Sunday, 2 March 2014

The Protected Hole



I posted this photo on my Facebook page a few days ago, but on reflection, I thought the image needed fuller treatment.
What is amazing about the hole in question is that it has endured for so long. One would have thought that the person responsible for filling up holes in roads would have noticed it by now and done something about it. Or, if it had managed to escape his or her keen eye someone else must have brought it to their attention. For crying out loud, the thing is located on a “FO-RODE”, the intersection of four roads, all major, and through which traffic passes into and out of central Freetown.  So, one has to conclude that it is a marker of some purpose. It is obvious that a thing of beauty it is not, unless our Master or Mistress of The Roads comes from an aesthetic that is uniquely different from yours and mine. 
Is its purpose functional? I would have thought not. It is difficult to see what use a 2 metre-diameter hole could serve in the middle of a busy thoroughfare. I know. You say it slows down the traffic and prevents reckless speeding. But there are other ways in which traffic is slowed down throughout the city, but which we won't bother with right now. So, I can’t buy that. Nor can I buy a proposition that it serves as a drain  to take the run-off from Freetown’s famously extreme downpours. That definitely does not wash because, if it was one, shouldn’t it have a grill cover to prevent the unsuspecting from being washed in as well?
I can’t think of any other purpose, try as I might. Except, perhaps, that perennial, ever-lurking about in Salone. The one staring me in the face all along, hidden right there, in plain sight. But here, I have to lower my voice an octave or so: It could be a “Debble Hole” (Devil Hole). And no one dares touch it. Even talking about it is risky enough and one may have truly exceeded the bounds of caution by actually photographing it. The mere thought of the transgression makes me quite nervous now.
Meanwhile, the thing stays in place. Till Doomsday, one presumes.
We just have to learn to love it.
Tell Fren Tru

2 comments:

  1. I noticed that same hole a while back. Alas; it is still there. But I passed that way not too long ago! Why did I not notice it? It cannot be a new hole, can it? How one gets used to seeing things for so long that you stop noticing. This must be the reason SLRA have not fixed it. They too have stopped noticing it.

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  2. Yes, Sanusi, a good psychology point there, but I am really hoping that they do have a plan involving complete re-casting of the roads around that area, which they should have had manners enough to tell us about. But they know that we are a laid back lot (far too) and that our reaction will always be "How for do?"

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