Thembisile Chris Hani is killed
De Vlugt, Garden Route
De Vlugt is a small Settlement located Halfway through the Prins Albert Pass. It is the only Pass in South Africa, where People live beside the Road and Trade, within the Pass. The Town has a selection of quality and pretty Accommodation on offer, as well as Restaurants and Tea Gardens.
The Area has a lot of fun activities on offer and visitors can find out more about these activities at the new Information Centre, opposite the Outeniqua Trout Lodge. (There is however no Mobile Reception, Banks or Petrol, available on the Pass!) It is Roughly halfway along Prince Alfred Pass (R 339), as it descends to meet the River, is the Historical Hamlet of; De Vlugt. Also know as Die Vlug.
De Vlugt is what remains of the dwellings of Andrew Geddes Bain and his son, Thomas, their Outbuildings and the Concentration Camp that housed the 270 or so Convicts, who labored to Build the Pass, the early 1860's. Bain began his task on the Knysna side of the Pass, widening the tracks of elephant through the Forest, before setting up Camp Midway, in the Poort along the Banks of the Keurbooms River, to continue the demanding task of Pass Building. ( a POORT is a narrow pathway through a mountain). Little has changed in De Vlugt since then. The only nod to Globalization is a Telkom Telephone, on one side of the Road, and a Tea Garden that offers coffee and Melktert (Milktart), bottled fruit, jams, tea, scones and hand-painted ornaments, on the other.
Otherwise the peaceful Hamlet remains undisturbed, (a Small Settlement, generally one Smaller than a Village, and one without a Church!) In this Stretch of the Pass, life is about as slow as it is going to get off the beaten Track in South Africa.Baine's Cottage still has original yellowwood floors, the kitchen a large Aga Stove, and there is no electricity. There are a couple of reasons to stay here: #Burchell's Track, a 4X4 route that follows Burchell's ox wagon Trail through the Kloof; a real Pioneer track threw by William John Burchell, the Botanist, in the Hectares of fynbos to the West of De Vlugt. Burchell traveled from Skuurbeknek to Romanskraal, Jaggakamma and Knoetskraal before linking up with the Paardekop trail to Plettenberg Bay.
It was only in 1998, when a fire destroyed Hectares of fynbos between Pietersrivier Farm and De Vlugt that the tracks made by his wagon were revealed. Burchell's Track is run by local; Katot Meyer, with the help of Middle Keurbooms Conservancy and Cape Nature. (Look out for hand-painted maps of the Trail in the old Cottage, at De Vlugt, if you want to follow the Trail that Burchell carved with his wagon. Interestingly: he had the wheelbase deliberately narrowed to enable him to navigate the narrow sections, which makes it steering wheel-gripping at times!)
https://www.countrylife.co.za/travel/heritage/thomas-bain-the-mountain-pass-master-builderhttp://www.outeniquatrout.co.za/bains_retreat.php
https://www.wheretostay.co.za/town/de-vlugt/accommodation
https://southmagazine.co.za/2016/03/01/passing-through/
https://www.uniondale.co.za/listing/die-skoolhuisie
https://www.booking.com/hotel/za/thomas-bains-cottage-rustic-farmhouse-views.en-gb.html
https://www.bonniedale.com/activities/routes-passes
https://www.caravansa.co.za/pietersrivier-nature-reserve-de-vlugt-western-cape/
De Rust, Little Karoo
De Doorns, Cape Winelands
De Doorns is a small Town, located in the Cape Winelands Region, of the Western Cape. Situated in the Hex River Valley, 32 km North-East of Worcester and 40 km South-West of Touwsrivier, on the Main Route to and from Cape Town, Johannesburg and Port Elizabeth The De Doorns Farm was bought by the Government of the Cape, Prime Minister John Molteno in 1875, to build a Railway Station for the expanding Cape Government Railways. The Line was built through De Doorns, connecting it to Cape Town and reaching Montagu Road (later Touws River). The Town would later develop around the Station.
This is a Valley of Vineyards and snow-capped Mountains, during Winter that combine to make it one of the most picturesque Valleys, especially during Autumn when the different vines give rise to a wonderful display of various colours! De Doorns is a Town with a particularly impressive Cultural Heritage. In 1819 De Doorns was proclaimed a Sub-Drostdy of Tulbagh. Two Farms were bought for the purpose of laying out a Town. In 1822 De Doorns was proclaimed a full Drostdy- (In Historical Contexts this means: During the 17th, 18th, and early 19th Centuries, a Magisterial and Administrative District; Over which a Landdrost, had Jurisdiction).
De Doorns lies at the Centre of the Hex River Valley, in the midst of South Africa’s Table Grape Industry. This is a Valley of Vineyard upon Vineyard of Historical Cape Dutch Homesteads, and snow-capped Mountains during Winter that combine to make it one of the most picturesque Valleys, particularly during Autumn when the different vines give rise to a display of variegated colour, so rich, that all who see it are inspired and none left untouched by its beauty! De Doorns Literally translated means ‘the thorns’ in Dutch, and refers to the Acacia Thorn Trees that dominate the Hex River banks. The De Doorns’ Wine Cellar boasts the longest Harvest Season in the World, from December through until April. The Area exports nearly 17 Million Cartons, of grapes Annually!