Victoria Falls - from the air, photo taken August 2004 |
We have booked our reservations for the July 2012 trip - at least the Zimbabwe part of the trip. Deposits for the safari camps will have to be paid by September and we will confirm our plane tickets at the same time. The plan for our South African travel hasn't been worked out yet but it looks like we will fly from Victoria Falls to Johannesburg on July 25, and spend the next ten days along the southern coast from Port Elizabeth to Cape Town.
Friends and camping.
My dad was an avid hunter. He learned to hunt from his father and from an early age my dad and my grandfather would hunt to put food on the table. The backwoods of Alabama would provide rabbit, turkeys and deer to supplement their often meager provisions. My twin brother and I had learned to shoot and to safely handle firearms at an early age. For our 10th birthday we were given single-shot, bolt action, .22 caliber rifles and taught basic shooting skills.
One of the managers at the Uitenhage Goodyear plant was George Whitehead, who learned of my dad's interest in hunting. It wasn't long before my dad was invited to a weekend hunt at Mountain View Farm, the home of George's parents. It was a successful hunt for my dad who became friends with the Whitehead family. In the next few years he established himself as a competent hunter and an excellent marksman; ultimately providing him with an ever-widening circle of farmers and hunting enthusiasts in the region who would give him opportunities to hunt. His knowledge of and interest in the amazing variety of wildlife in the area grew over the years; as did his circle of friends.
David and Charles Hayes were George Whitehead's nephews. They were the two sons of his sister Hilda Hayes who, along with their older brother Stan, were born and raised on the farm Mountain View. The family had generously suggested to my dad that my brother and I might like to spend a few days on the farm camping and this led to the first of many adventures for the four of us. David was a year younger than we were, and Charles was a year older. David and I became partners in many excursions into the beautiful valley at Mountain View and Charles and John teamed up to try our patience at times, but to always ensure there were no dull moments.
Mountain View Farm - photographed in January 1964. |
Much of the gravel road from Rocklands heading in a northwesterly direction is paved now but back then it was a dusty, often badly corrugated, road. About 12 miles (20km) from Rocklands, a short distance after passing the Sand River Dam on the left, we would take an unmarked turn right onto the farm road in the middle of a stand of Eucalyptus (or Blue gum) trees. Through several gates and over cattle grids (guards) the narrow three mile (5km) dirt road from there passed by rounded hills covered with wild proteas (suikerbos) and thick shoulder high shrub vegetation. On the right was ploughed, dry-land cropland, planted with winter wheat, lucerne, maize (corn) and other grains depending on the season. The last mile of the road descended down a steep mountain side with several switchbacks into the Elands River valley. In the distance, about a mile away you could see the small, old traditional Cape Dutch style farmhouse, built here fifty years earlier by George Whitehead. Behind the house, the mountains rise steeply to what is now designated the Groendal Wilderness. It is a wild and remote mountainous area, frequented now mostly by backpackers. There are no roads and only limited 4-wheel drive access.
After the steep descent into the valley you came to the Elands River and a rocky crossing. When the river was high, as occurred generally once or twice a year, crossing was only done by horseback or by a tractor pulled trailer. The wide valley floor in front of the farmhouse and further south along the valley was dotted with citrus orchards and some deciduous fruits such as apricots. Grandpa Whitehead, we were told, could sample a tangerine or orange from one of his orchards and tell you almost exactly where it was picked. I vividly remember his stories of the troops of baboons that would come into the valley each year and eat his oranges.
He told us that baboons could count to three but no higher than that. He would build a hide in the orchard and four armed men would go into the hide. One by one three hunters would come out, making their movements obvious to the distant baboon troop. The fourth man would remain in the hide and the baboons would, in due course, venture into the orchard and begin to eat the fruit. They were very destructive because they would pluck one fruit from the tree, take one bite and throw the remainder on the ground. A family of baboons could cause a great deal of damage in a very short period of time. When the apes came within range the fourth armed man could open fire and kill a few of the unsuspecting marauders. This plan would not work if only three men went into the hide and two came out. The monkeys always knew there was one human remaining and they would stay away until he left.
The presence of baboons was a sure indicator that there were leopards in the area. Over the years, the Whiteheads had shot a number of leopards that would become too attracted to their livestock, but for the most part, leopards sightings in the valley were rare. I can only recall seeing leopard tracks once in the years that we would camp at Mountain View.
John and I and David and Charles would camp in this valley many times over the next four or five years. Whenever we would ask my father if we could go camping he would insist that we could only go if personally invited by the elder Whiteheads. It wasn't okay that David or Charles would ask us. So we soon developed a “protocol” to conform to my dad's requirement. The four of us boys would decide on dates to go camping and begin making plans; then David would ask his mother to ask his grandparents if it was alright. Within a day or two my dad would get a call from one of the Whiteheads asking if we could come out for a long weekend.
The Elands River valley is a perfect place for four young boys to camp, and fish and hunt. It is, when not too high from seasonal rain, a crystal clear river with many rocky pools (read swimming holes), ideal for fishing for large-mouth bass. We would often look into the deep pools in the early morning and see bass lurking in the shadows. Consequently a rod and reel was always part of our essential equipment, as was a roll of aluminium (aluminum) foil. We would return to camp with two or three, one to two pound bass, cut the heads and tails off, and fillet them. The two sides, still with scales on them, were put together and the whole was wrapped in foil with a few dabs of butter. The sealed foiled package would be buried in the coals of the camp fire and allowed to bake for 10 to 15 minutes. When done, we would remove it and open the foil package. The flesh would fall away from the skin and the tender meat was easy to pare away from the bone. I can still taste this delicacy as I think about it.
We usually carried a shotgun with us and from time to time would bag a few pheasant or quail to cook. David or his brother would sometimes borrow a .22 caliber rifle from their grandfather in case we would see a bushbuck or duiker on our wanderings. Both are small African antelope that make good eating. We even had a few exciting night hunts for rabbits and springhares, those rabbit-sized hopping rodents that look like midget kangaroos in the distance in the glare of a powerful flashlight (or “torch”). Springhare hunts would have to attempted on moonless nights. I remember one night when we came across a porcupine and followed it for a while, its sharp white-tipped quills bristling with annoyance at our intrusion.
Our camping spots along the river were always chosen with care. Although we always took a tent or large canvas or plastic fly-sheet with us for shelter, we rarely used it. On winter (July) nights it was too cold to sleep in a tent. Our sleeping bags, in those days, weren't particularly warm, so we would lay on the ground as close to the fire as we could and sleep there. The first person to get cold enough would reach over and put more logs on the fire to keep the heat “turned on.” On those nights the temperatures would sometimes get down to just above freezing and heavy frosts would cover the grass and fields.
The only photo I have of Granny Whitehead, (1973) holding my son Graham. |
After a cold night on the ground we would often put on our heavy coats and walk to the house where Granny Whitehead would have hot coffee or tea prepared on the wood-fueled cast iron stove in the kitchen. She was the most wonderful, generous and hospitable person you could imagine. I don't believe I ever saw her sitting still. She always seemed to be cooking or sewing, knitting or arranging something. Grandpa George would always greet us with his loud booming voice and you could never meet him in the morning without a shake of his powerful hand. He was in his seventies when we first knew him. He was broad-shouldered and powerfully built and would often saddle up a horse and ride along the river to check on his orchards or his cattle. Together they had settled in this valley, built this farmhouse and raised three children. For most of their years here there had been no electricity. Water was collected from a small mountain stream about half a mile away and was piped by gravity into tanks adjacent to the house. A small staff of dedicated, friendly employees, many of whom had been born here, helped them run the farm. Most were descended from bushmen and had the small stature and fair complexions of that race.
We would have many adventures on this farm. The Whiteheads were substitutes for the grandparents that my brother and I had left behind in Alabama. I know that my dad, despite his insistence that we always go there by “invitation only” must have been delighted that we had the opportunity to experience the adventures that we had, especially as my mother's alcoholism would continue to grow more difficult to deal with. He would always listen to our stories and laugh when we described some of the things we would get up to.
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I will tell a few more stories from the farm in my next blog including our run-in with a skunk, and the night we had to leave our camp in a torrential rain as the river began to rise.
Mountain View Farm in 1999. Groendal Wilderness is in the background. |
Great post sir i really like it...Especially the camping trip you enjoyed with your friends...The pic captured from the plane of Victoria Falls is marvelous...
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