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Into the West
South Africa's Western Cape By Harley
by Laurianne Claase
The horizon hurtles towards me at a
hundred miles an hour with nothing between me and the rushing tarmac except the
seat of my pants. At this speed, leg muscles clench with the effort of
maintaining a steady centre of balance, the neck jars from resisting the whip of
the wind and my brain is under threat of being vacuumed through my ears. "It'll
rearrange your hormones," he'd said. And now I knew how.
The chrome and leather steed to which I cling is
no ordinary motorcycle. It is a cultural icon and a Hollywood idol, a symbol of
male potency, a fetish, a love-drug and a charm. It growls between the thighs
and sets the blood to throbbing.
Designed and built by William Harley and
the three Davidson brothers with the modest ambition of taking "the work out of
bicycling," the original Harley was little more than a bicycle with a
rudimentary engine and sling back handlebars. But those first three machines off
the production line in 1903 spawned a world-wide, century-long
phenomenon.
This success must in part be attributed
to the spoils of war.
Their speed and handling saw the bikes
used in skirmishes against Pancho Villa on the Mexico/Texas border and by 1914,
they had proved their metal. 20 000 bikes saw action in the First World War and
the factory's entire output of 90 000 motorcycles were used by the Allies in the
Second.
The bike's manly prowess proved,
Hollywood entrenched the legend. Easy Rider in 1969 saw Captain America cruise
into the sunset, transporting Peter Fonda and Jack Nicholson into celluloid
cool. The Harley's title as King of the Road was assured.
And here I was, about to get a good
long look behind the testosterone curtain and find out just what it was about
this purring hunk of metal that has made it the ultimate boy toy.
 And as if that prospect were not
inviting enough, four days lay before me of the vineyards and mountains,
seascapes and sky of South Africa's Mediterranean.
The Victorian writer Ruskin was of the
opinion that "mountains are the beginning and end of all natural scenery." While
the Western Cape has no shortage of either, its mountains also provide s-bends
and roller-coaster curves, dizzying drops off perilous passes and the electric
rush of two-wheeled adrenaline, for those so inclined.
I soon caught the bug.
I picked it up the next morning.
Ensconced in back-rested comfort behind my 'chauffeur', resplendent astride a
machine of burnished attitude, I was afflicted before we even set out but
managed to resist the compelling urge to practice my royal wave.
Our road out of the city led thirty miles
east to the foot of the once impenetrable Hottentots Holland. For the first
white settlers to the Cape these mountains marked the end of the world. But now,
where ox-wagons once had trundled, we followed on our Road Kings, towards Sir
Lowry's Pass.
We hit the pass in a gusting southeaster
that would have given Mike Tyson a run for his money. Feinting the left hooks
and uppercuts, absorbing the glancing blows and ducking the knock-out punches I
held grimly on, determined not to be a 'girl' and balk at the first sign of
discomfort.
The summit successfully conquered,
my laurels rested on a rainbow threaded over distant sea. And on under metal
skies towards the break in the clouds past apple orchards and pine trees to the
water and the wine.
The Western Cape is the wine-barrel
of Africa.>Grapes carpet vast tracts of its cultivated fields and our route
lay through two of the most important areas; the Winelands just outside of Cape
Town and the Breede River Valley, largest of the Western Cape’s fruit and wine
producing valleys.
The vineyards wear a look of
summer sleekness, their elegant farmhouses reminiscent of an earlier, more
permanent age. The low-slung, gabled facades, whitewashed and often thatched are
ubiquitous throughout the Western Cape. The homesteads have been restored to a
glory that was absent in their first incarnations as the modest, hand-hewn homes
of the early settlers. As the vines prospered, so the original homestead was
added onto and separate dwellings were built to house the eldest sons. The
farmers’ cosmopolitan origins informed their architecture and medieval Holland,
Huguenot France and later the islands of Indonesia contributed to a style of
building that has become known as Cape Dutch.
But, we don't stop to sample the,
uh, grape juice just yet. The road exerts its pull and we hit the trail. Or what
used to be a trail. Once part of the wagon route that led to the north and the
Kimberley diamond mines, Bains Kloof Pass is almost a hundred and fifty years
old.
The Pass was completed by convict
labour in 1853 at a rate of fifty three days a kilometre and without the aid of
cement. It is no less impressive today than it must have been then. Gouged out
of the rock-face high above the serpentine river, its bends and curves mimic the
water's eddy. We sail the rocky currents and surf the rise and fall but the
engine's steady hum fails to silence ghostly echoes of creaking wheels and
cracking whips.
Down we swoop into Wellington and
wine country once more. By now it is becoming difficult to ignore the clamour of
the vines. In the Cape, fine wine is plentiful but this nearby vineyard is one
of a kind.
Bought in 1988 by a senior
advocate from Cape Town with a hankering for the land, the farm was bankrupt and
derelict. With the coffers depleted by the purchase and no money to hire a farm
manager, Alan Nelson decided on a plan of action which had at its core the idea
of productivity. A contentious term this in South Africa and infinitely variable
in both its concept and its practice but the soft-spoken gentleman farmer seems
to have struck upon a working formula.
He turned to his farm labourers who
for long years throughout the colonial history of this part of the world have
been little better off than medieval serfs. The gist of the message was this.
“You help me look after the farm and I’ll look after you.” Less than a decade
later Nelson’s Creek’s ’96 Chardonnay was a South African Champion.
True to his word, Alan donated 9.5
hectares of land to his workers, almost a quarter of the farm in total and added
another 2 hectares after a ’95 Cabernet also garnered an award.
>Working now on their own
vineyards as well as Nelson’s, the new landowners’ first liquid harvest appeared
under the label of New Beginnings in 1998.
After an evening of Cape
hospitality, morning comes as something of a shock. It carries us down Michell's
Pass to Ceres and on into the Koue Bokkeveld , north towards the badlands of the
Karoo. Through grape and grain country and undulating expanses of dry summer
grass as the clouds paint shifting shadows on the hills. The horizon's rhythm is
broken only by the hulking ruins of a windmill and occasionally a motley
scattering of farms. The dirt roads that lead off to them bear signs for Lost
Valley and Cold Comfort. The scrubby khaki ground cover tells the rest.
We veer south, away from the
beckoning expanse of thirsty land and naked sky towards Agulhas where Africa
falls away into the sea.
Here at the southernmost tip of
the continent, Africa has been tamed. The eye glides over grazing lands and
wheat stubble peppered with scrawny thickets of exotic shade. The waves trail
whimsical ribbons of lapis lazuli and aquamarine in their wake. It is here that
the Indian and Atlantic Oceans meet and it is from the distant southern waters
that the whales come.
The winter waters of both seas are
a summer holiday for calving whales and from July to November, the bays and
coves and harbours of both the west and east coast erupt in giant tails and
barnacled backs, frothings and leapings and thrashings and spoutings.
The best land-based whale watching
in the world is reputedly to be had at Hermanus - a fishing village turned
coastal Riviera. But being the end of summer, the old harbour is unruffled by
visiting denizens from the deep and there is no sign of the resident whale crier
with his kelp horn and sandwich boards.
As for us, we set sail on a salty
breeze along the coast, past seas where whales birth in winter and great white
sharks come to feed on fattened seals.
Back past the beaches and tidal
pools, lighthouses and luxury villas of the Peninsula and up and over Chapman's
Peak as the sky winds itself around my helmet and the road falls away beneath my
boots.
Our triumphant return from the
land over the mountain is suitably gratifying. Kids wave, teenage boys drool,
lithesome girls in flouncy skirts cadge rides to the next traffic light and
stressed-out suits in BMW's swivel their Ray-Bans to follow our
passing.
93% of Harley Davidson owners are
men. Now I know why. Whether one has the physique of Woody Allen or the sex
appeal of Ed Bundy, a Harley transforms its rider into king of the road and
master of the universe.
And when the pulsing brute is
stilled and stabled and the road dust banished from the pores, the glamour
lingers yet. For, beyond the fanfare and behind the legend, lies the endless
fascination of the open road. And, with the wind still in my ears and the
horizon's glitter in my gaze, I also know, "The best way to get there is just to
go."
 For information on more Southern African adventures
contact:
easyAfrica Travel TEL: +27 21 674
9967; FAX: +27 21 888 5003 MOBILE: +27 (0)82 898 7137
http://www.easyafrica.com/
Images &
Text © Laurianne Claase 1999-2000
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