Touring Historic Vergelegen

It’s the 11th day of our South African garden tour and we head out from Cape Town to a historic wine estate that is located not in the traditional South African wine regions of Stellenbosch or Franschhoek, but in the valley below the Hottentots Holland mountains just 6 kilometres from the shores of False Bay. Yes, we’re going to visit Vergelegen.

Vergelegen-Sign

If you try to say what I’ve just written – and you’re not Dutch or Afrikaans – I guarantee, you’ll mangle it a little, for the soft g is a “fricative” in linguistics and you should say it (according to Wiki), by making a sound as if you were gargling.  So, with that in mind, try gargling “Vair-hech-lech-en” – which is Dutch for “remotely situated”. Indeed this lovely estate would have been a 3-day ox-wagon journey from the Cape Colony when it was founded in 1700 by Willem Adriaan van der Stel, who succeeded his father Simon van der Stel as second governor of the Cape. In doing so, he claimed a 30,000 hectare (74,000 acre) allotment and spent the next six years planting half-a-million grape vines (blue and white muscadels, “steendruif” or chenin blanc, and frontignan), camphor and English oak trees, fruit orchards and orange groves, while developing cattle and sheep pasturage and reservoirs and irrigation canals.  His interest in horticulture saw him publish one of the first gardening almanacs in South Africa, and he sent native Cape aloes to the Hortus Botanicus in Amsterdam.

But Willem van der Stel’s luxurious tastes and autocratic manner saw him recalled from the Cape Colony by the Dutch government in 1707 and made to answer unfair competition charges levelled by the free burghers (independent Colonial farmers) who claimed he had restricted the sale of their produce and curtailed their free rights to fishing while carrying on extensive farming operations at Vergelegen at the expense of the profits (and using the head gardener and slaves) of the Dutch East India Company (VOC or Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie). After van der Stel’s recall, the Dutch overseers of the VOC determined that none of its employees could own land in the Cape Colony, and Vergelegen was divided into four farms. The early garden plan of Vergelegen, below, showing the octagonal walled garden and homestead that still exist on the property was included in the appendices of Contra Deductie, a 320-page document published in Holland in 1712 which details the case against van der Stel.  The drawing is copied in the notes to an 1882 publication titled Chronicles of Cape Commanders: Or, An Abstract of Original Manuscripts in the Archives of the Cape Colony by Canadian-born historian George McCall Theal, who emigrated to South Africa as a young man.

Vergelen-Willem van der Stel garden plan

Amazingly, that Cape Dutch homestead built by Willem van der Stel in 1700 is still here today, though it was ordered demolished (because it had been built with “ostentation and pomp”) when Vergelegen was partitioned into four separate properties in 1709.  Despite part of that order being fulfilled, Vergelegen’s new owner Barend Guildenhuys could not bear to tear the entire house down, removing only the back portion. What is left today (with front gables added on around 1780 and various other additions coming later) is a lovely heritage building that has been part of Vergelegen through numerous owners since its founding. The estate gardens were dilapidated when Vergelegen was purchased in 1917 by mining “randlord” (that’s the South African version of a robber baron) Sir Lionel Philips as a gift to his wife Lady Florence (1863-1940). She worked on the gardens for more than twenty years, turning the walled octagonal garden into a beautiful English garden that has been restored by the current owners, the Anglo American Company, which acquired Vergelegen in 1987. Founded in 1917 by Ernest Oppenheimer, Anglo American now holds an 85% interest in de Beers Diamonds, as well as numerous other large mining interests throughout Africa and the world.

Octagonal Garden-Camphor trees-Vergelegen

But those five massive camphor trees overhanging the homestead cottage in the photo above, and in the one below, were planted around 1700 by Willem van der Stel..They were declared national monuments in 1942.

Camphor tree-Cinnamomum camphora-Vergelegen

Speaking of monumental trees, this English oak (Quercus robur) was also planted around 1700 by Willem van der Stel, and has survived with its hollowed-out trunk to be the oldest oak in South Africa.

English oak-Vergeegen

A closer look at the homestead with its pretty windows and gables.  The traditional thatched roof is fashioned from grasses of the family Restionaceae.

Octagonal Garden-Vergelegen-English Garden

It was Lady Florence Philips who acquired the pair of bronze deer flanking the homestead’s door. They are replicas of the deer found in the ashes of the ancient Roman city of Herculaneum, buried by Vesuvius.

Octagonal Garden-Vergelegen-deer

Before I learn that no photos are permitted in the house, I have…… whoops… taken a few photos in the house. (Sorry, Vergelegen). But if I hadn’t done so, I would not have had a chance to explain to you what occurred in the lovely dining room below on April 29th 1990, a fact of Vergelegen’s history that impressed me more than anything else. For it was here, privately, quietly and under the aegis of Anglo-American, that members of the ANC – men such as Nelson Mandela, Cyril Ramaphosa, Thabo Mbeki, Aziz Pahad and Trevor Manuel (some of whom had just returned from exile in Zambia the previous day) – had their preparatory meeting to negotiate their ascendant party’s terms with President F.W.de Klerk and his government. What a thrilling day that must have been, and what a moment in history for this Cape Dutch house, whose farms, vineyards and pleasure gardens were once worked by slaves in the pay of the Dutch East India Company.

Dining Room-Homestead-Vergelegen

Here’s a lovely arrangement of indigenous flowers in the house.  Of Vergelegen’s 3000 hectares (7413 acres), much is taken up by wilderness, and Anglo American has hired an ecological conservationist to help restore the indigenous fynbos, with the goal of enhancing and preserving 2240 hectares (5535 acres) to be a “pristine example of the Cape’s natural flora and fauna”. In particular, our guide tells us, they are removing the blue gums (Eucalyptus globulus complex) and stone pines (Pinus pinea) to relieve the demands those invasive exotic trees place on Vergelegen’s water table.

Fynbos flora bouquet-VergelegenThis is the rear of the homestead, with its quiet reflection pools.

Reflection Pools-Homestead-Vergelegen

We are given a walking tour of the many new garden areas.  This is the herb garden with its masses of scented lavender and other traditional herbs.

Herb-Garden-Vergelegen

I love the sundial in the midst of all these straight-edged parterres.

Leonitis leonurus-Vergelegen

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East Garden

I always keep my eye open for life in the garden, like this cape honey bee (Apis mellifera capensis) nectaring on the Limonium prezii, and birds too, like this white-bellied sunbird (Cinnyris talatala)sipping from the Leonitis leonurus or “dagga” as it’s known in S. Africa.

Bee on Limonium perezii-Sunbird on Leonitis leonurus

Here is is the new oak arboretum, with fifteen Quercus varieties planted and more to come – all part of a quest to play a part in conservation of oak species suited for the mild South African climate.

Oak Plantation-Vergelegen

We don’t have time to get up into all the vineyards but the grapes aren’t in season yet, since it’s just mid-spring. It’s lovely, however, to see the flowers that will yield the succulent fruit in a few months.

Grape flowers-Vergelegen

Having completed the grand garden tour, here we are appropriately in the wine tasting room, below. Isn’t it beautiful?

Vergelegen-Wine Tasting Room

I must say, the South African wine tasting experience is rather elegant, compared to Canada, but it’s exactly what you’d expect from a vineyard designed carefully by Anglo-American to match the ambiance of the entire estate.

A little background first. In the mid-1880s, phylloxera ravaged the vines of the Cape vineyards, as it had done earlier in France, the result of importation of American vines (the phylloxera aphid is native to North America) by English botanists. It devastated Vergelegen’s vines, which were ultimately removed and the land left fallow. It wasn’t until after 1966, under the ownership of the Barlow family, that grapes were planted again on the estate in a small-scale way.  When Anglo-American acquired Vergelegen, they cleared invasive vegetation and worked to rehabilitate the land before replanting vines. Their new multi-level, sunken hilltop winery was built and opened by Baron Eric de Rothschild of Château Lafite in Bordeaux, and their wines and the vineyard itself have won top honours in international tasting and tourism competitions.  And to add to the vineyard’s cachet, Vergelegen regularly features entertainers like Celine Dion, Josh Groban and Elton John to perform on the estate.  And the wine? It’s delicious.

Wine-Vergelegen

I love these lights in the tasting room. Note the octagonal V logo, a motif borrowed from the octagonal garden dating back to the Willem van der Stel days.

Lamps-Vergelegen

Finally, we sit down to enjoy a lovely lunch at Stables Restaurant.  With its beautiful decor, it’s fun to gaze around while waiting for the food to arrive…..

Vergelegen-Stables Restaurant

….especially since the walls are graced with beautiful textile art by indigenous artists depicting some of the unique plants of the Cape, like this…..

Art at Vergelegen1

… and this….

Art at Vergelegen2

…and this.

Art at Vergelegen3

And on that charming floral note, it’s time to head back to the bus and settle in for the short trip to Franschhoek and a very quirky and artful private garden whose owner is opening his gate especially for us. See you there!

Whale Watching in Hermanus

It’s late morning on the 10th day of our South Africa Garden Tour. Having enjoyed our brief visit to the Harold Porter National Botanical Gardens in Betty’s Bay a little more than an hour out of Cape Town, we are now enroute to the town of Hermanus, a half-hour further down the coast, overlooking Walker Bay.

Map-Cape Town to Hermanus

On the way, we pass some interesting homes built right on the fynbos beneath the Kogelsberg Reserve..  (Photos taken though bus window, so forgive the quality, etc etc)

Houses-Kogelsberg-Bettys Bay

The tradeoff for having a house like this one surrounded by gorgeous native flora is the risk that the wildfires that regularly renew the fynbos can also reduce your home to ashes.

House-Kogelsberg-Bettys Bay

We arrive in the town of Hermanus.  It was once called Hermanuspietersfontein, but that proved too unwieldy for the postal service, so it was shortened.  Like most visitors, we head straight to the seaside, where an interpretive sign above the beach explains just what makes Hermanus such a popular place. For it’s here where people can observe the Southern right whales (Eubalaena australis) that migrate to the shallow, sandy-bottomed waters of Walker Bay and spend the months of June to November mating, calving and raising their young until they have enough blubber not to sink in deeper waters of the Antarctic to which they will return come the southern hemisphere summer.  South Africa has strict rules about whale conservation on all its coasts and in 2001, this area was proclaimed the Walker Bay Whale Sanctuary Marine Protected Area.

Interpretive whale sign - Hermanus

We stop at one of the many overlooks facing Walker Bay and the spectacular coastline behind it. Below us is the Old Harbour Museum, one of the few open air museums in the world, and once the centre of life here in Hermanus.

Hermanus Old Harbour

On the way down to the rocky shore, we see a rock hyrax – this one a little more active than the one I saw sitting in its “latrine” on Table Mountain.

Rock hyrax

Though the old fishing boats now sit high and dry (with holes in their bottoms), the Old Harbour Museum provides a good spot for whale watching.

Hermanus Old Harbour rowboats

We move down the shore, keeping an eye open for the perfect site on the rocky outcrops dotted with tourists.

Whale watching at Hermanus

I spot a group of people on a promontory,all aiming their long lenses toward the sea where a female southern right whale and her calf are frolicking.

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So down we go and now I’m set up looking out onto Walker Bay. The rock I’m standing on is Malmesbury Group shale and the mountains behind Hermanus in the distance are the Kleinrivier Range.

Janet-photographing whales in Hermanus

With my telephoto lens, I can focus a little on a whale and also bring up the sheer, majestic face of the mountains in the distance.

Hermanus-southern right whale-Kleinrivier range

Southern right whales are not that active in the water, compared to humpback whales, which seem to fly through the air as they breach.  But I have fun trying to catch the odd fluke – this might be considered “tailsailing”…..

Southern right Whale fluke

…..and it’s interesting to see the “callosities” on the head of this whale. Though the callosities themselves are calcified skin patches, they appear white because of the presence of large colonies of whale lice, barnacles and parasitic worms which live on them.  Seasoned whale-watchers use these callosities to distinguish one whale from another.

Southern right whale callosia

The move below is called “spyhopping”, a controlled raise of the head out of the water using the pectoral flippers, similar to a human treading water.

Southern right Whale head

And I catch the splash end of a breach.

Southern right whale breach splash

Though it’s a little hard to detect, the photo below shows the southern right whale’s distinctive, v-shaped, double spout on the right.

Southern right whale double spout

Finally, it’s time to say goodbye to the southern right whales of Walker Bay.  It’s been a thrill to watch them play, but it’s time for lunch and then the drive back to Cape Town. (But do be sure to join me in my next blog, when I visit one of South Africa’s finest wineries.)

Southern right whales-Eubalaena australis

The Harold Porter National Botanical Gardens

Today, the 10th day of our South Africa garden tour, we’re heading out of Cape Town with our ultimate destination the town of Hermanus for whale-watching.  Our route will take us around Table Mountain out of the city, then over the Cape Flats and ultimately, on R44 or Clarence Drive, along the seashore of False Bay (so-called because it tricked a lot of mariners who thought they had already rounded the Cape of Good Hope into Table Bay).  False Bay has some smaller bays, including Gordon’s Bay, which gives its name to a specific, endangered plant, the Gordon’s Bay pincushion (Leucadendron bolusii).   The road will cut across the point under the Kogelberg Nature Reserve and we will stop in Betty’s Bay at the Harold Porter National Botanical Gardens (red arrow on the map).

Cape Town to Hermanus

I point my camera through the window of the moving bus to capture some of the magnificent coastal scenery on the way. This is Kogel Bay, approaching the Kogelberg Nature Reserve, where the wind often blows very hard, making it a favourite spot for surfing.  And sadly, though it’s normally considered a low-risk area for sharks, a young body-boarder was killed here by a great white shark in 2012.

Kogel Bay

Down the beach, a tidal pool has been partly enclosed for safe swimming.

Kogel Bay-Tidal Pool

Visitors can camp here and bring food to “braii” (barbecue).

Kogel Bay Braai spot

Though the rocks are a favourite place from which to fish, many anglers have also been swept into the sea near here, and their memorial crosses dot the shore.

Kogel Bay-Fisherman's Memorial

A little more than an hour out of Cape Town, we arrive at the Harold Porter Botanical Gardens. This stop is a late addition to our itinerary and most of us on the tour could not be happier. We’ve seen a lot of beautiful private gardens in our first 9 days, but the botanical enthusiasts are itching to see the unique fynbos flora!  And here (sadly in a bit too much sunshine for a good photo) are some of the plants we’ll see in bloom at Harold Porter, including yellow Leucospermum conocarpodendron, orange Leucospermum cordifolium and pink watsonia.

What's in Bloom- Harold Porter BG

Less than a year before our visit, in November 2013, the garden was inundated with mud and water from heavy rains that caused a landslide from the mountains behind.  Photos appear here behind some of the other plants in bloom.

Flood story-Harold Porter Botanical Garden

There’s a lovely container of indigenous flowers in the garden entrance room.

Fynbos flower bouquet

The garden sits between the sea at Betty’s Bay (that is the gorgeous blue sceptre, Aristea capitata at the right) ….

Harold Porter Botanical Gardens

…..and the Kogelberg Mountain Range, whose slopes are spangled with the unique fynbos species of the Cape Floristic Province.  Here’s a little video on the Kogelberg Nature Reserve.

Conscious of the time, I rush madly from bed to bed, moving from the bottom near the visitor centre up to the bridge that leads to the fynbos trail.

Garden Bed-Harold Porter Botanical Garden

I zero in on a sprawling plant, below, from the bed above. It’s Felicia fruticosa, shrub aster or bush felicia.  It reminds me a little of our autumn-flowering North American asters.

Felicia fruticosa

Here’s the familiar fan aloe, now renamed Kumara plicatilis, with a great backdrop of the mountains.

Fan aloe-Kumara plicatilis

And lots of little flowers I’m not familiar with, like these tiny “wild violets” Monopsis unidentata…..

Monopsis unidentata
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….. and this shrubby groundcover called doll’s rose or hermannia (Hermannia pinnata)….

Hermannia-pinnata-Doll's rose

And the amazing little strawflower-like plant called Cape snow, Syncarpha vestita.

Syncarpha vestita-Cape snow

We’ll see a lot of this little wild scabious (Scabiosa incisa) in the gardens around Cape Town – and also the pretty Acraea species butterfly nectaring on it.

Scabiosa incisa & Acraea butterfly

And here’s sweet little Pelargonium citronellum, which we know in North America for its derivative essential oil citronella, commonly used as a natural mosquito repellant.

Pelargonium citronellum

I love botanical gardens that use their plants and the environment in which they grow to offer educational insights that go beyond simple identification. This little display explains how the tannins in the tough fynbos plants make their way into the groundwater, turning it brown.

Tannins in water-Harold Porter BG

Here is the inflorescence of Brunia albiflora, called knopbossie or “knob-flower” in Afrikaans because of the shape of the flowers.  Like many fynbos species it is nominally serotinous, meaning the seeds are disseminated following a fire (though it can also seed without fire). According to plantzafrica, it is endemic to this part of the Western Cape, from the Hottentots Holland Mountains to Hermanus.

Brunia albiflora

Protea nitida or wagon-tree (waboom in Afrikaans) has distinctive blue-green leaves and fluffy white flowers.  It’s one of the few proteas that can become a small tree, in time reaching 15-30 feet (5-10 metres).

Protea nitida

Here’s the beautiful and complex flower of the tree pincushion (Leucospermum conocarpodendron), the largest of the pincushion proteas.

Leucospermum conocarpodendron

And two of the most commonly-seen, but beautiful, fynbos species, blue sceptre (Aristea capitata) and red pincushion protea (Leucospermum cordifolium). Don’t they look amazing together?

Leucospermum cordifolium & Aristea capitata-Harold Porter BG

A wetland with a little bridge near the top of the garden contains a profusion of striking, yellow-flowered Wachendorfia thyrsiflora. Its common name is bloodwort or bloodroot for its red roots.

Wachendorfia thyrsiflora-Harold Porter BG

I wish we had at least another half-day in this charming garden, then we could cross this bridge and hike up into the fynbos.

Bridge to Fynbos trail-Harold Porter BG

…..where leopards are said to roam from time to time……

Leopard sign-Fynbos-Harold Porter BG

……but where we would be much more likely to run into the wild Leucospermum cordifolium spangling the fynbos than leopards.  Isn’t this fabulous?

Fynbos-Leucospermum cordifolium

However, it’s time to head back to the bus for the short hop down the highway to Hermanus to look for whales. But this little botanical garden has stolen my heart.

A Cape Town Tour

Today, the ninth day of our South Africa Garden Tour, we have a very full schedule with plans to visit a number of sites in Cape Town.  We begin very close to our hotel, at the Biodiversity Showcase Garden in Green Point Urban Park.  A legacy project of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the park is adjacent to the Cape Town Stadium and is designed to beautify the area while raising awareness of the unique indigenous plants of the city and other nearby regions of the Cape Floristic Kingdom Heritage Site (including Table Mountain National Park).  The garden contains more than 25,000 plants comprising 300 native species.

Green Point Biodiversity Park-Cape Town

It’s fascinating to see the native South African pelargoniums that have clearly contributed so much to our garden hybrids (especially the zonal geraniums), like this very common tree pelargonium Pelargonium cucullatum.  Notice Signal Hill and Lion’s Head looming behind – you might remember them from my visit to the top of Table Mountain.

Pelargonium cucullatum

Unlike most pelargoniums I’ve seen in Canada, I notice a lot of bee activity on these native species.  Remember those “killer African bees”? Well, this is the Cape honey bee (Apis mellifera capensis) on P. cucullatum, quietly going about its business – and look at that gorgeous magenta pollen load in its corbicula, or pollen basket!

Apis mellifera capensis on Pelargonium cucullatum

I love these wetlands at the garden, developed from historic springs in Oranjezicht, a Cape Town suburb on the slopes of Table Mountain.

Green Point Biodiversity Park-Wetland

Cape Town was once called Camissa, meaning “place of sweet waters”, by the aboriginal Khoikoi people and there is a cultural movement to bring the public’s attention back to the water that once gave life to the city before it was diverted to drains and channels.

Water to the Common-Green Point Biodiversity Park

And this water-wheel fulfills an educational role, teaching about renewable energy while actually producing power.

Water wheel-Green Point Biodiversity Park

This interpretive sign offers suggestions on good plants for Lowland Fynbos – areas with sandy, acidic soil and flat terrain, such as used to exist in the Cape Town Flats and Fishoek, but have been lost to development. Recommended plants on the sign are Protea scolymocephala, Serruria aemula, Erica verticillata.  The shrubby, yellow button flowers at the base are bitterbush or “bitterbos” in Afrikaans, Chrysocoma ciliata.

Lowland Fynbos plants-Green Point Biodiversity Park

Here is the endemic Peninsula travelling aloe (A. commixta), with its unusual prostrate habit.

Aloe commixta-Peninsula rambling aloe

Soon it’s time to head downtown to continue our city tour.  Unlike most of South Africa, which experiences a subtropical climate, Cape Town has a Mediterranean climate, with mild, wet winters (North American summer months) and warm, dry summers (December to March).  So palm trees are common on Cape Town boulevards.

Cape Town-downtown

Here is the old Cape Town City Hall, built in 1905 using imported English sandstone.  On February 11, 1990, just hours after his release from prison, Nelson Mandela made his first public speech from its balcony. Though it’s no longer used for city business it is a frequent venue for cultural events.

Cape Town City Hall

We stop briefly outside Cape Town’s oldest surviving building, the Castle of Good Hope. Built by The Dutch East India Company in the late 1660s, it is South Africa’s oldest colonial structure.  There was actually an older building on this site originally, built in 1654 by Dutch settlers who established the “victualling” or replenishing station for the Dutch ships sailing the spice route from Holland to the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).

Castle of Good Hope-Cape Town

Now it’s time for a fun stop at Cape Town’s Adderley Street Flower Market. It’s here where we glimpse for the first time the great diversity of the unique fynbos plants – the leucospermums and proteas and berzelias, etc.(including a few that look suspiciously dyed.)

Adderley Street Flower Market-Capetown2

There are also more traditional flowers, such as roses, lilies and chrysanthemums. The changing tastes of the flower-buying public through the years is one of the interesting back stories of this market (see the flower market history link below).

Adderley Street Flower Market-Capetown1

These flowers, indigenous calla lilies, airy Ammi majus and gold roses, are bound for a wedding, we’re told.

Wedding flowers-Adderley Street Flower Market

We don’t have much time to talk to the vendors, many of whom are South African “coloured” (meaning people of mixed race) and descendants of slaves. A few vendors, like this man, have worked hard to harvest and maintain interest in the indigenous fynbos flora over exotics.

Flower Seller-Adderley Street Flower Market-Cape Town

There is a long and interesting history here, much of it caught up in South Africa’s apartheid past. These stalls are often handed down in families, from mother to daughter or father to son. Like many “coloureds”, the stall owners might have been among those living on flower or vegetable farms on Strawberry Lane in Constantia in 1965 when P.W. Botha declared it a “whites only” zone and sent them to live in shanty towns on the Cape Town Flats.

One thing is clear: amongst our group of tourists, we are all interested in the local flora. Aren’t these gorgeous? I could fill the bus with the ones I’d love to buy, but content myself with one big bunch. Then it’s back to touring.

Leucospermums & Proteas-Adderley Street Flower Market

Our next stop is the beautiful St. George’s Anglican Cathedral, built on a corner of the original Dutch East India Company’s Garden. It was here, during the 1986-96 bishopric of Desmond Tutu, Cape Town’s first black archbishop (he was previously Bishop of Lesotho and Johannesburg and had already won the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize), that the South African government’s apartheid policy was decried from the pulpit.  It was Archbishop Tutu who coined the phrase “Rainbow Nation” for the ideals fought for by Nelson Mandela and the other anti-apartheid figures, and it was Archbishop Tutu who found the deep well of understanding and forgiveness that gave rise to his post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

St. George's Cathedral-Cape Town

After touring the interior, we walk around the cathedral grounds and I stop to read the memorial tablets built into its foundation.  They offer a fascinating glimpse into the historic perils of navy life, both in terms of skirmishes……

Monument-St. George's Cathedral1

…..and the hazards of navigating Cape Town’s once-treacherous Table Bay.

Monument-St. George's Cathedral2
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From the cathedral, we can see the beautiful Mandela Rhodes building, once head office of Cecil Rhodes’ De Beers Diamond company, which was founded in 1888 during the diamond rush that ensued upon the 1869 discovery of the 83.5 carat ‘Star of south Africa’ diamond in Hopetown, in the Northern Cape Province. (I’ll write more about Cecil Rhodes in a future blog when we visit his Memorial on Table Mountain.)

Mandela-Rhodes-Building

The building is now headquarters of the Mandela Rhodes Foundation, which administers funding to African recipients of the Rhodes scholarship to Oxford University in England.  This institutional merger of two seemingly conflicting names and philosophies is a fascinating notion, given Rhodes’ views. The following, from the history of the Rhodes Scholarship, shows how fraught with racism were the terms of Cecil Rhodes’ will as it pertained to South Africa.

South Africa posed a particular problem.  Unlike any other jurisdiction to which Scholarships were allocated, South Africa had to select four out of its five Scholars from among the graduates of the four private boys’ secondary schools that had been named in Rhodes’ will.  As these schools did not admit black students, the Scholars selected from their ranks were uniformly white, and the fact that South Africa was under apartheid left little doubt that the fifth Scholar selected would be white as well.  Not until the 1960s was there any great global criticism of the South African selection process.  When there finally was an outcry, the Trustees remonstrated that they lacked the authority to change the terms of Rhodes’ will; this could only be accomplished by amending the original piece of legislation under which his will was administered. Despite the Trustees’ argument that selecting Scholars from these schools defeated the real purpose of Rhodes’ will, the British courts maintained that it was the Trust’s duty to faithfully execute the will as written.

In the 1970s, in an effort to remedy the situation, the Trustees created four new “South-Africa-at-large” Scholarships, to which candidates from anywhere in the country could apply and be considered by a national committee made up of black, as well as white, selectors. Additionally, the Rhodes Trust allocated monies for the creation of the Rhodes Trust Scholarships to fund the university study of promising black candidates and hopefully nurture the development of black Rhodes Scholars.  Not until the end of apartheid in 1991, however, was there a significant diversification in South African Scholars registered.” 

As we leave the cathedral for The Company’s Garden, we pass groups of lively young Xhosa street dancers. Naturally, I have to make a little film….

https://plus.google.com/106548255417361407356/posts/VwioqL4iAay

In order to visit the Company’s Gardens, we park near the Garden House (De Tuynhuys in Afrikaans), named for the tool house for the garden that first stood on the site in 1674. It was converted to a guesthouse for the Cape Colony’s first Governor Simon Van der Stel (1639-1712), and later became Government House, the residence of the President of South Africa. Following the historic ANC win on April 27, 1994, President Nelson Mandela moved into the Garden House and lived here until retiring from public office in 1999.

Government House-Tuynhuys

The Company’s Garden was created in 1652 originally to grow produce for the Dutch East India Company’s (or, as it was in Dutch, VOC – Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie) ships that loaded supplies here on their way to the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia). In time, it was redesigned in Victorian style and proclaimed for public use in 1848.  The gardens occupy a large swathe of the historic centre of Cape Town; their proximity to major cultural institutions and heritage sites (the garden is just under Victoria Street) can be seen on this map which I’ve edited a little in order to present it in one piece.  But you can also see it in its original form online.

The-Company's-Garden-Map

We walk through the gate. Sadly, the morning sun is blazing and there isn’t a cloud in the sky. It’s a day most visitors love, but for photographers it means forgetting about photos in the sun-dappled garden, since the shadows are just too deep.

The Company's Garden-Cape Town

Nevertheless, I find some individual vignettes in shade, like this Ethiopian banana (Ensete ventricosum)……..

Ensete ventricosum-Ethiopian banana

….and this pineapple guava (Feijoa sellowiana)….

Pineapple guava-Acca sellowiana

There is an interesting little succulent garden and I’m impressed by the size of the carpenter bees (Xylocopa sp.) nectaring on this orange-flowered dyckia.

Carpenter bee on Dyckia

A display of indigenous plants includes this gorgeous watsonia.

Watsonia-The Company's Garden

And there are majestric trees overhead, like this old rubber tree (Ficus elastica).

Ficus-elastica-Rubber-Tree

There are even trees that were once considered beautiful exotics but in our ecologically-minded times are now just considered invasive troublemakers, like this silky oak (Grevillea robusta) from Australia.

Silky oak-Grevillea robusta

And once again, Cecil Rhodes occupies a place of prominence,waving happily behind a pretty wild pomegranate (Burchellia bubalina).

Cecil Rhodes-The Company's Garden

The brand-new VOC Vegetable Garden (summer 2014) was designed in a quadripartite pattern that evokes the Dutch Baroque style of the 17th century. It’s comprised of heirloom fruit, herbs and vegetables in food and water-wise demonstration gardens. Apart from the Dutch colonial history, the garden will feature the food narrative of the Khoikoi who herded animals in the area, as well as the story of slavery and the slave labour that made the original Company’s Garden productive.

VOC-Vegetable Garden-Cape Town

We leave the garden and head to the Victoria & Albert Mall for a lunch on our own and lots of time to shop.

Victoria & Albert Mall-Cape Town

Then it’s on to high tea at the elegant Belmond Mount Nelson Hotel….

Tea Room-Belmond Mount Nelson Hotel

…where I eschew the South African rooibos (“redbush” tea made from the leaves of the fynbos shrub Aspalathus linearis) for regular old tea.

Tea at Belmond Mount Nelson Hotel

Finally, we return to our hotel where I empty the bathroom waste basket to use as a vase for my beautiful bouquet of South African fynbos flowers.  I only wish I could take it home with me.

Fynbos bouquet

Time to rest up before dinner. Tomorrow we head to a very pretty little botanical garden, then to see the right whales in Hermannus. Later in the week, we’re off to wine country — and I’ll take you along if you want to go!