Sunday Times

Out in the blue

This 50km slackpacki­ng trail in the Overberg offers a perfect blend of exercise, education and natural wonder, plus some well-earned downtime at the end of each day

- Words by Catherine Del Monte. Images by Gavin Wilmers Greenmount­ain.co.za

Just over Sir Lowry’s Pass, an hour’s drive from Cape Town, is a slice of hikers’ heaven: the renowned Blue Mountain Trail. Regarded as a punchier sister to the Green Mountain Trail — a four-day, 60km slackpacki­ng hike founded in 2007 — the Blue Mountain Trail is a three-day, moderate to hard slackpacki­ng experience covering 50km of the Overberg region on the south side of the Elgin basin.

Just shy of a year ago, exactly one week before SA plunged into Covid-19 lockdown and life as we knew it changed, I had the privilege of experienci­ng this bucket-list getaway in the Elgin Valley.

This past December, mid-pandemic, I found myself chatting to SAFM’s Jetset Breakfast presenter and columnist Michelle Constant, who also happens to have walked the Blue Mountain Trail and the Green Mountain Trail, the latter now twice.

“Walking for pleasure and solace is probably the most ancient gift that our body and health gives us,” she said.

“In a time of Covid, hiking, trail running and breathing in our magnificen­t landscape seems to be the right thing to do. Smelling the earthy and spicy fynbos, hearing the water trickle off the mountain …

“Everything about the experience is an experience of freedom.”

ART, APPLES AND WINE

Founded six years ago, the Blue Mountain Trail begins at the Wildekrans Country House, a 210-year-old homestead at the foot of the Houw Hoek pass. Trail founder Alison Green and the trail “family” — the housekeepi­ng team and guides — greet us with tea before a hearty dinner and a glass of delicious wine.

The Elgin Valley is famed for its rolling hills, carpeted with vineyards and apple orchards — so the three days include a number of generous wine tastings.

Check-in takes place before day one of the trail officially starts. Before settling in for the evening, you can explore the homestead and its wonderfull­y eclectic art collection, which includes charcoal works by William Kentridge and

bronze hare sculptures by Guy du Toit. Alison has been collecting such works for more than two decades. You could also sneak in a swim or take a stroll with the resident hounds — Smeagol and Titan — behind the house, past the rose and olive garden and up the hill, from where you will get a good view of Wildekrans and the neighbouri­ng pear farm.

This is a good idea for two reasons: firstly, to warm up the legs in anticipati­on of the first day of the trail; and, secondly, to make space for the candle-lit barn dinner on the property which, in our case, consisted of a gorgonzola, fig and pecan nut salad starter followed by tender lamb shanks and grilled, neighbour-grown nectarines with homemade ice cream, all well paired with a smooth red made by Alison’s husband Barry.

“I can’t recall my favourite wine but there were so many amazing meals,” recalled Constant. “One night I was absolutely exhausted, and we had the most delicious soup. It raised my spirits, and I was ready to hike a mountain the next day. And there was also the perfection of a pavlova!”

LACE UP THOSE BOOTS

For the next three days, each morning you will wake up to a wholesome breakfast before being transferre­d by shuttle to the start of the day’s hike — just as the sun throws its misty blanket off the valley.

Be sure to pack sunscreen, a hat, a water bottle, binoculars and a camera or your phone for the glut of photo ops that await you.

There are several seasonal booking options between January and April, in August, and October

— the latter said to be the month for fynbos and birding in the Cape. March is a popular time to lace up your hiking boots, not only to enjoy the tail end of summer but also because this is the time of year that the valley is electric with colour, courtesy of the Western Cape’s Floral Kingdom — from burntorang­e ericas to bright-pink papery everlastin­gs and the local special, Nivenia stokoei. Commonly referred to as Kogelberg Blue Star or

“Blousterre­tjie” in Afrikaans, this is the flower from which the trail takes its name.

Another great thing about March is that it is harvesting season. The trail wends its way through the valley’s orchards and vineyards, which are alive with chitter-chatter from pickers, packers and tractors.

Learn about the seemingly infinite magic of the Cape Floral Kingdom with guide Andreas Groenewald and guide-in-training Nancy Thom, whose hawk eyes made sure we didn’t miss a single critter on the trail. Both made sure we stayed hydrated, caffeinate­d and fuelled, carrying the day’s refreshmen­ts and in some cases the lunch.

Be on the lookout for the Scarabaeus spretus, commonly known as the dung beetle (very important in southern Africa for removing, burying and recycling dung — eland is reportedly a favourite); and the Aptera fusca, commonly known as the Table Mountain cockroach, which raises its abdomen and squeaks when distressed. There are also chameleons and baboons and, if you’re really lucky, you’ll see buck and leopards too.

Day two’s highlight has to be the picnic spot, the summit of the Kogelberg. Gawk unashamedl­y at the expansive view overlookin­g the dark-blue Indian Ocean before ambling down to the day’s “finish line”, where a refreshing swimming pool, wine tastings and more exceptiona­l food await you at South Hill Vineyards.

Londoners Eugene McConville and Anna-Marie Douglas, with whom my partner and I shared our trail experience, spoke of it as “a memorable mix of educationa­l exercise, fabulous fynbos, beautiful breakfasts, lovely lunches, delicious dinners, and lovely lodging”.

Indeed, Green, alongside key individual­s in the Elgin Valley community, has curated an experience that is the perfect brew of activity and leisure time. In these days of social distancing, it’s also an excellent way to get a dose of the great outdoors.

Constant agreed. “I would recommend this experience hands down. It perfectly matches activity, leisure, solace and friendship — all of which we need, and so much more now.

“What’s more, the Covid protocols were excellent — staff were masked all the time, there was plenty of social distancing and, given that the walking was outdoors, it was all good.”

Today I’m grateful that, while the world was going into a pandemic, we were isolated in the safety of nature and beautiful views. Now, almost a year on, I often catch myself staring out of the window in between work and daydreamin­g of the Blue Mountain Trail.

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 ??  ?? Wildekrans Country House.
Wildekrans Country House.
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 ??  ?? From left, AnnaMarie Douglas, Andreas Groenewald, Eugene McConville, Nancy Thom and Catherine Del Monte enjoying the great outdoors.
From left, AnnaMarie Douglas, Andreas Groenewald, Eugene McConville, Nancy Thom and Catherine Del Monte enjoying the great outdoors.
 ??  ?? The 18.5km hike on day one ends with a wine-tasting at South Hill Vineyards.
The 18.5km hike on day one ends with a wine-tasting at South Hill Vineyards.

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