Saturday, 27 July 2024

Drakensberg - Langalibalele Pass

 FOR YESTERDAY IS BUT A DREAM, AND TOMORROW IS ONLY A VISION: BUT TODAY WELL LIVED MAKES EVERY YESTERDAY A DREAM OF HAPPINESS, AND EVERY TOMORROW A VISION OF HOPE”

UNKNOWN







Drakensberg  
Langalibalele Pass


Giant’s Castle Peak has at various times been considered the second, third, fourth, even fifth highest peak in South Africa. It is certainly one of the highest and made more impressive by standing proud on a 4-km-long knife-edge that forms a hinge for the entire Drakensberg. As such it is possibly the most obvious reference point of all. In fact it is only the 12th highest peak, depending on how you define ‘peak’. If by ‘peak’ we mean completely free-standing, then Giant’s Castle could be argued to be the highest one in South Africa, but only the 12th highest point. Semantics: it’s high enough when you climb it.



Route:  From the rest camp up Langalibalele Ridge to the Contour Path, and then to the left up one branch of the Bushman’s River.

Distance:  9 km one way.

Duration:  5 to 6 hours.

Grade: Severe to extreme.

General:  This grading might appear to make this pass tougher than Bannerman but that’s only because of the different starting points. You could quite easily walk from the rest camp up this pass and back in a day, with a light day pack.



   From the rest camp take the Main Caves path down to cross the Two Dassie Stream, then head right below the main caves on the marked Giant’s/Langalibalele route. Where the Giant’s Ridge path heads off to the left up a knoll, keep right up the main Bushman’s River Valley, and head for Grysbok Bush. The path follows the course of the river for a little over 1.5 km, where it splits into side gorges first to the left, then to the right.


   The path crosses the Bushman’s River and then proceeds, not up the river any more but climbing the nose of the ridge, to the right above Grysbok Bush. It’s an unrelenting 2 km climb, with the steepest section right I the middle and then easing off towards the Contour Path.



   You will almost certainly want to stop here to catch your breath and gird your loins for the final assault. Again the path begins up the spur, following it as it curves round to the left, and then actually contours for a few hundred meters to the river. The Bushman’s is then crossed and from there to the summit the path follows the ramp-like, more flattened left-hand side of the gully.



   This is still a well-used route over the Drakensberg and you are advised not to camp near the head of the pass or down the Langalibalele Valley in Lesotho, as thievery has occurred. Either head up to Bannerman Cave (turn sharply up the valley to the right and near the top take a diagonal course up and across to the left- the cave is about 1 km to the left and 100 m higher than the top of this valley), head down, or traverse south along the Escarpment. You could do a round trip up this pass and down Bannerman, overnighting in Bannerman Cave or hut. The more attractive round-trip is why a one-way distance only is give. It is a beautiful but severe walk.


We as hikers, explorers, and adventurers have the absolute duty to respect and protect our Wildernesses. Nobody else will do it for us. Take ownership!



The End.

Safe Hiking.


 













References and Acknowledgements

From the book – “Best Walks of the Drakensberg” – D Bristow

Photos:  ©W Pelser


Compiled by:  Willem Pelser



Saturday, 13 July 2024

IN THE SANI PASS - DRAKENSBERG

 “I AM AN EXPLORER OF MY OWN FEAR, HOPES, DREAMS, AND POSSIBILITIES. IN REALITY MY ACTIVITY IS NOTHING BUT A PASSION FOR LIMITS.”

UNKNOWN



  
IN THE SANI PASS
DRAKENSBERG

Up the valley of the Mkhomazana River, the classic pass from KZN to the summit of the basalt island finds its way. This pass, known as Sani (pass of the Bushmen), was used from early times. It climbs through singularly wild country, full of memories of rustlers, renegades, and many vicious fights when vengeance-seeking tribesman and farmers encountered bands of the wiry little Bushmen cattle thieves.

   Long files of pack mules and donkeys still make their weary way up this pass, while Sotho horseman in their blankets and straw hats ride their hardy ponies to the most improbable heights.

   South of the Sani Pass stand the twin Hodgson’s Peaks, 3257 m high, named after a farmer accidently killed there while on a punitive raid against Bushmen rustlers. They act as reminders of past days of hard riding and misadventure.




   The Drakensberg continues southwards, its unbroken line of cliffs looking down on a sweeping stretch of farming community. The foothills are a pattern of maize fields, sheep and cattle pastures, while rivers such as the Mzimkhulu and the Ngwangwana have their sources on the heights, rush down through many a gorge, fatten from their tributaries and feed deep pools where trout lurk and the mountains admire their own reflections, on surfaces like glass.

   Beyond the Cape border, the Drakensberg swings south-westwards again. For another 300 km the wall of cliffs continues without a break. There are no holiday resorts and little development. Farms make a patchwork of the downlands, but the foothills and the main wall of the basalt island remain inviolate. It was in this part of the range that the legend of the dragon had its origin. It must have been easy to believe such tales in such an area. The wall of mountain seems remote and aloof. To the Zulu tribespeople they were uluNdi (the heights), another world of snow and rains, while they lived in the warm and fertile lowlands. What manner of creatures – mammal or reptile – lived beyond the edge of the escarpment only legend could describe. Even today there are dark valleys, caves, and rustler’s hideaways where few men ever walk.




   As the mountain wall continues southwards it slowly loses height. Farmlands crowd closer to the foothills. The highest road pass in Southern Africa, Naudes Nek, climbs to the 2500 m level and then manages, with a last wriggle, to clear the summit. The route is dramatic and spectacular, with heavy snow in winter, masses of red-hot-poker flowers staining the slopes like pools of blood in March, and nearby, the bulky peak of Makhollo (great mother), looming up to an altitude of 3000 m.

   Still further south there is another pass, Barkly Pass, which penetrates the Drakensberg through a red colored sandstone valley. The range, by this point, has lost both height and bulk. Its sandstone foundation is more apparent, and the giant cliffs of basalt have vanished. Sheep by the hundreds of thousands graze along the slopes; but the Drakensberg still retains its beauty and its wildness, with farmers and rustlers waging an interminable war.



   Then, abruptly and fittingly, this noble range comes to its southern end at a last towering mass of cliffs known as Xalanga (place of the vultures). From the Sentinel in the north to Xalanga in the south, the wall of basalt has provided South Africa with a mountain backbone 450 km in length. North of the Sentinel, the name of the Drakensberg is applied to the escarpment of the central South African plateau, and this continues for another 600 km with, especially in north-eastern Mpumalanga, some majestic scenery.

   But, the ‘mountains of the dragon, proper, are the eastern edge of the basalt island, the rainy roof and the greatest heights of Southern Africa.

We as hikers, explorers, and adventurers have the absolute duty to respect and protect our Wildernesses. Nobody else will do it for us. Take ownership!


The End.

Safe Hiking.




 References and Acknowledgements

From the book: Southern Africa – Land of Beauty and Splendour – Readers Digest

Photos:  ©Willem Pelser

Compiled by:  Willem Pelser