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Subject: Turtle Essays Essays ezine 165 dated 27.2.2006 - February27, 2006



Turtle Essays
Edition no 165
dated
27th February 2006

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Cape Town tours

Turtle SA Tours  offers tours to many of the places written about in theTurtle Essays ezine and website.

As people like to go off the beaten track  occasionally tours visiting the lesser visited attractions can be arranged.

To enquire email me at tourinfo@freeautobot.com or tourinfo@turtlesa.com


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In this edition:

Editors Blurb
A visit to the Olifants River Valley

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Editors Blurb

Hi there folks.
Welcome once again to all my regular and new readers.
It's great to have you all receiving my weekly  letters.
This week we are still out in the countryside  about 300 kilometres north of Cape Town in an area known as the Olifants River valley.
The area is well known for its citrus fruit and is also the home of the Rooibos tea industry.
It's also one of the hottest regions in the Cape with  the average daily summer temperatures about 35 degrees and going as high as 45 degrees centigrade.
It was just my luck to visit the area on a weekend  when the temperature soared to 45 degrees and boy was it hot.
Fortunately we visited the Lamberts Bay area first and enjoyed a cool 21 degrees on the beach there before making our way  inland to Clanwilliam where we spent the night.
 Clanwilliam is a great place to explore with lots of history in its main road and a restaurant that serves great steaks at very reasonable prices  and really makes a fuss of you if it happens to be your birthday.
Thanks Olifantshuis Restaurant Clanwilliam (Phone 027-4822301)
Enough from me for this week.

Geoff Fairman
PS. There are some great photos on the webpage which you can find here:
  Http;//www.turtlesa.com/ezine165.html

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A visit to the Olifants River Valley

The N7  highway to the north is an interesting drive.
As you leave the hustle and bustle of the city you enter a completely different world when you reach the country towns of Malmesbury, Moorreesburg and Piketberg.
The scenery in these areas is remarkable, in the winter months you will have fields of green and yellow  as the wheat and granola crops grow in the fields.
In midsummer as it is now the green fields have turned into gold as the crops have been harvested and the wheat stalks left in the fields have dried out.
Looking back from the Piekernierskloof pass the  golden valley  stretches for miles in all directions with the only break in the golden colour being the N7 highway and a river or two flowing across the valley.
Following the N7 northwards over the pass one soon arrives in another world.
The change is remarkable  as you leave the golden valley behind  and enter a river valley  filled with thousands of citrus trees.
On either side of the valley are mountains towering over the river and their slopes are covered with short bush .
Citrusdal is the first town one comes across as you drive down the Piekernierskloof pass.
It is situated on the banks of the Olifants river and is surrounded by mountains and citrus trees.
The Olifants River valley was first discovered way back in 1660 when explorers crossed the Piekerniers  mountain range and found the valley full of elephants hence its name Elephants River.
Citrusdal is well known for its mineral baths which were established way back in 1739 when self catering chalets were built near the baths.
Many of the old buildings have been restored and can be utilised today when you visit the baths.

Leaving Citrusdal we follow the N7 northwards along the banks of the Olifants river.
Its banks are like an oasis in a desert as all along its course are either orchards or groves of trees  growing while just  a short distance away is dry bush and semi desert conditions.
Clanwilliam is the next town along the N7 but before you reach the town you come across the Clanwilliam dam.
At the time of our visit in early February the dam was 46% full and looked a picture as it lay glistening between the mountains that surround the town.
On our return trip a day later the dam was only 45% full and given the heat and the speed which the water in the dam was being utilised the dam should have been empty within six weeks.

Clanwilliam is a  historic town where people started settling in 1725.
The main street of the town is filled with old buildings and old churches,
As is usual in country towns in South Africa  most of them grew up around a Dutch Reformed Church.
Clanwilliam is no exception and in its main road you can find the "Flower Church" which was built in 1864 and is still used as a church today.
Its claim to fame however is that it is used for the annual flower show held in the town each year .
Another old church is the  St John the Evangelist Anglican parish that was established in 1857 and consecrated by Bishop Robert Gray Anglican Bishop of St George's Cathedral in Cape Town in October 1866.
Main Street as it is known today is in fact not the original main road of Clanwilliam.
The original main road leads off to the left from Main street where the road splits near the old prison.
In this street their are a number of old Cape Dutch houses all beautifully restored.
Today the  town  is  at the centre of the Rooibos tea industry  and is surrounded by fields of this tea bush.
Its  needle like leaves produce a tasty and  aromatic tea that enhances ones health and  is especially  beneficial to the nervous system.
Benjamin Ginsberg  a Russian immigrant  first marketed the tea in 1904.
Other attractions are the Clanwilliam dam which is well known for its water skiing and also for its bass fishing.
On its banks it has a number of bungalows that can be hired for holidays and weekends and it also has a large camp site with some sites electrified.
For visitors from abroad who want to get away from the northern winter Clanwilliam is the place to visit.
In the summer months its temperatures reach the high 40's centigrade and even mad dogs and englishmen look for shelter in the shade.
Many of the locals have gone into tourist activities and have   turned  their homes into  bed and breakfast establishments catering for people wanting to escape the northern winters.
They provide shelter from the heat of the day by providing airconditioned rooms and swimming pools for their guests.
One such establishment is Clan Court owned and run by Dave and Sheena Nutter.
Their heated salt water pool is to die for especially at 10.00 pm at night when it is still 35 degrees centigrade outside.
Clanwilliam being  about  250 kilometres from the Cape Town is far away from the city pollution  and lights and so by lying back in the pool at Clan Court  having a late night dip one gets a spectacular view of the stars in the night sky.
If it were not for the Oliphants river the lush valley would be a desolate semi desert area.
The locals  farmers  have utilised the river well and produce some of the best oranges in the world in this valley.
About 24 kilometres downstream from the Clanwilliam dam is another dam named the "Bulshoek Dam" which is also utilised for irrigation.
On its banks a number of vineyards have been planted which beaqutify the surrounding area.
South Africans love water so the dam owners have established a campsite with self catering bungalows and facilities for caravans and tents close to the dam.
Counting the number of boats on the dam the campsite appears to be popular with locals.
The Clanwilliam area may be a long drive from Cape Town but once you arrive and settle into your B&B its a great place to visit.
Give yourself time to explore the village and its surrounding areas and if you have a 4X4 vehicle you can  also explore some of the outlying areas using the old mountain passes built by the  farmers of yesteryear.
Like to visit this area next time you visit Cape Town.
Contact Turtle SA to arrange a visit for you.
Here is the address :  mailto:tourinfo@turtlesa.com
See you all in Cape Town soon.

Geoff Fairman
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For my personal details, contact address, and warnings  regarding products advertised in this ezine please read  the disclaimers which can be found at: http://www.turtlesa.com/Disclaimer.html





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