month Dance and Budula Dance Festival earlier this year), Dance, Rhythm and Music are constantly on my mind as I work in my art studio and in the community, towards a Dance, Rhythm and Music theme for various exhibitions in 2026…

Episode 7 of the “Exploration of Shanagani Culture” 13 part series produced by Lowveld Media Trust, where I am happy to share my thoughts on arts and craft, has now aired on Youtube.

Thank you Passmore Ndlovu (Director/Producer/Camera), Lloyd Ndebele (editor/camera and sound), Tapiwa Change (camera and sound), Prince Sithole (camera and sound), Elizabeth Bernard (Xitsonga presenter)

exploration of Shangani Culture Art and Craft with Lin, episode 7 of 13 episodes

Leaving Clive to carry on farming at Kaya Nyala and safari guiding at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, Kelli and I head back to our bush house Tsavene in the Save Valley Conservancy, where we are greeted by the Sabi Stars in full glory..

Sabi star at dawn at Tsavene

FashionArt alert!…. An embellished pre-loved Rock & Roll Jacket is in creation! That visit with Olli and Nicole at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge and Kaya Nyala, resulted not only in African wild dog adventures, but also in me inheriting a Rock and Roll drill jacket from Nicole, which I am now embellishing with collaged, hand stitched offcuts of muceka (pronounced ‘mucheka’), an African print fabric now naturalized over much of Africa but originating way back from the wax resist prints which became wildly popular after years of trade with Indonesia. Our Mahenye ladies source unique muceka from Mozambique, such as the hot pink cloth I have used as background for my sketch and painting collages seen below…. I have also been donated great offcuts by Belinda Clowes (of BiNdi kubatana crafts) from her sewing room where she creates a wonderful range of craft and fashion items.

At Tsavene I take the chance to cut, stitch, collage – working on my Rock & Roll jacket .. slow and therapeutic handiwork, (Georgina Maxim would be proud of me…!) And I am loving the pop of pink that I’m adding, from Mahenye muceka fabric that I also used in my Mbudzi (goat) painted collage… it’s the GOAT !

Thinking goats and wild dogs, my sketches from 2024/2025 translate to pop art – a direction I am enjoying, loving pop art, and graffiti, as much as I do….

Lin Barrie, Goat/Mbudzi Acrylic on pink handmade paper A2 with glasses collage 2025 and Wild Dog/Mhume poster Acrylic on white watercolour paper A2 with glasses collage plus sketches, 2025

After a few days rest (and plenty of therapeutic slow stitching!) at Tsavene, a glowing dawn breaks and we pack up to drive north on our next, rather bumpy, road trip through the Save Valley Conservancy…

at Tsavene, a glowing dawn breaks

The baobabs along the way make me want to stop and paint; they are dancing with ballerinas in white skirted tutus, the frilly white flowers anticipating a good growing season. The ‘ballerinas’ that don’t stumble and fall from the tree will produce heavy fruits, baobab pods to hang pendulous and filled with nutritious baobab powder, a wonder food which Clive mixes with turmeric and ginger into a smoothie for us every morning.

Fresh and glowing new leaves on the Mopane trees as we drive north through the SVC… I feel the need to sear this colour onto my retina, an abstract lime green painting is growing I think…..

Fresh and glowing new leaves on the Mopane trees as we drive north through the SVC

Birchenough Bridge never fails to awe me, towering over the landscape….. the donkeys pulling this cart don’t seem as impressed as I am though…

Onwards and upwards we go, turning onto the Chimanimani Skyline Road and higher and higher into the mountains that are the backbone of Zimbabwe’s eastern border with Mozambique… the mysterious, brooding Chimanimani mountains. We stay at The Treehouse, a new and unique boutique art lodge, perched high above the Haroni River, filled with vibrant furnishings and original artworks on every wall and with breathtaking views at every window… (my Rock & Roll jacket fits right in…..)

Rock & Rolling with art and bedroom views at The Treehouse, Chimanimani

We get up at dawn, brew a cup of coffee and then sketch on The Treehouse deck, hanging high above the Haroni River, as a huge black raven watches over us….

Haroni River below, Kelli and Lin enjoy views forever, coffee and sketching at The Treehouse, watched by a black raven

We take a road trip to Tessa’s Pool, a basin filled with mountain water from a graceful waterfall, with bones of tumbled granite and clothed by phoenix palms and ferns.

Kelli and I, entranced, slip into the crystal clear water and stare up at that mesmerizing waterfall, floating, just floating…. as in a dream. I am seeing a Martin Van der Spuy painting in my head as I hang in the cool pool, surrounded by reflections and staring up at the rocks and the water fall tumbling from high above against the lips of the sky…. I just want to float there for hours…And I do….

rocks, water, ferns, painting by artist Martin Van Der Spuy and Lin floating, just floating, inTessa’s Pool

Snuggling into a cottage at Frog And Fern we are surrounded by more art... the glorious weave of a bark rug (msasa I think) made by local craftspeople…..and Martin Van der Spuy watercolours gracing our bedroom

a glorious bark rug made by local artists, and an equally glrious watercolour landscape by Martin Van Der Spuy

Bridal Veil Falls is the next stop on our road trip, as we drive through glowing scenery….

glowing summer leaves

We have fortuitously meet my friend Lauryn Arnott, fellow artist from Durban Technikon FineArt, and she suggests I look out for the ‘coptic priest’ she has observed with her keen artists eye at Bridal Veil Falls! Indeed, as Lauryn promised, there’s the coptic priest ministering, his rod out over the fine furl of water that tumbles past him on the sheer face of the rock, while Kelli plans future yoga and wellness retreats! Nature has sculpted him from the dried leaves and stump of a dead Ensete (wild banana) plant, and the poor priest will not last long enough to see over any of Kelli’s future retreats….. within a season he will collapse back into the earth he came from.

Bridal Veil Falls, spot the coptic priest……!!

In Chimanimani Village we visit artist Webster Mubayirenyi who is creating Biodiversity Murals at the CHIMANIMANI Biodiversity Community Learning Centre.

Webster Mubayirenyi, wall murals for Chimanimani Biodiversity Community Learning Centre.

The Skyline Road to and from adventure and this Zimbabwean landscape never palls…as we head back to Harare…

The Skyline Road to and from adventure…

Back in Harare I attend the wonderful opening of the group exhibition at Mbare Art Space (MAS), Mwana Wehvu. Mwana Wevhu – child of soil/earth and ancestry/identity reclaimed by the MAS artists, and open to interpretation by the audience, (the title arising from a conversation Moffat Takadiwa had with Dr. Ignatius Mabasa). Curated by Tafadzwa Chimbumu and assistant curator Mbalizwe Mushayi, and featuring artists Takunda Regis Billiat, Kimberly Tatenda Gakanje, Nkosiyabo Frank Nyoni, Julio Rizhi, Tafadzwa Benson Chataika, Lomedy Mhako, William Joseph Kachinjika, Marcus Zvinavashe and Nyasha Jeche (of the CaliGraph collective).

That Star Bar exhibition space is spectacular, with a fascinating history from colonial days as well…if those walls could speak! Certainly the MAS team are giving those walls new and powerful voices …..

Photos collage with Geri Cam, Moffat Takadiwa and curators seen chatting to the artists.

Mwana Wevhu – soil/earth and ancestry/identity reclaimed by the MAS artists, featuring Takunda Regis Billiat, Kimberly Tatenda Gakanje, Nkosiyabo Frank Nyoni, Julio Rizhi, Tafadzwa Benson Chataika, Lomedy Mhako, William Joseph Kachinjika, Marcus Zvinavashe and Nyasha Jeche (of the CaliGraph collective). With Geri Cam and Moffat Takadiwa seen chatting to the artists.


That same day I head to Mara Mara, meeting Kelli there, for the release of the third edition of the Design Life Africa magazine, (editor Milly McPhie). It’s a fun party, art, music and restaurant space in Harare.

Kelli’s electric pink and blue make up gracing the gorgeous features of Miss Rosebud on the front cover…

Kelli Barker Make Up, Design Africa Magazine, editor Milly McPhie

A roller coaster art week follows, (thank you dear Geri for all the networking and art inspiration!), beginning with an inspiring visit to Chi-Town for a walkabout of the Chitungwiza_artists_collective exhibition “Dombo rakarashwa nemuvaki” which featured four artists: Tanyse van Vuuren, Evans Mutenga, Tawanda Reza and Clive Mukucha – with Geri Kam plus US Embassy Ambassador Pam Tremont, her husband Eric Tremont, Melinda Crowley, (Head of Press & Culture, U.S. Embassy Harare), and Butho Nyathi, (Public Engagement Coordinator, U.S. Embassy Harare)

Admire Kamudzengerere, hosting the walkabout with their cute new baby attached, Tanyse van Vuuren, Evans Mutenga, Tawanda Reza and Clive Mukucha – with US Embassy Ambassador Pam Tremont


Chitungwiza Art Studio visits follow, with fellow artists Admire Kamudzengerere and Wallen Mapondera, and art associates…

Here we are at Wallen Mapondera’s studio…

Chitungwiza Art Studio visit with Wallen Mapondera, Geri and Butho, egg box innovations and a vast painting in work …

And on to the Animal Farm artists walkabout …… a vibrant painting studio and print shop, so inspiring.

Animal farm artists walkabout with Admire Kamudzengerere, artists and Ambassador Pam Tremont, and Melinda Crowley

At the National Gallery of Zimbabwe exhibition, “They Still Owe him a Boat..”, I participate in an artist talk with Jono Terry, moderated by Fadzai Muchemwa. His perceptions and art statements surrounding the Kariba Dam and its history are fascinating… and I ask Jono about that powerful portrait, see below, with the almost reptilian glowing eyes, it feels to me like that nyami nyami the fabled river spirt of the Kariba Basin/ Zambezi River, is peering through. In the reflections photo next to it, Jono says he felt that he had seen the spirit of Kariba therein, the very shape of Nyami Nyami…

Jono Terry, in discussion with Fadzai Muichemwa at the National Gallery, Harare, Zimbabwe, “They Still Owe him a Boat..” (background kariba photo by Jon Terry, all other collage photos are my own).

Then onto 4 Brighton Road – an intriguing new gallery space in Harare, for Sherman Baloyi’s exhibition “Postcards from the Future”, a walkabout and wonderful catch up with him on the juxtaposition of his paintings and textiles, his own prints painted over with optimistic black figures, so that the shape of the print beneath still informs the painting on top…, I am taken with his treatment of eyes, especially the eyeglasses created with fabric collage much like my own Goat series…and his use of beadwork. Portraits vibrant and engaging, optimistic yes, and a hopeful uplifting art offering!, and it is lovely catching up also with dear Kuda Chakwaz, fellow artist and curator of our original “Burnt Offerings exhibition in 2023.

Sherman Baloyi’s exhibition Postcards from the Future, with Kuda visiting. Oh those shades, those eyes…..

In a full circle from my days of working in textiles at Screentone, (now called Kingfisher Prints), Harare, I have collaborated with Black Rose, (Kadoma Textiles; Zimbabwe Spinners and Weavers) and Cindy Collyer, to create Palm silkscreen prints from my huge original canvas of relief printed Phoenix reclinata leaves seen earlier in this blog, and now silk screened at Kingfisher Prints to make up as Duvet covers..

palm print range, duvet and pillow cases, by Lin Barrie and Black Rose

Sofar Sounds in Harare, a worldwide concept of pop up music happenings, masterfully managed in Zimbabwe by Khumbulani Bandar Maleya, is going from strength to strength. For the previous edition of Solar Sounds at Mara Mara, I lent some of my artworks as a solo exhibition, a wonderful concept of uniting painting and music…

Lin Barrie painting exhibition collaborating with Sofar Sounds Music fest pop ups….

Sofar Sounds at the Hyatt Regency Hotel Harare last month featured music of the 70’s – with Khumbulani Bandula Muleya and with my vibrant ‘wild child’ styling her 70’s fro’.

At the Hyatt Regency Hotel – Kelli Barker, make up artist, with friend Khumbulani Bandula Muleya

Plus this edition of Sofar featured striking fashionart (my term for a fabulous fusion of fashion and fine art) – art prints by artist Eva Raath on recycled curtains and tablecloths recovered from the old Meikles Hotel, when it was renovated into the Hyatt Regency, Harare!! The art prints were then made into fashion garments by PezzCuliar (Valentina Sardella) and modeled by a team of Zimbabwean beautifuls… NB; Eva Raath will present her art in the Zimbabwe Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2026

fashionart (my term for a fabulous fusion of fashion and fine art) – art prints by artist Eva Raath, outfits by PezzCuliar (Valentina Sardella) and all Zimbabwean models…

For Sofar Sounds 25th edition hosted at @hyattregencyharare, Vera and the Husbands, Serpent, and the band ‘1970 Something’ rocked the stage. ‘1970 Something’ united five gifted artists who have never before shared a stage! @mannexmotsi on lead vocals, @jamesbuzizi on rhythm guitar, @basilmahachi on bass, @zealman on drums and @trustsamende_ on lead guitar……

Whew, what an art roller coaster these last few months have been, the vibrancy and innovation of Zimbabwean creatives never ceases to amaze me. The unfailing strength of their selfless collaborations is heartwarming, we truly are a small country of creatives with BIG REACH and BIG HEARTS!

Our last art happening of 2025 is the Loft 3 Gallery’s group show in Harare, where Kelli and I show our bright and joyful artworks. So, loving pop art and graffiti as much as I do, here is my “Zany Zebra, Unique”, a hand embellished art print from my Zebra sketch..aptly on display with Prudie’s wonderful ‘Pop’ portraits…..

Lin Barrie, “Zany Zebra, Unique”, a hand embellished art print from my Zebra sketch. On the wall at Loft 3 Gallery with Prudence Chimutuwah’s vibrant portraits

And a taste of some of Kelli’s popping little “Under the Sea” artworks on show, monoprints embellished; delightful…….

Another road trip…

I stagger back back from Harare to Chilo/Mahenye/Kaya Nyala, punch drunk with art and ideas, never enough days to experience all of the vibrant culture that Zimbabwe has to offer!!

As it is, by leaving Harare I am sadly missing the Almasi Collaborative Arts public readings of plays at The Friendship Bench- – plays by by Kudzai Mhangwa (Zimbabwe), Tawanda Vombo (Zimbabwe), Philisiwe Twijnstra (Netherlands, South Africa), Cynthia Marangwanda (Zimbabwe) and Jonathan Brakash (Zimbabwe) which are selected for a further year-long development, culminating in a full staging at Almasi’s Africa Voices Now! Founder of Almasi Arts is renowned Zimbabwean actress Danai Gurira, who has done Zimbabwe proud….

Plus I am missing the Village Unhu exhibition at the French Ambassadors residence, courtesy of Ambassador Paul-Bertrand Barets, but at least Kelli attends that while I am at Kaya Nyala and she sends me photographs of her favourites. Misheck Masamvu and Georgina Maxim, founders of Village Unhu, are the glue that sticks all this wonderful creativity together…

Village Unhu artists exhibition at the French Ambassadors residence, Kelli’s photographs of her favourites.

Grrrrrr… Why am I missing all this creativity in Harare, I ask myself ?! … because, just as important for our community livelihoods, I have to get back to the lowveld, to Kaya Nyala to host Dr Siva direct from India (T Stanes Bio solutions and organic plant products) and my sister in law Clare Keane Hammerson, from my brother’s Integrated Pest Management company, Real IPM. Clare, Blue and Stu the Real IPM team, give us valuable ongoing biological advice on growing an organic chemical free turmeric crop for export, under the business direction of Godfrey Marange. EEEK money is going into the ground, let’s hope some comes back out…! This is a brave jump into the blue for Clive and looking good already…here a photo collage of our progress, (with the good rain that has been had, the turmeric is budding well, and gorgeous red velvet mites, like little plush pincushions, are everywhere) …

a brave jump into turmeric production for Clive, who is relishing farming – a very real part of his conservation and community work, , and the crop is looking good already…

In between admiring the turmeric project, and the lowveld sunsets, I pickle our own homegrown onions and make mielie bread with our fresh picked green mielies (YUM!)

yet another road trip and we are back at Tsavene for the Christmas season. Anderson is so clever at making Christmas crackers for the staff children, and little Winley loves helping to decorate the Muuyu (baobab) wire tree that has been our Christmas tree for many many years… with handcrafted baubles and Gogo Olive knitted animals (which Winley knew all the names for…!)

Our wire Christmas tree, with Gogo Olive knitted animals which Winley knew all the names for…

I am found baking a Christmas cake, my mother’s recipe of course! as Christmas looms…

Tsavene christmas cake and fresh garden bounty

This muuyu tree of ours grows with found objects year by year, a true delight, ‘growing’ flowers, and fruit much like a real baobab!!

This muuyu Christmas tree of ours grows with found objects year by year, a true delight, ‘growing’ flowers, and fruit much like a real baobab!!

Sunshine and Rain at Tsavene… as we round off 2025 and gently head into 2026….

sunshine and rain at Tsavene

Good rains have fallen, and we head back to Kaya Nyala for the year end, and watch the Save river flowing full as the Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge boat crosses the great Save River in the path of the setting sun, December 29th 2025….

Save River flows full as The Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge boat crosses from adventures in Gonarezhou National Park..

This blog looks idyllic and inspiring, and indeed 2025 has often felt so to me, but the downs and the challenges, the losses and the depressions, are there always; just not documented, just accepted and worked with. So, our wish for you all who are reading this – dear friends, fellow artists and precious family, and those of you whom I don’t know yet but who find your way to my blog, is that your lives grow creatively and bear fruit in unexpected ways, and that you have a blessed holiday season, with warm memories outweighing the bad from 2025, and so much to look forward to in 2026….

I wish for each and every one of you acceptance, tolerance and most of all, I wish you LOVE.

All photographs are copyright, by Lin Barrie, unless otherwise stated….

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About wineandwilddogs

Lin Barrie The Save Valley Conservancy stretches along the upper reaches of the great Save River in the south east of Zimbabwe. The Gonarezhou National Park laps against the southern banks of the Save River and between these two nestles the Malilangwe Wildlife Reserve. These three celebrated wildlife areas form part of the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Conservation Area, (GLTFCA)- a unique wilderness jewel which is home to the “Big Five” (endangered Black and White rhinos, elephants, buffalo, lion, leopard) and the ”Little Six” (Klipspringer, Suni, Duiker, Steenbok, Sharpe's Grysbok and Oribi). Endangered African wild dogs, Cheetah, Brown hyena, Bat-eared foxes and a host of special birds and plants contribute to the immense variety of this ecosystem. Communities around the GLTFCA contribute to innovative partnerships with National Parks and the private sector, forming a sound base on which to manage social, economic and environmental issues. This is home to artist and writer Lin Barrie and her life partner, conservationist Clive Stockil. Expressing her hopes, fears and love for this special ecosystem with oil paints on canvas, Lin Barrie believes that the essence of a landscape, person or animal, can only truly be captured by direct observation. Lin Barrie states: “Through my art, and my writing, I feel an intimate connection with the natural world, and from my extensive field sketches of wild animals, people and landscapes, I create larger works on canvas. Lin's work is in various public and private collections in South Africa, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Australia, England, Canada, Sweden and the United States of America. She is represented by galleries in South Africa, Zimbabwe, England, Kenya and Florida, USA.
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1 Response to Road trips filled with ART, flowers, family, friends, farming and even more art; travelling Chilo, Chimanimani, Chitungwiza and so many places in-between, as we reminisce on the last six months of 2025.

  1. thanks so much for featuring the 70’s inspired fashion show presented at the hotel. @pezzeculiar (sustainable fashion brand) founded by Valentina Sardella

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