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Subject: Turtle Essays Edition no 177 dated 19th June 2006 - June19, 2006



Turtle Essays
Edition no 177
dated
19th June 2006

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Peninsula lighthouse tour

Our Peninsula Scenic tour can take in all the lighthouses along the Cape Peninsula coastline with slight adjustments to stops to make up time.

To find out more  about a lighthouse tour contact me at tourinfo@turtlesa.com

I look forward to hearing from you.

Geoff Fairman

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**
In this edition:
Editor's Blurb
Lighthouses and wrecks Green Point to Danger Point.

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Editors Blurb.

Hi there folks.

Welcome to all my new and regular readers.

This week the article follows on to the article of last week.

We will be visiting some more of the lighthouses on the Cape Peninsula and southern coastline.

I am also highlighting some of the wrecks that have happened near the lighthouses.

I trust you will enjoy the article.

This newsletter is going to be my last for a month as my wife and I are off to the UK for three weeks to visit my daughter and do a tour of the British Isles.

Our excitement is starting to mount as the last time we visited the UK was in July 1976.

My next letter will be sometime in July.

Geoff Fairman

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Lighthouses and wrecks Green Point to Danger Point.


 This week we  continue our trip along the Cape Peninsula coastline visiting the various  lighthouses found along its shores.

The first lighthouse cannot be visited as it is no longer in existence.

It was the Mouille Point lighthouse and  stood in the grounds of the present day Cape Technicon at Granger Bay.

All that is left of it is its circular base in the Technicon grounds.

When it was still in existence the tower was plastered and painted white and had a dioptric lamp which used  about 730 gallons of sheep tail oil per annum.

The lighthouse was finally  decommissioned  on the 15th April 1906.

Unfortunately during its lifetime  a  number of ships ran aground on its rocky doorstep.

The first ship was the RMS Athens which ran aground in May 1865 and two months later a second ship "The Piscatua " was also wrecked on the same spot.

The RMS Athens was a mail steamer belonging to Union Steamship Co.

It had a crew of 29  who all perished when the ship sank.

The sea on the day of the wrecking was extremely rough and as the ship tried to steam out of Table Bay it was swamped by some large waves which put out the boiler fires leaving the ship to the mercy of the seas.

The ship broke up rapidly when it hit the reef and today all one can see of the ship is its engine block.

 A few kilometres  along the coast is the Green Point Lighthouse which is today mistakenly called the Mouille Point lighthouse by some  people.

It has red and white diagonal stripes  and a number of other navigational aids.

The most well known aid is its foghorn which when the mist
descends on Cape Town and Table Bay is used to warn ships of the dangers of the coastline.

Because of the foghorn the lighthouse has been given the  nickname of "Moaning Minnie".

Green Point lighthouse has witnessed many a ship wrecked on its doorstep with the latest wreck happening in 1966 when the SS Seafarer ran aground  during a gale force northwest storm.

Fortunately no lives were lost as helicopters from the Ysterplaat airbase were able  to lift people off the stricken vessel and land them safely on the beach.  

Following the Atlantic coastline  around the Cape Peninsula  we come across  the 100 feet high Slangkop lighthouse at Kommetjie.

This lighthouse  is the tallest coast iron tower  on the South African continent.

It sections were cast in 1914 but  it was only erected and commissioned in March 1919.

The lighthouse although fully automated is still manned for security reasons today.

Since its construction no ships have run aground near it.

A fishing  trawler however ran  aground in the vicinity of the island in  Kommetjie  during the 1960's and was salvaged and taken by road to Cape Town where it was refloated.

The only ship to run aground near Slangkop Point was the SS Clan Monroe whichdid so on the 2nd July 1905.

After sitting high and dry on  a rock shelf just below where the lighthouse now stands it eventually rotted away and sank below the waves where it still lies today.

Divers sometimes dive on  it on looking for trophies.

The next lighthouse along the rocky Peninsula coastline  is the Cape Point Lighthouse which is  built on an outcrop  of rock about 87 metres above the sea on Diaz Point.

This lighthouse took six years to build and was finally commissioned in 1919.

The first lighthouse at Cape Point was built in 1860 and was built on top of Cape Maclear about 250 metres above the sea.

Unfortunately the lighthouse was not very effective as it was often covered in mist and could not be seen by shipping.

In 1911 when the Portuguese steamship "The Lusitania " approached Cape Point the lighthouse was covered in mist and the ship sailed too close to the point and ran aground on Bellows Rock.

The Lusitania immediately lowered its lifeboats and fired off a number of flares to attract the attention of shipping and the lighthouse staff on top of the hill.

Soon help was at hand and by midmorning of the following day everyone aboard had been rescued.

This shipwreck turned out to be one of the most successful rescue operations carried out on the coastline in its time.

The wreck which was high and dry on Bellows rock eventually slipped off the rock and now lies in about 40 metres of water close to the base of Bellows rock.

This shipwreck was one of the main reasons the lighthouse was relocated to where it stands today.
 
The next lighthouse on our voyage around the coastline is Cape Hangklip lighthouse.

It is situated on the eastern side of False Bay near Cape Hangklip.
The lighthouse is a circular  reinforced concrete tower twenty two metres high and was built in two days in November 1960.
It is an un manned lighthouse and is monitored from Cape Point.
Over the years a number of ships were wrecked at Cape Hangklip.
They are the "Ternate" which was a Dutch wooden sailing ship which ran aground in 1680 and the German sailing vessel called the" Louise Scheller"  which ran aground in 1882.

There are many more lighthouses along the South African coastline but the last one that we will visit on this journey is the lighthouse at Danger Point which was built in 1895.

It has an 18.3 metre hectagonal tower which was constructed of concrete blocks.

It was at first painted with vertical red and white stripes but later the colour was changed to white with the lantern being painted red.

The area where it is situated is a burial ground for ships and there are no fewer than seven shipwrecks in the vicinity of the lighthouse.

The most well known wreck being the" Birkenhead" which ran aground on the treacherous Birkenhead reef in February 1852.

Of the 638 people on board at the time of the wrecking 445 perished.

All  the women and children  on board were saved.

The bulk of the passengers  on the Birkenhead were soldiers  and they were ordered to line up and  to stand to attention on the decks while the women and children were placed into the lifeboats  and rowed to safety.

The Birkenhead was badly holed  when it struck the submerged rock and sank quickly  taking with it many of the men  who were standing on the decks waiting to be rescued.

The reason for the troops being lined up on deck was that their  commanders were afraid that their men  if allowed to swim for it  would swim to the lifeboatsand possibly capsize them drowning the women and children on board.

This drill became known as the Birkenhed Drill where women and children were rescued first.

The strip of coastline between Danger Point and Cape Agulhas lighthouses is home to no less than 140 shipwrecks.

In the area are many uncharted rocks a short way offshore hence the large number of ships that have foundered along this stretch of coastline.

With the building of the lighthouses along the coast many ships have been saved from a watery grave as dangerous rocks are now charted and the lighthouses warn them of the dangers in their vicinity.

Lighthouses are interesting places to visit and if you are a diver many of the wrecks I have written about can be dived.

Why not take the opportunity of hiring one the refurbished houses found at many of the lighthouses along the coast and enjoy a weekend away from it all.

You might even find some long last treasure on some of the wrecks in the vicinity.

See you there soon.

Geoff Fairman

ps Visit  http:www.turtlesa.com/ezine177.html  to see the photos of the lighthouses


**

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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