Quathlamba
“A
mass of Spears. Named thus by the Zulu warriors before the white man came.
Today called the Drakensberg, Mountains of the Dragon, a name given by the
Voortrekkers. Evocative names, both equally applicable to South Africa’s
mightiest mountain range with its spear-like peaks – reminiscent of the
saw-toothed spine of a gigantic dragon.”
Panorama April 1966This blog is all about the Drakensberg Mountains and its Wilderness area, South Africa. I have lost my heart and soul to this area and every single time I hike these mountains, I stand in awe all over again at this magnificent beauty.
"How often in the course of our travels through Kwazulu-Natal do we stop and gaze at the beauty of a distant range of mountains? The Drakensberg stands as a monument to one of the greatest cataclysms the Earth has experienced. As you approach the mountains, you realize why early Zulus called it "Quathlamba", meaning “Barrier of Up-pointed Spears". A cradle of rivers. Listen to the streams as they gurgle from their cradles and you will hear the story of the mountains. You will hear fascinating tales if only you listen! Lie next to a stream and listen to the song of the mountains. The smiling faces of the flowers, dancing in the wind. Venture into the remote valleys or stand on a peak at sunrise or sunset, after snow has fallen, and you will hear a song that you will never forget - the Song of the High Mountain". (DA Dodds)
Hiking adventures, hiking gear reviews, day walks, accommodation, books, articles and photos, all related to these magnificent mountains will feature here.
Should you want to accompany me on a hike or need some information or advice, please make contact with me. I hope you enjoy the articles.
Please visit the archive for some more interesting stories, photos and reviews.
Available in the Archive
(Do read it!)
1) Injasuthi to Lotheni
- Epic 6 Day Hike
2) Review: Hi-Tec
Altitude Pro RGS Hiking Boots
3) Drakensberg
Wilderness Hiking - 14 Day Hiking trip - Lotheni Reserve (Part 3)
4) Lotheni - 14 Day
Hiking Trip (Part 2)
5) Lotheni - 14 Day
Hiking Trip (Part 3)
6) The Bushmen of the
Drakensberg
7) Thunderstorms in the
Drakensberg Mountains
8) Before setting out on a hike………..
9) Cathkin Peak – Drakensberg
10) Why backpack and
multi-day hiking
11) Safety in the
Drakensberg
12) In the Shadow of
Cathedral Peak
13) Injasuthi – ‘well
fed dog’
14) Lotheni Reserve
15) Garmin eTrex 10
& 20 Specs and Review
16) The birth of the
Drakensberg – The Ancient Rocks
17) Drakensberg
Mountains – Rock Art
18) Drakensberg
Mountain Reserve Accommodation
19)
Drakensberg – Mkhomazi Area – Hikers Paradise
20)
Drakensberg – Hiking Kamberg – Highmoor - Kamberg, Exploring the Mooi
River Valleys
21)
Chelmsford Nature Reserve
22)
Bushmen Art – Deep in a Mooi River Valley
23)
Missing in the Drakensberg Mountains – Dragon’s Wrath
24)
Hiking Food and Clothes
25)
Wilderness Hiking Gear
26)
Thendele Walks – Royal Natal Reserve
27)
Mhkomazi Wilderness, Drakensberg – 7 Day
hike – A photo journey
27) Lesotho and the Natal Drakensberg – Fire
of the Dragon
Photos please make contact with the author, Willem Pelser.
“these mountains of up-pointed
spears
hold eland, oribi and rhebok
CAPERING OVER YELLOW ROCK
TO SANDSTONE CAVES THAT FORM A
BARRIER
ACROSS THIS SWEEPING MOUNTAIN
RANGE
DESPITE CENTURIES CHANGE
STILL REMAINS A KIND OF HUNT,
ELIMINATING FEAR AND CANT.”
ALLEN ROSS
LESOTHO AND THE
NATAL DRAKENSBERG
FIRE OF THE DRAGON
Some 160 million years ago, huge flows of lava poured out of the fissures in
the ground in quick succession. They probably reached as far as the present coastline
of Kwa-Zulu Natal and individual outpourings varied from e few centimeters to
many meters thick.
After about 20 million years the flows
stopped and the resulting basalt has since been eroded back at a rate of about
one centimeter every five years. It is fairly resistant and forms not only the
high prominence's of the main range and the Lesotho Highlands, but also the hard
capping of the Little Berg. Once this cover has been removed, the sandstone
erodes rapidly, as is seen in the steep valleys and gorges that cut into the
Drakensberg.
Therefore this is not a mountain range to
the usual sense, but a high escarpment being subjected to downward and headward
erosion.
Millions of years of erosion have pushed
the high cliffs back and left many outlying pinnacles, buttresses and ridges,
detached from the main escarpment but of the same spectacular height. The humbling
scale of the Drakensberg is not experienced anywhere else in southern Africa:
when one thinks of mountains here, it is the Drakensberg’s grandeur that first
comes to mind.
The main rim of the escarpment averages 3 000 meters above sea level, rising
to 3482 meters near the top of Sani’s Pass, where stands Thabana Ntlenyana, the
highest point in Africa south of the equator. To the north-east the highest
peaks on the Drakensberg watershed are Mafadi Peak behind Injasuthi Buttress,
at 3 459 meters, and Champagne Castle behind Cathkin Peak, at 3 374 meters
above sea-level.
From the watershed the Lesotho Plateau dips
over broken mountain country steadily down to the west, where it is bordered by
the Maluti Mountains.
Resting like a crown
on the high tableland, it forms a natural fortress in which lives a pastoral
nation in relative isolation from the rest of the world.
A rough stone
hut shelters Basotho shepherds
This nation, the Basotho, was brought
together by Moshesh out of the turmoil of the ‘forced migrations”, when as well
as Mzilikazi other chiefs fled westward from Shaka’s wrath. Among these were
the Matiwane, whose Amangwane tribe decimated the peaceful Mzizi clans in the
Little Berg. In turn the Batlokwa, led by the indomitable Mantatisi, plundered
the area to the west.
Mantatisi, a tall,
straight, lean woman, reputedly of exceptional intelligence, was utterly
insensitive to human suffering and soon became one of the most feared leaders
in these violent times. Ousted from her territory, she led her way up the
Caledon Valley among the sandstone foothills of the Maluti range.
The weaker tribes were continually attacked
and their cattle and crops pillaged. The country was plunged into despair as
slaughter and famine increased; refugees drifted aimlessly across the land in
search of food and shelter. No crops grew along what had been valleys of
plenty, no herds grazed peacefully in the pastures. Starvation eventually drove
people to devour their slain enemies, then their fallen comrades, and later
their own family members who succumbed to the ceaseless trekking.
Makers of
traditional hats – Lesotho
Cannibals formed themselves into hunting bands
that went out raiding for fresh supplies. Surviving members of the
once-peaceful Bafokeng, the ‘mist people’, became such vicious hunters that
even today they are known as ‘Marima’, the ‘cannibals’.
Most of the cannibals fled into the
mountains and occupied the sandstone caves that had once been the homes of the
Bushmen. At Mamates the largest caves in Lesotho were once the haunt of the
dreaded chief Rakotswane, while caves near Mo’hale’s Hoek are still called
Cannibal Caves. Ten years after the end of strive and unrest, French
missionaries found abundant sheep, cattle and crops for the people along the
Caledon Valley, but still they were living as cannibals.
Meanwhile, Moshesh had
gathered many refugees on the Thaba Bosiu and welded together a new tribe,
known as the Basotho. Later, when the Basotho came into conflict with white men
over border issues, neither Boer or British forces could dislodge Moshesh and
his people.
Old lady
grinds maize
The first known inhabitants of Lesotho were the Bushman hunter-gatherers of
whose past we know so little and yet whose passing is so deeply regretted. Cannibalism,
continued tribal wars and finally the onslaught of the white settlers caught
the Bushmen in an ever-closing trap and they were mercilessly hunted and
exterminated. This Late Stone Age culture, which has survived into the Space
Age in some remote places, was incessantly victimized because its ways were not
understood, its understanding of nature not appreciated and because the Bushmen
‘refused to be tamed’.
It is not known how long the Bushmen dwelt in the sandstone caves of the
Little Berg, but for many centuries this was a paradise where they lived in
harmony with bird and animal, snake, flower and stone. They grew no crops and
domesticated no animal, yet lived among the plants and beasts with an intimate
knowledge of all they saw. They inoculated themselves against snake bite and
knew every poison and delicacy in their environment. Modern science is often at
a loss to explain what the Bushmen took for granted. Long before European
culture knew about the moons of Jupiter, the Bushmen told stories of them: the
stars were the campfires of departed souls that wandered across the heavens,
forever hunters of the skies.
They told of when the land had been flat
marshland – as we know it was millions of years before their time, in the days
of dinosaurs.
Bushman
Painting – Kamberg area
With all their knowledge these diminutive
hunter-gatherers had the simplicity and cheerful disposition of children, were
generous souls who denied material possessions and upset nothing in the
ecological balance of their surroundings. Most interesting, though, was their
love of dancing, story-telling, and, of course, painting. The last Bushmen
known to have been shot in the Drakensberg, in 1866, was one of their artists;
around his waist was found a leather belt on which hung ten antelope horns
containing the various pigments used to adorn cave walls. The Bushman paintings
found in southern Africa exceed all other cave paintings in the world in both
quality and quantity – and nowhere more so than in the Drakensberg. An artist
who studied and loved their work, Professor Walter Battiss, said: ‘No artist
has said more, saying less.’
Lanner Falcon
Although today we
marvel at the way in which the Bushmen bridged the gap between human reasoning
and the instinctive behavior of animals, the chauvinism of the white colonists
regarded these children of the earth as savages, wild and hardly human. The
ploughs and guns, the herds and horses of the white invaders tore up the
Bushman’s Eden. By 1890 there were no known survivors in the Drakensberg or
Lesotho, although years later signs of their presence were still occasionally
found. In 1903 the Giant’s Castle Game Reserve was proclaimed, and one wonders
how, if they had survived for a few more decades, the Bushmen would have fitted
into the nature reserves of today, for their wise use of the land and its
resources seemed instinctive. They apparently destroyed nothing but for their
survival and there is evidence to suggest they practiced controlled
veld-burning in the Drakensberg to rotated the feeding patterns of the wild
animals, an example of ‘agriculture’ advanced for Stone Age man. It has been
observed how well they tended the delicate Little Berg, while invasions by both
black and white farmers soon led to overgrazing, ploughing, tree-felling and
excessive veld-burning.
The Little Berg cannot take much abuse. Even the paths made by hikers in the
more popular trail areas are taking a heavy toll of the thin and slippery
ground cover. In an attempt to conserve the natural resources of the
Drakensberg, it was proposed that the area be divided into four land use zones.
Protection of these zones is not enforced by legislation and they are still
open to misuse.
The first zone, the Wilderness Heart, extends from the top of the Little
berg to the watershed and, being ecologically fragile, should be managed
primarily for water conservation. The slopes and valleys of the Little Berg
make up the Landslide zone, the most fragile of all. Below this, the Trail zone
has great scenic and ecological diversity and is suitable for hiking and horse
riding on constructed paths. Although the zoning allows for only rustic
accommodation, plans have been mooted to develop luxury resorts in this area.
Finally, the Threshold zone allows more intensive land use in the form of
agriculture and the provision of accommodation.
The vegetation of the main Drakensberg range, between the Amphitheater in
the north and Giant’s Castle in the south, is determined mainly by altitude and
orientation to the sun. At higher altitudes the range of temperature extremes
increases and the vegetation becomes shorter and hardier. Likewise, north- and
east- facing slopes receive more sunshine than south- and west-facing ones, and
this too influences plant development. Forests are more prevalent on the cooler
slopes and in the damp, shady gorges, while protea savannah occurs at the same
altitude but on the slopes receiving more sunshine.
Fire has had considerable influence on the
Drakensberg’s vegetation and the larger, exposed trees are most vulnerable.
Grasses are better equipped to survive the ravages of veld fires as their
growing points are at ground level. Fire, therefore, has tended to maintain the
extensive grasslands while checking the advance of woody plants and besieging
the trees and tall bushes in protected areas. In the sub-Alpine belt, which is regularly
subjected to fire, certain woody plants such as the mountain cedar and the
Erica-like Philippia evansii have managed
to re-establish themselves only after a period of more than 20 years
undisturbed by fire. In previous times they and the forests probably covered a
far greater area than they do today.
Mountains have many moods which can change
significantly in moments. Winter shows the Drakensberg’s finest face when snow
blankets its surfaces and powders its slopes. Erica's burst their living
greenery through the powder, and icicles hang from the cave and rock lips. The
chill pierces deep into all living things, but the freshness is thrilling to
the well-prepared visitor as the frozen ground crunches and crackles underfoot.
This is when avid mountaineers pack their bags and head for the hills.
The Outer
Pinnacle
During the glorious summer months it is
a stirring experience to sit on the edge of the escarpment enjoying the
panorama below, and to watch one of the frequent angry storms that begin in the
valleys and move up the slopes of the range. The weather changes suddenly and
wild, billowing clouds shroud the peaks, breaking in furious dark waves over
the cliffs. Whips of lightning that crack into the basalt spires are enough to
make a hardened sinner repent, and it is not unusual to hear the resounding
crack as boulders and overhangs give way and plummet to the valley below.
No-one should
venture into the Drakensberg without sufficient food, warm and waterproof
clothing, bedding and preferably a lightweight tent. Even experienced
mountaineers have perished here through miscalculations or misfortune. Only 70
years ago it was believed that to be benighted on top of the Drakensberg would
mean certain death.
The mountains may be kind and beautiful to those who abide by their demands,
but are cruel and relentless to those who flaunt them.
Safe Hiking.
The End.
Willem
Pelser – The Mountain Man
Acknowledgements and References
Extract and
photos from the book ‘Mountains of Southern Africa’ – D. Bristow and C. Ward
Bushman Painting –
Kamberg Area –
Photo by Willem Pelser
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