Wild Weekends South Africa: Places to Go, Things to Do
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Wild Weekends South Africa - Claire Keeton
WILD
Weekends
CLAIRE KEETON
MARIANNE SCHWANKHART
WILD
Weekends
PLACES TO GO
Things to do
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Map of southern Africa
How to use this book
WEEKENDS
Magaliesberg
Carletonville
Johannesburg
Waterberg
Soutpansberg
Magoebaskloof
Kaapsehoop
Waterval Boven
White River
Kruger National Park
Kosi Bay
Durban
Howick & Karkloof Waterfalls
Tugela River
The Drakensberg
Harrismith
Clarens & Ficksburg
Gariep Dam & Smithfield
Prince Albert & Oudtshoorn
Four rivers: Keurbooms, Kruis, Storms & Bloukrans
Plettenberg Bay
Greater Tsitsikamma
Mossel Bay
Cederberg & Groot Winterhoek
Montagu & Simonskloof
Cape Town
Chintsa, Glengarriff & Morgans Bay
Richtersveld
Orange River & Green Kalahari
Namibia: Spitzkoppe & Swakopmund
Botswana: Makgadikgadi Pans & Central Kalahari
Botswana: Okavango Delta
Zimbabwe: Zambezi River & Vic Falls
Lesotho: AfriSki
ACTIVITIES
Ocean sports
Scuba diving, snorkelling & shark diving
Freshwater fun
Whitewater rafting & kayaking
Fishing
Mountain biking & road cycling
Rock climbing
Hiking & caving
Horse riding
Desert, dunes & off-roading
Bush
Snow & ice
Adrenalin
Big air
Urban adventures
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The concept for an adventure-travel column for the Sunday Times Travel Weekly supplement came from our editors and managers. We are indebted to them for thinking it up, funding it and approving our trips. We know how privileged we are to have this job.
To the Sunday Times travel team – editor Andrew Unsworth, deputy editor Paul Ash, subeditor Elizabeth Sleith (whose headlines are reprinted in this book) and designer Vernice Shaw – a special thanks for their support and patience every week, and to logistics wizard Sandy Hattingh for pulling off amazing feats.
Bookstorm publisher, Louise Grantham, is the force behind this book. We are grateful for her enthusiasm in its conceptualisation and for taking a risk on it.
Without the invaluable support of editorial project manager Russell Clarke and Mark Ronan editing our copy, the book would not have taken shape so smoothly. We appreciate their contribution.
From Claire
I would like to thank my extraordinary and lovely son, Zade, now seven years old, for exploring the country with me and tolerating my absences. I appreciate the commitment of his father, Ernest, for sharing the parenting every step of the way and enabling me to travel regularly. Thanks also to my climbing friends for child support at the crags from the time my son was a baby. This has allowed me to climb and travel with Zade from Montagu to Norway. Finally, we are grateful to the Mountain Club of South Africa, to which we belong, for conserving the Magaliesberg kloofs, where we spend most weekends.
From Marianne
To Oliver, my husband, who has never given me a hard time about my travels and adventures but instead always supports my ideas. I often come home in torn clothes, looking wild and scraggly, to someone keen to share my happiness.
Declaration
The authors stayed as non-paying guests at the following establishments: Welgevonden Game Reserve, Waterberg; Rhino Walking Safaris, Kruger National Park; Kosi Forest Lodge, Kosi Bay; Cedar Peak, Groot Winterhoek; Prana Lodge, Chintsa; Tsala Treetop Lodge and Tamodi Lodge, Garden Route; and AfriSki, Lesotho.
INTRODUCTION
Between us we had explored 58 countries for more than 20 years, climbing big mountains and walls, rafting rivers and camping in remote places, including in South Africa, when our editors at the Sunday Times approached us with a dream job offer: Claire researching and writing, and Marianne photographing adventure travel for Travel Weekly.
We’re in our element outdoors, and travelling is easy because we’ve been friends for a long time – good enough friends to share a toothbrush in the desert and be stuck together in roadworks for hours. We did our first trip together 10 years ago when we hardly knew each other, travelling around five countries in southern Africa in Claire’s old Suzuki, reporting on famine and HIV during the day, and driving and camping at night.
About a year into the job, we were again approached, this time by Bookstorm publishers, with another dream project: to compile our experiences into a travel book. From the initial discussion, the idea developed rapidly into this book, which gives us a chance to share our experiences of great places to visit and ways to unwind.
Working as the Girls Gone Wild team, we have been lucky to travel around South Africa and neighbouring countries for the Sunday Times since July 2011. Wild Weekends is a guide to the places and activities we would recommend from our trips. This collection describes places we chose to visit and others to which we were invited and would go back if we could.
Claire’s son has joined us on the road for regular trips for work and in our free time. Wild Weekends shows that it is possible to experience adventures with young children, whether it’s canopy gliding above waterfalls or canoeing on a lagoon. We hope readers will take ideas from this book and discover new frontiers to share with us.
Go wild!
MAP OF SOUTHERN AFRICA
Key to map
Magaliesberg
Carletonville
Johannesburg
Waterberg
Soutpansberg
Magoebaskloof
Kaapsehoop
Waterval Boven
White River
Kruger National Park
Kosi Bay
Durban
Howick & Karkloof Waterfalls
Tugela River
The Drakensberg
Harrismith
Clarens & Ficksburg
Gariep Dam & Smithfield
Prince Albert & Oudtshoorn
Four rivers: Keurbooms, Kruis, Storms & Bloukrans
Plettenberg Bay
Greater Tsitsikamma
Mossel Bay
Cederberg & Groot Winterhoek
Montagu & Simonskloof
Cape Town
Chintsa, Glengarriff & Morgans Bay
Richtersveld
Orange River & Green Kalahari
Namibia: Spitzkoppe & Swakopmund
Botswana: Makgadikgadi Pans & Central Kalahari
Botswana: Okavango Delta
Zimbabwe: Zambezi River & Vic Falls
Lesotho: AfriSki
HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
This book is divided into two sections – Weekends and Activities.
The Weekends section describes the places to go and things to do that we recommend from our travels in the last 18 months. Most destinations are easily accessible for a weekend away from one or another of South Africa’s cities – but there’s a wild weekend to suit everyone, no matter the depth of your pocket or where in the country you live.
Claire wrote most of this section (except for the Richtersveld, penned by Marianne) and so most of the opinions expressed here are Claire’s.
The Activities section introduces you to all the weird and wonderful leisure pursuits we have undertaken during these weekends away. Some activities are more demanding than others, so we have included our comments and thoughts on each activity, the places we think are most enjoyable for specific activities, as well as useful hints and tips, and information and resources. Marianne wrote most of this section except for scuba diving, snorkelling and shark diving, and we jointly penned ocean sports.
We have undertaken loads of activities, so we’ve grouped them by their base element (ocean, bush, adrenalin, and so on) and given each a logo. You can quickly see which activities might interest you by glancing at the logos at the beginning of each chapter.
PRICING GUIDE
We have created a general pricing guide for the activities and places to stay, using six numbered categories, so you can figure out what your budget will allow:
Under R150 per person
Between R150 and R300 per person
Between R300 and R500 per person
Between R500 and R800 per person
Between R800 and R1 500 per person
Over R1 500 per person
We decided to create a generic cost guide because prices change constantly, and the last thing we want is an angry Wild Weekender to chase us down because the price of canoe hire in East London has changed! Our advice is to confirm the exact pricing when booking your trip or activity.
MAGALIESBERG: SOUL SANCTUARY
In South Africa, we are lucky to have vast tracts of wilderness like the Magaliesberg, where it’s possible to be the only person boulder hopping down a tranquil gorge. The Magaliesberg ridge, which runs from Pretoria in the east to Rustenburg in the west, has kloofs on its southern and northern slopes, and the rock dates back about 2 billion years.
Climbing its ochre sandstone, in the stillness with the sun on your back, while eagles soar, is exhilarating. Resting on a ledge halfway up a climbing route, with the river far below, is the ultimate peaceful experience. When Marianne and I went hiking in Mountain Sanctuary Park on a weekday, we came across baboons, duikers and eagles – but not a single person. During weekends and holidays, however, this privately owned nature reserve gets booked out with visitors from the nearby towns of Pretoria, Rustenburg and Joburg. (Find out more about rock climbing here.)
MOUNTAIN SANCTUARY PARK
The publicly accessible areas of the Magaliesberg, such as Mountain Sanctuary Park and Fernkloof, are mostly on the north-facing side of the range. The Magaliesberg has many resorts, lodges, guest farms and game reserves where people can hike, climb, horse ride and go on game rides – which are found along a route called the Magalies Meander.
Mountain Sanctuary, which was voted among the 2012 top-10 nature reserves in the country, is deservedly one of the most popular. At more than 1 000 hectares, it is the largest privately owned nature reserve here, and guests are allowed to walk where they want, unlike many other places. The owner, Owen Sutton, who has a passion for conservation, explains that this allows guests freedom to explore, and dramatically reduces impact on the mountain, which is a very sensitive habitat. Visitors can swim in all the mountain pools and streams, with the exception of the Grotto.
The park has three hikes and a mountain-bike trail, which forms part of the Magalies Monster race.
TRAILS
The short trails lead to the Slide Pools, the Grotto and the West Pools. Children, and adults unaccustomed to hiking, will enjoy these trails. A rocky path from the rest camp leads to a sign pointing to the Slide Pools, and from there a path winds down to a river that flows over rocks into the pools.
The pools are safe for children to splash and swim in, and adults can use them as plunge pools. The Jacuzzi Pool is about 1.5 metres deep and is big enough for a few adults. The West Pools are great for swimming and, if you go upriver from the shallow rapids at the northern end, you reach the Fountain Pools. The Grotto, a cave with tree roots and a waterfall flowing through it, is cool and you almost expect to catch a glimpse of fairies in the dripping moss and shadows.
PRISTINE KLOOFS
Bordering Mountain Sanctuary Park are four kloofs controlled by the Mountain Club of South Africa: Cedarberg, Lower Tonquani, Boulder and Upper Tonquani. Permits are required to access these areas and patrols enforce this rule. Like the Mountain Sanctuary reserve, the Mountain Club is committed to looking after the veld and is strict about pollution, particularly in the rivers (the water is clean enough to drink).
Guidelines on conduct, such as staying away from nesting eagles, have been put in place to protect the wildlife. One of my friends has seen a leopard drinking at a pool in Cedarberg Kloof, and Marianne and I spotted a puff adder in Boulder Kloof. Vervet monkeys and baboons abound, and have taunted us (stolen naartjie in one paw) with their climbing prowess, of which we can only dream.
The rock climbing in the Mountain Club kloofs is excellent, with hard sandstone walls up to 150 metres high. Hanging by my fingertips trying to follow Marianne – or any of my more hard-core climbing friends – along a steep roof, or leading a route myself, is demanding but at the same time relaxing.
Climbing clears your head and the impossible becomes possible in an astonishing way. But if you don’t like heights, then bouldering – climbing smaller rocks without ropes – is another activity that allows you to try out the techniques of rock climbing without exposing you to high or long routes. The Magaliesberg has hundreds of boulders for children and adults to practise on, but be mindful, as my young son has discovered, that it’s harder to climb down than up.
SLEEPING OUT
Mountain Sanctuary has plenty of space, and in its grassy campsite, radios and other sources of noise are banned, making it a tranquil reserve. The campsite has clean ablution facilities, a swimming pool, a deck and a lapa. The pool has a shallow end popular with small children. If you want more luxurious accommodation, you can try The Feathered Nest lodge not too far away. The lodge has four open-plan cottages with verandahs. There are no TVs. Each cottage has king-size beds with diaphanous drapes, outdoor showers, baths for two and fireplaces that encourage staying indoors – despite the attractions of bush walks or sundowners at the open-air bar. The four-poster bed in the sunny Batis Cottage, on the periphery of the lodge, overlooks a waterhole that attracts wildlife and birds in summer. I liked the space and openness of this stylish room.
IF YOU GO
When to go
The Magaliesberg streams flow strongest in summer, which is the rainy season. Winters are cold at night but its blue days are perfect for hiking and climbing, and the stars are brilliant.
Contacts and rates
• For more information, visit www.magaliesburg.co.za
.
Tel 014 534 0114; web www.mountain-sanctuary.co.za
• For hiking and climbing information, visit Mountain Club of South Africa www.mcsa.org.za/jhbjoom
, with specials offered.
Tel 083 378 2735; web www.featherednest.co.za
• Go Vertical Mountaineering Adventures offers climbing (NB the authors have not tested guiding with them).
Tel 082 731 4696; email [email protected] for climbing guides
How to get there
Mountain Sanctuary Park and the other nature and game reserves are about 90 minutes’ drive from Joburg and Pretoria, and within striking distance of Rustenburg.
CARLETONVILLE: ’CHUTING THE BREEZE
Claire going for a tandem skydive
PICS: WARREN HITCHCOCK
Claire going for a tandem skydive
PIC: WARREN HITCHCOCK
THE THRILL
Somersaulting out of a plane into the clouds is pure fun. When I skydived for the first time, on a stormy Sunday, my exhilaration, unexpectedly, was not diluted by fear. The jump happened too fast to get scared. The ground was far away and I was strapped to a licensed tandem instructor with 10 years’ experience, so I felt safe.
But I did feel nervous excitement as the plane climbed nearly 3 300 metres into the sky. I told Marianne, who went skydiving as a student years ago, that it seemed like an insane activity. Nevertheless, I relaxed as soon as we exited the plane and were free-falling in the sky – our average speed was 201 kilometres per hour for the first 40 seconds. And once the parachute opened, the descent slowed suddenly to become silent and calm, until the landing.
If you want a once-in-a-lifetime rush and you can afford to go tandem skydiving, then do it: you won’t forget it. Or, even better, if you like it, do a skydiving course so you can pull the ripcord yourself.
THE JUMP
Marianne and I went to Skydive Joburg, a club near Carletonville, on a sunny morning and saw skydivers coming in to land, their parachutes bright in the sky, as we approached the drop zone. I was booked to jump at about noon and, on arrival, we met the organiser, Lizette Vermeulen. When she was starting out, Lizette packed thousands of parachutes to earn cash to fund her addiction. She introduced me to her husband, Glen, who was to be my tandem pilot. Glen, who has done nearly 3 000 jumps, says: ‘Skydiving is the coolest thing ever. It’s the best thing you can do with your clothes on. You can’t explain it to someone who has not done it.’
He explained that he would fetch me about 20 minutes before take-off, strap me into my harness and brief me on the jump. While we were waiting, the clouds mounted overhead and we had a brief storm, making me wonder if I’d get to jump that day. Luckily, the rain cleared, I