Garden Route and Tsitsikamma Hiking Trail
For the past few days, I’ve been preparing for a Garden Route drive beginning next week. Along the way, I’m excited to be joining a slackpacking group (strangers) for a wilderness adventure exploring parts of Tsitsikamma Hiking Trail.
It’s isolated new territory for me and I’m traveling solo, so there’s some apprehension. Recalling the perils of a two-month African safari last year, I’m concentrating on packing light and attention to detail, hoping to eliminate unexpected surprises.
We hike with daypacks while porters transport the heavier bags between rustic overnight huts. Hikers provide their own food, and there’s no electricity in the huts. Headlamps and candles are essential, but there’s abundant firewood for cooking. The hiking adventure is deep in the Tsitsikamma Mountains – a stunning untouched forest and fynbos wilderness!
Harold Porter Botanical Garden
Yesterday the weather was glorious, so I spent some time hiking at Harold Porter Botanical Garden near Betty’s Bay. October is spring in South Africa, but Mother Nature doesn’t seem to know that winter is over!
It’s not cold – 60s to 70s days and 50s at night – but the Atlantic Ocean puts a chill in your bones. Lately we’ve had strong wind, ominous skies, and much-needed rain. Thoughts are of Cape Town approaching summer with water shortages and rationing.
History of Harold Porter Botanical Garden
In the 1930s, three South African businessmen purchased Hangklip land located between Palmiet (bulrushes) and Rooi-Els (red alder). The business partners – Harold Porter, Arthur Youldon, and Jack Clarence – called it “Hangklip Beach Estates and divided the area into three townships – Betty’s Bay (named after Youldon’s daughter), Pringle Bay, and Rooi-Els”. Plots were sold to those interested.
Over the years, the nature reserve changed hands many times, but after Harold Porter’s death in 1958, it was left to the Shangri-la Nature Reserve. “Finding it too difficult to manage from Johannesburg, the corporate committee offered the land to the National Botanical Gardens of South Africa, which renamed it in Porter’s honor and took on management”.
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Harold Porter’s ashes were scattered in a favorite spot where Nerine Sarniensis bloom every March or April.
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In 1962, Hangklip Beach Estates added to the Botanical Garden by giving it the adjoining area of Disa Kloof. Later, the Betty’s Bay Management Board donated another piece of land which reaches to the Atlantic Ocean.
Today the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden stretches from the “top of the Kogelberg Mountain Range to the Atlantic Ocean, encompassing a whole river system”. Part of the land is a cultivated garden, and the rest a natural reserve included in the core zone of the Kogelberg Biosphere Reserve.
Harold Porter Legacy
Harold Porter “turned the first sod in the Garden” and marked out pathways “augmenting naturally occurring plants with other special or colourful species from elsewhere”. Porter built the Zigzag Border Trail to the top of Bobbejaanskop (baboon head) which is still used today.
Porter’s wife, Olive May, and son, Arthur, helped shape the garden. Arthur designed the entrance building from the stones of their home which burned down in 1960.
Harold Porter’s ashes were scattered in a spot where Nerine Sarniensis bloom every March or April. A plaque of granite sunk into a large sandstone boulder marks the spot. Olive May Porter died in 1984, and her ashes were scattered near her husband’s memorial stone.
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Harold Porter Botanical Garden stretches from the “top of the Kogelberg Mountain Range to the sea, encompassing a whole river system”.
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The Garden’s original paths and vegetation have changed over the years. Today, the centre includes a restaurant and conference facility. “New facilities are part of a Public Expanded Works Programme to provide wages and train disadvantaged individuals. South Africa’s Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism funds the Programme.”
Walking Paths and Hiking Trails
The Garden has seven paths and trails of varying length and difficulty:
- Zigzag Border Trail – difficult hike taking 6 to 8 hours
- Leopard’s Kloof Trail – permit required
- Fynbos Trail – via the contour path to Bobbejaanskop
- Nivenia Path – short easy path to Harold Porter’s memorial
- Disa Kloof Trail – dead ends at a waterfall
- Circular Route – easy trail around the Garden’s themed areas
- Ecosystems Walk – forests, dunes, wetlands, and fynbos
Fires and Storms
The natural garden consists of fynbos, and fires are a “necessary part of the cycle of this vegetation”. Heavy storms in 2005 and 2014 caused extensive flooding and damage to the Botanical Garden. The last major fire was in June 2010. A small fire occurred in November 2013 on the eastern boundary when “a young baboon climbed the electricity pylon, creating an electrical short-circuit that resulted in a shower of sparks that set the veld alight”.
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Since the Garden consists of fynbos, fires are a “necessary part of the cycle for this vegetation type”.
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“As always with disasters such as fires and floods, many Betty’s Bay residents have come to the aid of the Garden, helping put out fires and repair damage.”
Flora and Fauna
The garden is home to mammals, butterflies, insects, frogs, reptiles, and 900 species of birds. Some of the animals include:
- Leopard
- Caracal
- Baboon
- Porcupine
- Klipspringer
- Grysbok
- Genet
- Clawless Otter
- Mongoose
The variety of flowers at Harold Porter is magnificent, including:
- Guernsey Lily (Nerine Sarniensis)
- King Protea
- Honey Flower
- Red Crassula Kip Bloom
- Disa
- Sugarbush
- Blue Star
The streams, ponds, and waterfalls form an incredibly beautiful paradise. I hiked the Disa Kloof Trail to a waterfall and will return to the Gardens for more hikes. There is much to explore and enjoy in this peaceful environment!
It looks gorgeous. Good luck with the other hike. Seems our weather here is very similar to what you are experiencing. We did get a full day of soft rain one day last week and it refilled the creeks around us. First time in many weeks, maybe even three months. Thank goodness!
Are U having drought too? Hustling to get it together for the hike – very much isolated wilderness. Hope the other people are OK ;) and I can keep up – exciting and scary at the same time – love an adventure. Hope the weather is good!