There’s a large slice of mountain wilderness just outside Cradock in the Eastern Cape Karoo where night skies, wide-angle landscapes and very special zebras are the main attractions.
We’re part of a small visitor group in a game-drive vehicle led by field guides Richard Okkers and Des Naidoo, crossing the Mountain Zebra National Park in search of a collared cheetah called Mabula. He’s a large fellow for a lightweight big-cat species and has been known to pull down a fearsome black wildebeest or two in his time here.
However, I can’t keep my eyes off the blasted heath that these park lowlands have become in recent months. The crippling Karoowide drought has simply dragged on, from season to season.
But just look at these baby bokkies we pass on our hopeful way to a cheetah encounter – newly-minted red hartebeest and springbok all over the show. The local lore says buck don’t give birth for nothing. They know rain is coming. Never mind all those dodgy weather forecasts, ask the ungulates. They know what’s what.
Cheered by this, I join the Lost Patrol in its single-file march across the dry country, following a slightly eccentric, bleeping signal that should link us to Mabula somewhere down the line.
Fields of scattered ironstone shards clink tunefully like wind chimes as we trudge over them. We seem to be heading for Salpeterkop, where British soldiers once played chess by heliograph with other mad dog Englishmen ensconced in the steeple of the Cradock Moederkerk.
I just hope the cheetah isn’t parking off all the way up there, because none of us really feels like climbing in this heat. Besides, I can’t stop yawning. That’s because I’ve been up most of the night, star-struck by the skies above our mountain cottage that lies cradled deep in the dolerite bosom of the Bankberge, the spine of this great national park.
Esta historia es de la edición April 2019 de SA Country Life.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición April 2019 de SA Country Life.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
The Little Car That Could
The new Hyundai Atos is proof that budget-friendly vehicles can be fun
Cowboys Never Cry
GEORGE ROBEY rides the range outside Ficksburg with one of Africa’s great cowboys
Family Stays
Make some beautiful memories at one of these countryside getaways
Art from the Heart
Watching blacksmiths at the forge, painters at the easel, cabinet makers at the chisel, and wandering the woods with a famous calligrapher in small, bespoke gatherings is what the Prince Albert Open Studios project is all about
Lighthouse Over Yonder
A shipwreck road trip from Bredasdorp to Danger Point is a fine way to spend a day drifting over the Agulhas plain
Up and Away In The Amatolas
A burgeoning settlement of people enjoys the good life among the mountains, mists and forests of Hogsback
The Salt Shepherd
ALAN VAN GYSEN finds out how a farm boy the Vleesbaai skaaplande became as dedicated to big waves as he is to sheep
Time Holds on Longer Here
Do not blink as you take the R62 that runs through the Eastern Cape Langkloof, warns OBIE OBERHOLZER. You might miss the strip of tar to the tranquil village of Haarlem
Place of Refuge
People have been escaping to the remote Winterberg mountains in the Eastern Cape for hundreds of years, writes MARION WHITEHEAD
The Place Of Roaring Water
In Augrabies Falls National Park, cultural projects are creating a thunder akin to the mighty Orange as it plummets into its famous gorge