Sunday 27 March 2022

Touring South Africa's National Parks, and Goodbye to Africa

After a couple of long days driving across northern South Africa we arrived at Kuruman where we took the road north towards the Botswana border, driving through the coal mining town of Hotazel.
After 9 years of drought with farmers struggling to feed their cattle September saw heavy rain, and the Kuruman River flooded the tiny community of Vanzylsrus, the first time the river had flowed in many years. A lovely drive along the dirt road parallelling the river to the main road to the Kgalaghdi National Park. >Needing some rest before our four nights in the park we camped at the Kgalaghadi Meerkat Sanctuary, a few tens of metres from the Botswanan border. The campsite is set back from the road in undeveloped Kgalaghadi dunes offering complete peace and quiet. Though very hot in the day, the night sky was fantastic. A New Moon meant the Milky Way was spectacularly clear, with stars visible right down to the horizon. After a rest day we entered Kgalaghadi National Park and made our way north along the Nossob River valley, no water in the river.
Although there were not the large herds of antelope you often see in the Kruger, probably as the plentiful rains meant they could graze away from the waterholes, we saw a large flock? of Ostrich with a couple of adults and around 30 adolescents. Just before we reached a picnic site for lunch we we delighted to spot three cheetah resting in the shade of a tree. Our first wild cheetah on this trip! We spent half an hour watching as they viewed game around them, but were clearly not that interested as it was too hot.
Continuing towards Nossob campsite we pulled into the closest waterhole to find a pack of bloated spotted hyaena resting near to a gemsbok carcass. One or two were half heartedly gnawing at the carcass, but all were clearly well fed. An early start the next morning saw us follow a convoy of cars along the only road north, where most of them stopped at a group of three lion near a waterhole. 20 minutes later we spied three bat eared foxes still out foraging as the sun had not yet gained its heat, and we were entertained by a goshawk which flew down beside the van and captured a snake in its claws. We had a grandstand view as it managed to eventually grab the snake behind the nexk in its beak, and then swallowed it whole.
Reaching the picnic site we pulled in to be told by a new arrival that a male lion was right beside the road just a few kms away, so we delayed breakfast and headed to the spot. Sure enough a male and female lion were right by the road, the male lying down in the shade of a small tree, and clearly not wanting to move, so just gazed at us.
After 10 minutes we left him in peace and headed north to the junction of Botswana Namibia and South Africa, stopping to watch three more cheetah under a tree not far from a carcass being demolished by a group of vultures. Turning round to head back to Nossob Camp we checked on the lion, and some 3 hours later he had not moved, though did so after we sat beside him for 10 minutes. Over the following couple of days we roamed the roads in the park, amazed by the verdant green of the Auob valley, but saw few animals. We missed seeing elephant and hippo, which are absent from the Kgalaghadi NP as it is too dry. One special sighting just before we left was a lone brown Hyaena walking beside the track.
Animals are not the only attarction in South Africa and we spent the next few weeks visiting some of the other National parks. Augrabies NP is sited where the Orange River cascades 60m down over a granite waterfall into an 18km long gorge.
Rock dassies inhabit the rocks while the river thunders past with extraordinary power. In spate the riwaterfall carries has one of the highest volumes of water in the world. Trails run along the river to stunning viewpoints, but are only really possible in the early morning before the sun raises the temperature into the 40's.
A visit to the Namaqua NP on the west coast provided a real contrast in temperature, with cold misty and windy mornings. Although not the main flower season there was still an impressive array of flowering plants. A thuderstorm just before we arrived resulted in dry rivers flowing and in places flooding the roads, and the morning we left the park a storm was approaching the coast with some impressive 4m waves crashing onto the rocky shore.
Inland are the beautiful Cederberg Mountnains, where we spent a few days enjoying some of the trails, and one steep climb up to the Wolfberg cracks, narrow passageways between towering cliff faces leading onto the plateau near Wolfberg Peak. Some stiff rock scrambling rewarded us with spectacular views across the Cederbergs.
The Stadsaal caves further down the valley are extraordinary wind eroded sandstone formations where you can wander through the arches and openings and climb on the outcrops for stunning views. Nearby is a San Rock art site with 1000 yr old paintings of elephant. South east are large fruit growing areas where thousands of pickers were busy bringing in the apple harvest, before we entered the dry plains of the Karoo, where we spent a couple of days in the Karoo NP. Huge clouds of locust swarmed across the fields and crashed against the windscreen as we drove - a result of the good rains they have received this year.
Headimg south we passed through a beautiful gorge in the limestone Swartberg mountains and dropped down to green farmland. Cango caves in this PreCambrian limestone are a series of beautiful chambers worn from the rock, with spectacular Stalagmites and Stalactites formed over millions of years, and carefully illuminated. Some of the best calcite formations we have seen.
The final week of our travels saw us visit Bontebok NP, where the Bontebok antelope was rescued from extinction when the last 27 animals were provided with protection. There are now hundreds across several parks - a real success story. De Hoop is one of the parks with a sizeable population and we enjoyed walking the shore which is backed by huge white sand dunes. Cape Aghulas is the southern most point of Africa where the Indian and Atlantic Oceans meet. It is not spectacular, just a low rocky shoreline, but significant geographically. Boardwalks and a large three dimensional map of Africa add some interest. The last few days are being spent in an apartment while we empty and clean the van prior to it being shipped to Canada where we hope to continue our travels in July.

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