Showing posts with label baviaansriver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baviaansriver. Show all posts

Monday, 6 October 2014

The rebel who died beneath a rock

I was following the river again, forever winding and twisting back and forth across it. I had to hurry now because I had promised Alex Pringle that I would pay a visit to his home – and I hadn’t had that on my schedule.
The road up the Baviaansriver valley, which crosses the river 27 times.

You have to drive carefully along these roads. I have previously lost two tires on a single stone along a deserted country road and had no desire to repeat the ordeal. My thoughts were elsewhere, though. They were marching with a troop of soldiers who was travelling this very road on the night of 9 October 1815. They were on a murderously hard mission to travel most of the valley’s length before the sun came up so that they could surprise one of the frontier’s toughest men. History will recognize the name of Freek Bezuidenhout.

The death of a rebel frontiersman

Freek Bezuidenhout was my great-great-great-great grandfather’s neighbour. He was a wild and restless man who feared nobody and seemed to merely want to be left alone. He was one of the few frontiersmen who had abandoned the conventions of regular life to a large extent. After the death of his first white wife, he imply cohabited with a brown woman, with whom he had a son called Hans.

At this time in history my ancestor’s youngest son, Adriaan, was working for Freek on his farm. Freek knew that the law would come for him one day. It started after a series of complicated arguments with a labourer of his by the name of Booi. The matter involved a dispute of livestock and wages, and looking at it now it is clear that both of them had acted wrongly. Booi, however, resolved to try to use the law against his former employer, knowing that the British authorities were at the time unusually biased in favour of the natives. He therefore went to complain to the authorities in Graaff-Reinet, who accepted his version of the story the way he told it.
Sir Andries Stockenstrom - the landdrost who sentenced Freek Bezuidenhout to a month's imprisonment in his absence, who ordered his arrest, and who had to preside of the eventual trials of the rebels of Slagtersnek.

When the law demanded that Freek had to come and explain himself, Freek essentially told the law to get lost, and gave Booi a thrashing to emphasize his dissatisfaction. Booi, of course, went and lay charges once again. The law summoned Freek to court a second time – a summons which he once again ignored.

This compelled the landdrost to sentence Freek to a month’s imprisonment in his absence. Freek sneered at the news and responded by making it clear that if the law wanted the honour of his company (it was probably a three week journey to Graaff-Reinet), the law could come to him. In all fairness it has to be granted that the law had dealt extraordinarily patiently with Freek Bezuidenhout throughout this drama.

There was by then an unexpected twist to the story, which history has sometimes missed, but which might help to explain Freek’s stubbornness in part. The fact is that Booi had become involved with the wife of another native, who then resolved the matter by murdering the intruder to his marriage. Freek knew about the murder, but since the outcome suited his purpose well-enough, he saw no reason to report it or make a fuss about it. Booi’s death should have ended all the drama. Unfortunately it made it worse instead, for it soon became apparent that news about the murder had leaked, and there seemed to be a chance that the authorities might consider that Freek must have had a hand in the murder. He was apparently quite innocent, but to Freek his indictment seemed to big a risk to bear.

The entire matter had taken two years by this time, but even Freek must have known that the matter was destined to come to a head eventually. The problem was that everyone was afraid of Freek. Even the district’s elected leader – field cornet Opperman – told the landdrost that he refuses to try to arrest Freek. It would simply be too dangerous.

So it came on this fateful night that a contingent of 12 Hottentot soldiers, called “pandoers” were sent to go and arrest the wild frontiersman at first light. They were under the leadership of a British lieutenant called William MacKay, a Hungarian mounted policeman named Gerrit Lemke, and a Dutch sheriff of the court called Londt, and soon also to be joined by a Lieutenant Rousseau.

27 times they crossed the Baviaans that night, no doubt nervous about what would happen when they finally met the man who defied all authority. I could well imagine that the Baviaans river valley must have been a scary place at night. With sleeping baboons barking their alarm from the cliff tops, or the sudden snort of a rhino in the riverine bush, their nerves must have been raw. They reached Freek’s farm just when dawn began to smile upon the world.

Two days previously, after he returned from a visit to my great-great-great-great grandfather, Freek had told the boys who worked for him to keep an eye open for the law. Adriaan Labuscagne, together with Freek’s son Hans, and another Erasmus lad were already working in the fields when the soldiers made their first appearance. Adriaan was 17 (he later lied about his age and said that he was 15), Hans was about 20 (he did not know his own age), and Jacobus Erasmus was 18.

By reading all 1,000 pages of the trial transcripts which later followed, as well as other sources, I was able to piece together the events that followed in considerable detail.

Freek was the first who noticed the arrival of trouble when he observed to the boys: “Here come the soldiers who want to come and take me away.”
What Adriaan did exactly I could never find out, but it seems that at this point he must have made himself scarce. Freek’s wife brought guns, however, and these were pressed into the hands of the two boys, Hans and Jacobus. Freek shouted at the soldiers not to come any closer, but they either did not hear him or deliberately ignored him.
“Bezuidenhout! Give yourself up! Don’t be a blood fool, man!” lieutenant Rousseau shouted.
To this Freek bellowed in return: “Never!”
Rousseau then ordered his men to spread out and charge with bayonets, but with the instruction not to shoot.
Freek had other plans, though, and soon shouted at his son to open fire.

For a while Hans could not bring himself to shoot, and so an argument ensued between him and his father. Soon, however their position became so threatened that the boys felt obliged to open fire at the soldiers, along with the determined older man.

It took a while before the officer decided to finally answer the fire. As Freek’s trio of defenders retreated up the river’s course, with Freek’s wife was carrying a heavy bag that contained an astonishingly large amount of ball and powder. They were definitely prepared for a considerable resistance. Freek’s health was apparently not so good, though, and being greatly plagued with gout he retreated to the shelter of a cleft rock at the edge of a cliff that overlooked the river.
The monument marks the place where Freek Bezuidenhout fought his last battle against the Hottentot pandoers.

At this point Jacob Erasmus somehow abandoned the scene, leaving the stubborn Freek and his loyal woman and frightened son in their rocky fortress. The officers tried to convince Freek to surrender but he would not hear of it.

Even when Hans pleaded with him to give in, he replied that, “even if I present myself I will be hanged for it. Shoot me dead. If they shoot me dead – that’s when they’ll get me.”
The firefight resumed, and when it died down again, a Hottentot pandoer approached to try and reason with Freek.
“Who are you?” Freek demanded.
“Joseph,” the pandoer replied, upon which he asked if he could approach.
“No, stay away from me!” was Freek’s reply.
“Master Freek, lay down your gun; I shall do the same with mine, then we can talk about it,” the pandoer persisted.
“Don’t talk to me again,” Freek shouted back. “Stay away from me!”

Eventually, after much pleading from Hans, Freek reluctantly agreed that if he was allowed to exit his stronghold safely and was given a horse, he would ride to my great-great-great-great grandfather Frans Labuscagne, where he would presumably agree to cooperate.
Unfortunately their assurance did not sound so convincing, and suddenly Freek became suspicious.
“No, I can see it,” he roared. “You want to arrest me. Damn it – I won’t come out! You can have me if you kill me. Now I’m not saying another word…!”

After this the fighting resumed, with the soldiers firing into the crevasse, and throwing rocks into it.
Suddenly, however, Freek gasped, “Son, my arm is broken!” before falling to the ground.

A bullet had struck him in the chest so that it exited at the back of his shoulder blade. It had gone through the heart. For the wild frontiersman the world dissolved into a blur and then turned black as he exhaled his last breath. Freek Bezuidenhout had fought and lost his last battle.
The lonely grave of Freek Bezuidenhout, near where the rebels swore revenge.

This did not end the drama at the frontier, though. In fact, unbeknown to all the actors in this dramatic scene, the trouble had barely even yet begun. The next day all the neighbours in the valley assembled on the sad little plain where Freek would be laid to rest. They were all men of the veld – toughened by the elements and hard as iron in their desire to be independent and to survive. Men who could hold a gun were precious on the frontier. Even wild characters like Freek Bezuidenhout – and the frontier could ill afford to lose them.

My family was there, of course, but the mood was sombre where the dark-clad figures huddled upon the windswept plain. When Freek’s coffin was finally covered they all retired to his house to talk things over. The Bezuidenhout family was furious about what happened, and his brother Hans seemed most upset of all.

When he noticed that the mood was getting ugly, Great Willem Prinsloo asked my great-great-great-great grandfather Frans to take a walk with him in the garden sine he had a feeling that matters were heading in an unpleasant direction. He didn’t want anything to do with it, and so he hastened to eat, upon which he returned homeward down the valley.
The rocky cleft where Freek Bezuidenhout fought and died.

Soon Hendrik Prinsloo, Christiaan and Diederick Muller, Cornelis Faber, Stephanus and Louw Bothma all vowed to take revenge, with Hans Bezuidenhout being the loudest of them all. He then singled old Frans Labuscagne and Lucas Van Vuuren out and declared that they were “worse than hyena turds.” He even went so far as to blame field cornet Opperman. Being thus insulted, my great-great-great-great grandfather walked away in disgust. He had resolved that he would have no further part of the rebellion.

By the time I reached the place where Freek was buried, I had already relived the entire frontier drama in my mind and seen it played upon the surrounding landscape like a mental movie. I had always felt sorry for Freek Bezuidenhout. He had been in the wrong completely, but he had touched my heart with his simple desire to be left alone to mind his own business. It was an ambition with which I could strongly identify.
Freek Bezuidenhout's last stand as seen from the north-east.

At the site where Freek was killed, the wind comes rushing down the valley bottom, hits the cliff face and then blows your breath away with the unexpected updraft. I always look down into the crevasse with a mix of curiosity and caution. You cannot really see down to the bottom for the shadows are too deep. It was a dramatic place for a frontiersman to die. In a way I’m glad he lost his life in this picturesque spot, instead of in some British prison. More than likely he would have been thrown into the black hole, as the dungeon in the Castle at Cape Town was called. There, the man who had known nothing but the open plains since the day that he was born would have wept and withered until he joined the shadows that were darker than night itself. Freek died as he had lived. Wild, stubborn and completely free.
Monument at the place where Freek was shot.

The church at Eildon


Beyond the place of the tragedy the road suddenly dips lower, and then winds deeper into the mountains. Finally it reaches a junction where a simple sign on a farm gate announces that you had finally reached the place that I was heading towards. It was the old Faber farm, which now bore the Scottish name of Eildon.
Road towarrds the Winterberg.

Immediately upon my left, there stood a settler’s church, build of neatly dressed sandstone. This was the old Scottish Presbyterian church which serves the handful of remaining inhabitants to this day. Alex Pringle had invited me to explore it at length for I would find the door unlocked. He was right. The door swung open easily at my approach.
The Scottish settlers church at Eildon.

I found the church to be quite small, and guessed that it would seat about fifty people. It was clean and cool inside, with everything in order. An arrangement of withered flowers reminded me that the previous day had been Sunday. It was very quiet as the sun filtered through a stained glass window and bathed the floor in amber glow. It seemed like a world within a world, half removed from full reality.



It almost felt as if I shouldn’t be there. As if I was an intruder from a different environment who would spoil the untouched sanctity of this gentle place. 

Church interior at Eildon.

The big old Bible lay upon a pedestal, begging to be opened, inviting the traveller to read a passage. Seeing a Bible of its size and weight, I’m sometimes reminded that perhaps this is one reason why older generations used to take the word of God so much more seriously than people do today. It just seemed so imposing, so substantial – and so impressive – in such massive form. Maybe we unwittingly miniaturized God in our own minds when our printing presses succeeded in shrinking Bibles to a size that could more easily be carried in our pockets.
Bibles were large when people still had respect for the word of God.

Around one corner hung a hand-painted portrait of Thomas Pringle, who had been awarded the farm after the revel Faber had been hung at the execution which followed Slagtersnek. Beneath the sandstone slab, lay the bones of Thomas Pringle, re-interred here after his death in England. He was buried in the ground that had once belonged to a man who had believed that he would fight to set it free.
Beneath this slab, in the Scottish settlers church, the bones of Thomas Pringle lie.

Poor Faber. Poor everybody who had played a part in this sad drama. In the end it struck me that practically everyone who participated in the events that followed the death of Freek Bezuidenhout seemed to have emerged as victims of this deadly tragedy. Even Landdrost Stockenstrom and Landdrost Cuyler, who had to prosecute the rebels, yet also did their best to obtain clemency for them – even they were victims of the ironic hand of fate.
View towards the south-east from one of the windows in the Scottish settlers church at Eildon.

The aftermath of Freek's death


The tale which followed the funeral of Freek Bezuidenhout is far too long to share here, but I will briefly summarize. When the funeral was over, Hans Bezuidenhout and his companions began a campaign to stir up a large-scaled insurrection across several of the gigantic frontier districts. It was about far more than just the death of his brother, if you understand the context of events. The frontiersmen had suffered years of being terrorized by neighbouring tribes, during which first the Dutch colonial authorities, and later the British authorities usually showed themselves to be perplexingly on the side of the attackers, instead of the side of their own colonials. For decades the Dutch administration had been inefficient and corrupt, and when it was replaced by British rule, the settlers found them to be approximately just as bad, or sometimes even worse.

Hans Bezuidenhout selected a very novel strategy, which however original it might have been unfortunately also proved to be the undermining of his scheme. He namely went to the Xhosas in the east and tried to form an allegiance, aimed at overthrowing British rule at the Cape and driving the occupiers back into the ocean.

While many of the frontiersmen supported his initiative at first, this attempt at bonding with an enemy which had caused the settlers years of death and misery simply proved too much to accept. It cost him and his ringleaders critical support which they would eventually pay for with their lives. My great-great-great grandfather Leonard and his little brother Adriaan joined the rebels in the beginning stages, but as the drama unfolded and the bitter root of the allegiance began to reveal that it was doomed to failure, they managed to disentangle themselves from it just in time.

As it was, they still found themselves charged along with the other rebels, after the Government forces defeated the rebels at the place called Slagtersnek – or Butcher’s ridge. They were lucky, however, and escaped merely with a fine. The five ringleaders, on the other hand, were hung until they were dead.

The poet's shepherd tree 

I was now on the farm that Thomas Pringle had received, thanks to the vacuum of ownership after the rebels had been executed. He could not have known it then, but already the frontiersmen had had enough and were dreaming about leaving the British colony. It was 1820 when Pringle arrived, and by 1836 my family would join the first of the Voortrekkers to leave the country.

When they realized that they would spend the rest of their lives living in war and subject to pillage and plunder, they just packed their waggons, abandoned their farms, and rode away into the limitless no-man’s land that lay beyond the Orange River. With them came hundreds, and later thousands of other emigrants – tired to death of fighting both against their enemies, and being persecuted and humiliated by the authorities who ruled over them.
Painting of Thomas Pringle in the Pringle home at Eildon.

Thomas Pringle was the son of a Scottish farmer, who having a handicap to his walking, had not been able to follow in his father’s footsteps. Instead he became a poet, a writer and a journalist, before finally accepting a resettlement grant to relocate to the eastern frontier. Little did he or his fellow immigrants know it at the time, but the government’s sorry purpose was to bring more men into the conflict zone that had to function as a buffer between the Xhosa raiders and the interior of the colony. Instead of a mild and generous agricultural paradise, they discover a wild and savage land where the land yielded its produce grudgingly and everything around them was conspiring towards their destruction.

Thomas Pringle, however, did not seem so phased about it. Perhaps that was because ultimately he only lived seven years in South Africa before returning to England, and probably because Africa had charmed his soul just as she charmed the lives of all the men who came to love her. Still, the times he spent at his farm, which he now called Eildon, appear to have been happy ones.

I arrived before the brilliant white twin gables of an imposing old colonial house, feeling as unsure as I generally do when imposing myself upon strangers. I keep forgetting however, that in the wilderness there are no strangers. There are only friends whom you have not met before. Here, where people are even scarcer now than they used to be during the 1800’s, visitors seemed welcome. And the Pringle household proved to be no exception.
The stately manor of Eildon.

On the broad veranda I was met by a charming woman with a graceful bearing who extended her hand and introduced herself as Barry Pringle. She asked if it was alright if we talked while she was watering the garden. She would be hosting a gardening event next weekend and was expecting the arrival of a thousand people. It was important that the garden should look good, even in the baking heat of early spring.

Talk soon turned to the life of Thomas Pringle. I was told that her husband Alex, actually descended from Thomas’ brother, who had remained behind in South Africa, and who founded a dynasty whose roots trace back to this very house. She then asked if I had ever seen Pringle’s shepherd’s tree. I was mystified. I thought I knew a fair amount about history, but I had certainly never heard about this tree.
Formal gardens of Eildon.

So it came that Barry and I took a farming pickup and drove past the old family cemetery, down the slope and across a stream to where the original settler’s cottage was still standing. Her son now lives there, but even though the house had been restored over the years, it was still the same old settler’s cottage from generations ago. At the time that Thomas Pringle arrived, however, there was no house at all. Instead, he had himself built a native beehive hut, constructed from grass. Cool in summer and snug in winter, these beehive huts were very traditional, and very practical to live in at the time.

Next to the hut he had a shepherd’s tree, which most South Africans prefer to call the “witgat” tree. These are utterly remarkable trees. Firstly because there are relatively few of their kind. Secondly because of their pleasing appearance which is often umbrella-like in shape on account of how the animals tend to prune the succulent branches along the trunks.
The shepherd's tree at Eildon.

And thirdly because it is such a downright useful tree. The leaves can be eaten as a vegetable, and the roots are habitually roasted and ground to make popular substitute for coffee. It was under this tree, I was told, that Thomas Pringle used to sit and compose his poems, or write his fantasy stories about an imaginary world.

I don’t think Barry realized how enchanting I found this ancient tree. When I compared its current size to that depicted in a very old photographs of the same tree and house which must surely date from the 1800’s, it seemed almost no older at all. The witgat grows extremely slowly. It is an imminently patient plant, so very much in character with Africa itself.

Thomas Pringle would have been pleased if he could have seen a modern generation growing up beneath his trusty tree. Barry’s little grandchildren were playing the garden. Their mother apologized for what she called a mess, but what seemed to me to be just a delightfully homely country scene. She complained about the bushbuck that were eating her pansies and even the lavender bushes as fast as she could plant them.
The Shepherd's tree in olden days.

The shepherd's tree today, looking largely unchanged after perhaps a century.

I listened, but kept stealing glances at the shepherd’s tree. I’m not much of a poet, but for the sake of a romantic heart, I dearly wished that I too, could have spent an hour with my back against its trunk. To dream, to think, and perhaps to write a few paltry verses that would seek to capture something of the beautiful simplicity of this valley and its pleasant people.

Back at the manor house, Barry took her time to show me her graceful formal garden. Words can seldom describe the feeling of delight that one has in the wilderness of Africa whenever one comes across such an old haven of colonial splendour. Somehow it just seems to accompany the spirit of this ancient land so perfectly. With flowing gestures, she showed me her priceless painting by the famous painter, Thomas Baines. It depicted the Pringle house, probably around the 1840’s as seen from a distance.
A painting of Eildon by Thomas Baines, presumably around the 1840's.

Baines had a wonderfully unique talent to paint scenes that intimated animation. You always get the feeling that if you look away and suddenly look back at one of his pictures, you might be just in time to catch one of the figures still moving. While I enjoy good art immensely, you will always find me lingering the longest in front of the rare and wonderful paintings of the romantic explorer that was Thomas Baines.

Beautiful pieces of Victorian furniture, large old silver serving dishes with their plating worn away just slightly. Very tall ceilings and ancient panes of glass, through which the world is never as it is, but always rippled in impressionistic style. This was the house which the home of the Oracle. His son, David, told me more about the settler generation’s days. When I explained that I was still trying to find the exact place where my ancestors would have lived, he volunteered to introduce me to his father’s cousin, whom he described as a hugely interesting man whom he was sure I would enjoy greatly. I found him to be right on that account.

The butterfly collector 

On our way to the neighbouring farm of Ernest Pringle, David told me that Ernest had the biggest private collection of butterflies in the southern hemisphere. Originally an attorney, Ernest seemed more interest in life itself, and had spent much time discovering several unique new butterfly species, a number of which he had named after himself.
“Unless you plan to spend the rest of the day here,” David cautioned me, “I’ll advise you not to speak of butterflies.”
I took his advice, but I was tempted not to.

We found Ernest in a very large old house that seemed as if it had been caught in a time bubble from the 1950’s. Everything breathed the kind of world I had last experienced when I was a little child. Ernest invited us in with one of those extra wide and friendly smiles that you would come to expect among the best of country folk. He seemed surprised and slightly delighted when he heard about my quest.

It was not long before he vanished into the cool dark caverns of his house, only to return with an ancient hand-drawn map of the surrounding farms, done so beautifully that it might as well have been a picture in a gallery. Stories both related and completely unrelated to my quest poured fourth like water from a bubbling brook, and I knew that I was going to risk running out of daylight soon.

But when you meet people such as these good folk, you consider the risk only briefly, and then decide that you can sleep in your car for one night, if you really have to. Listen while you can when you find yourself in such a situation – for often times such experiences present themselves but once.

Across the map was scrawled in the hand of some legal clerk a case number and the words: “Pringle vs. Pringle.”
“What is that?” David asked his uncle.
“Oh that,” David smiled shyly, “is an unfortunate incident which we normally prefer not to talk about…”

For all its great mystery, however, Ernest proceeded to tell us the tale of an ancient feud between two family neighbours. A will, a contested property boundary, and water rights. It is a story as old as farming history itself – and it sounded all too familiar to me.

David told me about one solitary grave of a Boer fighter on the crest of one of the mountains on their land, which he thought nobody probably knows about. He said he had once almost driven into it with his pickup when he was fighting a runaway fire. It was in a place where no stones are to be expected, and he had completely forgotten that it was there. Together, we all wished we knew its history.

Then the conversation turned to farming. Fighting land claims was consuming much of Earnest’s time, while David and Alex were very concerned about the marauding jackal which he said, claims the lives of 500 of their sheep every year. The life of a farmer seems to have become no easier over the past 150 years.

I listened and I learned, while Earnest’s old Labrador lay by my feet, sleeping the slumber of a tired old beast that looked old enough to have been born when Thomas Pringle’s tree first sprouted. I knew that I would have to go soon and already felt sorry about all the information that I would not be able to absorb. It was a world which sounded so familiar to the one that I had come from. The same kind of people, the same kind of old-worlde homes, the same kind of conversations. It felt as if I had been invited to drink from a stranger’s pond, only to find that the waters tasted exactly like those which flowed from my own brook.
The road towards Winterberg.

And so we pointed our vehicle back towards Eildon where we arrived just in time to meet the Oracle himself as he returned home from towm. Alex smiled as we told him about our visit to his neighbour, and was glad to hear that I had seen the little chapel that he and the other farmers maintain so well, the shepherd’s tree – and the ancient world upon which the footsteps of my ancestors seemed to be only lightly covered by the sands of time.

It was time to go, for the sun was low by now, and I had yet to cross the Winterberg. The road gets at its worst along the berg, they told me, but as long as it was dry, my car would probably make it.

“Just take it slowly as you can,” I was told by one and all.

And so I took leave of the kind and generous people of the Baviaansriver Valley. With a feeling of contentment I turned eastward once more, and began the long and exhausting assault on the high land mass whose summit is always cold – the one so aptly called Winterberg – the Winter Mountain.


Next blog posting: I get lost, but am found by a man with a dog on a motorbike who helps me to find the place where Hans Bezuidenhout was killed. 

To the ruins of Great Willem Prinsloo

My mind was swimming in visions from two hundred years ago as I resumed my journey northwards. Around me farms and power lines vanished in a blur of imagination until only the tar road remained like the black umbilical cord that connected me to the unfolding past.

The road follows the banks of the almost always invisible Great Fish River until you reach Cookhouse. Cookhouse obtained its name from the wife of its original owner, who had a “kookhuis” or literally “cooking house” there. The farm still belongs to the original Van Aardt family.
The crossroads where I had to make a choice: the easy road ahead, or a road of unknown adventure towards the right.

Just outside Cookhouse the road skips across the water, at last yielding the traveller a view of its famous grey waters. You can see why once upon a time it marked the boundary between the old Dutch colony and the wilderness that lay beyond. It drains the desperately dry interior, but its the river is substantial because the catchment is enormous. Thus it is that the river flows fast and deep.
In the century of which I’m writing there used to be a succession of military forts built along its 30 foot banks. With just a few exceptions, however, these have all been clawed back into the surrounding landscape by the jealous hands of time and elements. The stone walls of the old military posts were slowly carted away by human hands to be used as building materials, while the sun-baked bricks and earthen plaster simply melted beneath the occasional rains of generations.
Giant wind generators catch the eastern wind to bring the light of civilization to Africa.

I counted the giant wind generators on the banks of hills. Looking like the remains from a crashed spacecraft from some sci-fi movie, I found their blades strangely beautiful as they slowly, gracefully, rotated in the eastern wind. It was going to be a pleasant day today, and already the needle quivered at 28 degrees.

I was following an ancient road which, although it had been modernized, was still serving the same purpose that it had since before the arrival of man. Marking the most gentle passage through the mountain folds, it is still carried travellers from Algoa Bay to Grahamstown, past Cookhouse and Cradock, and then on to Graaff-Reinet. This old town, once used to be the last outpost before the baking wilderness started – stretching for days and weeks into a land that the cartographer had yet to colour with its inks.

The road to Bedfort seems to be leading to a dead end in the mountains.
My plan was to visit the site where the actual battle of Slagtersnek had taken place. I missed the turnoff, however, and by the time I was certain of my mistake, it was already far too late to turn around. I stopped at the crossroad to Bedford and took a few moments to consult my map and GPS. I could have gone northwards to Cradock from here. It would have been a much easier route for the road eastwards leads through a broken wilderness of which the roads had been so bad on all my previous visits that I could never complete the full journey.

I hesitated for a while, but realized that mine is the heart of an adventurer. When given the choice between the familiar way and the road that promised hardship and adventure, I have always been inclined to choose the latter. And so, almost without even deciding upon it, the road simply chose itself for me and drew me eastward to the mountains. As the wilderness began to swallow me, I wondered whether I was making a mistake. I have often had that feeling at the start of some uncertain journey. I’m not sure if the first few miles get any easier even when the feeling becomes familiar. But there I was, feeling strangely increasingly disconnected from the modern world – and delighting in the feeling of it.
Tarkastad by way of Baviaansriver.

A few miles further on, a small road ventures left, spewing the comfortable traveller onto a dusty dirt road. The road sign says “Tarkastad oor Baviaansrivier”, but only those who know what lies ahead would understand the joke. It is like one of those signs you see at tourist traps, with little boards that point to New York, Moscow, Lisbon or Buenos Aires. It signifies a potential destination only, with no assurance that the direction it indicates would actually bring you there.

I smiled at this, however, knowing that I was committed already. You know you’re leaving the familiar world when you reach a security boom where you have to get out and press a button before the boom will lift. A security camera stares at you with one black eye. You’re reminded that the farmers are desperate again to remain safe against farm attacks and stock theft. Nothing much has changed since the frontier days, two centuries ago. Only now, instead of settler sentinels, you are guarded by a lens that came from China. It would be the last vestiges of the modern world that I would see for miles.
The historic farm of De Klerksdal.

The road soon swings right by the ancient farm of De Klerksdal, home of Gideon de Klerk, whose family has lived there for generations. I remember him as a gracious gentleman and passionate guide upon the footprints of the past. I would not have time to visit, though. The day might be too short as it is already.

The road degraded into a corrugation nightmare which rattled your teeth and jarred your brain cells against the suddenly unpleasant confinement of your scull. My father always used to tell me that this was one of the tributes to our government of old. They used to take pride in keeping dirt roads in great order. This road, I could not help but notice, seemed to have been purposely made to present a symbolic experience of the road to hell.
The famous Scottish poet, Thomas Pringle, who wrote so much about the Baviaansriver Valley in the 1820s.

The Scottish settler-poet, Thomas Pringle, described the world I was now travelling through. “The country beyond,” he said, “for a distance of seventy miles…. now lay waste and void, ‘a howling wilderness’ occupied only by wild beasts, and haunted occasionally by wandering banditti of the Busman race (Bosjesmen), who were represented to us as being even more wild and savage than the beasts of prey with whom they shared the dominion of the desert.”[1]

He also left us with a description of the region along the Little Fish River, where he described the vast numbers of wildlife that used to roam the plains. “So numerous were those herds that they literally speckled the face of the country, as far as they eye could reach,” he wrote. “Insomuch that we calculated we had sometimes within view not less than twenty thousand of these beautiful animals.”

In my mind’s eye I could see the multitudes, for this ancient landscape easily lends itself to the palette of the imagination. Following by a an extraordinary long plume of billowing grey dust, the small white speck of my sedan started inching towards the approaching mountain range. It looks as if some crazy surveyor must have built a road that would stop dead in front of the dying hills. Yet, at your approach they open up, as if some unseen hand had swung the door open to a forgotten world.
It is funny how time deceives one’s memory. I had remembered my next stop to be right there, when in actual fact it was a considerable distance into the mountain folds before finally I reached it. It was the old home of one of the giants among the frontier’s men – the elephant hunter whom everyone knew as “Groot Willem Prinsloo” – or Big William Prinsloo.
The homestead of Groot Willem Prinsloo, in a horseshoe of the Baviaans River.

Pringle described him as “a substantial African boor; a gigantic fellow, six feet five inches in height, and corpulent withal.”[2] Nestled in the middle of an impossibly tight horseshoe around which the river wound its way, I found the ruins of his crumbling settler’s home. This is, as far as I could establish, the only one of the region’s settler’s homes which is still standing. Reading Pringle’s account today, it is difficult to reconcile the lonely remnants of his homestead with the pleasing description that the Scotsman gave in 1820.
There was 30 years of war against the Bushmen, always hiding in the mountains, always ready to pounce on easy prey.

“Groot Willem’s house and farm offices,” the settler reminisced, “were constructed in a nook of the glen, with tremendous precipices of naked rock rising above and around, so as barely to leave on the bank of the river sufficient space for the houses and cattle-folds, together with a well-stocked garden and orchard, enclosed with quince and pomegranate hedges, and a small plot of corn land below.”
His house was perched at the lower end of the Baviaans River valley, and I always thought of this big man as a kind of sentinel for the entire region. When you read about his substantial part in the region’s history, you’re left with the impression of a physically big man who nevertheless had a warm and genial nature. A man not to be crossed, but at the same time also a man who did not like to fight more than circumstances demanded.
The wealth of the wilderness - an angora goat stares at me as I'm looking for a place to cross the Baviaans River.

Nature was alive with the sounds of spring when I parked my automobile along the road and waited for the dust to pass. There were echoing bird sounds in the riverine bush, and the diesel-chopper sounds of wasps and heavy duty flying beetles. The engine ticked patiently as I collected cameras and all the paraphernalia that accompanies explorers when they jump into imaginary wormholes that lead to the unremembered past.

The Baviaansrivier does not always flow, but spring had sprung, and the water was clear as crystal. Sweet with life from the Winterberg Mountains in the east. I struggled to find a series of rocks that I could step on to pass the flow. When I did, I was greeted on the other side by a flock of yellow-white angora goats. They stared at me with curious eyes, and the nearest one allowed me to run my fingers through her luxurious tresses. This is where mohair is produced. The expensive export textiles that has become the wealth of the barren wilderness.

The air was sweet with acacia flowers and globs of bees were feasting drunkenly as I passed. You have to stop in this valley if you want to understand why the pioneers found it so delightful. Driving past you’d wonder why anyone would choose to live here. Yet, when the silence greets you, you invariably discover that this is an enchanting world which seems to speak of peace, and always invites you to stay a little longer.
The remains of the homestead of Groot Willem Prinsloo, small for what the big man that he was.

Fighting my way through thorns and shrubs, I finally emerged into the clearing where the old ruins were still standing. Ancient walls of stone, plastered with local clay greeted me indifferently. I paused for a moment to pick up shards of blue and white porcelain from long ago. This, I realized, once belonged to someone who had dreams. A wife, perhaps, to whom they were objects of civilization which she had struggled to protect from Africa’s violence. A struggle that had ultimately been lost. Fragments from the never-ending quest to preserve dignity among the ashes. The porcelain pieces reflected the sun as I held them in my sweaty palms, and slowly lifted my gaze.
The windows of Willem Prinsloo's house appear to have been bricked up to leave only shooting holes.

Looking up through the pleasant heat, I could see that the old stone windows had been bricked up to leave what looked like shooting holes. Those were difficult times, when a settler family could live in a wilderness paradise for a year perhaps, and then suddenly be attacked at night. Firebrands upon the thatch, poison arrows through the window – or a cold iron blade in the long grass while a child was looking for a calf. Life was cheap upon the frontier in those days. If you were not prepared to fight for it, you were seldom permitted to keep it very long.
The interior of the Prinsloo home.

Crawling through the cobwebs and a thorn branch at the entrance, I surveyed the interior of Groot Willem’s house. How could such a big man have lived in such a small home, I wondered? But I forget sometimes. In the frontier years, people lived outdoors. Their homes were mostly used for sleeping, and since they were so often destroyed and plundered, it was seldom worth the trouble of building lasting structures. 
The burning of a settler farm during the time of the frontier wars.

Theirs was a generation that had grown up wild. Thomas Pringle said that the frontiersmen were among the wildest of the colonists. And yet, for all their quarrelsomeness and stubborn dedication to survival, there seems to have been an element of gentleness about them.
Travellers described them as nearly always living in small, unpretentious homes which housed whatever items of civilization they had managed to preserve. Most importantly, it housed guns and powder, a few precious tools, and coffee and sugar that was bartered from distant towns. 

Occasionally there was a treasured heirloom. Something from a life of powdered wigs in Cape Town, or a letter from a relative in Amsterdam. Mostly, though, there was only what nature chose to give – and that was a horizon full of treasures.
Beams such as these could very well be precious yellow wood from the forests of Bosberg in Somerset-East, many miles away as there were no big trees near the Baviaansriver valley.

Some of the pioneers had grown to be immoral and ungovernable, but on the whole, historians noted that they had somehow remained an unusually religious society. Even though there were no schools at all, much care was given to teaching children to read and write. Children were christened and couples were wed, even if it meant having to make a journey lasting weeks or months to the nearest centre of civilization.
The settlers were religious as a people, and even though there were no schools they took great care to see that most of their children should have an effective basic education.

Travellers nearly always described them as among the most welcoming and hospitable people they had ever encountered. Even when language made it impossible to converse, the settler-folk usually treated visitors with the greatest consideration. Lichtenstein said that the settlers had the most beautiful young daughters he had ever known.

At Prinsloo’s home, I thought about all the famous names of history who had enjoyed Groot Willem’s hospitality in this spot. Thomas Pringle’s party of bewildered British settlers were greeted here, and sent along their way with gifts of oranges and pumpkins. Many others – friends and enemies alike – were sheltered and fed by Prinsloo and his family.
General Jacob Gordon was a guest of Willem Prinsloo on several occasions. Source: Wikipedia.

Colonel Gordon painted a picture of his homestead which I found hard to reconcile with the crumbling ruins around me today. Yet, I understand. Africa is jealous for her wilderness. She wipes our footprints from her ancient landscape at every opportunity, always trying to restore it back to the way it used to be. It seems dignified to me if you think about it in the greater scheme of things.
For some reason Willem Prinsloo’s home now housed the biggest collection of wasp’s nests I had ever seen. Each being white like paper, and about the size of a cricket ball, I could not help but draw my collar around my neck as the large black wasps flew nervously to and fro in the half light of the empty chamber.

I wanted to feel the sun again, away from the smell of bats and the reek of a thousand cooking fires in the narrow hearth. It was good to have visited the old Prinsloo farm. It was something I had always wanted to do. He felt like a friend to me now, and however I tried to picture him, I always saw him with a laughing face.

The image made me smile as I carefully crossed the stones towards my car. I was sorry to have to leave this pleasant spot behind. The angora goats stared at me with bobbing beards, looking half-surprised that I was leaving them so soon. But the sun was riding high now, and I knew the road ahead was long. I get trapped by the shadows of the past so easily. It takes willpower to pry their fingers from my shoulders, hungry as they always are for any kind of living company.

* Next blog entry: How I met The Oracle at Glen Lynden.




[1] Narrative of a Residence in South Africa., Thomas Pringle., Edward Moxon., London., 1835., p. 29.
[2] Narrative of a Residence in South Africa., Thomas Pringle., Edward Moxon., London., 1835., p. 30.