07 October 2011

Tankwa Karoo - Elandsberg, Gannaga, Leeuberg


On the map we found an unknown nature conservation area. The Tankwa Karoo National Park. Was not yet open. We waited years. This September we booked a cottage for the spring flowers .

In the Karoo, usually there is a sandy rocky river bed, with a ribbon of green winding across the landscape, as the roots reach down to hidden water. Each of our concrete bridges was marked by careful craftsmen with the year it was built. One day we’ll find mine, which I share with Steve Jobs.

Bridge over Doring River

He stopped to lower the tyre pressure. Roads are notorious. Sharp stones (we admit it’s our fault, we lost a tyre on the way to Kgalagadi!) The annuals on the plain, as far as the eye could see, were seedheads bobbing in the wind. August was different.

Remember before GPS? My father was a civil engineer, from him I learnt this is a trigonometrical survey beacon. Driving across country the beacons seem unattainable, but of course there is a road.  Elandsberg was an easy 4x4, or a long walk. From where the world drops away, dizzy making, NOT Google Earth.

Trig survey beacon on the Elandsberg

In a Henry Ford – any colour you want so long as it’s black – this magenta vygie covered the plains, poured up the mountain slopes, climbed thru the rocks. The shimmering electric colour was eye-watering. Vygies – ankle to knee high succulents, in every colour you can imagine, except blue.

Vygies, succulents, mostly magenta!

Up the Gannaga Pass. Stopped to admire skilled stone work, as we wound our way up. Modern repairs are done more simply, and less appealingly, with a slab of grey concrete. 

Gannaga Pass
?? flower

Winding back across the plain, we saw Hoodia in bloom. It was used by nomadic San/Bushman hunters against hunger and thirst. Tucked at its base, grateful for any shade, are yellow daisies. Not the same as we saw later in the Hantam NBG.

Hoodia
another yellow daisy

On the Leeuberg 4x4 trail. The road climbs up, over the bonnet is nothing but blue sky. On the crest, beyond the bonnet is an endless abyss. NOT an adrenaline junkie, I used my wide brimmed hat, looked at rocks and plants, where the world still existed. 

Leeuberg 4x4 trail in the Tankwa Karoo

Trusting the Ungardener to drive his Land Rover with skill. Deep breathe. Now we go down. And stop. For the flowers. Red and orange leaved Oxalis, a Euphorbia not the usual lime-gold but a gorgeous glowing tomato red, and Karoo violets. Where he trusted the Land Rover to STAY, good dog!

Do not adjust your set
The road really was like that

Karoo violets Aptosimum indivisum
Oxalis, Euphorbia

BUT. At the bottom of that slope was a steep V-shaped gully. Up began with a heap of loose stone. Two car lengths, and we paused to slide slowly, back, down. To the bottom, diff lock, and try again, a little faster. I hold my breath. The Land Rover does its magical moonwalk on four feet! And we climb, ponderously like an elephant.

Rock by nature above left
Fifties farm house

The rock is broken by nature into tidy rectangular geometrical pieces. Which lend themselves to building. This mud brick (adobe) farmhouse returning to the earth, was still used in the Fifties.

Old steam engine in the Tankwa

Amongst the quiver trees Aloe dichotoma, a steam engine. Quiet now.








Pictures by Jurg and Diana
words by Diana of Elephant's Eye
- wildlife gardening in Porterville,
near Cape Town in South Africa

(If you mouse over brown text,
it turns shriek pink. Those are my links.)

18 comments:

Elke said...

Hello Diana,
what an adventure this seems to be, with or without a GPS.
But the flowers are rewarding. You are so lucky to be in spring now, around here autumn has kicked in.
Hav a nice weekend!
Elke

Kyna said...

That was interesting about the Hoodia. I guess that's why they use it as an ingredient in diet pills lol

Donna said...

Diana those magenta vygies are wonderful. they caught my eye right away in the first picture. I love the petals and how airy they almost are. The lovely rocks, the steep roads take you away to a wild area where by-gone days remnants are strewn. I can imagine that steam engine chugging through the wilderness a hundred years ago. What an incredible place!!

Elephant's Eye said...

Kyna - you are right.

Esther Montgomery said...

What an intimidating landscape.

The 'do not adjust your sets' picture is immediately one of my favourites.

As a child, we'd head for trig points (in this country they were concrete narrow pyramids) because one could trust that from them there would be a good view.

The Sage Butterfly said...

I always enjoy your posts and photos. Sometimes it would seem that there is no beauty on those vast plains, but you always seem to show us the allure and charm of your surrounding area. I am always interested and find such beauty in your place to dwell. Those hills are stunning as are the plants and flowers.

HolleyGarden said...

Oh, what terrain! I would have been climbing out of my seat going down that steep mountain! But what beautiful flowers you found.

Cat said...

Love stopping by and soaking up all the beauty of your country-side. Absolutely delightful, Diana.

Elephant's Eye said...

Holley - I was too afraid to open the door and try walking. Would have had to zig-zag like a mountain goat. Leave it to the moonwalking 4x4 ;~)

Bridget said...

Sounds like an adventurous trip! Great pics...beautiful plants...so much to discover. Love the jeep!

gardenwalkgardentalk.com said...

I love that image of the steam engine. Just beautiful.

Curbstone Valley Farm said...

The mystery flower from Gannaga Pass is lovely, I wonder what it is? Glad your trusty Land Rover took you on this journey. I bet it wasn't in the least bit concerned about that steep slope. Sometimes I think we could use one here for our steep roads, especially in winter when they get mossy and slippery. The stonework in the 50s farm house is beautiful, and I love the little nest. Although the farmers are long gone, at least a little bird is still enjoying living there.

Stacy said...

After my parents retired they got a 4-wheel drive pickup that they would take through Colorado mountain passes, with strict instructions to their children "never to do what they were [having so much fun] doing." Your "do not adjust your sets" photo reminds me of them.

Somewhere I read that magenta is nature's "default" color (and nature should be applauded for that). Your vygies (Lampranthus?) look a lot like our also-South-African imported Delosperma cooperi (ice plants). Do you know how closely they're related?

Elephant's Eye said...

Stacy - Lampranthus and Delospermum are both in the mesembryanthemum family. 127 genera 1,700species.

Delospermum distribution map

Delosperma 170 species currently under taxonomic revision.

I wimp out of IDing.

Muddy Boot Dreams said...

An adventure....amazing adventure. The sheer vastness of the land is stunning.

Jen @ Muddy Boot Dreams

Firefly said...

I am quite jealous. I don't have a 4x4 hence I've never been on a trip like this one. Stunning views, beautiful flowers, lots of history, what more to you want from a trip like this?

catmint said...

Dear Diana, thank you to you and your ungardener for making this wonderful vicarious nature fix possible. The succulents are so silky I can almost feel them. cheers, catmint

Arash said...

very nice region. I like to go this kind of regions with a 4-wheel drive pickup. You had a wonderful adventure!

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