Rare fynbos, Hermanus golf course

Number 12: June/July 2005
ISSN 1810-5580
Full-size PDF of cover (252K)

Colouring in the world we live in
Driving through a landscape or village is much like watching just more TV – a picture in a frame. It is only once one knows the people who live in the houses, the history of a place, the names and family connections of flowers and birds, that our surrounding pictures come alive and get a soul.

A signboard next to the road then points to real people and their stories. A farmhouse becomes the site of an old Khoekhoen kraal and a stopover for travellers with weary oxen. A dry riverbed next to a highway is the place where a rhinoceros once came to drink at a spring.

Village Life is about the stories of mostly ordinary people, some of whom did extraordinary things. And it is about our place in history and in nature, ultimately the source of our sustenance and of much enjoyment. There are more than enough publications writing about everyday, ever changing news, disasters and scandals. We like to focus on some of the more lasting, positive things in life.

• Welcome to our new readers. This is the first issue of the magazine to be distributed throughout the greater Western Cape and beyond.

Contents

3: Spoil yourself at luxurious Grootbos
Special offer for readers of Village Life

4: Rare plants are threatened by Hermanus golf course
Botanical Society fights against fairway
Read full text

6: A dog in sheep’s clothing
Rambo misses life on the porch

8: Klipgat Cave – home of early man
This archaeological site gave us some of the earliest evidence of the first modern humans. Facilities at the site will now be upgraded thanks to a grant from the national Lotto. Text & photographs by Maré Mouton

15: Stitching together at Mfala
A workers’ cooperative produces vibrant products

16: Veterans chugging along
Old tractors and engines are central to a wider conservation movement

18: Kingfishers
Veteran bird-watcher Nico Myburgh tells us about five of these regally attired species. Read full text.

22: In the footsteps of Jan Hartogh
Our researchers for the first time reconstruct the route taken in 1707 by Governor van der Stel’s servant

28: Feathers, frills and friends
The Red Hat Society spreads its cheer

30: Molly D’Arcy Thompson
A tribute to a woman who in many ways were ahead of her times.
Read full text.

Cover story:
34: Klippe Rivier – Grande dame of the Overberg
The chequered history of this historic farm near Swellendam

40: As South African as bobotie!
We prepare, taste and photograph another well-loved recipe

42: The Village Gardener
Tracy Paton’s down-to-earth gardening column features:
42 A fresh look at succulents. Read full text.
44 A snake to eat your snails
45 The striking strelitzia

46: It’s just bursting with nutrients
Louie Lemmer continues her series on edible seaweeds, sharing recipes for nori

48: A toy story
Two old friends are brought together because of a toy truck built more than 50 years ago

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The expansion of the Hermanus golf course threatens a patch of rare coastal fynbos. Photo: Christine Wakfer
Rambo, Merino ram
The story of Rambo, a rather confused sheep who thinks he's a dog.
Klipgat Cave archaeological site
Artist Molly D'Arcy Thompson
Klipgat Cave on the south western coast was home to early "modern" humans in the Middle Stone Age as long as 70 000 years ago, far earlier than any in Europe.
Molly D'Arcy Thompson defied the conventions of her time to travel, paint and write.
Stone-age artifacts, Klipgat Cave
Left: A more recent era at Klipgat cave. Beads and pendants made from shell from the Later Stone Age (1500–2000 years ago), probably by Khoesan herders.
Traditional bobotie dish
Antique tractor
From the Country Table, probably the best bobotie you'll ever taste!
Old tractors and other machines wil be on the national show in Villiersdorp in August.
Klippe Rivier< Swellendam
Klippe Rivier, "the finest house in the Overberg", has seen many famous people come and go, including two Boer Presidents
Gable, Klippe Rivier, Sellendam