12/19/2007

Day Hike to Die Hel

Die Hel is Afrikaans for The Hell. It is really quite the opposite, although it is really deep. We woke up to very foggy and wet clouds in the valley and set out for a day hike down river to the southern extent of the hiking trails in the park. After about an hour of winding through the fynbos and protea groves the trail turned abruptly down and turned into sort of a switchbacked staircase. Over the lip of the kloof (that's a canyon or ravine or gorge or something similar) we caught a glimpse of Die Hel. It's one of the deepest pools in the Western Cape Mountains:There's a creek-walk "kloofing" route down into Die Hel from the Klein Kliphuis Rivier bridge that ends with jumping the 5m falls into the pool. There's another one that starts from Die Hel and ends hundreds of meters below at a farm in the valley.
Our friends from the trail were already there, finishing their lunch when we arrived. They were kind enough to take a picture of us. And then they made us tea. I am not even kidding you. Then they jumped up, said, you should really skinny dip here and not wet your undergarments, and took off. So we did! Of course the rain started in earnest while we were in the water so the clothes all got wet on the rock anyway. But it was not cold and it was so lovely, and the hike out is enough to warm anybody up.
They tipped us off to a side trail on the way up the wall that led out to a rock overhang. We didn't notice it on the way down but went to check it out. The overhang offered shelter from the rain and a clear view up and down the kloof. It was obviously the best place to hang out for any inclement weather.
On the roof of the overhang was Khoi/San rock art. The Khoi and San people were the indigenous inhabitants of the Cape - indeed, most of South Africa - at the time of European colonisation. The Bushmen of the Kalahari are their remaining descendants. The paintings in Groot Winterhoek are somewhere between 300 and 6000 years old.
... when there were elephants here:

The paintings are done with mineral pigments, some colours weather better than others.

We spent the rest of the afternoon/evening posted up in the tent. We made tea under the fly and made a deck of cards out of ripped up pieces of notebook paper. Sila won.

Off to the Groot Winterhoek Wilderness Area

We went on a little road / backpacking trip up to the Groot Winterhoek Wilderness Area, only a couple hours outside Cape Town and up into the mountains.
We set off with Flipper, who likes 100km/hr and no more. Also, Flipper has no shocks. However, we are very happy to be leaving town.We drove up the coast road past our familiar northern suburbs beaches and farther north than we had been before - stopped only briefly in Veldrift on the coast to have a strange lunch and look for flamingos. For some inconceivable reason I didn't get a picture of them.

We headed inland through Piketberg. All roads, it seems, lead to Piketsberg. We took the R44 east to Porterville, got briefly lost and found a notorious prison, but then found the ungraded hellhole road which eventually switchbacked up the mountain front and gave us this view over the Swartland. Flipper does not do 4WD. Flipper's eye fell off.
We arrived pretty late and since it didn't occur to us to try the doorknob on the unoccupied (always? it turns out) reserve office, we didn't have a trail map for the park. We did have the government issue topo that showed nearly all the trails. It was pretty useful even once we got a park map because the park map omitted some water courses.

Here's Sila setting up the tent near the Disa Trail on our first night. See the ridgeline on the western horizon at dusk:
And after sunset:
The next morning we spent an ungodly amount of time organizing our packs and met some nice people in the parking lot who would reappear several times throughout our trip. They tipped us off that the office was WIDE OPEN for us to take the park map. Duh. We took off down the Groot Kliphuis Rivier (Big "rockhouse" river). There were some gorgeous pink flowers everywhere. They are called Ericas. Here's me with my little pack with one billion things tied to the outside. Time for a bigger pack maybe.
The trail follows the river down into some amazing piles of rock. Weird shapes and towers and balanced boulders everywhere. Here's Sila climbing among them as we stopped at a watering hole. This was before we knew how good the water is! All those rocks are essentially pure quartz and the rivers go in and out of the ground like a natural filter. There are some big tadpoles in the river though.

Here are some more of the strange "rock formations". Don't even ask, I have no clue. All I noticed is that they are most prevalent in the hinge regions of multi-kilometer scale synclines and therefore occur in roughly horizontal bedding with strong crossbedding, and are largely controlled by fold-perpendicular (E-W striking) vertical joint sets. But what you really want to know is, where are the sand people and do they have R2D2? And the answer is, I don't know.


This unfrickin believable waterfall was near the lower end of the river trail. Had I known how close we were I would have insisted on a swim! Look at the ferny goodness on that rock wall. So cool and refreshing. The streams through the fynbos tend to have a reddish tint to the water, I'm told this is a result of the organic acids and/or tannins produced in the soil. Dissolved organic acids would theoretically enable the water to carry a bit more iron but Prof. Harris tells me the waters (on Table Mountain anyway) have less dissolved solids than any natural waters he's analysed in his lab.
Sila found a rock which caught his interest. A PacMan rock which ate his head.


It was so frickin hot (40C/105F) and I was very cranky about passing up the waterfall so I took a nap in the shade of a precariously balanced boulder.
During our nap, the nice folks from the parking lot caught up to us and told us we were indeed nearly to our destination and we really ought to swim. This was good news and we followed their advice. Also, we lost the trail and waded through a muddy creek so we were soaked and feeling much better when the 13-km trail spit us out on the jeep track for the last few km to de Tronk, and old farmstead in the southern part of the park.

There's a low-water bridge on the jeep road, Sila had to do some laundry.

Looking south and down-river: A mission for tomorrow.
We caught our new friends again at a bridge over another great swimming hole on the Klein Kliphuis Rivier (little rock house river; klane klip hase rifeer) and even though evening was coming on and it wasn't hot anymore, I took one last dip, still feeling parched from the hot day. It was lovely.


We set up our tent under a protea tree with a nice flat bounder behind. We cooked dinner up there with great view across the valley and waited for the rain to come.


More posts coming, or check My flickr set to see complete photos

12/13/2007

Happy Day! Playin Hookie

We got a Bug! It is so cute. We are calling him "Flipper". Heh heh heh.


Flipper can carry Sila's new 6'7" surfboard inside, no problem. Hopefully it can carry his old 7'6" board too, because that one is now for me!

This is the view that made me realize I do remember Dad's yellow bug - from the back seat.

Flipper goes surfing at Woodbridge Island in Milnerton (Northern suburbs) which is only about 6 miles from our house on the freeway. Reminds me so much of California. There are restaurants on the beach here but they are not taco stands. This is sad.

There is a nice view of the city and the mountain from this friendly beach break.

Beautiful day

Robben Island

Unfortunately one of us is prone to sunburn

12/07/2007

FISH TACO SUCCESS!!

They didn't last enough to photograph but we have had our first real TACO NIGHT in cape town. Grilled Hake fillets, fresh guacamole, thinly sliced crispy cabbage, cilantro-infused salsa fresca, cumin creme, hot handmade tortillas (CORN tortillas). Happy Day!

11/13/2007

Flying out of Cape Town

Sorry haven't updated, I've been in the States for a couple weeks now, busy busy! Snapped a few pictures flying out of Cape Town on a beautiful early summer day.

Table Mountain, Devil's Peak, Lion's Head and Signal Hill as seen from the runway at the airport:

The beaches of False Bay and the town of Somerset West:

The mountains around Stellenbosch:

10/23/2007

Just how I want it

The remodel is coming along. Rosie finally came on Sunday and removed the rest of her crappola! ( after this photo was taken). You can see the painting progress:

The kitchen is finished and it's exactly what I wanted (only I wish it was a bit bigger!)How. frickin. gorgeous. is my La Crusette skillet! You can sort of see the effect of the skylight in this photo.

10/19/2007

Pictures of People

Here we are, the 3rd year class after mapping a fast 2-days in the Nuy Valley Several of them have expressed interest in doing an Hons thesis with me. So exciting! I'm off to the CGS (the Council for Geoscience, USGS equivalent body) on Monday to find hanging projects in the mapping division. Should be some kick-ass Western Cape Structure coming out of my (future) research group in the next 12 months. Very exciting.

10/15/2007

Eric makes the boat go

We picked up Eric, Sandwiches, Chips, and Beer in Marshall. Three adults and three lunches (one a landlubber) makes a very full dinghy. The sun was high, wind was fresh but warm.


"So, how does this whole "sailing" thing work, anyway?"
"Dude I already turned off the engine"
"What!!?!"
"Dude you're luffing."
"What!!?!"
"Dude, you're driving."

Eric experiences weather helm

The Rowes enjoying the day

We anchored at White Gulch and I went for a row. Pretty evening. Pretty rocks. Elk. Kelp. Quiet.

Upon return to Amable, I discovered the inevitable consequence of leaving the boys alone aboard for 2 hours: out of beer. This "emergency" necessitated a full steam run to Inverness, the last potentially open store on the bay, all the way at the far other end.
Eric seemed to enjoy the bow wave but could not be coaxed onto the rotted, bouncey bowsprit pulpit. Lubber!


The shallow water made Sila slow down at sunset. I didn't capture the thousands of pulsing jellyfish here. Their bells softly touched the surface of the water without making any ripples. I hate to drive through them or put my oars into the water in fear of sweeping them up too roughly.

As the designated beer buyer (that's biatch to those of you watching at home), I rowed in past the Inverness Yacht club, found some hippies, walked to town through thickets of poison oak barefoot in the gathering dark, found the store closed, and begged (BEGGED!) a 12-pack of Heineken from the Czech guy who runs the restaurant, at wildly inflated prices. I can't even say how much I paid him, it's too embarrassing, but since he clearly wasn't going to do another sale that night and it wasn't exactly legal, I let it go. Hiked back through the woods and rowed out in the now VERY DARK to the deeper water where I thought Amable was eagerly awaiting me!

Duress increasing, I rowed circles around every anchored boat I could see - seemed to take hours - (no I don't have a watch) and couldn't find them. I started wondering if they had left me! Seemed incredible but no sign of the boat. Finally, exhausted, I rowed in toward the Golden Hinde where there appeared to be some kind of social activity going on. As I got closer, I could make out one boat tied up to the visitors dock, the mast slowly emerging from the sea of masts in the yacht basin behind. A very familiar boat, with no lights on....

Long story short, we spent the night anchored at Heart's Desire Beach, a place I vaguely remember going for a family group camp thing when I was 8ish? Dad's last ditch effort to be a camping family perhaps? Even 20 years on, I can remember that I liked it and Mom didn't! In the morning I had to go ashore and look for familiar places - Once on the beach, it seemed too cold to swim back so I hired a water taxi...

10/11/2007

Sila and the Earth




Little known fact: My husband and THE EARTH have the same birthday (separated by a mere 5981 years). So in honor of the occasion, I have double knit a Jollyfish Hat. The Jollyfish is the mascot (of sorts) of the Pastafarian followers of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Members of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster have spoofed allied with advocates of the teaching of intelligent design (ID) in American public schools. As long, that is, as all ID theories are included, including the Creation Story of the Noodley Appendage. (if you haven't yet, you really must click the link and read the Open Letter to the Kansas Board of Education).

As a corollory, the FSM points out that since the early 1800s, the global population of pirates has decreased just as global warming was increasing! The correlation is clear. Therefore, the only way to combat global warming is to increase the number of pirates.

One more for you, FSM
Raaaaaaaamen.

10/10/2007

Sailing the San Andreas Fault

Realized I didn't ever finish the posts about our sailing trip in July. It was incredible! I started here with some pictures from Angel Island and then continued here with coming out the Golden Gate and then I quit. Why? In favor of knitting posts.

Anyway, the first day out the gate we made it all the way into Bodega Bay, which we didn't photograph because we just walked around and looked at the hole formerly known as the future nuclear power plant.
An aside: if it's just too darn easy to make a huge hole in a granodiorite mountain, or turn a quartz diorite mountain into road base, you might be on the San Andreas Fault!

We saw some whales from Bodega Head, and also met a guy who goes on whale-hugging tours to the Baja calving grounds. This was, naturally, someone I found strange enough to be interesting and Mr. Thielke found crazy weirdo to be avoided until he said the two magic words, "wooden" and "boat". Funny how the tide turns then! Ha ha tide.

We worked our way in through a very scary unmarked channel. Sila noticed one of the markers was off its spot. Sila can read charts and maps better than I can, as long as they don't involve any roads. I argued with Sila and Sila was right. If I had won the argument, we would have been in the mud on a dropping tide. In the San Andreas Fault. Observe the harbor seals hauled out in the middle of the bay.

Once we got through the treacherous mouth, Tomales Bay was a perfect dream. Couldn't be more beautiful and peaceful and idyllic and all the superlatives I can think of. We anchored at White Gulch, across the water from the little town of Marshall, for a few hours. There were elk in the hills and there are some relatively young coarse arenites there with some seriously cool deformation bands, but I'll spare you that for the moment.

We sailed down toward Inverness at sunset and then went back to White Gulch to spend the night.

10/06/2007

One other thing that's cooler in Cape Town



I walked a new way home from work the other night, along the M3 highway - won't do it again because it requires running across the offramp to the N2 - dumb idea, although there is a path and it picks up on the other side, and people are clearly expected to run across the flippin freeway. The commuters don't even look anymore but there are a variety of African buck on the slopes of Devil's Peak - I think they were part of Cecil's estate at one point and now they just live there, between the UCT campus and the city bowl. There are Zebra too but I didn't get a picture of them.

Foreground: psycho speeding minibus taxi. Background: two wildebeast.

Things which are better in the states

OK I have been here for eight months now and it's time to talk about things that were better back home. Let's be honest. There are some things which are American which I just miss. There are also some things about life in Cape Town that are... well... unfortunate.

Things which are unfortunate about Cape Town:
  • No bike lanes or bike paths to get around town
  • public transport scary at night (southern suburbs) or all the time (most of the city)
  • people drive like maniacs
  • hard to get nice vegetables
  • fish is always overcooked, fries are undercooked (cold and floppy and greasy!)
  • internet is charged by the MB, not unlimited!
  • sometimes it is just too damn windy to think.


Things which I just miss about living in America:
  • Knowing how to do things and go places without having to ask
  • Breakfast burritos
  • coffee for sale in the morning (before 8:30! like at 5:30 sometimes!)
  • chatting with my brother every day


Things which are better in Cape Town than in America:
  • Eating out is cheap, I have been eating out every day since my fridge broke! lazy.
  • My job is slowly advancing to a point which might be less stressful than being a grad student... maybe
  • I can afford my cool little house

10/01/2007

Doubly-plunging overturned folds!

We were getting ready to send the students out into the field and I showed them again what the symbols are for putting folds on a map. When I came to the doubly-plunging overturned syncline, I literally said, "I've never seen one and I sincerely doubt you'll need this symbol, but here it is anyway..."

That same afternoon I was out walking around with Cat (the demonstrator) and we came upon this:



I'm calling it the Lilly Pad Pond for now - giving areas and features good names like in Poleta. Just part of my daily quest to be a little bit more like Hilde Schwartz. I'm calling it this because I swear these swirly folds look like ripples in a pond, or like a bunch of lilly pads. It is HECTIC in there! Love it love it.

The clincher of course is that many, if not most of these folds are doubly plunging and overturned!! So I finally saw my first doubly plunging overturned syncline!!! so kickass. Here's Cat in a doubly plunging overturned anticline I'm calling "Cat's Canoe". The Lilly Pad Pond is in the "chestnut" shales of the lower Prince Albert Fm.




The ridge in the background is the Dwyka 4c ridge and the 4f between Lilly Pad Pond and the ridge is quite deformed as well, if not as easy to see due to its weak bedding. I will go back and work on this place for sure.