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 1966
“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)
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“GO OUT ALONE ON THE HILLS AND LISTEN,
YOU WILL HEAR MUCH,
THE WIND AND THE STREAMS TELLS STORIES,
ALONE AMIDST NATURE,
A MAN LEARNS TO BE ONE WITH ALL AND ALL WITH ONE”
FLOWERS
OF THE DRAKENSBERG
WILDERNESS
The Drakensberg and its Wilderness is a forbidding,
awe-inspiring territory caught amongst the mist and clouds of basalt peaks
where waterfalls turn to columns of ice in winter. Long familiar to herdsmen
and mountaineers, the area is largely inaccessible and still considered terra incognita by botanists.
The plants may differ with every fold of the
mountains, with every change in altitude, aspect, drainage, from one valley or
peak to the next, clinging to cracks in rock faces, taking hold in basalt
gravels or floating in shallow rock pools on the summit.
The dramatic broken landscape of the escarpment and
the harsh climatic conditions on the highlands of Lesotho account for the
remarkable diverse plant life with about 2200 species and almost 400 endemics
(plants found only in this area and nowhere else in the world).
The flora of these high mountains has been
recognized as one of the world’s ‘hot spots’, a centre of plant diversity of
global botanical importance.
Although the interior is exposed and windswept, its marshes, mires and sponges are the watershed of southern Africa, giving rise to rivers that flow to two oceanopposite sides of the continent, the Atlantic and the Indian.
The summit of the Drakensberg, which averages an
altitude of 3000m, forms an almost inaccessible boundary between Lesotho and
South Africa, with sheer cliffs falling 1200m in places. This beautiful area
can be very bleak until the plants respond to rain and warm summer temperatures
with a burst of colour, flowers carpeting the sheet rock and marshy ground on
the summit.
The grasslands
can be transformed into fields of flowers in response to fires, often started as
a result of lightning (the area has the highest strike rate in southern
Africa). People also use fire to bring on new grass for grazing.
May of
the Drakensberg and Lesotho plants are already well known to gardeners in the
northern hemisphere. Some were introduced to horticulture in Britain and Europe
by intrepid explorers and collectors as long ago as the late 1800’s. Although
mostly unknown in gardens of southern Africa, many plants are popular and
available to gardeners in Europe, Britain, USA and Japan, while horticultural
hybrids and cultivars abound.
A note of
caution to both the professional and the amateur plant collector – feast on
these plants with your eyes and your senses only. Growing them can be difficult
and, more importantly, they are protected by the nature conservation laws of
South Africa. You may not collect plants without a permit.
In 2000,
the uKhahlamba-Drakensberg area was proclaimed a World Heritage Site for its
rich diversity of plant and animal life, spectacular natural landscape and
outstanding San rock paintings. Africa’s greatest concentration of rock art is
to be found in the caves and overhangs of these mountains, with more than 600
recorded sites containing over 40000 images. The area is recognized as one of
the world’s few sites that meets the criteria for both natural and cultural
properties.
The region
was formed by massive volcanic activity in the Jurassic period resulting in
basalt lavas covering most of the plateau and the upper face of the escarpment
with dolerite intrusions. It overlays the softer Cave Sandstone which is
exposed as cliffs and overhangs below the escarpment and in great wind-sculpted
boulders in the south.
The soils
are black, very rich; thin on the summit plateau, deeper on the foothills. In
summer the soils on the summit are often waterlogged. In winter they freeze
every night. The freeze and thaw heaves the soil and stones making it an
unstable habitat for plants. This activity also causes the crescent-shaped
scars on the mountain slopes lower down.
The friend
of nature who wants to get to know and experience the region at its best, must
come here high or late summer when the richly coloured splendour of flowers
unfolds most abundantly, then, like the Cape Flats in spring, this stunning and
melancholy land, too, resembles a lovely garden, a more beautiful one than
could hardly be imagined.
The End.
Safe Hiking.
References and Acknowledgements
Photos – W Pelser
Compiled by - W Pelser – Information from “Mountain Flowers – Elsa Pooley”.
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