Rose's
Round-up
on tourism
oor toerisme
Official
Newsletter of the Regional Tourism Organisation
of
the Central Karoo District Municipality of South Africa
Amptelike
Nuusbrief van die Streeks Toerisme-organisasie
van die Sentrale Karoo Distriksmunisipaliteit
No.
99 APRIL, 2002
Please
note: Where contributions have been submitted in the Afrikaans language,
they have been translated for the convenience of our international readers,
but the original Afrikaans text is included in italics.
LAINGSBURG
LAMB HAS THE EDGE
When it comes to Karoo meat, master chef Chris van Wyk says there's
nothing quite like Laingsburg lamb. Chris is so delighted with the Laingsburg
product that he is taking a supply to Luxembourg later this year when
he captains a team of 12 South African chefs taking part in the International
Chefs Olympiad. "It has a uniquely delicious flavour. To my mind
it is a cut above all other Karoo meat." Chris, who has had 12 years'
experience as a hotel chef, now owns Amaqueta Foods in George. Here he
prepares ready-made delicacies for hotels and restaurants. "Everyone
loves good food, and I love to make it. Most people love Karoo lamb. It's
spiced on the hoof and has a special flavour. There's something about
Laingsburg lamb that gives it the edge. Perhaps the bushes in the Koup
area are slightly different. Perhaps it's the way the farmers finish the
animals in free-range environments. I've never discovered the secret,
but my palate knows the difference. Anyway, no matter what the secret
is, I want to use Laingsburg lamb together with Karoo venison in Luxembourg."
The 12 South African chefs on the team come from hotels, restaurants and
private businesses across the country. The lamb will come from Hartman
and Sons abattoir, established in Laingsburg last year by Andries Hartman,
who has years of experience in the production of quality and specialist
meat products.
'n WINKEL VIR KAROO LIEFHEBBERS
Vir die baie liefhebbers van Karoovleis is daar nou ook 'n
verskaffer in Bellville. Francette Coetzee, dogter van Suid-Afrikaanse
rugby held Mannetjies Roux, het 'n Karoo kafee in 13de Laan gestig onder
die naam Karoo Trading Post. Hier verkoop sy Karoo lam, skoon afval, en
wildsvleis. "Die vleis is uiters gewild en aanvraag is groot,"
sê sy. "Maar ons het gou agtergekom dat Karoo liefhebbers baie
meer as net vleis wil hê. Ek voorsien nou ook wildspasteie, Karoo
knoffel en droë vrugte, sowel as Karoo water van ons familieplaas
Nobelsfontein. Baie handwerk en tierlantyntjies wat reisigers by my ma
se Victoria-Wes winkel, Victoria Trading Post, kan koop, is ook hier beskikbaar,"
sê Francette.
SHOP
FOR KAROO ENTHUSIASTS
Karoo mutton lovers will be delighted to know that there is now an
outlet in Bellville. Francette Coetzee, daughter of South African
rugby hero Mannetjies Roux has opened a Karoo café in 13th
Avenue and named it Karoo Trading Post. Here she sells Karoo lamb
and venison. "These products are most popular, but we soon discovered
that Karoo lovers wanted more than just meat," she said. "I
now also supply venison pasties, Karoo garlic, dried fruits and Karoo
water from our family farm Nobelsfontein. There's also a range of
craft items similar to those that tourists buy in my mother's Victoria
West shop, Victoria Trading Post," said Francette.
'MY KINGDOM FOR A KOEKSISTER'
Author and restaurateur, Janet Telian, of the Savoy Cabbage and Champagne
Bar in Cape Town, is puzzled why the Karoo pays so little attention to
providing traditional dishes. At a recent seminar she said: "Food
is one of the great delights of travelling. It saddens me that people
in the far-flung little towns of the Karoo do not make more use of their
traditional cuisine as a base on which to build a delicious tourism product.
I have never understood the reason why people in the hinterland opt to
serve poor imitations of international cuisine. For years now driving
through the Karoo I headed for a specific Beaufort West coffee shop to
enjoy koeksisters and coffee. They were excellent and served ice cold,
fragile as glass and dripping with delicious syrup. I was recently quite
disappointed to find they had been elbowed off the menu by some vaguely
Italian delicacy. A great pity."
SPECIAL
TV TOUR A WINNER (Tel No 049-892-3978)
Award-winning TV producers Sandra and Neville Herrington, of Tekweni
TV, are compiling a series designed to capture the heart of the Great
Karoo. Their aim is to portray interesting people against the magnificence
of the ecology. To ensure that they succeeded, a special route was
worked out by David MacNaughton, of Karoo Connections, the Graaff
Reinet-based company that escorted them through the area, and Rose
Willis, regional tourism co-ordinator in the Central Karoo. The route,
which delighted Neville Harrington, cameraman Bruce Cunningham and
sound engineer Tom Pitout, started in Port Elizabeth and wound its
way through the Great Karoo, taking in the rich histories of Cradock,
Graaff Reinet and Beaufort West as well as the farms and tiny settlements
along the way. The ecological splendour was captured at places like
the Mountain Zebra National Park, the Valley of Desolation, the Karoo
National Park and Baviaanskloof on the return trip. Interviews conducted
in and around the towns, provided the spice and colour. "This
is a route that truly conveys the spirit of the Karoo to visitors.
We hope to convince others to use it," said David.
BEAUFORT
WEST MAN HELPED CREATE MODERN CAPE TOWN
An Afrikaans commercial pioneer, born in Beaufort West in 1868, was
one of the men of vision who worked tirelessly to reclaim the foreshore
area of Cape Town and so double the city's central business district.
Anthony Frederick Jacobus Benning moved from the Karoo to the Mother
City in the early 1900s, there to established a successful business
as a master builder. In time, according to Eric Rosenthal's South
African Dictionary of National Biography, Benning was elected to the
Cape Town City Council. His aim was to increase the size of the business
district to so improve the infrastructure and economy of the city.
Benning was also avidly interested in politics and the promotion of
Afrikaner affairs. He was a founder member of the National Party and
a sponsor of the Afrikaanse Handelshuis, one of the first Afrikaner-owned
retail businesses in South Africa. Benning also helped establish Nasionale
Pers in 1915, Santam in 1917 and Sanlam in 1918.
BEAUFORT
ROCKS UNDER REVIEW
A geology student of the Free State University is researching the
lower Beaufort rock layer as part of his MSc thesis. Nick Scholtz,
who grew up in Graaff Reinet, loves the Karoo. "The natural beauty
of the area made researching the geology of the Karoo' an almost obvious
choice for my master's degree thesis. His current research is being
conducted under the guidance of Johan Loock, senior lecturer at the
university's Department of Geology. He and Nick recently spent two
weeks researching the stratigraphy of the lower Beaufort rock layer
around Zeekoegat, in the Prince Albert area, and eastwards towards
Lombardskraal, near Beaufort West. "We want to discover when
these deposits were made and more about the sub-stratas," says
Johan. "While we will not be actively searching for fossils on
this field trip, we will mark any we find for future research."
ANCIENT
WORLD OF ROCK ART ENTHRALS AUDIENCE
A peek into the long-ago world of the Karoo's San and Khoi peoples
enthralled Beaufort Westers recently. Sven Ouzman, head of the National
Museum's Rock Art Department, concluded a three-day field trip to
the Nelspoort/Beaufort West area by giving an illustrated lecture
on South African rock art at the museum. "It kept visitors glued
to their seats," said organiser and museum assistant Caroline
Bedeker. "Sven discussed South Africa's rich and incomparable
rock art heritage in such an easy-to-understand way that we were all
quite disappointed when the talk ended." "I explained the
differences between rock engraving and rock painting traditions,"
said Sven. "I was also able to discuss the distribution of the
art, explain how it is dated and how the Karoo became home to rock
art legacies from San, Khoi, Black and White communities. The audience
was astonished to learn that some researchers consider the graffiti
on roadside rocks and boulders a form of rock art." Sven paid
particular attention to the rich and extensive Nelspoort site, its
many rock engravings of bird-human figures, extinct fauna and rock
gongs. He said his programme to train former Beaufort West street
children as heritage custodians of this site under the aegis of Restvale
Primary School, was doing well. "I would like to encourage people
to visit the site and test the skills of these youngsters," he
said.
THE
SWEET MUSIC OF THE BELLE OF BEAUFORT WEST
Far from the Karoo, a chance meeting on the coast of Scotland in the
1890s led to a romance that brought a talented musician to Beaufort
West. On a misty day, a lovely Scots lass, petite Isabella Page, accidentally
bumped into a Beaufort West lad, Whitcombe Rose. Both were on a casual
stroll through Crail, a small fishing village on the coast of Fife.
Friends later agreed that it was love at first sight. After a brief
romance Whitcombe returned home to fight in the Anglo-Boer War. For
five long years Whitcombe corresponded with Belle, as the fair Miss
Page was known. The momemt came, and he proposed by cable. Whitcombe
dashed to Scotland to marry her in Edinburgh. Belle, whose ancestry
went back to Isabella of Dunachtin, who married the chief of the MacIntosh
clan in 1427, was an incurable romantic. Aware of this, Whitcombe
arranged for his friend Gerald de Wet to meet them at the Beaufort
West station attired in silk top hat and tails. Gerald drove the newly-weds
through the village in an open landau drawn by a pair of black horses
with white ostrich plumes to a reception at Jubilee House. Belle was
an instant hit in Beaufort West. Before marrying Whitcombe, she had
played in a mandolin orchestra under the baton of an Italian conductor
in Scotland. She was also an accomplished pianist, singer and trained
whistler. Belle was one of the few women in the world who fully mastered
the techniques of professional whistling. She held many musical soirees
on the Nuweveld Mountain farms where she and Whitcombe lived for almost
49 years. They had three sons, Page, Donald and Ivan, and daughter
Edith, who later married David Bowen. Belle so captivated her father-in-law,
Peter Rose, that he changed the name of his farm from Van Blerckskloof
to Bellevue in her honour. At the end of her life, Belle was crippled
by arthritis. She was eventually confined to a wheelchair, and the
hands that had brought so much musical pleasure to the people lay
twisted and useless in her lap. She died in May, 1951, and her beloved
Whitcombe survived her by only three days. They are buried side by
side in the town's Anglican cemetery
WINTER
UITSTAPPIES VIR VOËL-KYKERS (Tel No 023-414-3615)
Beaufort-Wes se William Quinton Wilde-voëlvereniging beplan
'n reeks opwindende uitstappies vir die wintermaande. Op 27 April
kuier hulle op Elandsfontein, die plaas van André en Martie
Lund, ongeveer 40km oos van Beaufort-Wes. "Hier is heelwat voëls
wat nie naby die dorp te sien is nie," sê uitstappie-organiseerder
Annetjie Mocke. Dan, gedurende die naweek van 10 en 12 Mei, gaan klublede
woud-voëls kyk naby Grootvadersbosch op die Tuinroete en op 15
Junie, beplan hulle 'n daguitstappie om die unieke voëls van
die Swartbergpas te sien. "Dalk sal ons gelukkig genoeg wees
om ook in die sneeu te kan speel," sê klubsekretaris Japie
Claassen, die uitstappie organiseerder. 'n Jaarlikse winterwatervoëltelling
word noord van Beaufort-Wes op die plaas Sakrivierspoort gehou oor
die naweek van 19 tot 21 Julie. Daar sal ook 'n telling wees by die
Beaufort-Wes Voëlreservat en 'n wintergrondvoëltelling op
die 27 Julie. "Om hierdie telling effektief te doen werk ons
interessante roetes uit en dra dus ons deel by tot toerisme sowel
as die bewaring van Karoovoëls," sê Japie. "Ons
beplan om die winter af te rond met 'n uitstappie na Gamkaskloof,
Die Hel."
WINTER
EXCURSIONS FOR BIRD LOVERS
Beaufort West's William Quinton Wild Bird Club is planning a series
of exciting excursions for the winter months. These include a visit
to Elandsfontein, the farm of André and Martie Lund, 40km east
of town, a visit to see the forest birds at Grootvadersbosch on the
Garden Route, and a trip to the Swartberg Pass. The annual winter
water bird and ground bird counts take place in July. The season will
be rounded off with a trip to Gamkaskloof, The Hell.
A WEDDING JUST LIKE GRANDMA'S
When Maria Herbst and Jannie Loock decided to tie the knot recently
they opted to have the ceremony in an historic church on her father's
farm. Not only is the attractive little church at Zeekoegat a national
monument, but it was where Maria's grandmother Ida married Lucas Jacobus
Herbst in 1930. And there was yet another highlight to the day. Maria,
like her grandmother so many years ago, walked down the aisle to strains
of the wedding march played on a little organ donated to the Prince
Albert Dutch Reformed Church Congregation by Cecil John Rhodes. This
tiny historic church at Zeekoegat was built as a gift to the community
by Stefanus Oosthuizen, a Prince Albert resident who owned the nearby
store, once raided during the Anglo-Boer War by Commandant Gideon
Scheepers's commando. Oosthuizen, his wife and their two-year-old
son, are buried in the church grounds.
SKRYWER
OORVAL MET SPOOKSTORIES
Die versoek om hulp met insameling van spookstories van die Karoo
het uitstekende reaksie gelok. Eers het dit in Round-up verskyn, en
later in Die Burger. Skrywer Sian Hall is oorval met stories. "Ek
is nogal verbaas hoeveel dorp-, stasie-, pad- en plaas-spoke hulle
verskyning in die Karoo al gemaak het," sê sy "En
daar is nogal heelwat wat ek nie vantevore van gehoor het nie. Ek
is so dankbaar vir die hulp."
'GHOST
WRITER' GETS GOOD RESPONSE
A request to assist in gathering the ghost stories of the hinterland,
first published in Round-up, and followed up by Die Burger, resulted
in an excellent response. Author Sian Hall was flooded with stories.
"I never realised there were quite so many town, station, farm,
highway and byway ghosts in the Karoo," she said. "And among
them many I'd never even heard of. My sincere thanks for the help."
KAROO
HERITAGE IN PERSPECTIVE
Legends of the Karoo, the role of lawmen, farmers, preachers and land
speculators, the development of villages, postal routes, architectural
styles and traditional foods were all among topics discussed at a
recent heritage symposium. Organised by the International Committee
for Monuments and Sites and the International Scientific Committee
for Historic Towns and Villages, this two-day symposium, entitled
Understanding and Using the Urban Heritage of the Karoo, was held
in the Apollo Theatre complex at Victoria West. A wide range of papers
on town and township conservation, the development of the post office,
the role of students in conservation programmes, museums and their
role as information providers, as well as the use of cultural heritage
to promote tourism was discussed in depth. There was also a special
public lecture on the blockhouses built by the British to guard railway
bridges during the Anglo-Boer War. It was given by Professor Wally
Peters, of the Department of Architecture at the University of Natal,
who last year measured and photographed these structures in the Karoo.
TOERISME
VORDER GOED IN LAINGSBURG
Laingsburg beplan ses nuwe toerismeroetes. Drie eko-roetes buite
die dorp sal klem lê op die natuurskoon, terwyl drie in die
dorpsgebied op geskiedenis en kulturele erfenis sal konsentreer. 'n
Kort vloedroete, kultuur-historiese- en begraafplaasroetes sal ook
uitgelê word met behulp van plaaslike ontwikkelingsbefondsing.
"Ons vermoed dat die klein begraafplaas langs die slagpale die
oudste in die dorp is," sê burgermeester Mike Gouws. "Dit
was heel waarskynlik deur die Lutherse sendingkerk gebruik, en hier
was glo meestal net kinders begrawe. Ons kan nêrens rekords
opspoor nie." Hierdie begrafplaas is onlangs deur Andries Hartman
en Ben Smith van die slagpale en vier van hul personeellede, Piet
Pietersen, Hans Balie, Danie Willemse en Jan Storm skoongemaak as
'n gebaar van samewerking met dié dorpsprojek.
TOURISM
GAINING GROUND IN LAINGSBURG
Laingsburg is planning six new tourist routes. Three eco-tourism routes
in the district will concentrate on the natural beauty of the area,
while three in town will cover the town's culture and history. In-town
there will be flood, cultural/history and graveyard routes which will
be laid out using local labour and recently acquired development funding.
"We believe that the little graveyard near the old Lutheran Mission
Church is the oldest in town," says mayor Mike Gouws. "We
have not been able to find any records, but we have been told that
these are mostly the graves of children who died during an epidemic."
In a gesture of co-operation with this town project this little graveyard
was recently cleaned by Andries Hartman and Ben Smith of the local
abattoir and four of their staff members, Piet Pietersen, Hand Balie,
Danie Willemse and Jan Storm.
THROUGH
THE KAROO WITH POST COACHES
Post coach routes through the Karoo are favourites among history buffs.
As these routes snaked through the old Cape Colony and into the hinterland
they gave a new importance to many towns, villages and farms. This
history has been captured in an 800-page book, The Cape Colonial Post
Office, by historian Dr Franco Frescura, who in 1994 was director
of philately at the South African Post Office. Scheduled for publication
in July, 2002, the work covers the country's postal history from 1792
through to the merging of the four colonial services under the Union
Government in 1910. The territorial expansion of the postal service
led to the mushrooming of many hinterland settlements. Much social
history is detailed in the book which has many postal route maps.
The book can be ordered from The Archetype Press (Tel No. 012 667
3802) at a cost of 135 US dollars, plus postage.
TERUGBLIK
OP NELSPOORT
In 1947 het die tien-jarige Katie Swartz van Nelspoort gehoor dat
die koning van Engeland daar besoek kom aflê Sy het amper uit
haar nate gebars van opgewondenheid en die vlaggie wat sy gegee is
om te waai as hy verbygaan het sy met trots bewaar. Die dag van die
koning se besoek het Katie douvoordag opgestaan om haar plek langs
pad in te neem. Sy het haar oë amper droog gekyk om 'n man in
goue klere met 'n kroon op sy kop te bespeur. "Party van ons
het gemeen dat die koning in goud geklee sou wees en dat goud van
sy klere sou aftap," sê sy. "Maar dit was nie so nie.
Hy was 'n gewone mens in normale klere. Ek was baie teleurgesteld.
Ek het nie meer my vlaggie hoog gehou nie. Alles was so anders as
wat ek verwag het." Dit is van die stories wat 16 Nelspoort vrouens,
onder leiding van die Southern Cape Land Committee, geboekstaaf het
onder die tietel Nelspoort Ons Lief en Leed. Die boekies is beskikbaar
teen R35 elk by Restvale Primêre Skool (Tel No. 023-416-1648)
of die Advieskantoor (Tel No. 023-416-1878).
A
PEEK INTO THE PAST AT NELSPOORT
In 1947 ten-year-old Katie Swartz of Nelspoort heard that the King
of England was to visit the settlement. She felt she would burst with
delight. With great care and pride she placed the little flag given
to school children to wave when he passed, in a very safe place. Eventually
the big day dawned. Katie was one of the first to take up her place
along the route, flag at the ready. She stared down the road searching
for a man dressed in gold with a sparkling crown on his head. "We
children believed all kings wore crowns and precious robes which shed
bits of gold as they walked," she said. "Suddenly he arrived,
but he nothing like the kings in our picture books. He was an ordinary
man, dressed in normal clothes. He was not at all like I expected
him to be. I was so disappointed, I could not even wave my flag!"
This is the type of story told in "Nelspoort Ons Lief en Leed"
a little Afrikaans booklet written by 16 Nelspoort women in an effort
to capture the history of the tiny settlement. It is available at
a cost of R35 from Restvale Primary School (Tel No 023-416-1648) or
the Advice Office (Tel No 023-416-1878).
WHERE
THE CLOCK ALWAYS CHIMES BREAKFAST
"It's never too late for breakfast" proclaims a sign at
the Laingsburg Country Hotel. Guests at the Coffee Shop just smile
when first seeing it. Soon, however, they find that the hotel's famous,
hearty Karoo breakfast of bacon, eggs and all the trimmings, actually
is available from 06h30 to closing time at 22h00. "It's among
our most popular meals," says owner Brenda Poole.
SPECIAL
NOTE
All
those involved in tour guiding now have until the end of May to register.
Western Cape registrar Anne Barnes Tel. 021-483-4165 has necessary forms
and full details
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
Cost : R30 per annum to cover copies sent by postage
e.mail : karootour@internext.co.za
These items may be used to promote the Karoo and
republished with acknowledgement to Rose's Round-up
Copyright: Rose Willis
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