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Beacons of life and death
Examples of recent articles...
To read the full article or for more examples of articles go to the Article Archive at the bottom.
Beacons of life and death
(Written for the June 2015 edition of The Intrepid Explorer)
Text by Stef Terblanche
Pictures by Karl Andre Terblanche
Adventure, the great outdoors, spectacular sea and land scenery, a
taste of life and death dramas, the isolation and romance of a bygone era that
somehow endures, fascinating history, and now also a unique form of hospitality…all
rolled into one experience. Rare but true.
Visit any number of South Africa’s 45 fascinating lighthouses dotted
along 2,954km of some of the most breathtakingly beautiful, rugged and treacherous coastline in the world and you
will get all this and more, while also getting to see how this indispensable
service to the maritime industry operates.
Many of these were built in isolated, inhospitable terrain without the aid of modern technology and testify to man’s ingenuity and perseverance. In almost every case the sea had mercilessly claimed many lives, cargo and vessels before it was decided to build a lighthouse. Some of these lighthouses have accumulated their ghosts and spellbinding tales over two centuries.
Many of these were built in isolated, inhospitable terrain without the aid of modern technology and testify to man’s ingenuity and perseverance. In almost every case the sea had mercilessly claimed many lives, cargo and vessels before it was decided to build a lighthouse. Some of these lighthouses have accumulated their ghosts and spellbinding tales over two centuries.
South Africa’s lighthouses are maintained and operated by Lighthouse
and Navigational Systems (LNS), a business unit of the Transnet National Ports
Authority. They cover the coast from the diamond and copper country of Port
Nolloth on the far northern West Coast right around to Jesser Point at Sodwana
Bay near the border with Mozambique. All are automated these days and only 17
are still manned.
As eight of these lighthouses are open to the public with a number
of them offering lighthouse tours, self-catering accommodation or conference
facilities, today’s lighthouse keepers, or lighthouse officers as they are now
known, sometimes have to be as adept at seeing to tourist needs as making sure
the powerful light beams keep on guiding ships safely to their destination.
But many more of these lighthouses can fairly easily be reached,
making a tour of South Africa’s lighthouses a unique experience that will take
you to unforgettable, out of-the-way places. We did just that, but because of
time constraints limited our tour to the lighthouses of the Western Cape.
Our journey started with lighthouse number six down from Port
Nolloth on the awesome West Coast, a few kilometers from the historic fishing
village of Paternoster in the Columbine Nature Reserve. Here the Cape Columbine lighthouse was commissioned in 1936 and is probably the only South African
lighthouse built in something of an art deco style aptly resembling a square,
buttressed castle – instead of the usual round, tapered shape - as it is built
on what is known locally as Castle Rock.
This was the last manned lighthouse to be built and the last
lighthouse designed by Harry Claude Cooper, Lighthouse Engineer for the Cape
Colonial Government and subsequently the first Lighthouse Engineer of the then
South African Railways. Cape Columbine, painted white with a red lantern house,
stands 15m high on a prominent, windswept headland from where every 15 seconds
its 1.5Kw lamp flashes a beam of some 5,040,000 Candelas visible from 32
nautical miles away. It is usually the first lighthouse to be sighted by ships
coming from South America and Europe.
Originally lighthouses were painted in different, unique colours
and patterns to make them easily identifiable from the sea. For the same reason
the flashing light of each lighthouse has
a different character or sequence.
The history of the area around Cape Columbine is steeped in
maritime tragedy. Legend has it that the picturesque village of Paternoster,
which means “Our Father”, derived its name from the prayers of shipwrecked
Portuguese sailors. The lighthouse was named after the barque Columbine which ran
aground here on 31 Mary 1829. But the
many submerged rocks and reefs along this coast first had to claim many more
victims before the lighthouse was finally built more than a hundred years later.
For lighthouse buffs this lighthouse offers an interesting array
of ‘firsts’, such as its particular lens system and being the first to receive
all three navigational safety features, namely a light, a fog signal and a
radio beacon. A steep climb up its spiral staircase into the lantern house will
reward you with spectacular views of the surrounding nature reserve, Britannia
reef and the Atlantic Ocean.
From Paternoster the road takes us south to Saldanha Bay and
Langebaan Lagoon, to two lighthouses guarding the sea entrance to the bay and
lagoon, named North Head and South Head lighthouses. Both had humble beginnings in 1969 first as 23m high
aluminium lattice towers with lanterns atop, and were only converted to
concrete towers more recently. North Head can be reached through along a nature
trail through the naval base property next to the harbour. South Head can be
reached through the West Coast National park and Postberg Flower Reserve but is
out of bounds to the public as it stands behind locked gates on military property.
Giving the Dassen Island lighthouse at Yzerfontein a miss, our
next stop was the Cape Peninsula which, as the infamous Cape of Storms,
naturally abounds with lighthouses and has a history filled with spectacular
maritime disasters. No fewer than six lighthouses are located around the
peninsula in vastly differing settings.
The rugged isolation of Slangkoppunt lighthouse at Kommetjie,
painted white from top to bottom, stands in stark contrast to the urban setting
of the Green Point lighthouse at Mouille Point which is dwarfed by high-rise
apartment blocks. Green Point lighthouse was built between 1821 and 1824 as the
first operational and solid structure lighthouse in South Africa. The building
with its red and white diagonal stripes is a Cape Town landmark. It is also the
place where generations of lighthouse keepers received their training. Today it
serves as head office for the lighthouse service but is still operational and
its loud foghorn, installed in 1926, is still a frequent irritation to some nearby
residents. Another old lighthouse at nearby Mouille Point has long been
demolished.
Despite its role in safely guiding ships in and out of Table Bay,
the Green Point lighthouse has borne witness to many a tragedy on the waters in
front of it. In one of the worst storms ever to hit Table Bay, some 30 ships
were blown ashore and wrecked in 1858, with many lives lost. In another severe
storm in May 1865 the RMS Athens, a mail steamer was driven onto the rocks by
huge waves, with its entire crew of 29 perishing. And in 1966 the SA Seafarer ran aground close
to the lighthouse which used its strong light beam to assist three air force
helicopters to airlift crew and passengers to safety without loss of life. This
was the first such rescue operation in South Africa.
A short distance across the busy waters of Table Bay is the Robben
Island lighthouse built in 1864, but which in a sense is the oldest in South
Africa. The current lighthouse stands on Minto Hill, the same site where the
first Dutch governor at the Cape, Jan van Riebeeck, in 1656 ordered a huge
bonfire to be kept burning as a navigational aid for ships. Despite this many
ships foundered on the rocks around the island over the years, among them a 17th
century Dutch ship laden with gold coins meant as payment for Dutch East India
Company employees in Batavia. Over the years some gold coins have washed up,
but the bulk of the treasure has yet to be found.
As a young child the later Archbishop of Durban, Denis Hurley,
lived on the island as his father was lighthouse keeper until 1923.
Across the water from Robben Island is Milnerton lighthouse, also
in an urban setting surrounded by restaurants and a golf course.
Next we go south to Simonstown and Roman Rock lighthouse, one of
the most unique lighthouses in South Africa. The lighthouse, a circular cast
iron structure on top of a concrete base with two metal landing areas jutting
out, is perched precariously on two rocks in False Bay near the entrance to the
naval harbour. At high tide the rocks are fully submerged, with strong
Southeasters in summer and gale force Northwesters in winter sending an endless
succession of waves crashing into it.
These conditions made the mere construction of this lighthouse
between 1861 and 1865 quite a feat, allowing for only 96 working days over the
four years. Because of its unique location its lighthouse keepers were the
highest paid in the service, but after 1919
automation replaced them.
The Cape Point lighthouse sits spectacularly atop a rocky headland
of sheer cliffs surrounded by a restless sea at the southern tip of the Cape
Peninsula. It is within the Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve which is part of
the larger Table Mountain National Park. The first lighthouse was built in 1857
in the “wrong place” at the highest point of the headland. After a Portuguese
ocean liner, the Lusitania, ran
aground directly below the lighthouse in 1911, a new lighthouse was built lower
down, almost at the tip of the point, in 1914. Boasting the most powerful beam
of all South Africa’s lighthouses, it can be seen from 34 nautical miles away.
The area is so littered with wrecked ships that there is a special
shipwreck trail here. It is also a place of myths, such as “sightings” of the ‘Flying
Dutchman” ghost ship. Or the incorrect story that the Indian and Atlantic
Oceans meet here, when in fact they meet all along the Southern Cape coast and
not at any particular point. In the Simonstown Museum is a photograph of a
quaint handwritten notice that was nailed to the lighthouse door in the early
1900s and which read: “Any Person caught rolling down the cliff will be
prosecuted, by order Lighthouse Engineer”. Presumably only if the culprit
survived the roll.
From Cape Point we follow the scenic road around the False Bay
coast to Kleinmond and the Cape Hangklip lighthouse, located on a beautiful
little peninsula covered in fynbos from where it overlooks a number of
picturesque bays. This is also prime whale-watching territory.
Then it is on to Gansbaai and the Danger Point lighthouse which
was commissioned in 1895. Danger Point is also the location of one of the most
tragic cases of outstanding chivalry in maritime history. When the HMS
Birkenhead struck a rock and sank here in February 1852 while carrying troops
to Algoa Bay, there were not enough serviceable lifeboats for all on board. Allowing
women and children to use the lifeboats, the soldiers famously stood to
attention on the decks as the ship broke up and went down. Many of them were
taken by Great White sharks that inhabit these waters, which led to locals to
this day calling them ‘Tommy Sharks’. Of the 643 people on board only 193
survived. After this tragedy the “women and children first” protocol was
adopted throughout the maritime world.
More than 140 shipwrecks litter the coast between Danger Point and
the Breede River mouth some 150km further east. Between Danger Point and Cape
Agulhas, on a small peninsula the Quoin Point lighthouse overlooks the
graveyard of a number of these wrecks. This lighthouse can only be reached by
4WD vehicle.
Our next stop is Cape Agulhas, the southernmost tip of Africa
which like Cape Point also dubiously claims to be the meeting point of the
Indian and Atlantic Oceans. But it is home to one of South Africa’s most iconic
lighthouses, and was South Africa’s third lighthouse having been commissioned
in 1849. Like the Cape Columbine lighthouse it is built in an unusual style based
on the Pharos of Alexandria, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
The structure was declared unsafe in 1966 and replaced with a
steel lattice structure. However, the local community restored their beloved
lighthouse themselves and it was put back into service in March 1988 and now
also houses a lighthouse museum. The lighthouse is also said to be haunted with
a non-existent man seen painting the stairs leading up to the lighthouse on a
number of occasions.
After Cape Agulhas there are two more lighthouses at Cape Infanta
and Ystervarkpunt at the mouth of the Gouritz River, before one arrives at our
last stop, the Cape St Blaize lighthouse at Mossel Bay. In service since March
1864, the lighthouse gets its name from the Portuguese seafarer Bartolomeu Dias
who in 1488, named the bay the Bahia (Aguada) de Sao Bras, or ‘the watering
place of St Blaize’.
The lighthouse has been built on top of a cave which is an
important archaeological site where Khoisan people lived from about 200,000
years ago to about 1400.
Cape St Blaize is the starting point of an awesome cliff-face
hiking trail with breath-taking views. Most of the other lighthouses we visited
also have stunning coastal and inland hiking trails nearby, while a number are
located in or near nature reserves. Other activities on offer in the vicinity
of a number of these lighthouses include kite-surfing, kayaking, shark cage
diving, rock and boat angling, scuba diving and snorkelling, surfing, game and
bird watching, and mountain-biking. Camping sites and a range of good
accommodation is available close to all of them.
Of the 22 lighthouses between Port Nolloth and Cape St Blaize, 9
are manned. Cape Columbine, Green Point, Slangkoppunt, Danger Point, Cape
Agulhas, and Cape St Blaize are open to the public while a number of them offer
self-catering accommodation. For more details Transnet National Ports
Authority’s Lighthouse and Navigational Systems unit can be contacted at telephone
021 449 2400 or by email at lighthouse.tourism@transnet.net.
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