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Rose's Round-up
on tourism
oor toerisme
Official newsletter of the Regional Tourism
Organisation of the Central Karoo District Municipality Amptelike
nuusbrief van die Streeks Toerisme-organisasie van die Sentrale Karoo
Distriksmunisipaliteit
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the subject line. Thank you. No 107
December,
2002
RESEARCHER STUDIES TENT
TORTOISES
A
Canadian researcher has come to the Karoo to study the common but poorly
known tent tortoise. Dr
Thomas Leuteritz, a post-doctoral
associate of Professor
Retha Hofmeyr, of the
University of the Western Cape, has set up base at Prince Albert
to study the
behaviour and breeding biology of Psammobates
tentorius, better known as the tent tortoise or "knoppiesdop."
The project will run for three months east of Prince Albert at
the Tierberg Karoo Research Centre, which is managed by Dr Richard Dean,
of the Percy FitzPatrick Institute of the University of Cape Town.
To establish how far tortoises move, where they nest and what
they eat, Dr Leuteritz has fixed transmitters to 12 female and eight
male tortoises. A radio
receiver now tracks their daily movements. Keen youngsters recently helped Dr Leuteritz.
During a two-day veld school, arranged by science teacher Jacobus
Minnaar and Dr Sue Dean, seventh grade learners from Prince Albert
Primary School helped Dr Leuteritz collect data.
"At this veld school these children not only learned about
tortoises," said Sue, "but they also studied the effects that
shadows cast by Karoo shrubs have on soil temperatures, and learned of
the importance of vegetation in the conservation of tortoises and other
special Karoo animals."
KYKNET KUIER
WEER
'n
TV-span van die Kyknet program, Kwela,
het onlangs weer in die Karoo besoek afgelê om 'n spesiale
feestyd program te verfilm. "Die hoofdoel is om feestydreisigers te
probeer oortuig om meer dikwels in klein dorpies langs die hoofroete na
die Kaap te stop vir ‘n blaaskans," sê kameraman André Calitz.
"Min Gautengers besef hoe baie daar te sien en doen is in hierdie
afgeleë plekkies." Die
aanbieder van die program, Susan Booyens, was self verbaas met wat sy in
die klein dorpies ervaar het en met die vriendelike ontvangs by
omtrent elke plek In
die Sentrale Karoo het Ludriena Cilliers, 'n klank engenieur wie in
Richmond groot geword het, die span bygestaan. Die program bevat
onderhoude by die rotstekeninge van Nelspoort as ook
by die Barnard uitstalling in Beaufort-Wes Museum.
Die span het ook ingeloer by Ellis se Fietswinkel, die oudste
besigheid in Beaufort-Wes, en is ook na die Karoo Nasionale Park.
Daarna is die span Laingsburg toe om meer uit te vind oor die
Wolfaardt-versameling en om by Matjiesfontein te kuier.
Die program word op 4 Desember uitgesaai.
·
“KYKNET”
VISITS THE KAROO AGAIN
A
TV-crew from the “Kyknet” TV programme, Kwela, recently visited the
Karoo to film a special series for the Festive Season.
“The main aim is to encourage travellers to stop more
frequently, stretch their legs and visit small towns along the main
route to the Cape,” said cameraman André Calitz. “Few Gautengers
realise how much there is to see and do en-route.”
Presenter Susan Booyens was pleasantly surprised at the friendly
reception at virtually every stop.
In the Central Karoo, Ludiena Cilliers, a sound engineer, born
and bred in Richmond, assisted the team.
The programme includes interviews at the rock art site at
Nelspoort, and Beaufort West, where the team visited the Barnard
exhibition in the museum, Ellis’s Cycles, the oldest shop in town, and
the Karoo National Park. From
there it was on to Laingsburg to find out more about the Wolfaardt
collection and later to visit Matjiesfontein.
The programme will be broadcast at 20h00 on December 4. KAROO
ULTRA CITY THE BEST IN S A The
isolated yet bustling Shell outlet at Three Sisters in the Karoo has
been voted this year's Ultra City of the Year.
In making this announcement Ian Page, franchise manager of Shell
in the Cape, said: "The customers actually make the award. They
vote for the place where they have had the best experience and get the
best service. I think that this is a wonderful achievement for Three
Sisters, particularly when one considers the location of the complex.
It is virtually in the middle of nowhere at the fork of the busy
N12 and N1 routes. The fact
that it is from here that Piet Steenkamp, who only recently acquired the
outlet, and his staff, deliver the best service in the country, is
certainly worthy of congratulations." MORE ABOUT THE MARBLE IN THE
BOTTLE
Bottles
are big in the lives of Al and Ethleen Lastovica, of Wynberg. Theye have
not only been collecting
bottles for over 20 years,
but have also written three books on the subject from a South African
perspective. Round-up reader
Peter Spargo asked them to comment on “Never Mind the Drink,”
published in Round-up 106. "Midge
Carter must have come across the last marble-stoppered
bottles used in South Africa," says Ethleen. "We
thought that manufacturers stopped using these in the 1930s. Marble-stoppered bottles, called
'Codds' after the man who patented the design in the 1870s,
were used by fizzy drinks manufacturers for almost 60 years.
Then the many cases of poisoning related to excessive consumption
of carbonated drinks began to worry medical men. They soon discovered
the cause of the problem was the antimony rubber washer in the neck of
the bottle. Codd bottles were most unhygenic. The glass had so many
nooks and crannies that the bottles could not be cleaned properly before
re-use. "But, the
bottles were strong and mineral water manufacturers were loathe to get
rid of them. 'Why buy newfangled, clean-cut, crown-top bottles when the
old Codds were still sound?' they argued," said Ethleen.
In their book on South African pottery ginger beer bottles, the
Lastovicas have pictures of bottles used long ago by the Beaufort West Mineral Water Company and mineral water
manufacturers in Victoria West, Richmond, Noupoort, Cradock and
Oudtshoorn. KERSTYD ONDER DIE STÊRRE Prince
Albert organiseer 'n spesiale “Karoo
Carols by Candlelight” diens op 1 Desember. Alle
kore en gemeentes in die dorp sal bymekaarkom om die Kersliedjies en
stories onder die stêrre te vertel.
"Ons
vind hierdie jaarlikse diens is baie gewild onder toeriste in die
dorp," sê Toeristeburo voorsitter Di van der Riet Steyn.
·
CHRISTMAS
UNDER THE STARS
Prince
Albert is organising a special Karoo Carols by Candlelight service for
December l. All choirs and
congregations in the town will congregate to sing carols and tell the
Christmas story under the stars. “We
have found this annual event to be very popular with tourists,” said
Tourist Bureau chairman Di van der Riet Steyn. A PRINCE ALBERT LINK WITH
KEW GARDENS?
The
story "A Karoo Link with Kew Gardens" in Round-up
No 105 prompted British reader David Upton to respond.
"Marianne North's work is wonderful. I know it well as we live only a few hundred yards from the
Marianne North Gallery in Kew Gardens.
If her paintings had had been photographs and a few years later,
they would have gone into National
Geographic. Even
though she didn't focus on the Karoo in particular,
perhaps Prince Albert should
consider forming a real link with Kew," writes David. JOERNALIS
SKRYF CHRIS BARNARD SE
BIOGRAFIE
'n
Britse joernalis, Chris Logan, is deur Suid-Afrikaanse uitgewers
Jonathan Ball aangewys om die eerste biografie oor Professor Chris
Barnard, die pionier van hartoorplanting, te skryf.
Logan het onlangs in Beaufort-Wes besoek afgelê om so veel
moontlik nuwe agtergrondinligting in te win oor Chris Barnard se lewe.
Hy soek veral stories van Barnard se jeugjare in die dorp en meer oor sy
jong dae voor hy onder die soeklig beland het.
·
JOURNALIST
TO WRITE BARNARD BIOGRAPHY
A
British journalist, Chris Logan, has been contracted by South African
publishers Jonathan Ball to write the first biography on world heart
transplant pioneer, Professor Chris Barnard.
Logan recently visited Beaufort West to begin gathering as much
background material as possible.
He is particularly interested in learning more about Barnard’s
youth in early Beaufort West and his life before he rocketed to fame. FRESH BREAD ON NEW YEAR'S
DAY – WITH A SMILE
Much
is made in modern business of going the extra mile to please a client,
but this is really nothing new. Way
back in the 1890s, a
Beaufort West baker, confectioner and general dealer excelled at
customer service. At the
start of the 1893 festive season, P Krummeck advised clients that if they placed their orders
in good time his carts would deliver fresh bread and other dainties to
their doors early on Christmas and New Year's mornings. "Those who
forget to order should not fret. Our shop will be open from seven to
eight on both days," he said in Dutch in an advertisement. SWEET DREAMS IN AN OLD
AIRPORT
Beaufort
West’s airport has been sold and the old buildings remodelled into The
Flight Deck, a guest house on the N1. Owners Nick and Philippa Wilson,
formerly of Triangle,
Zimbabwe, will soon open their doors. Brother-in-law Lionel Perreira, a
qualified pilot, will
reopen the airport and runways.
The Flight Deck features four comfortable en-suite rooms, a guest lounge
and a bar in the old control tower.
These offer spectacular views of the Great Karoo and Nuweveld
Mountains. "In
addition to accommodation, we will provide light refreshments for
pilots, air crew and tourists arriving at the airport. For a nominal fee
there will be a shuttle service to town as well as holiday and
hunting farms," said Philippa.
"Our cuisine will soon include fresh herbs and vegetables
from our own gardens." Philippa is no stranger to tourism. For
several years she published a magazine on interesting stays along the N1
from Messina to Cape Town. KAROO SCHOOLBOY FINDS RARE
FOSSIL The
rare fossilised remains of a creature once thought to be the
“grandfather” of all tortoises and turtles has been found on
Ezelfontein, the Merweville farm of Kobus Snyman, who is also principal
of Zwartberg High School in Prince Albert.
The almost complete, well-preserved
Eunotosaurus fossil , found by
Kobus's 16-year-old son, also Kobus, was identified by local
palaeontologist Dr Judy Maguire. It is only the tenth specimen of its kind to be found in the
world. The first was found near Beaufort West in 1892 .
World famous palaeontologist Professor H G Seeley was the first
to describe this specimen from the partial remains. "The
Eunotosaurus is quite a rare type of primitive reptile about the size
and shape of a terrapin, but without a shell," says Dr Roger Smith,
head of the Earth Sciences Division at the S A Museum in Cape Town.
"However, it does have a very unusual rib cage – each rib is
flattened so that they almost touch each other.
Early workers thought that they were ancestral to tortoises –
until they found one with the skull intact.
This confirmed that they were not ‘anapsid’ reptiles like
turtles and tortoises of today, therefore Elunotosaurus was not on their
ancestral line. Specimens are confined to the lower part of the Beaufort
Group of rocks and Late Permian in age.
This means that they lived in the Karoo around 255 to 260 million
years ago. The Eunotosaurus
are part of the Tapinocephalus and Pristerognathus reptile zones
that outcrop mostly between Laingsburg and Beaufort West, although
recently another specimen was found in the Eastern Cape by Billy Klerk,
of the Albany Museum.” Judy has been granted permission to display
this rarity in the palaeonlological exhibit in the Fransie Pienaar
Museum at Prince Albert. She
says: “Here visitors will be able to clearly see the expanded ribs.
They are so flat that they almost
touch each other. This would have provided protection from predators.” MUSEUM HOOF HET DIEP SPORE
IN DIE KAROO GETRAP
Die
eerste inheemse hoof uitvoerende direkteur van nasionale museums in
post-apartheid Suid-Afrika het 'n diep verbintenis met die Karoo.
Professor Henry C “Jatti” Bredekamp, wie onlangs aangestel is
as hoof van ISIKO museums, se
professionele verbintenis met die "asvaal ou Karoo" strek
terug tot 1965 toe hy op 19-jarige ouderdom aangestel is as
“Kleinmeester” van die destydse NG Sendingkerk plaasskooltjie op
Bennie Frank se plaas, Kruidfontein, naby Leeu Gamka. "Indertyd was
Kleinmeester ondermeer verantwoordelik vir die Sub B tot St 3 klasse en
later, op versoek van die Inspekteur van Skole,
moes ek ook ingryp om die arme Sub A-tjies reg somme te
leer," sê hy. Saam
met die plaasmense en spoorwegwerkers van die kontrei moes Jatti ook in
sy "aanmekaar getimmerde klaskamertjie" katkisasieklas loop.
"Die klasse het onder
die strenge toesig van die analfabetiese katkisasiemeester en evangelis,
oom Awie de Klerk,
geskied," sê Jatti. Daarna
het die Kleinmeester diaken vir die Kruidfonteinstasiewyk van die
NG-Sendinggemeente Prins Albert geword en dit alles terwyl hy aanvanklik
in 'n ou bouvallige klein kamertjie van 4 x 2 meter op die skooltjie se
perseel gewoon en geslaap het. Later moes hy sy intrek neem in die enigste leefbare kamer
van 'n bouvallige pomphuis op die plaas.
Met die verplasing van die Xhosa-sprekende spoorwegwerkers uit
die Karoo na die Transkei en Ciskei tuislande in die laat sestigerjare
het Kruidfontein se leerlingtal so gedaal dat Jattie sy goedjies moes
pak en 'n onderwys pos op die Kaapse vlaktes gaan soek.
Jattie sê die oeroue geestelike krag wat indertyd van die
eensame Karoovlaktes uitgegaan het, het hom geinspireer tot verdere
studie na-uurs by die Universiteit van Wes-Kaapland.
·
MUSEUM
HEAD HAS A LONG LINK WITH KAROO
The
first indigenous Chief Executive Director of National Museums in South
Africa has a long association with the Karoo.
Professor Henry C ‘Jatti’ Bredekamp,
recently appointed head of the ISIKO museums, has a professional
association with the “barren old Karoo” that stretches back to 1965,
when, as a 19-year old youth, he was appointed
teacher at the then Dutch Reformed Mission School on Bennie
Frank’s farm, Kruidfontein, near Leeu Gamka.
“In addition to being responsible for
Sub B to Std 3 classes, the
Inspector of Schools requested me to even teach the little Sub-A’s
their sums,” he said.
Jatti joined the farm labourers and railway workers at catechism
classes in a tiny thrown-together classroom under the stern eye of the
illiterate evangelist, Uncle Awie de Klerk.
Shortly afterwards, the
young schoolmaster was appointed deacon for the Kruidfontein Station
Church Ward of the Prince Albert Mission congregation.
All this happened while he lived
in a tiny 4 x 2 metre room at the school.
He later moved into the only habitable room in a derelict old
pump house on the farm. When
the Xhosa-speaking railway workers were transferred from the Karoo to
the Transkei and Ciskei homelands in the late 1960s, attendance figures
at Kruidfontein School dropped dramatically.
Jatti had to take his few things
and find another teaching job on the Cape Flats.
“The spiritual strength the vast plains of the Great Karoo
imbued me with, inspired me
to further my studies after hours at the University of the
Western Cape, and in time led me to the post I hold today,” said
Jatti.
ENGINEER
TELLS THE STORY OF CAPE PASSES The
road to Gamkaskloof, or The Hell, features
on the cover of a new book on the famous passes of the Western Cape.
Written by Graham Ross, a retired civil engineer and “padmaker” of
note, the book captures the romance of
building roads over some of the Cape's most inhospitable mountain
ranges. "The Cape has over 490 mountain passes. Many are over
a century old and almost all are steeped in history, and as such
are great tourist attractions," says Graham.
The Romance of Cape Mountain Passes, published by New Africa Books,
retails at R200. SAFARI MET 'N STÊR BEKROON Beaufort-Wes
se gewilde Safari Kamers is
onlangs deur die Toerisme Graderingraad van Suid-Afrika (TGSA) in kennis
gestel dat hulle met een stêr bekroon is. TGSA uitvoerende direkteur Dr
Salifou Siddo het Safari Kamers geluk gewens en bevestig dat 'n offisiële
muurplaat en sertifikaat op
pad is en dat hulle gebruik kan maak van die TGSA logo op enige
bemarkingsmateriaal.
·
SAFARI
GETS A STAR
Beaufort
West’s popular Safari Rooms has been granted one star by the Tourism
Grading Council of South Africa (TGSA).
In a letter of congratulations Dr Salifou Siddo, TGSA executive
director advised Safari that their official plaque and certificate are
on the way and that they may now use the TGSA logo on any marketing
material. THE CHRISTMAS CHEER WAS
GREAT, BUT …
British
soldiers who spent their first Christmas of the Anglo-Boer War at
Beaufort West in 1899 were surprised by a sumptuous traditional dinner.
In an official letter of thanks in The Courier of January 9, 1901, J H Bowes Wilson, commanding officer
of the West Riding Regiment, wrote: "The officers, non-commissioned
officers and men have
commissioned me to thank you all most heartily for the magnificent
Christmas dinner you so kindly gave the troops stationed at the camp,
bridges and kopjes. I assure you it was most thoroughly appreciated. The men did full justice to the good fare so thoughtfully
provided. They are most grateful to the their Beaufort friends. Please
convey our heartfelt thanks
to all ladies and gentlemen who by cash or other kindly assistance
helped cheer all of us so very far from home."
…
IT DIDN'T ALWAYS HIT THE MARK While
some soldiers enjoyed the dinner, others were just plain homesick.
Bt-Major, the Hon A V F V Russell, of the Grenadier Guards, spent
two Christmases near Beaufort West.
In his diary he wrote of being miserable so far from home.
"This heat is very unlike Christmas. Dinner was so dreary
that I left early. Even the church did not make me feel at home.
The service was too commonplace."
On the evening of December 31, 1901, he had severe toothache. His
face was swollen and he felt lonely.
He wrote;
"Again, I do not feel cheery.
And, tonight we are expected to march right out of one year and
into the next. This will be my second festive season which has gone
unmarked!" OP DIE SPOOR VAN
HERINNERINGE Twee Zimbabwiërs
met noue verbintenisse aan ou Beaufort-Wes en Prins Albert het onlangs
in die Karoo gekuier. Pierre
en Dawn Brummer het familiebande met Nico en Engela Brummer van Beaufort
West, die Nels na wie Oudtshoorn se C P Nel museum vernoem is, en George
C Rainier, eens magistraat van Prins Albert.
"Ons
gebruik nog twee silwer wynverkoelers en
twee groot skinkborde wat die mense van Beaufort-Wes aan
magistraat Rainier geskenk het in hoogagting vir dienste wat hy gelewer
het," sê Dawn.
Die paar het ook Rainer se dagboek waarin hy vertel hoe gelukkig
hy in die Karoo was. "Nou besef ons hoekom," sê Dawn.
·
A
TRIP DOWN MEMORY LANE
Two
Zimbabweans with close ties to Beaufort West and Prince Albert recently
visited the Karoo. Pierre and Dawn Brummer have family ties with Nico and Engela
Brummer who once lived in Beaufort West, the Nels after whom
Oudtshoorn's C P Nel Museum was named and George C Rainier, an early
magistrate of Prince Albert.
"We still use two silver wine coolers and two huge silver
trays which the people of Beaufort West once presented to Magistrate
Rainer in appreciation of his services," said Dawn.
The couple also have Rainer's dairy in which he tells of how
happy he was in the Karoo. "We
now know why," said Dawn. THE MAN WHO BROUGHT
LIGHT AND LOVE TO TOWN
In
September, 1883, an electric lamp became a tourist attraction in
Beaufort West. The local
newspaper, The Courier,
reported on September 28, that Mr Boye, a local shopkeeper, had
"imported" the
first electric light into Beaufort West and installed it at the entrance
to his shop. "It is
small but it does shines brightly," reported the newspaper.
"For quite some time visitors will be 'stepping out'
at night to see the light. We hope that more shopkeepers would
follow this lead." Only
a week earlier Boye took Beaufort West by storm when he married the
beautiful Miss Maddison by special licence at the home of her parents in
Donkin Street. It was said
he swept her off her feet so suddenly that the family had no time to
send out invitations. "Yet
a goodly number of friends were there to toast the handsome couple
before they departed in a shower of rice and orange blossoms for a short
honeymoon on Peter Rose's Nuweveld mountain farm,"
The Courier reported. "Friends partied well into the night and
enjoyed an excellent wedding cake provided by a friend of the
groom." MURDER ON THE MURRAYSBURG
ROAD A
stranger appeared in Beaufort West one bleak winters' day in the 1880s
and asked a young horse cart driver to take him to Murraysburg.
The stranger was never seen again and Van Niekerk, the cart
driver, was found murdered alongside the road.
The Murraysburg magistrate and doctor were called to the scene.
They said Van Niekerk appeared to be asleep in his seat, but as they
approached they saw his head had been stoved in. It seemed he had also
been robbed . The Pienaars
of Waaifontein reported that Van Niekerk had passed the previous
day and purchased a firearm and ammunition from them.
Perhaps he had then already been nervous of his passenger, but he
said nothing. Neither
the firearm nor ammunition were ever found.
However, farmers in that vicinity say
that over the years they've seen lights near where Van Niekerk
was murdered. Many are
convinced he still roams the road in search of vengeance.
SEASON'S GREETINGS TO
ALL ROUND-UP READERS
GESEËNDE KERSFEES EN VORSPOEDIGE NUWE
JAAR AAN ALLE LESERS
Issued
by the Regional Tourism Office, Central Karoo District Municipality, Private
Bag X560 Beaufort West, 6970
Further
information: Rose Willis -
Tel No 023-415-1160 - Fax
No 023-414-3675
Cell
082-926-0474 - e.mail :
karootour@internext.co.za
Cost : R30 per annum to cover postage These stories may be used to
promote the Karoo and republished with acknowledgement to Rose's
Round-up Copyright:
Rose Willis |