Skip to content

Gawie se water and other stories Traditional Geocache

Hidden : 10/31/2009
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
3 out of 5

Size: Size:   regular (regular)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:


GAWIE SE WATER AND OTHER STORIES

Approximately 3.5km one-way along a fairly level jeep track, but allow time to savour the surroundings.

Note that you are supposed to have a permit to walk in this area. Permits for this area (it's called Limietberg,  Capedoc) can be obtained (wildcards work, I think) at Bainskloof Corner Lodge (021-864 1159 coords approx  S33 36.969 E19 06.045, not sure about open times but probably quite flexible) Wellington Tourism (021 873 4604 S33 38.483 E19 00.227, Mon-Fri 08h00-17h00 Sat-Sun 10h00-13h00) , Capenature in Paarl (021 871 1536 - don’t ask me why Paarl tourism does not issue permits) or contact CapeNature Call Centre 021 659 3500). Tourism offices are probably not open when you want to go caching so a little planning is required.

Allow me to take you on a journey into some fascinating history in the Bainskloof Mountains. Park at S33 37.426 E19 05.845 (PK) and pass underneath the cable gate to follow the jeep track. Ever wonder where this track goes? Well you are about to find out!

Your first stop is at S33 38.279 E19 06.428 (P1). Here is a memorial in recognition of the Witterivier tragedy of 1895. A group of students from Wellington went hiking up the mountains and the weather turned foul.  The party split into two, with the stronger party going back to the village for help and the slower party were forced to stay overnight on the other side of the river. It rained all night and the river turned into a raging torrent. It was so cold there were reports of snow on Table Mountain. The next day the rescue party managed to secure a rope across the river.  The first to attempt the crossing was a girl by the name of Lettie de Jager. She got as far as the middle of the river, where she managed to cling on to an outstanding rock, but she could progress no further. Three young men tried to help but also only got as far as the rock where they all succumbed to the cold after about 2 hours. Later that day the remaining survivors where winched across at a safer spot.  Mr Hugo of the next story erected the memorial. A sad reminder that beauty and danger can be close companions. 

 

Markus from tom&sons at the memorial in June 2008

Next go to S33 38.611 E19 06.470 (P2). Here you will see what remains of Mr Hugo’s house. Mr Hugo was the prosperous owner of Hugo’s jam factory.  You can still see the remains of his factory today in Bain Street down in Wellington (S33 38.461 E19 00.608 - go and have a look). The factory was subsequently the site of the Dietman piano factory and now it is an upmarket residential development called “The Piano Factory”. There was quite a debate whether the development should be called “The Jam Factory” or “The Piano Factory”, but evidently the latter fell more poetically on the well-heeled ears of the inhabitants.

Jam was big business in those days: There was Hugo’s in Wellington, Langeberg and Jones in Paarl, Rhodes Fruit farms (RFF) in Simondium and Gants in Somerset West, to name but a few.  Of those Langeberg and Jones ended up as part of Tiger Brands and RFF still do a bit on the side. The name Hugo is still used as one of Tiger Brand’s names for premium quality jams. Jam and canning is a fraction of the industry it used to be before the widespread use of cooling facilities and also due to the apparent increase health awareness of the world – people prefer fresh fruit and such healthy foods such as take-aways and fast foods… 

 

  Wolkerus or "Clouds Rest" after completion in 1941

Anyway, Mr Hugo developed this notion to build a house in the mountains of Bainskloof. He had this road built that you are walking on and built the house in the 1940’s, complete with swimming pool. Unsurprisingly his wife refused to go and live there. Mr Hugo died before he could move into his house and so the house stood empty for 8 years until it burnt down in a veld fire in 1949. Mr Hugo must have died a sad man.  I can clearly remember as a child the “spookhuis” (Ghost house) standing there hauntingly high up in the mountains. Only some walls and the gable ends were still standing at the time. You can imagine what spooky images were conjured up in a child’s mind. Sadly an escaped convict murdered two hikers there in 1978 and the ruins were demolished to the foundations, so all that is left is what you see today.

After the fire, February 1949

An artist's (my sister's) impression of the spookhuis as I imagined it.

This painting catches the spooky atmosphere quite well (A Starry Night by Van Gogh)

I had a huge workout today (31 October 2009) clearing blackwattle around the watercourse running down next to the spookhuis, and so an opportunity presented itself to place this cache, which I have wanted to do for a long time. We rode all the way there in a rather low clearance 2x4 bakkie – quite exciting.

Now go to the cache at S33 38.729 E19 06.532 (listed coordinates). Nearby there is a small bridge over a deep cutting in the rock that we call “Gawie se water”. This cutting diverts water from the Witterivier down to the farms of the Bovlei in Wellington. Interestingly here water is diverted from the Witterivier, which flows to the Breede river that enters the Indian Ocean at Cape Infanta near Swellendam to the Berg River which enter the Atlantic ocean at Velddrif.

Thomas Bain who built the pass in the 1850’s offered to make this cutting for £600, but the local farmers thought that was too much money. Gawie Retief of the farm Kanetfontein (a cousin of the  voortrekker Piet Retief) took it upon himself to excavate the cutting, which was completed by 1860 at three times the price!

I had ideas to place the cache at the bottom of the cutting, so that you have to take off your shoes and walk in the water, but I am feeling kind and generous. When I placed the cache I peered below the bridge deck and had a Discombob moment, tempted to place the container perched on a ledge below the deck. Instead, as this is an educational expedition, I have placed the container at a very easily accessible spot. I invite you to have a look and comment if there are any better spots to place the cache.

 

My brother Nicky walking in the trench below the bridge in January 2005. My but the time flies!

I strongly recommend you walk further along the jeep track, or in the trench to find out where the water is diverted from the river itself. There are lovely places for a picnic and a swim. Enjoy.

Near the weir where the water is diverted from the Witte rivier (January 2005)

Acknowledgements: I wrote most of these stories from memory, but naturally I must have got them into my memory from somewhere. Thanks to research by  Mrs Pooks and the booklet "Bainskloof and other tales" by Winnie Rust for some pictures and correction of details.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Ng onfr bs ohfu tebjvat ntnvafg fybcvat ebpx

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)