The **Green Grass** Shop

This afternoon Farmboy and I took a little drive to a slightly different part of town. Our travels took us to Parkhurst, one of the coolest areas of Jo'burg I've ever come across. I can't quiet believe I've never been there before. Packed full of dainty antique stores, and cute cafe's, the main focus of our morning was The Green Grass Shop.  




The Green Grass shop sells lots of unique gifts, like this clock (above middle) and a host of crocheted animals...the owls being my favourite! But their main focus is on design. They have just got themselves a laser machine, and with it create all sorts of designs and engravings on anything from paper to wood. A nice touch for wedding invites :)




Check out their website here or pop in to their store at Flat 3 Sunlit Court, 34 Fourth Avenue, Parkhurst


Must See...*Dream Girls* Teatro Monte Casino, Jo'burg

What an electrifying performance, South African theatre, you have done us proud! I thought the Lion King was fantastic, but that was before I sat glued to my chair, totally absorbed in the world of glitter, scandal and hair-do's. If you only see one theatre production this year, make it this one!


Dream girls tells the rag-to-riches tale of an up and coming 1960's girl group, and all the trials and tribulations that follow fame and glory. Featuring an entirely South African cast to play its all African American characters, Dreamgirls is produced by leading South African Producer, Hazel Feldman of Showtime Management.


Special Easter Performances have been added for the week of Easter - with shows now open for bookings from Wednesday 20 April to Sunday 24 April. Top ticket prices over the weekend have been dropped to R350 per ticket!

Special Easter Packages are also now available:
4 top price tickets only R1000 (save R400)
5 top price tickets R1250 (save R500) and
6 top price tickets for R1500 (save R600)

Click here to book your tickets today!


*Shows also at the Artscape Opera House in Cape Town*

Lounging around Lydenburg

If you know anyone who has RCI timeshare,then you have to check this place out. Just 3 hours outside of Johannesburg on the way to Nelspruit, and you'll find yourself a slice of relaxation pie.

A quiet place to sink your teeth into those books you've been meaning to start, try your hand at some fly fishing, head out for a hike or just do nothing (something I did quite a lot of!), Verlorenkloof is a well established and highly regarded share block development on the eastern escarpment in the heart of the trout triangle in Mpumalanga. With 12 private, stone thatched crofts, sleeping up to 10 people, it's the prefect place to escape to with a group of friends to enjoy a long weekend. And thats exactly what Farmboy and I, my mom and friend Louise did a few weeks ago.

If you've had enough down time, head out to Dulstroom, Lydenburg or even check out the Kruger Park (just a 2 hour drive from Verlorenkloof).







Nearly all of the bedrooms in the crofts are ensuite, and they are serviced twice a day by little fairies. Bliss. For more information, click here to see the estates website with details of how and when to book. 


Happy relaxing :)

Byanston Organic Market

Looking for a place to buy fresh, home grown veggies for your home cooked Pizza and Pasta dishes??

"The Bryanston Organic & Natural Market is Johannesburg's original outdoor market. When you visit our market, you will enter an environment where the emphasis is on quality hand crafted goods, unique art and photography, clothing made from natural fibres, a deli filled with rich, wholesome foods and, of course, fresh organic and naturally grown produce" Byanston Organic Market
The market is open Thursdays and Saturdays from 9am until 3pm. 

Why not pop in for cup of tea and a snack, before checking out the wide variety of funky goods on sale...





How to get there:

Home made *Pasta Affair*

Something along the lines of a previous post "Pizza a la **Pazzala**", heres some instructions for making your very own pasta....so easy and most delish!


Ingredients for Basil Pesto Pasta

Pasta: 
500g cake flour
5 eggs
(makes enough for 5 people, work on the basis of 100g flour & 1 egg per person)

Sauce:
200ml Basil Pesto (1 1/2 packets of Ina Parman's works well!
100 g mushrooms
50g fresh basil
100g fresh rosa tomatoes
1 onion
olive oil (for frying)
pinch of salt


Step 1: Get yourself a pasta machine (@Home for R250 or see your nearest Antique store)



Step 2: Mix Flour & Eggs together and knead.




Step 3: When mixture reaches an even consistency, wrap in cling-film and put into the fridge for 30 minutes

Step 4: Break mixture into smaller, more manageable balls and start putting it through the machine. Use the setting to thin out the pasta mixture (usually has settings 1-7, start with the thickest and work your way to the thinnest).




Step 5: Start putting the thin sheets of pasta through your choice of spaghetti/linguine settings, making sure to keep flouring each side of the pasta. Once the pasta is in "strings" use a stick/broom to wrap the pasta over to dry

If your feeling a little more creative, add some food colouring to the mixture :)






Step 6: Begin getting your sauce ingredients ready. Chop the basil, mushrooms and tomatoes and fry in a pan with a little olive oil.  Keep aside to add to the final product:



Step 7: Fill a large pot with enough water for the pasta and leave to boil (add some salt and olive oil). Add the pasta and cook for 5 minutes, or until al dente (throw a piece agains the wall, if it sticks, the pasta is ready!)


Step 8: Drain the pasta & add the basil pesto and the rest of the ingredients and voila! Pasta at it's finest! :)

Upcoming *Festivals* in SA!


A taste of whats happening in our beautiful country during the month of April:


Klein Karoo Nationale Kunstefees
Where: Oudtshoorn

The Klein Karoo Nasionale Kunstefees in Oudtshoorn features well-known and young up-and-coming artists in dance and theatre. Started as an Afrikaans alternative to the mainly English National Arts Festival, KKNK has 200 different shows on three different stages.




Splashy Fen
Where: Underberg, KwaZulu-Natal







Website: Splashy Fen


Every year the Splashy Fen music festival attracts thousands of people to a farm near Underberg in KwaZulu-Natal for a feast of mainstream and alternative rock and pop. It offers plenty of facilities, but there are great bed-and-breakfasts in nearby towns for those who believe music festivals can be enjoyed without mud.




Prince Albert Town and Olive Festival
Where: Prince Albert, Western Cape


The Prince Albert Town and Olive Festival, held in the Swartberg region of the Western Cape in April, offers a whole lot more than just the region's famous olives and wine. There's an art exhibition, beer tents, live music, witblits tastings, crafts for kids, historic tours, a cycle race, an olive pip-spitting competition, culinary demonstrations, a midnight ghost walk, stalls, cabaret, a dance and more.

Thanks to SouthAfrica.info for the above information :)

Pizza a la **Pazzala**


Tired of boring old restaurant bought pizza's? Why not try making your own?

 Not only are home made pizza's more fun to make, they are a whole lot healthier! And if your really keen, why not go the extra mile and buy or make yourself your very own pizza oven!! 

Click here for more details on building your own oven..alternatively, Builders Warehouse sells them in certain branches *Balito being one of them!*

Step 1: Get together a bunch of crazy cooks *family and friends work nicely*


Step 2: Home Pizza Oven Preparation

1. Keep the chimney closed while not in use to prevent water getting into the oven and wetting the base. Steamed pizzas are a disaster.

2.  Light the fire 1  1/2 hours before you intend to cook the pizzas to heat the base to ensure crispy bottoms. The best wood is a blue gum or wattle to get nice smoky flavour, but any wood which is used for braaing will do.

3.  Pizza’s cook from the top and bottom. To ensure pizza’s cook from the top a flame needs to be present.  Have some small logs handy which will catch alight easily. Otherwise keep the fire fed but not over hot or pizzas can burn.

4.  Before cooking pizzas move the burning logs towards the back of oven. Use blow pipe to clear ash from cooking area. If pipe has been mislaid, use a piece of wet newspaper which has been slightly dampened and held by tongs to wipe ash away.   

5.  Pizzas need to be shifted around to ensure they do not burn on the side nearest flame.

6.  Hot coals spread over the spillage from pizza’s in progress is a useful way of cleaning up the oven base.

7.  Before using your oven next time make sure the ash has been cleared out and the base cleaned. 



Step 3: Get your ingredients ready

   Dough (Makes 8 medium pizza’s)
 Ingredients: 800 g Bread flour, 200 g semolina flour, 1 tsp salt, 1 heaped tsp sugar, 1 tbsp olive oil, 1 packet yeast, 650 ml lukewarm water. 

1.  Mix dry ingredients and oil in Kenwood using dough hook. Gradually add water until dough forms into a ball rolling around the edge of mixer bowl. All this can be done by hand but it involves 10 to 15 minutes of kneading.

2.  Put into bowl to rise. Cover with cling film with a little oil to prevent dough from cracking and drying out. Takes +- 90 minutes.

3.  It is best to separate dough before rolling Individual pizza’a. Roll out dough by hand into one long roll (like French baguette). Cut into 8 portions and round them into balls.  Flatten by hand and spread out. Roll the balls into round shapes using semolina or flour to prevent sticking. It is a good idea to use cutting mats so pizzas can be carried from one table to another.  Once rolled out ensure there is a good spreading of semolina or flour underneath the pizza base so it does not stick to the mat. This is probably one of the most important tips as a stuck pizza is a nightmare for the person doing the baking in the oven.





     Tomato base mix.
 Ingredients. Depends on number, but should be sufficient for 15 pizzas.
 2 tins tomatoes; 
2 tins tomato puree; 
2 garlic cloves, 
2 onions, 
Herbs (origanum, bay leaf or two)

Fry chopped onions and crushed garlic in a little oil. Once onions translucent add other ingredients and let cook under low heat for +- 60 to 90 minutes to get rid of some of liquid. Chilli’s can be added.   The tomato base can be pureed in a liquidizer, but this is not essential. Spread tomato base thinly keeping a small outer rim clear of tomato. 












Step 4: Make sure to have a good glass (*or 2) of wine handy for quenching thirst



Step 5: Compare Pizza making skills



Step 6: Put pizza in oven









Step 7: Enjoy your hard work!






Under the **Berg**

What are long weekends made for other than to go picnicking in magical places with special people (*apart from sleeping in reading a good book that is*). And Thats exactly what I got up to this long weekend. 

After a great start of relaxing on Farmboy's farm...


The chickens provide the the entertainment as well as the sustenance for good old farm style fry-ups (I'm talking about their eggs...not the chickens themselves!)


View from the patio...it's a tough life for some hey :)


More morning entertainment thanks to "Pirate" and her dislike of early morning dew  :)


It is a dairy farm after all!

Then we headed out to Drakensburg Gardens, near Underburg in KZN, for a delicious Sunday lunch and a little explore of the surrounding area...

Some sights along the way...



Little gorge...


Not so little when you are trying to cross!



The view from our picnic spot


Lovely drive home...another beautiful African sunset! It's good to be home!

Meandering Madness!





If you've got a few days and feel like some nice scenery and a bit of an arty*farty atmosphere, then why not head to the Natal Midlands to meander your way around restaurants, coffee shops, quaint b&b's and loads of funky arts & crafts!


Here is a map of the area: *For a more detailed interactive map click here for the official Midlands site*






On our way to Balito from Farmboy's Farm, we picked up our very own guide (Farmboy's delightful videographer friend, Luke) hopped into our car and away we went. Here's a few pics of where we stopped off:


1. Aladdin's-de-Light










A little disappointing as their coffee shop was closed for renovations. But, if your looking for some antiques you might spy one or two 'de-lights' :)


2. The Faraway Tree







Ummm...what can we say about this place...a little creepy perhaps? Not worth a stop unless your a real fairy fanatic :)











Chris offers a great introduction to all of the cheeses he has on offer (and of course a chance to stuff your face with cheese tasters!) . Also offered is a cheese-making courses from R750 a person for whole day filled with the intricate processes of turning milk into that yummy yellow stuff! Email Chris at Marrakesh@dillon.co.za for more details.


















Full of exciting bits of junk, this shop is filled to the brim with brightly coloured goodies from all over the show; as well as a very impressive range of 'antiquey' looking furniture. Definitely worth a stop!









Quaint little shop near Lions River with lots of scented goodies and loads of cute home made pajama's :) Definitely worth a browse.


And a few more pic's along the way...












Whose got your vote South Africa??

This past weekend was the last time that South Africans were able to register to vote for the up and coming 2011 elections. I am a little ashamed to say this, but it was my first time too. BUT at least I got off my lazy bum and headed to my local voting station which was at Norscot Manor in Douglasdale, ID book in hand to get my name down :)






So now what?!
Who is running? Who has the best campaign? Who will you be voting for?
I've done a little research and thought I'd give a little help to those who, like me, are a bit overwhelmed/confused/unsure/don't know enough and especially those who just couldn't care less, this is for you...


**the following information was all I could find on the parties represented in the National Assembly of Parliament. Thanks to SouthAfrica.info for all the, uhh, info**

"The African National Congress (ANC) is the majority party, with 264 of the 400 National Assembly seats. The party also controls eight of the country's nine provinces, with the exception of the Western Cape, where the Democratic Alliance won the majority in the 2009 elections. The ANC also controls five of the six metropolitan municipalities. Nonetheless, South Africa's opposition parties remain robust and vocal.


South Africa's Parliament is made up of two houses: the National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces. The National Assembly is the more influential, passing legislation and overseeing executive performance. Its members are elected for a term of five years.


All South African citizens over the age of 18 eligible to vote, if they register to do so. So far, South Africa has had fully inclusive democratic elections in 1994, 1999, 2004 and 2009. Before 1994, only white South Africans were allowed to vote for the national government.


Here's a quick summary of the history and policies of South Africa's major political parties – including one not officially represented in Parliament, and one that no longer exists but is important historically.

For a list of all South African political parties registered with the Independent Electoral Commission, visit the IEC website.







African National Congress (ANC)

  • 264 seats in the National Assembly
  • Website

The South African Native National Congress was founded in 1912 with the aim of bringing Africans together to defend their rights and fight for freedom. In 1923 its name was changed to the African National Congress (ANC).

ANC policy is to increase economic growth and reduce poverty. The Freedom Charter remains the party's basic policy document. Adopted in June 1955 by the ANC and its allies, the charter lists principles upon which a democratic South Africa should be built.
In 1994 the ANC adopted the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) as a policy framework to guide it in transforming South Africa from a divided society to one that provides equal opportunities for all its citizens. The four main principles of the RDP are:





  • meeting the people's basic needs, such as housing, water and electricity;
  • developing the country's human resources;
  • building the economy; and
  • democratising state institutions and society.

Democratic Alliance (DA)

  • 67 seats in the National Assembly
  • Website
South Africa's official opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, formerly known as the Democratic Party (DP), espouses liberal democracy and free market principles. 

In the 1980s the party increased its Parliamentary seats to seven. Among the new MPs was Tony Leon, who became DP leader in 1996, introducing a more aggressive approach to opposition politics.

In 2000 the DP joined forces with the New Nationalist Party to form the Democratic Alliance (DA). But the NNP withdrew from the pact in late 2001, and was disbanded in 2004. Leon resigned as party head in 2007, to be replaced by Helen Zille.

The DA seeks to promote:
  • a prosperous, open-opportunity society in which every person is free and equal before the law;
  • a spirit of mutual respect, inclusivity and participation among the diverse people of South Africa;
  • a free enterprise economy driven by choices, risks and hard work; and
  • a vigorous, critical and effective opposition that is loyal to the constitutional order and promotes the well-being of the country.

Congress of the People (Cope)

  • 30 seats in the National Assembly
  • Website
The Congress of the People (Cope) is a new party that contested its first in April 2009, winning 7.42% of the vote. It was formed by breakaway ANC members dissatisfied with that organisation's decision to "recall" then-President Thabo Mbeki in September 2008 and replace him with Kgalema Motlanthe.

Cope was launched in at the November Convention held in Johannesburg in 2008. Its prominent founding members include Mosiuoa Lekota, the former minister of defence who resigned from the Cabinet after Mbeki stepped down, as well as former Gauteng Premier Mbhazima Shilowa, former Congress of South African Trade Unions president Willie Madisha, and Barney Pityana, the vice-chancellor and principal of the University of South Africa.

At the November Convention, Cope adopted the following principles in its declaration:
  • Supremacy of the Constitution.
  • Building social cohesion based on values we can all defend.
  • Freedom and equality before the law.
  • Participatory democracy.


Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP)

  • 18 seats in the National Assembly
  • Website
The Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), led by Mangosuthu Buthelezi, draws its support largely from Zulu-speaking South Africans. Its strongholds are the rural areas of KwaZulu-Natal and the migrant workers' hostels in the metropolitan areas of Gauteng.

The IFP supports the government's Gear macroeconomic strategy, but argues that it has been introduced in too tentative and piecemeal a manner. The party argues for revitalising the economy through a "re-prioritisation" of economic policy, based on four pillars:
  • attracting increased levels of direct fixed investment;
  • facilitating the competitive development of business in South Africa;
  • managing the high expectations and demand for social delivery; and
  • introducing more cost-effective fiscal management in government.
The IFP also believes in integrating traditional leadership into the system of governance by recognising traditional communities as models of societal organisation. Buthelezi heads KwaZulu-Natal's House of Traditional Leaders, which advises the government on issues relating to traditional leaders.

Independent Democrats (ID)

  • Four seats in the National Assembly
  • Website
The Independent Democrats (ID) is one of South Africa's newest mainstream political party, formed in March 2003 under the leadership of Patricia de Lille. De Lille is a former trade unionist and a long-time member of and MP for the Pan Africanist Congress, which she left to form the ID.

De Lille has gained massive support for her forthright stand against corruption. A 2004 survey revealed her to be South Africa's favourite opposition politician.

With the motto "Back to Basics", the ID's policies are fairly centrist. The party is at one with the ANC on the economy, health and jobs, although De Lille outspokenly differed with the ANC's earlier policies on HIV/Aids.

In the 2004 survey, De Lille was found to be the most trusted politician among coloured voters and was second favourite in the white and Indian communities. The ID is seen to have attracted former DA supporters, people disillusioned with that party's ill-fated alliance with the NNP.

United Democratic Movement (UDM)

  • Four seats in the National Assembly
  • Website
The United Democratic Movement (UDM) was formed in 1997 by Bantu Holomisa, who was expelled from the ANC after accusing a top party official of corruption. 

The UDM sees itself as a contender for power with the ANC. Holomisa says his party is aiming to become an alternative government. His party campaigns around issues which it believes the government is handling badly.

Freedom Front Plus (FF+)

  • Four seats in the National Assembly
  • Website
The Freedom Front was formed in 1993 by Constand Viljoen, the former chief of the South African Defence Force. Viljoen came out of retirement to lead a group of Afrikaners who wanted to form a political party.

As head of the Afrikaner Volksfront, Viljoen was instrumental in convincing conservative Afrikaners to participate in the new dispensation, through which, he argued, the issue of self determination should be taken up.

African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP)

  • Three seats in the National Assembly
  • Website
The African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP) was formed in December 1993 with the aim of representing South African Christians in Parliament. It won two National Assembly seats in 1994 and six in 1999.

The ACDP was the only party in the National Assembly that voted against the adoption of the Constitution in 1994, citing moral and Biblical objections to some of the document's clauses – particularly the rights of gays and lesbians.






According to its manifesto, the ACDP stands for "Christian principles, freedom of religion, a free market economy, family values, community empowerment and human rights in a federal system".

United Christian Democratic Party (UCDP)

  • Three seats in the National Assembly
  • Website
The United Christian Democratic Party (UCDP) was formed by Lucas Mangope, head of the apartheid-era "homeland" of Bophuthatswana. Mangope was among the first homeland leaders to accept so-called independence for his scattered country for the Setswana-speaking people. The UCDP was the only party allowed to operate in the territories under his control.

Pan Africanist Congress (PAC)

  • One seat in the National Assembly
  • Website
The Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) was formed in 1959 as a breakaway from the ANC. Influenced by the Africanist ideals of Kwame Nkrumah, it promotes the return of the land to the indigenous people.

The party's support has been steadily eroded since 1994, with voters favouring the ANC. A major blow was the 2003 defection of PAC MP Patricia de Lille to form her own party, the Independent Democrats. 

Minority Front (MF)

  • One seat in the National Assembly
  • Website
The Minority Front, led by the maverick Amichand Rajbansi, says it represents the interests of the Indian community. Apart from its two seats in the National Assembly, the party is also represented in the Durban metropolitan council.

Azanian People's Organisation (Azapo)

  • One seat in the National Assembly
  • Website
The Azanian People's Organisation (Azapo) preaches the philosophy of black emancipation and black consciousness, a philosophy popularised by Steve Biko, who was killed in police cells in 1977.

African People's Convention (APC)

  • One seat in the National Assembly
  • Website
The African People's Convention was created out of the 2007 defection of two prominent PAC members of parliament. It was the only party created by the since abolished practice known as "floor-crossing" to contest the 2009 elections.

South African Communist Party (SACP)

The South African Communist Party (SACP) is not officially represented in Parliament, but a number of its members occupy seats by virtue of their dual ANC membership.

Formed in 1921, the Communist Party of South Africa was predominantly white, but later on attracted black intellectuals, who in turn recruited black workers into its ranks. In 1946, one of its leading members, JB Marks, led 100 000 black miners in a strike that contributed to the party's banning in 1950.

The SACP has had a close working relationship with the ANC since the 1960s, when anti-apartheid organisations were forced to operate from exile. Members of both organisations held dual membership and served in the structures of both bodies.

The party's membership overlaps with those of the ANC and the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu), its partners in what is known as the tripartite alliance. It has significant representation in the ANC and government, from the executive down to local government structures.

The party believes in the establishment of a socialist society, which it says should be characterised by democracy, equality, freedom, and the socialisation of the predominant part of the economy.

New National Party (NNP)

The New National Party (NNP), formerly the Nationalist Party, ruled South Africa for the over 40 years of the apartheid era, from 1948 to 1994. The second-largest party after the country's first democratic elections in 1994, its voter base abandoned it in large numbers thereafter.

In the 1994 elections the NNP, led by FW de Klerk, gained 20% of the vote, making it the official opposition to the ANC government. It also won a majority of votes in the Western Cape province, giving it control of the provincial legislature.

After suffering heavy losses in the 1999 elections, the NNP joined forces with the DP and the Federal Alliance to form the Democratic Alliance in July 2000, making the NNP and DP the ruling coalition in the Western Cape.

Just over a year later, in October 2001, the NNP withdrew from the Democratic Alliance, throwing Western Cape politics into turmoil.

In August 2004 the NNP's national executive took a unanimous decision to disband the party. Most of its former representatives went on to join the ANC."

Thanks again to SAinfo for all of the above!



**So, after all of that, who will you vote for on the 18th May?**


For all those South Africans who will be overseas for the voting, I'll try my best to find out if you are still able to vote even though you may be out of the country :)

A new kind of yogi...

It's day 2 and I'm rather chuffed with myself at having gone to Bikram Yoga 2 days in a row *apart from the fact that I needed a 5 hour rest when I got home at 7 am this morning to recover* life sure is easy when you don't have much else to do :)

I am starting to accept the fact that i have only been home for 6 days and therefore do need to take some time to really focus on what I really want to do and where I want to go in life. Which means bumming off my parents for a little while longer, nothing wrong with that hey!


So...while the search for "meaning" (what does that even mean?!) continues, I leave you with some of the world's cutest yogi's. Dan Borris pairs 2 rather unlikely elements to create something adorable...




and


click here to buy your very own Yoga Dogs/Cats 2011 Calendar :)

**the dogs & cats aren’t actually forced into these obscure and awkward positions.  As explained in an article on Express.co.uk, Borris works with his wife Alejandra and uses computer editing to make the poses look authentic**






And in places like the US, Taiwan and Japan, the above pictures may just become more than a picture in a calendar:

"The idea of canine yoga – or doga – classes was dreamt up by American-based yoga instructor Suzi Teitelman. She discovered that her dog, a spaniel, liked to join in with her yoga exercise routine at home in America.
Classes of doga are increasing in number and popularity in the US. Doga is the latest American import to have taken off in UK, Japan and Taiwan, and may eventually be exported to the rest of the world".
Lifeisreallybeautiful.com

umm...I'm not so sure:


**South Africa** Rocks!!

Browsing through the web, as you do, I came across this really really awesome blog about South African blog called South Africa Rocks. It aims to promote South Africa and highlight all the really positive elements of our country. Check it out!

Something that caught my eye on the site was this:
*it's our National Anthem, but look how awesome it's been illustrated!*


You guys are doing an awesome job with your site ") foshizzle!

Bikram Smikram!

I have been home here in Jo'burg for a total of 4 days and already I'm starting to get itchy feet. So, to cure my itch I've decided to start Bikram Yoga (*again). Again, because I started it about 5 years ago, and well, it was a bit intense and so I kinda stopped...lazy me! But now I will attempt it for a second time...let's hope this time is different :)

For those of you a little unsure of what exactly Bikram Yoga is, here's a little summary:

One of the most well-known kinds of yoga is Bikram. If you’ve heard of people practicing yoga in a room that is heated to over 40 degrees celcius, this is the type of yoga they were sweating through. Bikram yoga is also referred to as “Hot Yoga.”
Benefits
The intention behind having the room heated so high is to ensure the student will sweat profusely, thereby ridding the body of toxins. The intense heat also makes the muscles very supple and warm which enhances flexibility. The sequence of postures is also designed to relieve stress, reduce tension and prevent injury.
What is a Bikram yoga class like?
Bikram yoga involves doing a set sequence of 26 postures, or asanas, and two breathing exercises in a class that is heated to 105 degrees Fahrenheit. Students are guided along the class by Bikram-certified teachers who instruct using a specific dialogue. Each class lasts approximately 90 minutes.

The authentic Bikram method recommends that you practice it every day.
Given the high heat and the length of time that each posture is held, Bikram yoga is very strenuous. Even though beginners are encouraged to sample a class, if you have a strong aversion to the heat or get faint quickly, you might want to think about first trying out another kind of yoga class that heats the room, but not as high as in a Bikram class.
Thanks DietinReview
Well I did say I wanted to get rid of that itch, I'll be doing that in my first class at 05:30 tomorrow morning...*gulp* so that hopefully in a few weeks/months/years/lifetimes this will be me:

For those of you in the Johannesburg Sandton/Fourways area, there is a fantastic studio at the Design Quarter on the corner of  Leslie Avenue & William Nicol Drive *click here* for their website*