THE early morning air is chilly, but already queues are forming along a section of railway track in the small town of Darling, a farming community about 75km from Cape Town.
They come from all over the town and the neighbouring communities – a class of primary schoolchildren, mothers, teenagers, and farmers from the surrounding farms.
Nthombi Pukwana, a clinical psychologist and acting train manager for the day and weekend, is host and guide and her passion and belief in the Phelophepa mission is tangible.
The Phelophepa Healthcare train, one of two owned and run by Transnet, is on its last but one stop before services shut down for overhauling and rest for the staff. The trains travel from January to October, 35 to 36 weeks each year, visiting a…