Tag Archives: picnic spots

Oribi Gorge

The deep valley of the Umzimkulwana River is one of the most spectacularly scenic areas of Kwazulu-Natal. Known as the Oribi Gorge, this haven for nature lovers and thrill seekers is located just over 20 km inland from Port Shepstone, on the Natal South Coast.

Oribi Gorge

Oribi Gorge

The Oribi Gorge Nature Reserve, under the auspices of Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife, the provincial conservation authority, was proclaimed on the 1st of April 1950 (having been protected as the Umzimkulwana State Forest since 1928). The reserve covers 1,917 hectares, the majority of which lies inside the valley of the Umzimkulwana, which meanders for a distance of almost 27km through the reserve. The gorge itself varies in width from a half to one kilometer and is up to 400 meters deep in places. Habitats in the reserve comprises mostly coastal forests, with grasslands covering the plains around the gorge, providing a safe home to a wide variety of flora, with over 500 species of plant identified, and fauna, which includes rarities like the samango monkey and blue duiker, and over 250 species of birds. Some lucky visitors even encounter leopard from time to time, or caracal like we did. Accommodation and camping is available in a small rest camp, complete with a reservoir swimming pool, while there are numerous beautiful picnic spots and view-sites along the tar road that travels down into the gorge along an old elephant path. The reserve is best explored along the many hiking trails that radiate through the gorge.

On the property of the Oribi Gorge Hotel are a number of sites, accessible for a small fee, offering spectacular views over the gorge and the river far below. It is also home base to Wild 5 Adventures, a company specialising in outdoor adventure activities. Thrill-seekers can enjoy abseiling down a cliff next to a waterfall or white-water rafting, a zipline crossing a portion of the gorge, or the highest swing in the world, at 165 meters!

At the privately owned Lake Eland Game Reserve, where accommodation and camping, and a restaurant, is available, visitors can enjoy picnics, self-drive or guided game and bird viewing, cycling, horse riding and fishing. The 80 meter long suspension bridge over a section of the gorge gets the heart racing, while the 4.5 km zipline tour, the longest in Africa, of which one section crosses 300 m across the gorge, is probably not for the faint-of-heart…

With the beaches of the South Coast less than half-an-hour’s drive away, and offering such a variety of leisure and adventure activities while surrounded by natural beauty, the Oribi Gorge definitely is an attractive holiday destination for the whole family.

The Hue of Us

Given our love for South Africa’s wild places, the earthy, natural colours would probably describe us best…

Hues

This picture was taken at Pafuri, in the far north of the Kruger National Park and we post it here in response to the latest weekly photo challenge from WordPress; “The Hue of You

Ezemvelo Nature Reserve, 13 October 2013

We spent our Sunday enjoying nature and each other’s company at Ezemvelo Nature Reserve, a new destination for us, located about 75km east of Pretoria.

Ezemvelo_13102013

We’ll share more photos and our impressions of Ezemvelo in an upcoming post.

Kruger National Park, September 2013.

Yes, we’ve been to the Kruger National Park again…

Our Heritage Day long weekend in Kruger started early, on the morning of Friday the 20th of September, waiting at Phalaborwa for the gate to open. Formalities completed, our chosen route took us along some of the less traveled gravel roads in the area to Letaba Rest Camp, where we’d spend our first night in the Park.

We spent the afternoon traversing the roads around the camp, soaking in the peaceful atmosphere and spending some time with our favourite Letaba resident, the big tusker Masthulele, and Hlahleni, one of the pretenders to the throne.

Come Saturday morning, we were on our way to Punda Maria, Kruger’s northern-most rest camp. A cold front was heading for the lowveld, and strong gusts of wind accompanied us all the way. Good sightings of elephants and some of Kruger’s rare antelope species, and a variety of other animals and birds, kept us entertained on the long drive northwards, and we arrived at “Punda”, where we were joined by Marilize’s parents and would be staying for the next three nights, just in time for the 2PM check-in time.

(We’ll dedicate a special post to Punda Maria soon – the camp and the area around it has a rich and fascinating history and plenty to offer nature lovers)

No visit to the north of the Kruger National Park would be complete without a pilgrimage to magical Pafuri. And so, despite the cold front having Kruger now firmly in its cold and wet grasp, this is where we headed on Sunday. Pafuri is a lush tropical paradise next to the Luvuvhu River, a bird watcher’s heaven, with regal nyala antelope around seemingly every corner.

That evening, a herd of elephant spent a lazy hour or two at the floodlit waterhole next to the camp fence. You’ll understand why I blame the waterhole and the hide that overlooks it for losing quite a bit of sleep this weekend – who can sleep when there’s this much action right on your doorstep!

Elephant herd at Punda Maria's waterhole

Elephant herd at Punda Maria’s waterhole

We decided to visit recently re-opened Shingwedzi on our last full day in the Park. Shingwedzi Rest Camp and its immediate surroundings was hard-hit by the January 2013 floods, and we were curious to have a look at how our favourite Kruger camp has bounced back (some photos in our “Shingwedzi after the flood” post). Along the way an extremely aggressive elephant bull showed two buses and several SUV’s exactly who is in charge of this piece of wild Africa!

Elephant roadblock on the way to Shingwedzi

Elephant roadblock on the way to Shingwedzi

The Shingwedzi area is teeming with game at the moment. We had our first ever sighting of an albino impala, and a massive eland bull spending some time in the almost dry Mphongolo River was a welcome surprise, as these large but skittish antelope are rarely seen by visitors to the Kruger Park.

Almost back at Punda Maria that evening we had a thrilling encounter with a young lion walking past a herd of elephant on the Dzundwini Loop (photo here).

See the lion?

See the lion?

Dinner was followed by some more time spent photographing Punda Maria’s nightlife instead of sleeping…

Genet, Punda Maria

Genet, Punda Maria

Milky Way

Milky Way above Punda Maria

But all good things come to an end and Kruger said goodbye with a magic sunrise on our way to Punda Maria Gate and back to Pretoria. Wouldn’t a scene like this also just convince that you need to get back here as soon as possible? Yes, we are already planning our next visit to Kruger National Park…

Punda Maria sunrise

Punda Maria sunrise

Golden Gate Highlands National Park, September 2013

We spent the weekend of the 13th to the 15th of September at our much loved Golden Gate Highlands National Park, in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of its proclamation. Here’s a gallery of photographs we took during that trip, and if you’d like to know more about this magnificent piece of South Africa, have a look at our special “Celebrating Fifty Years of the Golden Gate Highlands National Park!” post.

(click on any of the pictures to view them in a carousel gallery)

Good morning! Again!

Oh, what a beautiful morning!

Sunrise over the Allemanskraal Dam, in the Willem Pretorius Nature Reserve.

Allemanskraal sunrise

Allemanskraal sunrise

The theme for this week’s photo challenge is “Good Morning!

Midmar Dam Nature Reserve

Near the town of Howick in the Natal Midlands, and conveniently close to the N3-freeway, you will find one of Kwazulu-Natal Province’s most popular playgrounds, the Midmar Dam Nature Reserve.

Midmar Dam

Midmar Dam

Most of the visitor activity is centred on the large Midmar Dam. Being the venue for the world’s biggest open-water swimming event, the Midmar Mile, held annually in February, the public resort with its well-kept lawns is especially geared to the enjoyment of a wide variety of water sports. Along the 15km of developed shoreline are zones set aside for picnics, fishing, powerboating and yachting, and a restaurant is located near the entrance. Accommodation options ranges from camping sites to fully equipped chalets.

At full capacity the Midmar Dam covers over 1,800ha, with the land area of the reserve covering an additional 2,844ha. A section of the reserve is set aside as a game park hosting a selection of non-dangerous mammals, including the rare oribi antelope, and a wide variety of birds, including the majestic fish eagle, in natural surroundings where visitors are allowed to walk, cycle or drive around in their own vehicles.

We found Midmar an excellent base from which to explore some other wild places in the area, particularly the Queen Elizabeth Park Nature Reserve, Karkloof Conservancy and Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve, as well as the many country stalls, farms, art galleries and eateries that make up the “Midlands Meander”.

Shingwedzi after the flood

Our September 2013 trip to the north of the Kruger National Park afforded us the opportunity of visiting our favourite Shingwedzi Rest Camp for the first time following the devastating floods in January 2013.

Most of Shingwedzi has re-opened for visitors, with only some facilities, including the restaurant, remaining out-of-service – a sterling effort getting the camp up-and-running again so soon!

Revamped Shingwedzi shop

Revamped Shingwedzi shop

The view downstream from camp, to where the causeway is now buried beneath a thick layer of sand

The view downstream from camp, to where the causeway is now buried beneath a thick layer of sand

View upstream from camp, where a huge pool of water now houses hippos and crocodiles where previously there would have been nothing but sand in the dry season

View upstream from camp – a huge pool of water now houses hippos and crocodiles where previously there would have been nothing but sand in the dry season

Shingwedzi accommodation

Shingwedzi accommodation

Shingwedzi camping site

Shingwedzi camping site

Shingwedzi accommodation

Shingwedzi main building – reception, shop and restaurant

Shingwedzi accommodation

Shingwedzi accommodation

Shingwedzi camping site

Shingwedzi camping site

Driving around the area, the impact on man-made infrastructure and the natural environment was still clearly evident eight months after the flood waters of the Mphongolo and Shingwedzi Rivers swept through here in the dark of night.

Elephant at a pool in the Shingwedzi River

Elephant at a pool in the Shingwedzi River

Deep sediment deposits where the Shingwedzi burst its banks

Deep sediment deposits where the Shingwedzi burst its banks

Bent trees and shrubs along the Shingwedzi river

Bent trees and shrubs along the Shingwedzi river

What's left of the Kanniedood Dam wall. Not a single tree remain standing in the immediate area below the broken wall!

What’s left of the Kanniedood Dam wall. Not a single tree remain standing in the immediate area below the broken dam – before the flood you could not even see the wall due to the dense plantlife!

Debris, deep sand and newly formed pools of water along the course of the Shingwedzi River

Debris, deep sand and newly formed pools of water along the course of the Shingwedzi River

Nature is resilient and we have no doubt that the Shingwedzi area will remain a firm favourite for many of the Kruger faithful, the de Wets included! Have a look here to find out why we love Shingwedzi so much!

Celebrating Fifty Years of the Golden Gate Highlands National Park!

Golden Gate Highlands National Park turns 50 today!

Golden Gate Highlands National Park turns 50 today!

We’re back in Golden Gate Highlands National Park, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Park’s founding. On this special occasion, it is good to look back on the history of this magnificent piece of South Africa.

The iconic Brandwag buttress

The iconic Brandwag buttress

In December 1880 Jan van Reenen bought a farm here in the scenic Eastern Free State and, on arrival, the family found the setting sun casting a soft golden glow on the sandstone cliffs, inspiring the name “Golden Gate”.

Mushroom Rocks

Mushroom Rocks

It was in March 1962 that the then National Parks Board (today called South African National Parks) decided to set aside a piece of the Orange Free State as a national park, and the beautiful and mountainous Golden Gate was identified as the best location. By September 1962 the Government announced that portions of a number of farms have been purchased for this purpose, leading up to the official proclamation of the Golden Gate Highlands National Park on the 13th of September 1963.

Grand Golden Gate scenery

Grand Golden Gate scenery

At its inception the park covered a mere 4,792 hectares. Additional land purchases saw the Park’s size increase to 6,241 hectares in 1981 and to 11,630 hectares in 1989. The biggest expansion occurred in November of 2008, when the neighbouring Qwa Qwa Nature Reserve (originally proclaimed in 1990 by the authorities in the former homeland of the same name) was incorporated into the National Park, increasing its size to the current 32,690 hectares. Today, Golden Gate also forms an integral part of the Maloti Drakensberg Transfrontier Conservation Area – a worthy initiative linking all the conservation areas of this mountainous region that also includes the uKhahlamba Drakensberg Park in Kwazulu-Natal Province and Sehlabathebe National Park in Lesotho, amongst others.

Golden Gate Dam

Golden Gate Dam

Golden Gate features some of South Africa’s most beautiful mountain scenery, with a considerable range in altitude (between 1800 and 2850 meters above sea level) and associated climatic conditions, located as it is in the foothills of the Maloti and Drakensberg mountain ranges. Temperatures range from an extreme -12 degrees Celsius on winter nights to 33 degrees or more on summer days, with most rainfall occurring in summer (though snow falls quite frequently in winter). The Little Caledon River and Klerk Spruit are the most important watercourses in the Park, with the layered sandstone cliffs being its most recognisable feature. The plant life is mostly grassy and herbaceous (with spectacular floral displays in spring and summer), and few large woody species – the latter being mainly confined to the narrow valleys, or “kloofs” as they are known locally, and includes some exotic specimens that are being allowed to live out their lives due to their aesthetic and historic value.

Golden Gate covered in snow

Golden Gate covered in snow

Blooming grasses

Blooming grasses

Little Caledon

Little Caledon

Brandwag Buttress

Brandwag Buttress

Mountain stream

Mountain stream

The National Parks Board quickly began reintroducing various game species that occurred here historically but had been wiped out by man prior to the park’s proclamation (although some species, like grey rhebuck, mountain reedbuck, black-backed jackal and baboon, had managed to hang on). The first animals, five red hartebeest from the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park, already arrived on the 5th of May 1963. Two other notable introductions are those of the endangered oribi, a small antelope, in 1972 and 1974, and of the sungazer, an endangered girdled lizard with a characteristic spiky appearance, during 1990. Today the park protects a huge number of plant species (there’s more than 60 species of grasses alone), a remarkable variety of insects (including 78 kinds of butterfly), two indigenous species of fish, eight kinds of amphibians, 28 species of reptile, 180 kinds of birds (including endangered species like the bearded and cape vultures, and the bald ibis) and nearly 60 species of indigenous mammals, some in considerable numbers. The game count in 2011 showed the park is home to around 2,400 blesbok, 1,400 black wildebeest, 1,000 plains zebra, 1,000 red hartebeest, 700 eland and 450 springbok, to name a few.

Black wildebeest at dawn

Black wildebeest at dawn

The threatened Southern Bald Ibis

The threatened Southern Bald Ibis

Blesbok dwarfed by Golden Gate's mountains

Blesbok dwarfed by Golden Gate’s mountains

Plains zebra silhouette

Plains zebra silhouette

Cape griffons in flight

Cape griffons in flight

Plains zebra

Plains zebra

Red-winged starling

Red-winged starling

Small fry in Golden Gate

Small fry in Golden Gate

Wild flower in Golden Gate

Wild flower in Golden Gate

Plains zebra

Plains zebra

Black wildebeest

Black wildebeest

Egrets over Glen Reenen

Egrets over Glen Reenen

Secretary Bird

Secretary Bird

Serval

Serval

Golden Gate doesn’t only protect a grand and valuable variety of natural beauty though. The Park is world-renowned for the discovery of the oldest fossilised eggs, embryos and nesting sites of dinosaurs dating back 190 million years. Closer to the present, there’s a number of rock painting sites reminding us that this beautiful landscape was once the home of the Khoisan. The small van Reenen family graveyard is also worth a solemn visit. Golden Gate has seen its fair share of human conflict, and among the relics hikers may come across are the discarded remains of ammunition and weaponry destroyed during the Second Anglo-Boer War in the early 1900’s (during which some Boer women and their children opted to rather hide out in the caves of Golden Gate than face the perils of the British concentration camp at Harrismith after their farms and homesteads had been burned to the ground). Insight into the culture, traditions, history and lifestyle of the Basotho people can be gained by visiting the fascinating “living” museum at the Basotho Cultural Village. Differing from most other national parks in South Africa, a few local people, and their livestock, still inhabit portions of the Qwa Qwa section of the Park.

Herds of cattle roam to the Qwa Qwa section

Herds of cattle roam the Qwa Qwa section

van Reenen family graveyard

van Reenen family graveyard

Glen Reenen Rest Camp provided the first tourist accommodation in the fledgling park, with the first overnight guests being housed there in converted farm buildings on the 29th of September 1963. Additional accommodation was soon constructed at Glen Reenen, and camping facilities provided. Glen Reenen was extensively upgraded, expanded and renovated during 2003 and 2004 but retains its rustic charm and farm-like character. Facilities here include a fuel station and a small shop that stocks a variety of groceries and curios.

Glen Reenen

Glen Reenen

Glen Reenen

Glen Reenen

Glen Reenen

Glen Reenen

Glen Reenen

Glen Reenen

By 1968, thirty-four new self-catering chalets had been completed in the Brandwag Rest Camp below the Park’s most recognisable feature, the iconic Brandwag buttress. Work then commenced on the building of an alpine-style mountain inn to provide full service accommodation and so the Brandwag Hotel was officially opened on the 24th of March 1972. Following extensive renovations and upgrading to both the main hotel building, with its fifty-plus hotel rooms, and the chalets, this resort (complete with tennis courts and bowling greens) was renamed the Golden Gate Hotel and Chalets in 2010. Facilities now include various conference rooms, a restaurant, a coffee shop, a sports bar and a curio shop.

Golden Gate Hotel

Golden Gate Hotel

Golden Gate Hotel

Golden Gate Hotel

Golden Gate Hotel

Golden Gate Hotel

Golden Gate Hotel

Golden Gate Hotel

In the early 1980’s the Wilgenhof Environmental Education Centre came into existence, its main focus being to provide visiting school groups with a well-developed curriculum, to learn more about the value of our natural resources and the reasons for protecting the remaining few natural areas in our country and the world. Scholars are housed in dormitory-style rooms, and the facility also provides a lecture hall and kitchen.

The eight self-catering log units at the Highlands Mountain Retreat is a unique accommodation option, located at an altitude of 2200m with a magnificent view over the eastern sections of the Park, and accessible only along a narrow road leading deep into the mountains. The Highlands Mountain Retreat opened to visitors in 2005.

Highlands Mountain Retreat

Highlands Mountain Retreat

Highlands Mountain Retreat

Highlands Mountain Retreat

Highlands Mountain Retreat

Highlands Mountain Retreat

Highlands Mountain Retreat

Highlands Mountain Retreat

Following the inclusion of the Qwa Qwa nature reserve in 2008, accommodation is now also available at the Basotho Cultural Village in spacious self-catering units that resemble traditional Basotho rondawels (round thatched huts).

Basotho Cultural Village

Basotho Cultural Village

Basotho Cultural Village

Basotho Cultural Village

The restored old farmstead at Noord-Brabant offers six guests secluded, private accommodation some distance from the main road leading through the Park. All the mentioned accommodation options inside the Park are managed by SANParks and is where we prefer to stay when visiting Golden Gate, but there is a wide variety of privately owned and operated accommodation options in the towns and on the farms around the Park.

The road between Glen Reenen and Harrismith, our favourite route to Golden Gate, was paved only in the mid-1990’s and allows quick three to four hour access to the Park via the N3 motorway from Durban and the major urban centres in Gauteng. The original route to the Park leads through the towns of Bethlehem and Clarens, and is certainly the most scenic option.

Grand Golden Gate scenery

Grand Golden Gate scenery

 At the foot of Brandwag

At the foot of Brandwag

The road to Kestell

The road to Kestell

Lichens Pass

Lichens Pass

There’s a variety of outdoor activities to enjoy during a visit to Golden Gate. Horse riding has been extremely popular since the Park’s early years, as is the natural swimming pool at Glen Reenen, in a rock pool in a mountain stream (understandably the latter only during the summer months!). There’s a selection of day walks, varying in duration from one to six hours and suited to a variety of age groups and fitness levels, to enjoy, the most popular leading to the top of Brandwag Buttress. Opened in 1978, there’s also the Ribbok Hiking Trail, a 30km trail that takes two days to complete and over the length of which hikers covers a range in altitude of over 1000 meters. Up to 18 hikers can be accommodated on any given day on the Ribbok trail, where basic overnight facilities are provided in a hiking cottage deep in the mountains. Cyclists too enjoy the meandering routes through the mountains. The newly opened (2012) photographic hide at the vulture restaurant, where carcasses are provided to supplement the diets of the endangered vultures that occur here, is a highlight of any visit. Searching for the numerous game and bird species from the comfort of your own vehicle is an option definitely worth exercising, with two tarred loop roads near Glen Reenen and a gravel road to the small town of Kestell offering good sightings and magnificent views. Meriting picnic site near the park’s administrative headquarters at Gladstone is just the place to enjoy a relaxing afternoon.

Golden Gate Hotel from the top of Brandwag

Golden Gate Hotel from the top of Brandwag

Glen Reenen from the top of Brandwag

Glen Reenen from the top of Brandwag

Pony surveying the Golden Gate landscape

Pony surveying the Golden Gate landscape

Horses at the Gladstone stable

Horses at the Gladstone stables

Gladstone stables

Gladstone stables

Hiking trail

Hiking trail

Hiking trail

Hiking trail

Glen Reenen's swimming pool

Glen Reenen’s swimming pool

Vulture hide

Vulture hide

There probably aren’t very many people more in love with Golden Gate than us de Wets, but can you blame us? The Golden Gate Highlands is a spectacularly beautiful national park, one of the jewels in South Africa’s conservation crown, and may it remain so for many, many generations to come!

Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve

Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve

Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve

The Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve was established in 1976 by the Wildlife and Environment Society of South Africa. To this day it remains one of our country’s foremost environmental education centres and thousands of learners participate in a variety of courses presented here annually.

Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve

Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve

The reserve lies on the outskirts of the town of Howick in the Natal Midlands and is easily accessible from the main N3-highway. It covers an area of just 759 hectares stretching along the course of the Umgeni River below the Howick Falls (in itself worth a visit). Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve protects a variety of habitats including dense riverine thickets, open woodland, thorn-veld, grasslands and towering cliffs. Giraffe, monkeys, zebras and numerous antelope have found a home in the Umgeni Valley, and among the 270 bird species that have been recorded in the reserve are to be found raptors like the Crowned, Fish and Verreaux’s Eagles.

Reedbuck

Reedbuck

Zebra and Blesbok in Umgeni Valley

Zebra and Blesbok in Umgeni Valley

Zebra in Umgeni Valley

Zebra in Umgeni Valley

Zebra in Umgeni Valley

Zebra in Umgeni Valley

Visitors can enjoy a picnic or tackle one of the seven different walking trails of varying difficulty, fly-fishing (strictly on a catch-and-release basis), mountain biking or rock-climbing. Guided game-viewing drives are available while a gravel road (negotiable, slowly and carefully, in a standard sedan vehicle), five kilometres in length, stretches from the reserve entrance along the edge of the gorge, offering scenic views of the valley and the river below. Accommodation in the reserve ranges from the dormitories used by visiting school groups to rustic bush camps, cottages and self-catering chalets.

Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve

Umgeni Valley Nature Reserve

Howick Falls

Howick Falls