A Baviaanskloof journey

April 2008


Great Walk in Tsavo, Kenya

Eden to Addo Mega-Hike

Machampane Wilderness Trail

The Whale Trail

Helderberg Hike

Tsitsikamma Trail

Boosmansbos

Oorlogskloof

Cederberg - Wuppertal to Algeria

Cederberg - Crystal Pools

Nyalaland Wilderness Trail

Sweni Wilderness Trail

The Wolhuter Wilderness Trail

The Wolhuter Trail -  again (by Peter Groves)

Napi Wilderness Trail

Metsi-Metsi Wilderness Trail

Groot Winterhoek

Jonkershoek


Self-drive, overland safari to Namibia

Botswana - Zimbabwe   lodge and canoe safari

A Kruger safari


Sea kayaking


Book African walking tours and walking safaris


Contact me

 

 
Ralph Pina now has his own website. For more up-to-date information on his travels, please visit www.ralphpina.com
 

An essential element of our Eastern Cape road-trip in April was to spend time in the Baviaanskloof again. The kloof was probably the most memorable section of the 400+km Eden to Addo mega-hike that I had done in 2006. We tackled it from east to west this time, only to discover that jeep tracks that were easy to walk were quite another matter for my high-clearance, 4x2 bakkie (don't try it in a car!). The mega-reserve section up Combrink Pass across the Pisgoedvlakte plateau down to Rooihoek is only about 45km, but it took 2.5 hours. Granted, that included numerous stops to take in the breathtaking views.

You can download the Google Earth track of our Baviaanskloof journey, with geo-tagged photos, or view it in the 3-D map below:

Since the hike, black rhinos have been introduced into the reserve east of Geelhoutbos and this camp was being refurbished. The mega-reserve interpretation centre at the eastern end of the kloof should be worth a visit, but had been damaged by fire when we were there. The mega-reserve is taking shape and to quote the Wilderness Foundation:

The Baviaanskloof area is one of three areas in the Cape Floral Kingdom (CFK) that have been identified for mega-reserve status (an area of > 400 000 ha in extent) by the strategic bioregional conservation initiative, Cape Action for People and the Environment (C.A.P.E).

The rationale of the C.A.P.E proposal to establish mega-reserves in the Cape Floral Kingdom is founded on the need to adequately provide for the conservation of ecological and evolutionary patterns and processes. A mega-reserve is the name that has been used to describe such a landscape-wide conservation intervention.

Rooihoek rainbow
Rooihoek rainbow

The highlights of this trip were camping under a threatening sky at an almost deserted Rooihoek, and staying in Just-for-Two cottage at Matjiesfontein. Matjiesfontein is owned by an enterprising young couple who have turned the farm into a retreat and a venue for eco-building courses and other activities. Through their Another Way Trust, they are empowering the local community by helping to establish sustainable, rural community-driven enterprises in bee-keeping and tourism, amongst others.

A tourism project that caught my eye was the Carnivore Camera Trails Project which proposes to establish day hikes to remote, motion-triggered research cameras that will be used by conservation authorities to record the movements of various carnivorous species, including the elusive and persecuted Baviaanskloof leopards. The project will finance the cameras and establish a community tourism business centred around guiding, trail maintenance and accommodation.

Click on the photos below to view them in various sizes

A study

Tunnel of light

Just-for-two cottage
Hartebees on Pisgoedvlakte
Rainbow at Rooihoek
View to Couga
Kloof walk
Entering the forest kloof
Cottage
Near Rooihoek
Mega-reserve interpretation centre
Combrink Pass
Baviaans stride
Behold the Baviaanskloof
Baviaanskloof pass
Rooihoek swim

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Photos by Ralph Pina
  GE fly-through by Ralph Pina using a Garmin Foretrex 101 Wrist-mounted GPS Navigator