Sunday, February 12, 2017

Drakenberg, Best for Hiking

#The view from the hiking trail on the way to Tugela Gorge
THERE can be few more humbling slabs of geography than the Amphitheatre, a mile-high citadel of doom-grey basalt that looms over the Royal Natal National Park. Viewed from the Tugela River’s innocently chuckling lower reaches, this Tolkien-grade fortification looks as portentous as it is.
‘The Amphiteatre is like the mother of South Africa,’ says Ncamy Dlamini. ‘We would have no farms, no food without the rivers that are born up there.’ This is the loftiest stretch of the 600-mile rain factory known in Afrikaans the Drakensberg – The Dragon’s Mountain.
Ncamy is a firefighter. She and her squad are out on a nine-hour training exercise in the park. ‘Most of our fires start with lightning, and spread like it,’ she says. ‘You have to move fast to fight them, and at 3,000 metres altitude that isn’t easy.’ She arches her shoulders against the weight of her backpack. ‘But, you know, this is our homeland. It’s so beautiful and so special, and I am always proud to be protecting it.’
The trek up the Tugel Gorge is by turns benign and wild. The near treeless green valley is punctuated by the exotic blurts of red-spiked bottlebrush trees. Then the vegetation an those black-streaked sandstone flanks close in, and soon the rainforest whoops and croaks are drowned out by the white-noise roar of rapid water.
Boots and socks come off for what the trail map blithely calls a ‘boulder hop’, requiring hikers to zig-zag across the increasingly excitable Tugela. Shed-sized rocks strewn along the tightening cleft pay impressive testament to the river’s full-flow fury: it becomes ever easier to imagine the Amphitheatre as this nation’s life-giving heart, and the Tugela as its mightiest artery.
In the final stretch, chain ladders climb rock faces and the gorge narrows to the spread of a hiker’s arms. The reward, for those who catch the lords of the mist in benevolent mood, is a neck-craning view of the Tugela hurling itself off the roof of the Amphitheatre, in the second-highest waterfall on Earth. For a long while the summit is no more than a notion, lost in steamy wisps; then a shaft of sun bursts through and for one brief but  dumb founding moment there it is, a tiny silver thread spooling down from the top of the world.
Billed as an ‘Afro-Swiss mountain village’, Alpine Heath sits on the edge of the Royal Natal National Park, with large self-catering chalets equipped with fireplaces and offering views of the escarpement. The central complex features two swimming pools, bars, a grocery and two restaurants (threecities.co.za/alpineheath).