Shack Restaurants SA
Rumor has it that Bill and Jeanie Budd, along with
Myles [Bill’s late brother] owned a farm.
They needed a place to sell their veggies, so they had the idea of
opening a restaurant in Durban and so Legends Late Nite Café was born on the
15th April 1981. The first year saw Jeanie working in the restaurant at night,
Varsity by day and typing out menus in between. Sleep was not an option!
Legends was the first late night restaurant in Durban
and was hectically busy, as it was the cool place to hang out and be seen. It
grew from strength to strength and Bill bought a Porsche while sleeping on a
mattress on the floor! Those were the crazy days! Legends then opened on the
beachfront in the Old Parade Hotel and the success story continued with the
opening of branches in Pietermarizburg, Rosebank, Johannesburg and the
Playhouse.
Bill and Jeanie who were always visiting new places
and expressed their love for travel by opening “The Great Escape Travel Co.”,
next door to Legends, Musgrave!
To cut a long story short, Beachfront closed down due
to sale of the building, Pietermaritzburg and Johannesburg were sold and the
Playhouse split from the original Legends fold.
Oh yes! I forgot about Gringo’s Cantina, which was
simply the only tequila-swilling cactus bashing, bean guzzling cantina this
side of Mexico, where people danced on tables, drank tequila and behaved
‘loco’.
Then there was the short lived BAT café at the BAT
Arts and Cultural Centre in the harbor, a showcase for local culture and simply
the best place to view the spectacular Durban Skyline.
Then in 2002, Tourism Kwa Zulu Natal approached Bill
to open a Lifestyle store with restaurant, travel and merchandise to showcase
the best of KZN. Thus Legends became Zulu legends, but after a year the
merchandise was a non starter and the area was going into decline.
Legends was sold in November 2003 and Bill, enjoying
a sabbatical, started ‘The Prawn Shack’ next to the Amatikulu Prawn farm which
only opened on Sundays. This wonderful lifestyle lasted for 2 years, until Mike
and Ben bought the old ‘Captains Cabin’ on an auction in October 2005 and
coaxed Bill out of retirement whilst retiring themselves!
Buds on the Bay, originally intended as a place for
mates to hang out and where you could relax on the deck, drink, tell tall
stories and plan adventures, grew and grew with long lazy lunches becoming the
style. The somewhat eclectic menu reflected our many travels and “the Black
Ball Nites” for mates on Tuesdays remained faithful to the philosophy of
‘talking sh..t and then doing it’. These madcap adventures now form part of the
“Roadside Cuisine” series. After 11 crazy years, Buds closed in February 2016 when
its non renewable lease came to an end
Meanwhile, the Prawn Shack has just kept on trucking,
becoming mildly famous along the way, and although situated on Tribal Trust
land with no security of tenure, it is still going from strength to strength.
The business model is so good it has given rise to
the ‘Shak Restaurants’ concept, specializing in unique venues and now the
Marula Shak has opened in Ponta Malongane, S. Mozambique, to fit in with the
‘Shak’ ethos and there are a number of
new Long Lazy lunch menu’s and the usual ‘Drinking done different’!
‘Roadside Cuisine – a Journey through Africa and
beyond, fusing cultures and cuisines’ was a concept born of our many travels
and motorbike trips where by far the most fun, and best memories, were had eating
street food whilst mixing with the locals and just absorbing the atmosphere.
So, in this tradition we are making a few tweaks to
our menu’s to celebrate ‘local is lekker’ Shisanyama to Asian, Mexican and
Mocambiqecan cuisines, among others, but what the heck – ‘fusion rules’!
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