
The next morning after breakfast and a visit to the pet owl and meerkats, we went on an extremely long but mostly enjoyable hike through the canyon that made up part of the farm. Although South Africa is going through one of its worst droughts on record, the farm had just gotten a little rain so we ended up walking through the river that ran through the canyon a lot and getting entirely wet and muddy. The rain also filled up the small rock pools in part of the river, so Alice and I stopped and went swimming for a bit. The inside of the canyon was beautiful with steep rocky walls covered by flowers and bushes. We could hear baboons, on the very tops of the walls, calling to each other with hoots and barks. When we looked up we would see them for quick moments running across the cliff face.

After our hike we drove a short distance to the Brewery, where the owner brews and sells his own beer. We were still sweaty and muddy from the hike so many of us just took our shoes off and walked in barefoot, to sit down at tables in a small green backyard. We were served a delicious lunch of different kinds of cheese, meat and bread. And of course, beer. I’m not much of a beer drinker, but the beer I had, which the owner said was brewed with a little honey was probably the best I’ve ever tasted

We then made a short stop at the little town of Nieu-Bethesda (not much like the US Bethesda) and at the Owl House. Owned by a woman named Helen Martins who went a little crazy living isolated in the tiny town and began to obsessively decorate her house, turning it into a piece of art. Sculptures surround the house, mostly of people, many of nativity scenes. There are also many of owls, as the name suggests, and small shelters constructed from green glass bottles. The inside of the house was all color. The window glass was all different colors, each room carefully painted in red, or yellow or green. Huge mirrors in the shape of the small old-fashioned hand mirrors hung on many of the walls.

We went back to the farm and most of us rested for a while. That evening we were shown the many, many fossils that had been found and collected on the farm, all older than the dinosaurs. We learned that while we had been hiking we could have quite possibly walked past a few 350 million year old fossils. The karoo is apparently one of the few places in the world where fossils this old are discovered and the farm is often visited by scientists and researchers. Many of the fossils discovered are in museums throughout Africa. I was most impressed by the man who showed us the fossils. He had apparently discovered most of them himself. He had no formal training, I think, he was not a scientist or a professor. He just, as he said, had a “knack” for spotting a fossil when most of us would see a rock. He went through the fossils showing how one was a piece of jaw, another the impression of leg bones. As soon as he showed us we saw it, but I have no idea how he managed to see that jaw in the ground in a pile of rocks.
The next morning we walked to a couple of the caves where we could see cave paintings by the San people and the Khoi. We then said our goodbyes to the farm owners, and to the dogs, and started the drive back. We stopped on the way at a national park and walked up the high cliff face to get a view of the Valley of Desolation. I don’t know why it was called that. The valley was in fact quite beautiful with a large lake and a small town in it. Not very desolate at all.

Next week is the end of term and April break! We will be driving up the Garden Route to Capetown…