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Willowmore – The Karoo, South Africa

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Willowmore is the Gateway to the Baviaanskloof

Willowmore is the Gateway to the Baviaanskloof

Willowmore

Willowmore is best known as the western gateway to the spectacular Baviaanskloof Wilderness area, stretching for more than two hundred kilometres south-east towards distant Hankey and beyond to Port Elizabeth. This is an area of outstanding scenic splendour with the parallel Baviaanskloof Mountains to the north and the Kouga Mountains in the south crowding the Baviaanskloof River valley, culminating in a jumble of rugged mountains at its eastern end.

The Baviaanskloof is one of the most spectacular wilderness drives in South Africa and to travel its full length requires a high-clearance vehicle or preferably a 4X4 vehicle.

Perdepoort north of Willowmore

Perdepoort north of Willowmore

Willowmore is situated in the midst of the Cape Fold Mountains, just beyond the southern end of the vast Camdeboo Plain. The town is overlooked by the 1413-metre high Boesmanspoort Mountain to the north-west and the vista of rolling mountains stretching away to the east and west dominates the landscape.

North of Willowmore the N9 highway picks its way through the Perdepoort, or Horse Ravine, skirts the eastern edge of the Beervlei Dam, before setting our across the vast open spaces of the Camdeboo Plain towards distant Aberdeen and beyond to Graaff-Reinet.

Beervlei Dam

Beervlei Dam

Just south of Beervlei Dam the gravel R306 road branches off the N9 highway towards Rietbron and beyond to Beaufort West. Just north of the town the R329 branches off the N9 highway east towards Steytlerville along South Africa’s last surviving Provincial strip road.

Construction of the cement strip road between Willomwore and Steytlerville was completed in 1954. The road is a single strip with vehicles having to move onto the gravel verge for oncoming traffic. The length of the cement road is 36-kilometres. This road is the shortest route from Willowmore to Port Elizabeth.

Willowmore Town Centre

Willowmore Town Centre

Just south of Willowmore the N9 highway reaches the gravel junction south-east to the Baviaanskloof and beyond this point descends the Buyspoort and Ghwarriepoort Mountain Passes before entering the Western Cape and onwards towards Uniondale or Oudtshoorn in the Klein Karoo.

The scenic R407 gravel road west from Willowmore skirts the northern slopes of the Swartberg, or Black Mountains, towards the tiny village of Klaarstroom and beyond to Prince Albert.

Beervlei Dam Wall

Beervlei Dam Wall

Farming in the Willowmore district transitions from the drier northern areas to the higher rainfall areas of the more mountainous south. Most farmers are small-stock farmers producing merino and dorper sheep, cattle and ostriches.

The construction of the Beervlei Dam north of Willowmore was completed in 1957 and was intended to control the devastating floods that occasionally occurred in the catchment of the Groot River across the mostly arid plains of the Camdeboo and the eastern Koup.

The dam is however somewhat obsolete as it is mostly silted up and empty. The run-off from flooding has diminished because of improved farming practices and the construction of numerous anti-soil erosion structures in the catchment area.

Willowmore Town Hall

Willowmore Town Hall

Willowmore offers a variety of interesting historical buildings and other attractions, many of which date back to the 19th century. The iconic town hall in Knysna Street, with its wedding cake clock tower was built around 1896 and is the centre point of the Willowmore community.

The building is used for film shows, amateur theatrical productions, soirées, wedding receptions and funerals. Other notable buildings include St Matthew’s Anglican Church, completed in 1881.

Willowmore - The Old Gaol

Willowmore – The Old Gaol

The Old Jail was constructed from local stone and the walls are half a metre thick, and was completed in 1880. The outside corners, windows and doors are decorated with plaster quoins. The Old Gaol, as it was then called, consisted of a hospital cell, hard labour cells, awaiting trial cells, a female cell and a kitchen cell.

It was decommissioned as a prison around 1950, was abandoned for more than a decade, and then converted into a luxury guesthouse by its current owners.

Blackstone’s Power Station

Blackstone’s Power Station

Before Willowmore was connected to the national electricity grid in 1984 the town was supplied with electricity by its own power station known as the Blackstones. The six Lister Blackstone diesel generators were shipped from England and then came up by rail to Willowmore. The largest of these engines is still in working order.

Red Bridge in Knysna Street

Red Bridge in Knysna Street

The iconic Red Bridge in Knysna Street was erected as a pedestrian bridge over the Noodsloot and was used by pedestrians when the stream was in flood. The bridge predates the road bridge and was built when the road forded the stream through a drift.

The Wonderboom north of Willowmore

The Wonderboom north of Willowmore

Situated to the north of Willowmore towards Aberdeen along the N9 highway is the ‘Wonderboom’ or Wonder Tree, an aberration of nature. Consisting of two varieties of small trees growing next to each other, the Common guarri Euclea undulta and a Sheperd’s Tree Boscia oleolides, the Wonderboom has 3 stems.

The Wonderboom’s Eye of the Needle

The Wonderboom’s Eye of the Needle

Two of the stems of the Sheperd’s Tree have joined each other, forming an “eye of a needle” and the third stem of the Common guarri has grown through the eye, forming the “thread” through the eye of the needle.

The “Wonderboom” was discovered as early as 1906 when the road was constructed between Willowmore and Aberdeen. It was only when the road was first tarred in 1961 that it received more attention and was acknowledged as a wonder of nature.

Just to the north of the town ‘Aasvoëlberg, or Vulture Mountain, overlooks Willowmore. A road has been constructed to the top of the mountain providing access for high clearance vehicles.

Willowmore Railway Station

Willowmore Railway Station

The summit of the mountain is one of the few accessible places in the Karoo where you can find both proteas and other fynbos species, as well as Karoo succulent plants.

The sandstone rock formations on the mountain are spectacular and the panoramic views from the summit stretch far and wide, encompassing the impressive Cape Fold mountain ranges stretching away to the east and west, a fitting place to take in the beauty and splendour of this corner of the Karoo.

Evening light in Willowmore

Evening light in Willowmore

The Baker’s Dam in the vicinity of Aasvoëlberg was built by the South African Railways in 1906 to supply the steam locomotives in Willowmore with water on the now defunct railway line between Klipplaat and Oudtshoorn.

With the advent of diesel locomotives, the Municipality took over the dam to serve as the town’s primary source of water at the time. Today the dam is a favourite haunt of bird watchers.

Willowmore Street Scene

Willowmore Street Scene

The old Boer graveyard has interesting graves dating back to the 2nd Anglo Boer War. Many of the graves stones have been recently restored and the old fashioned marble headstones are a poignant reminder of the deadly conflict that took place in the district more than a century ago.

From the graveyard it is an easy walk to the small gunpowder chamber which was used to store gunpowder and ammunition during the conflict. Remnants of the old British forts built during the 2nd Anglo Boer War can be seen outside the town on the Pierre Ferreira Walking Trail.

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Karoo Road Trip: 10 Best Places to Stop on South Africa’s Greatest Self Drive

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Updated Friday, 11 January 2019

Divided into two distinct parts, a Karoo road trip can explore either the Klein Karoo (a 300 km strip of mountainous, semi-desert between Worcester and George), or the Groot Karoo, which occupies the predominant heart of South Africa’s innerlands.

Karoo National Park

The Karoo is South Africa’s answer to Australia’s outback.

Its particular rare mix of ragged mountains, vast open spaces, idiosyncratic little towns, star-studded skies devoid of light pollution, sheep farms, and back of beyond windmills make it road trip country like nowhere else in the world.

Best of all. Hardly any visitors to the country have heard of it. Let alone driven it.

Karoo Road Trip

There are many ways to do a Karoo Road Trip:

  • Route 62, the world’s longest wine route that winds through the Klein Karoo
  • The roads of Koup – between the Nuweveldberge and the Swartberg
  • The paths of the Hantam & Roggeveld – the vast interior of the Groot Karoo
  • The routes of the Western upper Karoo – bounded by the Roggeveld Mountains and the Nuweveldberge (also known as Tough Man’s Karoo)
  • The Camdeboo between the Sneeuberge and the Baviaans Mountains
  • The upper Karoo sparsely populated plains southwest of Kimberley

No matter what Karoo road trip you choose, here are a series of great places to stop en route:

  1. Barrydale

Snug up against the Langeberge in the middle of Route 62, and not far from the beautiful Tradouw Pass, the road suddenly winds in amongst the restaurants and galleries of Barrydale  and you’re obliged to make a pit stop, if not stay in one of its numerous guest houses in amongst the fruit orchards.

The Karoo Road Trip images a collection of scenic spaces and huge places with authentic villages and towns scattered about at night you need to get outside and sped some time with the stars and planets as what you will expereince is the same likness your great ansestors must have seen if they visited this planet 10 000 or 10 million years ago. The Karroo is probably one of a handul environs big enough and so sparsely inhabited that the lights from cities does not influence the heavens and as such the epereince is not just a great road trip or adventure but it is also the only way we can cheat time and travel back in time in such a way that even traveling at the speed of light 120 years would not reach our destination. If you can think with even a small amount of creatively and you mixed it up with those humans who were born millions of years ago but they never took the road more travelled like the rest of humanity out of Africa. Many would interpret this as a lack of something but if you followed the mass migration what on earth are you doing back home.

  1. Karoo National Park

One of the easiest ways to explore the Karoo because of its proximity to the N1, the national road between Johannesburg and Cape Town, the Karoo National Park lies just outside Beaufort West, yet is far enough into the Nuweveld Mountains that the national road becomes a distant memory once you round the bend and see the mountains.

The Karoo Road Trip images a collection of scenic spaces and huge places with authentic villages and towns scattered about at night you need to get outside and sped some time with the stars and planets as what you will expereince is the same likness your great ansestors must have seen if they visited this planet 10 000 or 10 million years ago. The Karroo is probably one of a handul environs big enough and so sparsely inhabited that the lights from cities does not influence the heavens and as such the epereince is not just a great road trip or adventure but it is also the only way we can cheat time and travel back in time in such a way that even traveling at the speed of light 120 years would not reach our destination. If you can think with even a small amount of creatively and you mixed it up with those humans who were born millions of years ago but they never took the road more travelled like the rest of humanity out of Africa. Many would interpret this as a lack of something but if you followed the mass migration what on earth are you doing back home.

  1. Kimberley

The surprisingly interesting town and site of South Africa’s Big Hole, Kimberley might have begun as a diamond rush town but today its wide streets are lined with Victorian mansions, museums, galleries, gardens, battlefields and ghost routes aplenty.

Kimberley Mine Museum

  1. Klaarstroom

This darling town with its typical Karoo huisies at the foot of the Swartberg lies on the other side of Meiringspoort from the equally as darling town of De Rust. It still functions as a ‘stop’ for today’s travellers, as it once did for the Karoo farmers trading their wool in Mossel Bay.

Klaarstroom

  1. Mountain Zebra National Park

One of the most beautiful but least explored, national parks Mountain Zebra National Park near Cradock is jam packed with game, including lions and cheetahs, in amongst the mountains that are the natural environment of the mountain zebra.

Mountain Zebra National Park

  1. Namaqualand

The Namaqualand Flower Route is probably the most famous way to drive through the Karoo . If you’re lucky, and the flowers have bloomed, then there are carpets of wild and bright daisies far and wide.

Namaqua Flower Beach Camp, Kamieskroon

  1. Riemvasmaak

In the nether regions of the Groot Karoo up against the Augrabies National Park, be sure to work this little community conservancy (the very first land restitution story in South Africa) and its hot springs into your itinerary. You’ll need a 4×4 to do the 75 000 hectares of land between the Orange and Molopo rivers justice.

Augrabies Falls National Park

  1. The Camdeboo

The Camdeboo lies in the Karoo heartland, a national park surrounding the historical town of Graaff-Reinet that includes the Valley of Desolation, also known as the Cathedral of he Mountains, and lies not far from the equally inspiring little Karoo town of Nieu-Bethesda.

Country Village, Graaff-Reinet

  1. The Swartberg Pass

One of many mountain passes in the Western Cape, the Swartberg Pass is also one of the most beautiful. It lies between the towns of Prince Albert and Oudtshoorn and winds through the Swartberg Nature Reserve.

Swartberg Hiking Trail

  1. Victoria West

Its name might hale from the Victorian era, but the only thing Victorian about the town today is its charming architecture, which survived both the effects of a disastrous flood in 1871, and the deluge of wagons en route between Cape Town and the diamond rush town of Hopetown, during the late 1880s. Today it’s a typical Karoo dorpie with plenty of accommodation and good antique shops.

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Victoria West

When last did you time travel? Do a Karoo Road Trip as time travel is just one small extra activity if you feel brave!