Thursday, June 23, 2011
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
No quarter asked or given
The Arangieskop Trail of June 2011 was not a 'walk in the park' for me...
After doing it 3 or 4 times previously, I've learnt that time has taken its toll on me.
The 1st day unfolded without any major mishaps. It was a slog, but done in good time.
The occassional squawk of the 2 way radio accompanied us to the blustery top.
The snow on the distant mountains was quite a sight! like a light frost on a cake. Diè bakker was baie suinig!
Our time at the overnight hut was spent eating laced brownies and coping with the after effects (for some) and others actually disappointed that they had had none ( after effects, I mean).
Supper was made by Justin, amidst clouds of smoke. Occasionally, windows would be opened to ventilate the cabin because the stove was smoking! Then the temperature would go down and the fire would be fed religiously to get it up again. This dance would continue to bedtime.
After supper some okes were given a 'varkie' at klawerjas. A few hairs were neatly brushed in place to impress the new group that joined us (there were 2 ladies of the female persuasion in that group).
Some 'wine tasting' afterwards when some had already crawled into their sleeping bags. The die-hards sit 'bankvas' with a selection of tipple presented at the table in hip-flasks, coke and water bottles and the genuine glass bottle. Geen genade is getoon nie! Alles is somier verslind! Lekker geslaap daarna....
The snoring on this particular hike was not as bothersome as usual. The main contenders probably didn't think the competition was tough enough, especially since the title holder (Greg Geduld) wasn't there.
We awoke to the wind roaring at us to get going , it couldn't wait to play!
Oats was made, coffee was a forlorn hope and mugs were left behind.............
Then the slog to the high point, the photo shoot of the virgins AND then the dreaded downward
trudge .
On this day, this trail claimed some skin and blood.
I took a tumble on some rocks or as sister dearest said: "like someone doing cartwheels without using their arms" WTF!!!?
We were together up to this point. When she saw that I was in the capable hands of Wally and Ferdie, she abandoned me to go haring off on her own!
We saw her again after more boulder hopping, gorge scaling and chain hauling. She was on the opposite side of the valley, looking like a little pin with a yellow head!
Yup, that downhill really tested me physically and mentally.
Reaching that jeep track at the bottom was like crossing the finish line, ' cos you knew that the rest of the way was a stroll to warmth, cheers, white-toothed smiles, big bear hugs and that looong awaited cup of coffee!
After doing it 3 or 4 times previously, I've learnt that time has taken its toll on me.
The 1st day unfolded without any major mishaps. It was a slog, but done in good time.
The occassional squawk of the 2 way radio accompanied us to the blustery top.
The snow on the distant mountains was quite a sight! like a light frost on a cake. Diè bakker was baie suinig!
Our time at the overnight hut was spent eating laced brownies and coping with the after effects (for some) and others actually disappointed that they had had none ( after effects, I mean).
Supper was made by Justin, amidst clouds of smoke. Occasionally, windows would be opened to ventilate the cabin because the stove was smoking! Then the temperature would go down and the fire would be fed religiously to get it up again. This dance would continue to bedtime.
After supper some okes were given a 'varkie' at klawerjas. A few hairs were neatly brushed in place to impress the new group that joined us (there were 2 ladies of the female persuasion in that group).
Some 'wine tasting' afterwards when some had already crawled into their sleeping bags. The die-hards sit 'bankvas' with a selection of tipple presented at the table in hip-flasks, coke and water bottles and the genuine glass bottle. Geen genade is getoon nie! Alles is somier verslind! Lekker geslaap daarna....
The snoring on this particular hike was not as bothersome as usual. The main contenders probably didn't think the competition was tough enough, especially since the title holder (Greg Geduld) wasn't there.
We awoke to the wind roaring at us to get going , it couldn't wait to play!
Oats was made, coffee was a forlorn hope and mugs were left behind.............
Then the slog to the high point, the photo shoot of the virgins AND then the dreaded downward
trudge .
On this day, this trail claimed some skin and blood.
I took a tumble on some rocks or as sister dearest said: "like someone doing cartwheels without using their arms" WTF!!!?
We were together up to this point. When she saw that I was in the capable hands of Wally and Ferdie, she abandoned me to go haring off on her own!
We saw her again after more boulder hopping, gorge scaling and chain hauling. She was on the opposite side of the valley, looking like a little pin with a yellow head!
Yup, that downhill really tested me physically and mentally.
Reaching that jeep track at the bottom was like crossing the finish line, ' cos you knew that the rest of the way was a stroll to warmth, cheers, white-toothed smiles, big bear hugs and that looong awaited cup of coffee!
Monday, June 20, 2011
A Midwinter Walk on the Wild Side
Pretty Pink Protea Aurea |
I am not even going to try to describe the view from the front stoep; the Langeberg Mountains, heads in the clouds, tower above the cottage, rugged and beautiful.
The usual suspects arrived in two carloads, and soon we were braaing, beer, red wine and whisky lubricating conversations, which, as usual, varied from the ridiculous to the sublime! Man, it was good to be back home again.
We arose at an unearthly hour so that we could have a good breakfast before hitting the trail. The 07h00 zero-hour morphed into 07h30 and we were on our way. It was cold in the early morning in the half darkness of dawn and the grass was wet with dew. The clouds had lifted from the mountain tops and there were stars in the sky. In the west the moon was slowly sinking towards the horizon.
We had not gone very far when we were into the protea belt. These beautifully coloured proteas, red-pink-cerise, were growing en masse and were in bloom in this first valley, up to a certain altitude, where they were replaced by Ericas, Restios, various other plants and indigenous trees in the river valleys.
Indigenous forest and waterfalls there were aplenty; how can one describe the magic of a forest to someone? I think Dalene Matthee comes close when, in the novel 'Fiela se Kind', the little girl says, 'Daar's feetjies in die woud' (there are fairies in the forest).
The uphill slog was hard, but not nearly as hard as the downhill leg we would do the following day. When, eventually, the overnight hut hove into view, it was a most welcome sight.
The overnight hut has a fireplace in the middle of the floor, as well as a coal stove in the corner, which was more or less in the same condition as the one at Dassieshoek. There was a donkey boiler outside; one has to make a fire and keep it going to provide hot water. There were absolutely no problems with that, the showers were piping hot for the nine of us and the four people in the other group with whom we shared the hut. The other group were not entirely strangers, as Justin knew two of them from way back when! We got on like a house on fire.
Justin made supper, which consisted of a minced beef-spaghetti dish with lots of onions in it; it was just what the doctor ordered, and there was more than enough to go round. Supper, of course, was complemented by the variety of alcoholic beverages that each of us could squeeze into our backpacks.
After supper, we broke out the cards and had a good old game of Klawerjas.
It was cold at the top. Inside the hut is a digital display coupled to thermometers inside the hut and out. When we awoke in the morning it was four degrees centigrade outside, which in itself is not that bad, but, when coupled to the wind chill factor - and the wind was literally howling - it made things slightly uncomfortable.
After a really good breakfast, we hit the trail at 08h30. The first leg was uphill for about a kilometer to the top of the peak called Arangieskop. If anything, the wind right on top was worse still. It ripped my beanie off my head and launched it into the wide blue yonder, never to be seen again. But soon, as we dropped into the next valley from the one we had ascended, we were on the lee side and the wind wasn't that much of a bother anymore.
Arangieskop |
As I said, the downhill leg was tougher. There were the most spectacular cliffs and waterfalls, and, when one got down to that certain altitude, the proteas of the previous day were replaced by a completely different species of protea, a very pretty pink variety that I personally have not seen before.
Mackerel sky |
Some of us were a bit tardy on that downhill leg, to put it mildly. By the time it was fully dark I was about 500m from the Dassieshoek Cottage; I made it at 18h30. A cup of hot coffee, five minutes or so to 'recover', and we were ready to head back home.
The Dassieshoek house, where we spent Friday night |
Way over yonder Is a place I have seen In a garden of wisdom From some long ago dream... (Words and music by Carole king) |
Fynbos |
Erica |
Daisy? |
Ferdi negotiating a slippery crossing |
Light-coloured Protea |
Arangieskop backlit |
Arangieskop with the sun behind it |
Backlit Ericas |
Mountain Stream |
The overnight hut near the top |
Pillar inside the overnight hut |
Melanie & Justin relax at the fireplace |
The rules |
Protea Nerifolia |
Melanie and Carol through the front door of Dassieshoek Cottage |
View from the garden at Dassieshoek |
Dassieshoek Cottage |
Dassieshoek |
Dassieshoek Kitchen |
Koffie Kapitaal |
The braai area at Dassieshoek |
Ancient tree |
Sunset at Dassieshoek |
Signpost at the gate |
Another signpost near the entrance to the nature reserve |
Milestone? |
Klipwerf |
Moonset in the early morning |
Carol on the trail |
Protea Nerifolia |
Dassieshoek Cottage |
Proteas all along the trail |
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