We’re stoep-sitting somewhere in dusty, old Nieu-Bethesda the other day, minding everybody’s business but our own, when this clutch of nervy, black-spotted Kolbroek pigs comes trotting by. I’d like to know where the rather snappy name ‘Kolbroek’ comes from. A fellow stoep-sitter shares this theory, “They say the first spotted pigs in South Africa swam ashore from the wreck of the Colebrooke somewhere on the Cape coast back in the late 1700s.”
The modern-day Kolbroek porker can claim his genetics from sub-breeds like Windsnyer, Sandveld Red, Great White and Tamworth – with a bit of African bush pig thrown in for hardiness. The subject of swimming pigs and broken boats is so dramatic and delicious that my wife Jules and I decide to take a road trip down to the heart of shipwreck country – the Agulhas Plain.
And so, months later, we find ourselves wandering about the Bredasdorp Shipwreck Museum, engrossed in the stories of stormtossed vessels, human folly and all the stuff that washed up on the shores of the Southern Cape coast. We also hope to nail down the legend of the handsome Kolbroek pig.
It might surprise you to discover that, at a rough estimate, for every one of South Africa’s 3 000 or so kilometres of coastline, there is at least one shipwreck site. Some, admittedly, have disintegrated into nothing more than a half-remembered story, while others are still around, their rusty hulks hosting all manner of sea life.
The Shipwreck Museum displays the remains of many vessels, both famous and forgettable, in the form of cannons, brass porthole frames, ballast bricks, crockery, compasses, clay pipes, copper nails and coins.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 2020-Ausgabe von SA Country Life.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 2020-Ausgabe von SA Country Life.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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