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)
DRAKENSBERG WILDERNESS PHOTOS © WILLEM PELSER
“HIS WALK IS AN ADVENTURE AND HIS DEPARTURE AN ESCAPE. HE
HAS A KIND OF TURBULENT PLEASURE, BETWEEN FEAR AND ADMIRATION”
DR.
S JACKSON
THE VALUE OF HIKING A
WILDERNESS
After a hiking trip of a few days one always return with a sense of
being refreshed and with new enthusiasm for one’s work. One feels as if one has
undergone a physical and spiritual rejuvenation. This is so because hiking does
not merely involve the movement of one’s legs – it involves the sum total of
one’s being.
Hiking helps you to
get to know yourself
Man is a
being that can be counted – he is this or that special, unique being. In our
mass society, however, man becomes a mere number, and you can list them: ID
number, student number, passport number, tax number, car registration number,
bank account number and at the end…….a grave number.
Man is
not a cypher, though. Each human being
is a unique, special creature. Each person needs time to get to know himself,
apart from getting to know the world around him. If you are always on the run
you cannot discover yourself or your unique abilities or qualities. There is no
better form of relaxation which can promote the “turning inwards” than hiking
in the wilds. The restful manners in which this type of recreation is practiced
and the environment in which it is done are perhaps the most important reasons
for this.
Hiking will allow you
to breathe again
Man does
not only have a spatial dimension, i.e. inhabit a specific space. He also
experiences space – or the lack of it.
Many
people’s living space has nowadays become very limited: an office by day and a
room in a flat by night. Some become so used to it that they develop a fear of
open spaces when they drive through vast open landscapes. Others, who were used
to more space, suffer from persistent claustrophobia.
It can
also be dangerous when one begins to experience the small space in which one
finds oneself every day as the real world. Physical, spatial limitations can
add to spiritual impoverishment.
If you
have ever been tempted to think of yourself as being something special, look up
to the heavens and reflect on the following: You are not even a speck on the
face of the earth. The earth itself in turn, is an insignificant almost burnt
out planet of an unimportant star floating in the immeasurable distances of
space. The distances are so enormous that they are not measured in kilometers
but in light years.
These
spaces are so enormous that they threaten to overwhelm one completely.
Fortunately we do not experience these distances, which completely surpass our
limited intellects, in this way when we are out in the open at night marveling
at the beauty of the stars. The small amount of space that we can experience is
just enough to let us breath again.
Hiking brings you to
life, real life
Together
with the animal man rises above grass, flowers, and trees, because man also has
senses. Man is a physical being, who can hear, see, small, taste, and touch.
Plants do not have these senses and therefore cannot experience pain or joy.
Psychologically
hiking allows a renewal of one’s humanity. It teaches you to realize anew the
privilege of having these senses and to be able to use them. Somebody has
rightly observed that “Nature is filled with wonderful things which are
patiently waiting for our senses to be sensitized to them.”
You are filled
with a child’s sense of joy and wonder that you have eyes to drink in the
beauty of color and line.
Sit down
quietly for a moment, and you will hear sounds which have never penetrated your
awareness. In the wilderness, where the silence is almost tangible, there is
always the rustling whimper of the wind or the noise of a stream – talking to
itself to exorcise the solitude!
In the
wilderness you discover that you still have a nose. Hike through the forest and
grasslands and smell all the herbs growing wild around you.
You feel
the scorching sun and the bite of the cold.
What you
eat tastes good again. To hike literally adds savor to your life.
So-called
modern, civilized people have to be taught how to use their senses again. This
does not happen by itself – it is an art which our primitive ancestors knew far
better than we do nowadays.
Furthermore,
one acquires self-control, discipline, and perseverance on the hiking trail.
This is
apart from the fact that most of us – often unconsciously – carry excess
baggage of emotional tensions and stresses. Hiking purifies you of this and
creates a new sense of balance.
Hiking makes you think
clearly
In spite
of what evolutionism wishes to teach, man is not simply a highly-developed
primate. Apart from the facets already mentioned man has at least nine more
dimensions, which make him tower above the animal. His reasoning ability does
not only differ a little from that of animals – it is totally different.
Not much
can be said about the value of hiking for our intellectual ability – why do you
think philosophers and other learned people liked walking so much? You have
probably experienced this personally. Perhaps you have also sat struggling with
a problem for hours, finally to give up and go for a walk around the block. The
result? You are suddenly able to think clearly again – problem solved!
A hiking
trip is not only good for one’s legs but also for one’s brain. Apart from which
it also gives you a new perspective on matters. And it is important to retain
perspective because however interesting our work might be, we easily fall into
a glum and monotonous routine.
The End.
Safe Hiking.
References and Acknowledgements
From the
book – the enchanting world of the Drakensberg Mountains –
B vd Walt
Photos – Willem
Pelser
Compiled by Willem
Pelser
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