| The Magaliesburg
- a place of wilderness and war
| Top
images left to right: |
| 1.
Barton's Folly at Hekpoort |
2.
Flowers of the Fairy Elephant
Foot F.pulchra |
| 3.
Old Lutheran Church at Kroondal |
4.
Canon at the Krugersdorp
War Memorial |
|
The
Magaliesberg by
Vincent Carruthers |
 |
Published
by Protea Book House
(012) 362 5683 |
|
By Vincent Carruthers,
author of the
book "The Magaliesberg" and a
close friend of magalies meander.
The Magaliesberg mountain range
is a microcosm of the magnificence of nature and the
turbulent history of South Africa.
Its present tranquillity belies the
drama of its geological formation. More than two billion
years ago huge seismic forces cracked the bed of an
inland sea and tilted it skyward. Molten magma pumped
into fissures and burned deep kloofs in the rock.
Over millions of years the jagged peaks of the tilted
seabed were scoured by a continental ice sheet, then
buried in swamp, smothered under desert sands and
finally capped with volcanic lava. Sixty million years
ago the covering began to weather away and the mountains
re-emerged to become the cliffs, the gentle slopes,
the secretive kloofs and the tumbling streams we know
today.
The geology of the range created different
habitats that support a variety of wildlife that is
exceptional both in its abundance and in its diversity
of species. Grassland of the highveld reaches the
mountains on the south and give way to woodland in
the deep rich soils of the lower slopes. The warm,
north-facing slopes of the ancient seabed harbour
the plants and animals of the dry bushveld while the
sheer cliff edges provide safe, inaccessible roosts
for Cape Vultures, Black eagles and baboons. The shaded
kloofs, watered by clear perennial streams, maintain
a gentle microclimate for varieties of ferns and flowers
and a retreat for the wary leopard. Unique endemic
plants have evolved in this benign environment such
as the Fairy Elephant Foot, a succulent with vivid
pink flowers and leaves that precisely match the re-crystallised
stones at the edges of kloofs. Another endemic is
Pegler's Aloe that has shaped itself to withstand
the wind and fire of the summit.
In the early nineteenth century the
prosperity of Batswana society in the Magaliesberg
was shattered by invasions, first by the Bapede from
the east and then by the Ndabele under the formidable
leadership of Mzilikazi. For a decade he conquered
and controlled the people from the Vaal River to the
Limpopo. To his domain came early explorers and adventurers,
drawn by his fame and the reputation of the wildlife
in what were then called the Cashan or Kgaswane Mountains
after a well-known Tswana chief. Robert Moffat, the
famous missionary became Mzilikazi's close ally, Andrew
Smith, founder of the South African Museum lead a
scientific expedition, Cornwalles Harris hunted here
and discovered the Sable Antelope, and many other
famous naturalists visited the area.
These pioneers were followed by frontiersmen
of another sort - Dutch trekkers from the British-ruled
Cape seeking new lands. They drove out the Ndebeli,
renamed the mountains Magaliesberg and founded settlements
of their own. Conflict between Dutch and British eventually
escalated into war and fortifications in the Magaliesberg
are reminders of violent engagements during the Transvaal
War of 1880-1881, the South African war of 1889-1902
and the 1914 Rebellion.
The ability to "meander in the
Magaliesberg" to enjoy its beauty and understand
the romance of its turbulent history, is a great privilege.
Its protection has been a continuous battle by dedicated
conservationists and landowners. No matter whether
one's ancestry is Batswana, Nguni, Boer or British
and no matter what one's focus of interest or enjoyment
may be, the Magaliesberg is a national treasure where
all South Africans can find their roots. |