Mountains Are Always Bigger Than They Look
Somehow we always misjudge a mountain. Why is that? When I look at it, I think “that’s not such a big mountain - in fact, I’d be able to climb it, no sweat”… Hahahaha. Till I’m about half way, I don’t have any air left in my lungs, and I need the water which I forgot to bring, or was too brave to think about.
We went to climb a ‘koppie’ (South African word for a small mountain, kinda like a hill I guess) anyway, so we went to the Wonderboom Nature Reserve (me and my family). Which was really cool!! The reason for wanting to climb to the top is that we wanted to see the fort which is up on the koppie.
I was gonna write you some interesting facts on the fort, but found a good summary on the net (its quite long, but a good read all the same). Please let me know if this post takes too long to load - I have added three photo’s, but they might take a while to load…
Wonderboom Nature Reserve, Pretoria: Named after the wild fig (Ficus salicifolia) Wonderboom, for which the reserve is famous, and which grows at the foot of the northern slopes of the Magalies Mountain range, the Wonderboom Nature Reserve lies to the north of the city - a 200 hectare reserve that has as its heart a 1 000 year old specimen.
A legend that places the remains of a chief of an indigenous tribe beneath its roots serves to explain the size of this particular Wonderboom (miracle tree). It was originally a lot bigger, so big it was reputed to provide shade for 1 000 people at a time, or 22 ox wagons. But the combination of a fire in 1870 and a more recent parasite infestation, that had the tree in quarantine for 20 years, has left it a shadow of its former self.
However, the sheer weight of its branches, which grew longer and lower, rooted themselves and produced daughter trees, which have in turn produced a third generation that now surround the original specimen.
If this weren’t enough of an invitation to visit the Wonderboom Nature Reserve, it is also the site of the Wonderboom Fort - one of four built to defend the city against the British - at the top of the Wonderboom Hill. At the foot of this same hill lie two adjacent archaeological sites - one an example of the Iron Age, and the other one of the best Stone Age sites in the area - the largest single collection of stone artifacts ever discovered in Africa was excavated here.
The reserve is also the dwelling place of a number of small antelope, monkeys, dassies and an array of birds.
Source: SA Venues
Photo’s Source: My sister
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[...] Dizzy Dee added an interesting post on Mountains Are Always Bigger Than They Look.Here’s a small excerpt:At the foot of this same hill lie two adjacent archaeological sites - one an example of the Iron Age, and the other one of the best Stone Age sites in the area - the largest single collection of stone artifacts ever discovered in Africa … [...]
gorgeous, and it didn’t take long at all to load!
Great photos! Thanks for sharing!