“No, it’s always windy here,” says the man behind the counter at the Thanda Tau filling station next to the N3, about 40 km north of Warden. “When I leave home in the mornings, I put rocks in my pockets so that I don’t blow away on my way to work.”
It’s December 2018 and we’re on our way to East London from Pretoria. But instead of going straight to the coast, we’re going to drive seven passes high in the mountains of Lesotho and the Eastern Cape.
Get in and hold tight!
High times in Lesotho
We make our way to the Peka Bridge border post south of Ficksburg. Wheatfields shimmer like a golden carpet in the late-morning sun. We sail through the border post and head to Maseru, the capital of Lesotho. It’s impossible to cut through Maseru quickly – roll down your window, accept the traffic jams and take in the cacophony of hooting minibusses and bleating goats.
We’re looking for a filling station with a credit card machine. At the third station without one, the petrol attendant assures us we have no need to worry. “You will meet many garages,” he says.
Five filling stations later we leave Maseru behind, traveling south-east. After about 100 km on the A5, we turn off to Ramabanta Trading Post and drink a Maluti lager on the stoep. Baboon’s Pass is on the other side of the valley – at 2 689 m in altitude, and as rutted as they come, it’s one of Lesotho’s most infamous 4x4 passes. I wonder why anyone would drive it of their own free will. From a distance, it looks more like a footpath, better suited to mountain goats.
We reach the village of Semonkong at 5 pm. The Maletsunyane River cuts through a green valley west of town and tumbles over a cliff a few kilometers further. Semonkong means “place of smoke” and is named after the misty spray caused by this waterfall.
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