Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Spring is popping everywhere ...

The Kaartmans have just returned from a brief break at Sevilla, in the Agter-Pakhuis, where the spring flowers have to be seen to be believed ... this is going to be one of the GREAT YEARS for spring flowers, from the Cederberg up to Namaqualand, so if you have not booked already .... well, you’re probably too late!
To celebrate we have put together a DVD with over 1400 images of Cape Flowers, gathered on our mapping travels around the countryside. Most are pretty high-res [from 6 to 16 megapixels] and all we’ve done to them is changed the file names to reflect 

  • the plant’s family name
  • the genus of the plant
  • the species
  • AND ... the common name

We hope most of our identifications are correct, and we’d love your feedback if not. 
The DVD’s make a great screensaver [full instructions on the disk] or simply a neat way to identify those gorgeous beauties out there. You can buy one online for only R100 – click on the word EFT to buy by EFT [don’t forget to add R20 for postage]; you can also buy by credit card, click on the Add to Cart button ....
[By the way it is a DVD even tho the pic above says 'CD' ...]
Whet your appetite with the pics below ....
Kaartman, July 2013















































































Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Bakkrans

Bakkrans: click on map to enlarge

Bakkrans is not a resort, it’s an experience, a dip into history at several levels. There’s the recent past, the bywoners who’ve been gone for about forty years. It’s their footprint upon the landscape, maybe a century or two old, that is Bakkrans – their cottages, their stone walls, their name for the place. 
Bakkrans cottages: pics by David Slingsby
We don’t know the Khoi herders’ name for Bakkrans, and their traces are few – some ochre-red handprints, a scatter of broken pottery. They were here for a millennium or two, camping amongst these weathered boulders, passing by with their fat-tailed sheep. They displaced or murdered or merged with – who knows? – the San. 

left: Khoi handprints; centre: the Mannetjie;
right: a rare San polychrome

pics by David Slingsby 
The San were here for perhaps eight thousand years – before that the climate might have been too cold. They saw the Bakkrans itself, the rocky overhangs, the massive, eroded boulders exactly as we do today. Only the stone walls, the little buildings, the jeep tracks, Wynand du Preez’s apple tree and the name itself – Bakkrans – would be strange to them. They left their astonishing legacy of rock art in hundreds of rocky shelters, or simply upon the giant boulders amongst which they hunted game that was probably richer in species then. There are elephants in the rock art, even a few rhino and one or two lions. At times it was wetter than today, at other times during those eight millennia it was drier, and colder. The vegetation was much the same as we see it now, with occasional invasion and retreat of species as the climate fluctuated.
Bakkrans wildlife: Mountain zebra; Tok-tokkie; Steenbokkie
The Grey rhebuck [bottom right] was taken on the road home

pics: David Slingsby
Arrie Beukes is your guide at Bakkrans. Soft-spoken, gentle, one of the best Landrover drivers in the world, 74-year old Arrie has lived in the area all his life; he knew the last of the du Preez who scratched a living here. Arrie built many of the roads at Bakkrans: perhaps that’s why he drives on them so respectfully. Arrie built the road down into the Mooibergvlakte, and Arrie discovered the fossils, and that’s where we leave the human history very far behind.
Arrie Beukes and his Landie
pic: David Slingsby
If we could squeeze every year into one tiny minute, then the first motor vehicle arrived at Bakkrans just seventy-five minutes ago. One day and four hours ago the first Khoi arrived; the San had perhaps been here for five days before them. But Bakkrans  holds a much more ancient surprise for us. We have to wrench our minds back for an impossible 750 years at our condensed scale – or somewhere close to 400 million in reality – in a feeble, probably doomed attempt to understand the age of the fossils of Bakkrans.
This wasn’t even Africa, then. It wasn’t even Pangaea, the giant super-continent that later split into Gondwanaland and Laurasia. It was still 300 years [at our one minute-a-year scale] before the dinosaurs began. The giant view of the Tanqua that unfolds east of Bakkrans includes a sharp peak, the Skoorsteenberg. Skoorsteenberg is a geologically-famous site, a centre of 500 metre-thick lake- or ocean-floor deposits from the Permian, when the Karoo was all “onnerwater”, as David Kramer has it. The Skoorsteenberg formations are only half as old as the Bakkrans fossils.

These are club-mosses. They represent some of the earliest land plants that emerged during the Devonian era. They shared the marshy landscape with giant dragonflies and the first half-fish half-reptile vertebrates that managed to crawl out onto the mudflats to sun themselves. Archaeosigillaria is their name; “traces ... have been discovered in parts of Guinea, Ghana, and Arabia, as well as in Gabon; they also occur in the Bokkeveld Series of South Africa. Fossilized plants that include Archaeosigillaria (ancient club mosses) may be traced in formations of the earlier Devonian Period in the Sahara and in South Africa (Witteberg Series).” – I quote from Britannica.

A stay at Bakkrans is relatively expensive, but Arrie and his Landrover remain there with you during your stay. If you don’t make use of Arrie’s superb guiding, info, and his knowledge of the area the loss will be all yours. The facilities are basic but complete – the idea is that you should gain some insight into the lives of the bywoners who built your cottage so long ago. Don’t be alarmed – you’ll get a lekker warm shower, a flush loo and a comfortable-if-narrow bed, but I have one criticism. It’s all very well living like a bywoner but us old toppies need our sleep. Why is there only one hard, thin pillow upon which to rest your ageing head? I can’t pretend to be a bywoner while I’m trying to get to sleep [Johan was horrified by this remark – he’d overlooked the problem! There will be plenty of pillows for the next round of outoppie visitors!].
Inside a cottage; A glimpse through the kookskerm door
pics by David Slingsby
There are some good short walks, stunning flowers – spring flowers as well as fynbos on the hilltops – and tremendous views, over the Tanqua to the east, over the full span of the eastern Cederberg to the west. From the right vantage point you can see from the Wolfberg Arch, to Tafelberg, Sneeukop, even to Krakadouw and the Pakhuis Pass. Even the ubiquitous Citadel peeks over the ridge that hides Wupperthal from view. There are genuine endangered mountain zebra, herds of gemsbok, and all the usual small guys, the inquisitive klipspringers, steenbokkies, dassies and the tracks and traces of aardvark, porcupine, leopard ... Baboons there are not, but the compensation is the silence. When there is no wind you can hear your campfire crackling from hundreds of metres away.
View to the distant Wolfberg Arch
pic: David Slingsby
Look up Bakkrans on its superb website – it’s all there, except for the “must brings”. Take extra fluffy pillows. A solar-lamp if you have one. Matches – lots. Pack your food in plastic lug-boxes that you can seal – there are lots of cheeky mice, even a couple of namtaps. The only thing you won’t need is earplugs – unless you find that the silent brilliant starlight keeps you awake ...
Namtap or Spectacled dormouse (Graphiurus ocularis)
pic courtesy of Witteberg Private Game Reserve
And when you leave, thank Johan van der Westhuizen for opening up this extraordinary dip into the past, both the recent and the really deep. Baie dankie, Johan, vir ons Kaartmans was dit ’n ware belewenis!

– Kaartman May 2013

Friday, May 17, 2013

Famous Family Members


The Kaartmans were recently surprised to find that 
they had a tenuous familial link to one of their favourite poets .....


          Miss Helen Slingsby was my maiden aunt,
               And lived in a small house near a fashionable square
          Cared for by servants to the number of four.
          Now when she died there was silence in heaven
               And silence at her end of the street.
          The shutters were drawn and the undertaker wiped his feet – 
               He was aware that this sort of thing had occurred before.
          The dogs were handsomely provided for,
               But shortly afterwards the parrot died too.
          The Dresden clock continued ticking on the mantelpiece,
               And the footman sat upon the dining-table
               Holding the second housemaid on his knees – 
          Who had always been so careful while her mistress lived.

T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)

– Kaartman, May 2013

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Self-catering [1]


Some of the most pleasurable mapping moments happen on research trips. Mrs Kaartman and I were surprised and delighted recently when we totted up all the places we have stayed at, and found that it was nearly eighty. Self-catering joints, that is, not the less frequent family-or-friends and the very infrequent hotels. Perhaps, we thought, it’s time to share some of our accumulated knowledge of self-catering, both the rough and the smooth. Not all our stays were recent, so the occasional horrors described here might, for all we know, have cleaned up their acts in the meantime. And their kitchen shelves. Windows. Under the beds. Musty wardrobes.
Not that long ago self-catering “chalets” [who concocted that awful name?] were very much a hit-or-miss affair. Some were wonderful, others were extremely basic, hardly more than mountain huts. Time was when you always had to supply your own bedding, and you collected the cutlery in a wooden tray from the farmhouse back door. Before you were allowed to leave, every last teaspoon was counted, every cracked glass charged for. Most places have improved a great deal, but there are a few things to watch out for.
Mrs K, for example, always checks whether there is a top-sheet under the duvets. If there is, a fleeting look of distrust attends her careful inspection of the duvets themselves. 
“If there is a sheet,” she wisely avers, “they might wash just the sheet after each guest, and not the duvet covers.”
We always take our own duvets on our trips, just in case.
Four of our favourites [see URL's below]:
clockwise from top left:
Baviaanskloof : Key by Katrien; Cederberg: Jamaka
Kogelberg: Oudebos; De Vlugt: Gykonna

In many quarters it is still probable that you will encounter single-ply toilet paper. Even the larniest-of-larnie ten-star resorts in the Cederberg puts single-ply into their loos, can you believe. This false economy [because your paying guests will simply use twice as much] is sometimes taken to extremes, with improbable brand-names like “Golden Ring” and “Butt-Soft” [I kid you not]. The latter two are made of a grey kind of blotting paper that instantly disintegrates at a touch, let alone a wipe. Once again, it’s a serious false economy, because you have to destroy at least the first third of the roll while trying to break through the glue-spot that prevents it from unwinding.

We always take a few rolls of decent double-ply on a trip, and so should you.
Another old favourite is to equip the kitchens with a pallid, yellowish liquid that is supposed to be used for washing up. You will use most of the bottle to create a single foamy bubble, let alone help you scrub fried egg off the non-non-stick frying pan with last year’s brillo-pad. The civilized places provide good old healthy-looking green washing-up liquid with a recognizable brand name; you should take your own, just in case. We always do.
A noticeable feature of almost every SC [as the trade know them] is the fridge. Very noticeable, in fact. So far, out of nearly 80 places we’ve stayed in, the only one we’ve not had to turn off at night is the one at Daisy Cottage, Traveller’s Rest. A night free of gurgles, grunts, belches and sudden impromptu high-pitched humming is what one prefers out in the gorgeous silence of the countryside, we feel.
Mind you, Daisy shares a different endearing feature with others we have known. It has a longspan metal roof; in those Agter-Pakhuis temperature ranges from 0° to 40°+ the roof spends all day and much of the night expanding and contracting with pops, groans and squeaks that remind one of the Titanic’s awful death-throes minutes before she plunged into oblivion. We love it. Daisy talks to us, reminding us of happy times.
Another feature of SC fridges is that they are usually set much too high. Open the door and turn the little dial down to 3 or 4 if you prefer your milk unfrozen in the morning. A very undesirable consequence of a deep-freezing fridge, as Mr Kaartman discovered when preparing his evening Scotch on the rocks, is that the ice-cubes anneal themselves most painfully to the fingers and have to be removed with hot water.
Thinking about it, it ought to be the law that anyone wanting to open a self-catering cottage should have to pack their weekend clothes and all the food they need into the car. They must then drive around the block or local equivalent, back to their own self-catering housey, which they may then not leave, except for a swim in the dam or a walk up the koppie, until the Sunday afternoon. That way they’re almost certain to make sure that everything in the house works [even the toaster], and that it really is a “fully-equipped cottage”.
  Maybe they will also discover that there is no such thing as an SC that actually leaves cupboard space for your food, so you spend your entire holiday with everything in bags or on the counter. 
  What’s wrong with these guys?
We always take our own can-opener, sharp knife and pair of scissors on our trips. A long lead and a couple of multi-plugs are a good idea, too. Take your own bath towels even if they have towels. Check on the price of their wood if you want that cosy, fireside feel in winter – there are, I fear, a couple of joints deep in the country where there is no wood to be self-collected, and the price of the bagged-up green blue-gum sold at the office is, well, exploitative.
Four more favourites: clockwise from top left:
Agter-Pakhuis: Traveller’s Rest; Cederberg: Mount Ceder
Stanford: Waterfalls; Klein-Karoo: Red Stone Hills
We’ve had some damn fine cottages over the years. Red Stone Hill’s “Ostrich Palace” near Oudtshoorn – it’s an old cottage, not a real ‘paleis’ – was one of the best. Gykonna near De Vlugt was brilliant. Jamaka, Mount Ceder, Traveller’s Rest, Oudebosch [Kogelberg], Waterfalls, Baviaanskloof’s ‘Key by Katrien’ were amongst the best. Highlands near George was probably the worst, one of those cold places in an alien pine forest, a wooden hut with a stove and rusty chimney full of holes so you dared not make a fire, languid, uncaring service at the desk and – worst of all – just two of everything for the two of you: two teaspoons, two plates, two forks, two knives etc etc etc – as though any kitchen never needs more cutlery than the exact number of people it is serving. Unfriendly, awful, a waste of money.
Take the bad, the ugly and the very, very good, and I would say that if you spend more than R250–R300 pppn on a self-catering cottage, you are being ripped off, and I’m dying for someone to prove me wrong. Most of the very, very best come in at less than R250 ... 
That says a lot, hey.
Next time we’ll regale you with a some of the adventures the Kaartmans have enjoyed in some of them eighty little houseys. Oops, don’t read that wrong ... I mean adventures with wildlife, with floods, with funny cooking, with smoke and fire, with strange loos ... all the stuff that makes travelling such a peculiarly lekker thing ...

Kaartman, April 2013

Friday, March 1, 2013

Noordhoek Beach


For a good leg stretch Noordhoek Beach on a warm morning is hard to beat. The sea is freezing cold, definitely only for wet-suited surfers, but as you walk along beside it it’s like having a giant, cooling aircon right at your side. You can take dogs and horses, too, but you need an ‘Activity Card’ from the National Park to make this legal. We once met someone walking a large grey wolf there, but I don’t know whether you need a card for your wolves. You don't really need a map for the walk, but our Silvermine/Hout Bay map will help you find where to start.

Noordhoek is a beach that has always had a wild loneliness, even when there are lots of people about – maybe because once you’re clear of the usual bizarre beachfront architecture of the ‘village’ there are no human habitations for miles and miles on the landward side. The great Noordhoek wetlands, remnants of the ocean channel that once divided the Peninsula in two, are a part of the National Park and apart from occasional muggers [none for several years now] are home only to a selection of small and mostly inoffensive Cape fauna.
On the beach: Boomers; Birds; Babies; Blondes
The ocean channel silted up several thousand years too soon for Captain Niels Pete Fischer Nicolayson, a Dane captaining the ss Kakapo, his first command. The Kakapo was a 663 ton schooner-rigged steel steamship built in 1898 and originally named Clarence. In 1900 she was sold to the Union Steamship Company of New Zealand, who renamed her Kakapo after a rare, flightless parrot [see below].
On 25th May 1900 the Kakapo, on delivery to her new owners and en route to Sydney, Australia put in to Table Bay Harbour for coal. Coaling was quick and like all ships anxious to avoid harbour dues she sailed for Australia that afternoon.
It was, of course, a wild and stormy night, with a rising Nor’wester. The seas were huge – the famous Dungeons, some of the biggest surfing waves in the world, occur off Noordhoek  – and visibility was poor. Mistaking Chapmans Peak for Cape Point, the officer-of-the-watch turned hard to port and steamed up Noordhoek Beach at full power and full speed [9.5 knots].
663 tons moving at 9.5 knots makes an impact, and today the remains of the Kakapo lie 60 to 100 metres from the sea, depending upon tides and seasonal shifts in the beach-line. 

The crew were able to climb down a rope ladder on to dry sand, but legend has it that Capt Nicolayson was too embarrassed to leave and lived on board for three years, through several failed attempts to salvage the ship. This is undoubtedly rumour; in the subsequent enquiry his ticket was suspended for three months, while a number of Kommetjie residents were prosecuted for pinching liquor [of course] and bales of fabric [why not?] from the ship.

The Kakapo makes a great destination if you’ve walked from Noordhoek, and a good turn-around point for a 2-3 hr walk. The rusting old boiler still dominates the view after 113 years, but be careful where you sit with all those spiky old ribs sticking up out of the sand. She was used during the filming of the Academy Award-winning movie, ‘Ryan’s Daughter’; if you watch carefully during the Kakapo scenes you might just spot – in this story of the nineteenth century – a couple of cars flashing past on Chapmans Peak Drive.

A kakapo is a rare flightless parrot and there are only about 160 of em left in the wilds of New Zealand. Most of these are apparently known by name. It’s the largest parrot known, being as large as a chicken – read all about it at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakapo . However, if you want a really funny experience watch Stephen Fry pretending to be David Attenborough, and suffering extreme shock at a first-hand experience of the perversity of Mother Nature ... a must-watch at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9T1vfsHYiKY ... that should get you off those Oscar jokes for a while.

All the best
Kaartman, 28 Feb 2013, sojourning temporarily in Betty se Baai.