Go Back  Fodor's Travel Talk Forums > Destinations > Africa & the Middle East
Reload this Page >

Where to stay in the Drakensberg?

Search

Where to stay in the Drakensberg?

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Feb 20th, 2008, 06:03 PM
  #1  
Original Poster
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 646
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Where to stay in the Drakensberg?

We (a family of 4 - daughters aged 15 and 16) will be staying in the Drakensberg for 5 days over Christmas and have narrowed our accommodation choices down to 3: (a) A chalet in Tendele Hutted Camp in Royal Natal National Park; or (b) a self catring house in the Bergview Estate adjoining the Drakensberg Sun (with use of Drakensberg Sun facilities); or (c) a cottage in the mountains 1 km past Champagne Castle Hotel.
We are visiting from Australia and this is the first 5 days of a 5 week SA trip. We plan to recover from jetlag and do lots of hiking - just to really experience the amazing Drakensberg scenery. To anyone who knows the area, which area would you choose and why?
PRLCH is offline  
Old Feb 20th, 2008, 09:36 PM
  #2  
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 154
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Royal Natal National Park is in the Northern 'Berg, which is a less developed area and my preference. Tendele is wonderful and Royal Natal has great activities for the family, from horseback excursions to fly-fishing lessons. You're also close to Lesotho, and could do one of the day trips from tour operators in the region if you're so inclined. I can recommend Amphitheatre Backpackers as a nearby option -

Their website:
http://www.amphibackpackers.co.za

And my review:
http://afrikatourism.blogspot.com/20...ckpackers.html

You're also close to Spioenkop battlefield (http://battlefields.kzn.org.za/battl.../about/191.xml) and nature reserve (http://www.kznwildlife.com/site/ecot...ions/Spioenkop) for alternative activities to hiking (or if the weather stinks...)

Another option to consider would be Didima Camp near Cathedral Peak. Great location, diversity of hikes, interesting rock art interpretive centre.

http://www.kznwildlife.com/site/ecot...ral/index.html

One thing to bear in mind is that Christmas will be the peak of the rainy season and the more popular places will also be packed with South Africans on holiday. You're bound to get rain on a couple of your 5 days, so you want to have alternative activities close at hand...

Personally, I find the central region (south of Cathedral Peak - Champagne Valley, Monk's Cowl area and beyond) vastly overdeveloped with golf resorts sprawling across the foothills...not what I want to see when heading for one of Africa's great wilderness regions and a UNESCO World Heritage Site!

HTH

Kurt
kurt_a is offline  
Old Feb 21st, 2008, 12:20 PM
  #3  
Original Poster
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 646
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Thanks for that wonderful response Kurt. I actually stumbled upon Didima yesterday as I was doing more research! We had a family "conference" last night - all of us pouring over the internet, and added Didima to our list of possibilities. The unanimous vote came out as Didima as our first choice and Tendele as our second choice. Your information seems to support these 2 selections. We are also very pleased to find we can get accommodation at both these sites (even so far in advance we have found places are booking out), so I think we are off to Didima! We will make sure we take a couple of good books for a thundery afternoon.
Once again, thanks for your insight. We were last at Champagne Castle for our honeymoon 20 years ago, and when looking at the area now I was amazed by the apparant development in the area. I guess that is called progress today!? We are REALLY looking forward to our trip to South Africa, and all bookings are now falling nicely into place!
PRLCH is offline  
Old Feb 22nd, 2008, 09:30 PM
  #4  
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,085
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
We spent a year in South Africa in 2004-2005. In May of that year, we visited the Drakensberg, as part of a 3-week self-drive from Cape Town. Below is the relevant (Drakensburg) section of the trip report that I sent home to family and friends in Canada at the end of that journey. It includes descriptions of where we stayed in the Drakensberg. I hope it helps! The Drakensberg is a beautiful area – enjoy your visit! Robin

Sorry – so the trip report makes sense:
Robert = my husband
Laura = our 18-year-old daughter
David = the professor at the University of Cape Town that my husband was working with – Robert was on sabbatical at UCT

…….After overnighting in Bloemfontein, where we sampled the local beef and found it as good as any we have eaten in Alberta, we left the N1 and headed southeast towards the aptly named “mountain kingdom” of Lesotho, the country which is entirely surrounded by, but completely independent of, South Africa. As we drew closer to Lesotho, we caught glimpses of the life of the local Basotho people. The highway bisected settlements of shacks with their tin roofs weighted down against the wind with large rocks. It was Sunday, and there were streams of people walking barefoot along the highway, heading to church in nearby tiny communities. Near the town of Thaba Nchu, we passed two cow herders, resplendent in their colourful Basotho blankets, which they wore like cloaks, as is traditional. Women and young children, who beamed and waved as we passed, sold sheepskins and apples from flimsy stick booths along the highway. The expanses of corn, sunflowers and hay bales continued, and rows of poplar trees, which were a lovely autumn gold, appeared. We passed huge fields of gorgeous mauve, pink and white cosmos (flowers), prompting Laura to comment that her high school biology teacher, Ms. Belt, would love the fields, as they were perfect examples of incomplete dominance. We drove through the cherry producing area of South Africa, but the cherry season was over and the orchards bare. Drat! Cherries have always been my favourite fruit.

We traveled through Free State on the Highlands Route, which follows the Lesotho border for 280km, and is one of South Africa’s most beautiful drives. Our Frommer’s had mentioned that Nelson Mandela once described this area as gladdening his heart no matter what his mood, and it didn’t take us long to discover why. This northeastern corner of Free State has spectacular mountain scenery and magnificent sandstone formations. We stopped in several of the charming villages that are strung along the Lesotho border, the most pretty of which was Clarens. We strolled around President Square and purchased several wonderful souvenirs, including two of the conical straw hats which are worn by the Basotho people and unique to this area and Lesotho. We stopped at a large township on the outskirts of Clarens to watch youngsters in colourful clothing play soccer. Spotting us, they called and waved to us enthusiastically, so typical of the way we were received in rural areas, particularly by children.

Arguably the highlight of the Highlands Route was Golden Gate Highlands National Park, Free State’s only national park, designated as such for the outstanding beauty of the Maluti Mountains rather than its wildlife, although we did see zebra, eland, springbok, and black wildebeest roaming the grassy plateaus. We were amused to spot several cows grazing amongst a dazzle of zebras, and wondered how the cows came to be in the park. The red and yellow striped sandstone cliffs and overhangs glowed in the afternoon sun, and Laura confessed that she would be quite content to live out her life in this part of the country. Qwa Qwa National Park was another highlight of the route, with its massive and very impressive sandstone formations and wide open spaces. The San, who lived in the park’s many caves and overhangs, called the sandstone cliffs qwa-qwa, meaning “whiter than white”, because the sandstone, as it weathers, changes from white to beautiful shades of red and yellow. We stopped at the Basotho Cultural Village, which offered a glimpse of the traditional lives of the Basotho people. The village consisted of a courtyard of beautiful Basotho huts, which progressed from 16th century huts to modern square huts with tin roofs. Although activities were winding down for the day, people in traditional dress still wandered about, and two men were busy skinning a sheep. We admired the litema, the external decoration on the huts, which are applied by the Basotho women and still visible today in rural Lesotho and Free State. The decorations varied from intricate patterns, that were scratched into the clay walls, to modern, brightly painted patterns. They were simple, but very beautiful. I couldn’t help wonder what the neighbours would think if I added some litema to our home in Calgary.

The view from the village across Qwa Qwa Park was amazing and, as we watched the sandstone change colour in the fading light (so reminiscent of sunset at Uluru/Ayer’s Rock in Australia), we were suddenly struck by how late in the day it was. Consulting our notes, we were horrified to discover that the gate of Royal Natal National Park in the Drakensberg Mountains, where we were to spend the night, closed at 6:00pm. We had a little over two hours to negotiate roughly one hundred kilometres of winding roads and narrow mountain passes. We left Free State, raced over Oliviershoek Pass, and flew into the province of KwaZulu-Natal. It had always been our intention to avoid traveling at night and, as darkness fell, for the first time on our journey I was truly uneasy. The 50-km route to the park on a secondary highway was poorly marked, the road was winding and uneven, and pedestrians in dark clothing returning home at the end of the day streamed along both sides of the narrow, shoulderless highway. To make matters worse, our car started acting up, sputtering and lurching in a most alarming fashion and providing little in the way of braking. It was thus with great relief that, with about five minutes to spare, we crawled through the gate of Royal Natal Park. Once in the park we felt safe, although we still faced a 9-km drive to Tendele Camp, where we were to overnight. In total darkness, we wound our way up and up a rough dirt road to the camp, silently willing the car to continue. We arrived to find reception closed and our name absent from the blackboard which listed the occupants of each cabin. Unperturbed, we wandered about in the dark, remarkably quiet camp (it was only 6:30pm, but you’d have thought it was midnight) until Robert was discovered by a patrolling security guard, who directed him to the camp manager. After perusing our reservation confirmation slip and apologizing profusely for the mix up on the blackboard, the manager directed us to a lovely log cabin. We settled in, ate dinner and went to bed, painfully aware that the nearest mechanic was likely 200-km away and that we might have to waste our first day in the mountains accompanying the car as it was towed back to civilization.

The Drakensberg Mountains, designated a World Heritage Site (natural and cultural) in 2000 because of their beauty and the thousands of San rock paintings which are found there, are the second largest mountain range in Africa. Known as uKhahlamba or “barrier of spears” to the Zulu, they were renamed Drakensberg or “Dragon Mountains” by early settlers, because they reminded the settlers of the ridges on a dragon’s back. Both are apt descriptions of this spectacular mountain range. We had read that the northern and central sections of the Drakensberg are the most spectacular, and this is where we were to spend the next couple of days, providing our car co-operated.

When we awoke in Royal Natal Park the following morning, the sight which greeted us from the cabin windows soon caused us to forget about our car troubles. Tendele, we discovered in the light of day, is an enchanting mountain retreat. Located at the base of Dooley’s Cliffs, the camp offered spectacular views of the Amphitheatre, a dramatic 500m high, crescent-shaped rock face that stretches for 5km and is framed by the Sentinel (3165m) and Eastern Buttress (3121m). It was spectacular! We enjoyed the splendor from the cabin windows as we ate breakfast. A small antelope grazed outside one window. While Laura and I savoured the view, Robert attended to the car. I hope that my dear husband will forgive me for saying that, while he is a man of much knowledge and many talents, automotive mechanics is not among them. You can therefore perhaps understand my surprise and skepticism when he returned a half hour later and declared the car roadworthy. In celebration, we decided to enjoy the mountains by hiking 3-km to Tiger Falls, a lovely waterfall surrounded by indigenous forest. As we made our way along the trail, we could hear baboons barking on the cliffs overhead. After a leisurely tea at the base of the falls, we had great fun scrambling on the rocks behind and above the falls, enjoying the refreshing spray. The occasional high-pitched shriek from Laura would announce that she had encountered yet another of the numerous and alarming spiders inhabiting the site. We were lucky to spy a rare (only 204 pairs remain) lammergeier or “bearded vulture”, which occur only in the Drakensberg and the Himalayan foothills.

Leaving Tendele mid morning, we switchbacked our way down the park’s steep road which we had staggered up in darkness the night before. As we admired the vistas far below us, we hoped that Robert was correct in thinking that the car, and particularly the brakes, was functioning properly. Just outside the park gate, we encountered a group of six Zulu women who were weaving baskets by the side of the road. We stopped to watch, asking questions of the youngest woman who spoke a little English. Nearby, spread out on the ground, were dozens of beautiful baskets, woven in a variety of intricate patterns from a combination of grass and colourful plastic cabbage/onion/potato bags. After much debate over colour and pattern, we purchased three lovely baskets for the ridiculously low price of R65 (~$13) each. The young woman helped us to record in my journal the name of the artist who had crafted each basket, painstakingly spelling the names for us. It was a memorable encounter!

KwaZulu-Natal is often described as the country’s most “African” province and, as we traveled south from Royal Natal Park through the northern part of the province, we understood why. That beautiful, mountainous area was like nothing we had seen in our travels until then. Instead of private farms and occasional villages, as is found in most of rural Africa, the land is unfenced and communally owned. It is a very poor region known as “Zululand” which, during apartheid, was the bantustan or “homeland” where the Zulu were forced to relocate. Traditional Zulu homes - thatched, single-room, igloo-like huts, called “rondavels” - dotted the landscape for as far as we could see. From the highway, we caught glimpses of the everyday life of the Zulu. There were people everywhere. When we stopped to take photographs along even the remotest sections of the highway, children would invariably pop up from the long grass at the side of the road and beg for handouts. Knowing that they would have little use for coins, we wished that we had apples or oranges to give them. It was impossible to stop the car for any longer than the time needed to take a quick photograph, otherwise we would be swarmed. As a result, we never did manage to eat our lunch, which was in the trunk, subsisting instead on the only two edible items that I had in my backpack, jelly tots and gum. There was no electricity. Woman and young children carried water on their heads in an assortment of amazingly large containers, often for great distances from a single community pump. Women wore brightly coloured, long skirts and blouses, and covered their heads with neatly tied scarves. Most were barefoot. Some congregated at the pump to do laundry, which they draped over nearby bushes to dry. Pre-school children laughed and played nearby. Other women used roughly tied bunches of grass to rake the dirt around their homes. Still others scavenged for firewood for cooking and heating, carrying the wood in huge bundles on their heads. Women harvested grass for baskets. Children of all ages, dressed in an assortment of colourful uniforms and often carrying their books on their heads, walked barefoot along the narrow highway to school. We marveled at the fact that, even though the children were living in such abject poverty, they looked healthy, happy, and impeccably dressed. The only men we saw, apart from the taxi drivers, were elderly. They walked barefoot and bent over along the highway. We noticed that virtually all walkers, young and old, carried a stick and we wondered why. Too short to be used as walking sticks, were they to fight off dogs? People? We never learned. The highway bisected numerous tiny “villages” which consisted of nothing more than a minibus taxi stop, a “store” selling very basic supplies, sometimes a small clinic, and one or more schools. The well maintained schools were large and numerous to accommodate the huge population of children. All bore large signs which indicated that they were “Clover Schools” built and sponsored by Clover Dairies. We swerved to avoid goats, chickens, dogs, cows, donkeys, and sheep, which also occupied the highway. Everyone and everything moved slowly, and we quickly concluded that the Zulu believe that the highways were built for people and animals, not automobiles. Occasionally, we encountered a dangerously overcrowded minibus taxi crawling along the highway, carrying women and their pre-school children several kilometres to the nearest town. The women carried their babies on their backs, held in place with blankets tied about the women’s waists. Few whites live in the rural areas in the northern and central Drakensberg and, when we stopped in Bergville, an ugly, busy, town, with decrepit department stores and streets crowded with people, animals and vehicles, the locals looked at us as though we had beamed down from another planet. Laura asked if she was the only one feeling terribly out of place. Robert stood out like a sore thumb as he waited in a long line of blacks at the local ATM. With rare exception, the people smiled and waved as we passed. In town, they seemed particularly pleased when we greeted them in Zulu. It would certainly be understandable if the Zulu felt anger towards foreigners like us, who drive through their villages in our fancy rental vehicles, while they struggle to survive. If they do, it certainly wasn’t apparent to us. We found them friendly and welcoming, and the stories of crime, unfriendly locals, and despicable roads, which are often associated with the northern and central Drakensberg, greatly exaggerated (well, except perhaps for the roads!). We had the feeling that we were finally experiencing “true” South Africa and we were all the richer for it.

We continued south through rural KwaZulu-Natal to Cathedral Peak in the central Drakensberg, one of a 4-km line of impressive peaks, with some rising over 3000m. It was a clear morning, and the mountains seemed to go on forever. On our way in to the park, we passed many women bent over, painstakingly trimming back the grass and weeds from the sides of the highway using tiny (20cm) sickles. As David pointed out, why employ one person using an expensive tractor that has been imported from another country, when you can employ many people over a long period of time to do the same job by hand. True, I guess, but I didn’t envy the women their task! The central Drakensberg boasts some of the highest peaks in South Africa, and the area around Cathedral Peak was stunning. The chalets in Didima Camp, where we spent the night, were built to resemble the caves of the San people. Our chalet, with its fully-equipped kitchen, satellite TV, and cozy fireplace, was a shocking contrast to the poverty-stricken areas that we had just traveled through to reach it. After a most enjoyable evening spent around a crackling fire, we retired early, waking just before dawn to the sound of baboons barking not far from our cabin. Before leaving, we visited the park’s San Art Interpretive Centre, which provided fascinating insights into the art and culture of the San people. We purchased two more baskets from the centre’s shop, one of which Laura felt would appeal to Graham in particular.

From Cathedral Peak, we traveled another 150-km south, past beautiful peaks and grassy plateaus that were dotted with rondavels, enduring what must have been one of the worst potholed roads in the country. Our destination was Giant’s Castle, a mountain park that was once a favourite hunting ground of the San. After settling into our cabin named “Christmas Bells”, in keeping with the camp’s izimbali (“flowers” in Zulu) theme, we hiked 3-km along the Bushman’s River through open grassland and patches of indigenous forest to Main Caves, a large sandstone overhang which shelters one of the most impressive and best preserved rock-art sites in the country. It was raining and cold, and I suspect that the interpreter was rather surprised to see us when we emerged from the forest. For the next hour or so, the young Xhosa student pointed out some of the more beautiful and better preserved paintings from amongst the over 500 which cover the rock face. The detail in the paintings was amazing, particularly in the paintings of the kudu and other animals, and we could not help but be awed by this legacy left by the San. Our guide concluded the tour with a valiant effort to teach us how to make the three subtly different clicks used in the Xhosa language, but we proved to be rather hopeless students. We spent a chilly, damp evening huddled around the fireplace in our cabin, and were eventually lulled to sleep by the sound of the Bushman’s River, which passed nearby. In the morning, we awoke to bright, clear skies, and stunning mountain scenery, which had been obscured by cloud the previous day. Dominating the scene was Giant’s Castle, an impressive 3316m free-standing basalt block. Nearby was the giant, lying on his back, with arms neatly folded across his chest. After a brief hike to admire the vistas, we left the park, amused by a sign which warned guests to be wary of crows with a rubber fetish; they like to peck the rubber off windshield wipers. Fortunately, ours were still intact.

We proceeded east and then south from Giant’s Castle, falling victim yet again to the poor rural signage, and traveling several kilometres out of our way before realizing we were on the wrong track. We were looking forward to lunch with one of Robert’s former students in the coastal city of Durban, South Africa’s largest port and just over 200-km to the south, on the Indian Ocean. It was Freedom Day, a national holiday, so the roads through the rural area around the park were thankfully much quieter without the schoolchildren streaming along both sides. However, cows, chickens, goats and donkeys were not observing the holiday, and twice we had to stop and wait patiently for cows to move out of the way. When we reached the town of Mooi Rivier, some 150-km north of Durban, near the southern border of Zululand, we were struck by a sudden change in the landscape. The communal land and rondavels of the Zulu disappeared, and the prosperous, fenced, privately-owned farms returned. We saw fewer dilapidated bakkies, and SUVs with white drivers began to fly past us.

As we drew nearer Durban, we were appalled by the smog and brown haze which hung over the city. However, we actually found it a much prettier city than we expected, having noted that adjectives such as “dirty”, “noisy”, “crowded”, and “crime-ridden” are used frequently in written descriptions………….
canadian_robin is offline  
Old Feb 24th, 2008, 12:52 PM
  #5  
Original Poster
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 646
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Robin,
Thanks so much for that lovely descriptive account of your trip to the Berg. It brought so many childhood memories of family holidays flooding back! I grew up in South Africa and left there more than 20 years ago. I have not been back for about 14 years. I've been so busy raising my family in Australia in those years, there has not been much time to sit back and reflect. Now, as we are planning the trip, I feel pangs of "homesickness" I have not felt in years. I think South Africa will always hold a special place in my heart, and I am really looking forward to showing my girls some of their heritage.
PRLCH is offline  
Old Feb 24th, 2008, 02:34 PM
  #6  
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,085
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Our sabbatical prior to the year we spent in Cape Town, SA, was a year spent in Brisbane, Australia - two very beautiful countries. I envy you the time you have spent in each. I can well imagine you wishing to share SA with your children.

If you have not yet booked your accomodation for the Drakensberg, try to book at least one night in the north - in Golden Gate Highlands NP. We regreted not spending a night there - it was a very beautiful area.
Robin
canadian_robin is offline  
Old Feb 29th, 2008, 10:39 AM
  #7  
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 27
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Thanks for the great trip report on the Drakensberg! My husband and I spent 4 days there in October, and it was truly a highlight of our trip! Like you, we went through Golden Gate NP, and Clarens, both beautiful. For our lodging, we stayed at a somewhat new resort, Montusi Mountain Lodge (www.montusi.co.za)in the northern Drakensberg. It is owned by the same people that own The Castle, but is geared more for a quieter, more romantic stay. I would highly recommend it, the views were spectacular!!
ejbentx is offline  
Old Feb 29th, 2008, 10:40 AM
  #8  
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 27
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
oops! I meant to say The Cavern, not the Castle!
ejbentx is offline  
Old May 13th, 2008, 04:40 AM
  #9  
 
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 31
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Hello,
I loved reading your account. We will be visiting that area in Dec. and can't wait to see all the beautiful scenery.
Did you happen to eat at the Tower of Pizza which, I believe, is near Bergville?
I would appreciate any information that anyone has on that particular place to eat.
Many, many thanks!!
purrcy is offline  
Old Sep 4th, 2017, 10:48 AM
  #10  
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 4,509
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Bookmarking. Very helpful post from a fellow Canadian
tedgale is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Original Poster
Forum
Replies
Last Post
sherwoodforest
Africa & the Middle East
26
Aug 28th, 2019 04:13 PM
Elisabeth54
Africa & the Middle East
4
Mar 25th, 2014 01:42 PM
adifferentvista
Africa & the Middle East
32
Jan 5th, 2011 01:27 PM
aruso
Africa & the Middle East
9
Sep 21st, 2010 09:59 AM
Elisabeth54
Africa & the Middle East
4
Mar 5th, 2010 07:46 AM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are On



Contact Us - Manage Preferences - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information -