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East Griqualand - Where the Spirit Roams Free | |||||
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East Griqualand: Frontier Holiday for Pioneering SpiritsEast Griqualand - wide, open spaces and lofty peaks urge the resourceful traveller to 'go where no visitor has gone before' - it's still that kind of place!
The Drakensberg World Heritage Site of our western boundary, plus the Swartberg, Bokkiesberg, Cedarberg and Ngele ranges to the east and south, are all alive with opportunities to play pioneer and take that 'giant leap' into unexplored territory. While not exactly maiden ground, but offering spectacular views and the company of black eagle, Cape vulture and lammergeyer, Mount Currie is the focal point of local history - East Griqualand's equivalent of Mount Ararat. Instead of Noah and his Ark, though, Adam Kok and his people - complete with 20 000 head of livestock - came to rest here in 1863, after two years in the wilderness searching for a promised land. Mixed biblical references aside, the Mount Currie Nature Reserve today offers almost 2 000ha of picnic-spots, campsites, self-catering accomodation, the Scout Memorial and walks among small wildlife...highlighted by a pleasant trail to the top of Mount Currie. The round trip should take about five hours - leaving enough time to sample the delights of Crystal Springs Dam... appropriately named lair of rainbow trout, bass and bluegill. Remains of the Griqua's original settlement lie within the reserve - an historical monument, together with their first, cross- shaped cemetery.
Adam Kok and his folk spent nine years on the slopes of Mount Currie before moving to the valley floor below... around a makeshift 'palace'. The leader declared this to be his seat of government and named it Kokstad - Kok's Town. When he died in an accident two years later, Adam Kok was eulogised by East Griqualand's first missionary, Rev William Dower, as having left an 'imperishable name in one of the finest districts of South Africa'. A monument marks the site of his grave, while the original Town Hall - built in 1910 - is a National Monument now serving as the local library. The former library - built in 1907 - is also a National Monument, and today houses the Kokstad Museum. Here you'll glean fascinating insights into both Griqua and colonial history...including the eccentricities of Frontier Armed and Mounted Police commander, Sir Walter Currie - the name behind the mountain. Matatieleis another peak- shadowed town, its 'Ducks have Flown'Basotho name derived from waterfowl-teeming wetland pools and marshes. The local museum - in a building that's ex-auction house, workshop and church - reaches beyond town chronicles to delve into Early Stone Age secrets of the San hunter-gatherers. Visit the nearby Wilfred Bauer Nature Reserve to stroll, picnic, catch fish and marvel at the descriptively named, crossbred zedonk! - we did warn you this place is unique!
Mountain Lake Nature Reserve is a National Heritage
Site a
little
further up(12km) from town, its rolling grasslands and
pristine
wetlands some
2 000m above sea level. When full, the lake boasts 30ha of
deep,
trout-filled splendour...with 80 bird species and
panoramic
views of
the Drakensberg range completing a rapturous ambience. Between Kokstad and
Matatiele, the hamlet of
Cedarville provides tranquil canoe-borne
excursions on
its surrounding, water-filled hollows. Also nearby, the
carp-abundant
Umzimvubu River is an ever-popular recreation ground for
locals and
visitors alike.
Venturing further afield, the 2-day Bokkiesberg
Trail will
take you
from the Cedarville Flats to a 3-roomed bungalow waiting
on
the range
heights.
Swartberg stands at the Kokstad-
Matatiele crossroads and, in keeping with the trends of
surrounding
local history, its original hotel - built in 1922 - now
serves as a
supermarket and trading store. The bed-and-breakfast
hospitality of
local farmers is another regional trademark maintained
here. And don
t forget to reserve your tickets for the wonderfully
scenic, steam-
train journey to Creighton in the southern Midlands - it
happens but
once a year and absolutely everyone wants to be
aboard! | |||||
| For more information about other Zulu Kingdom destinations || Email: kznta@iafrica.com || Phone: +27 31 366 7500 | |||||
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