Talk of the Town

Church bells ring out as drought ends

NG Kerk steps in as cathedral lacks trained bell ringers

- SUE MACLENNAN

After weeks of good rainfall in the catchment area and in the town, Makhanda was in a flurry on Monday October 16, as speculatio­n grew that Settlers Dam could soon overflow for the first time in about eight years.

It did – but the town’s traditiona­l way of celebratin­g when a drought breaks, ringing the bells of the Cathedral of St Michael and St George, wasn’t an option.

While there are bell ringers keen to learn, there’s been a dearth of the kind of expertise needed to coach and manage a team needed for the formidable ring of bells housed in the High

Street landmark’s tower.

When confirmati­on arrived in the form of videos and photograph­s that the dam was indeed overflowin­g, it was the NG Kerk, on the opposite hill, that stepped into the breach.

At 5pm sharp on Monday, congregant Nico Barnardt rang the bell for a good 10 minutes.

Minister Strauss de Jager recorded a video of the occasion and shared it for those who weren’t able to hear the bell. “I think they closed up the louvres some time ago to prevent rain damage but it means the sound doesn’t travel far,” De Jager told Talk of the Town.

He shared a special story. When De Jager and his late wife, Augusta, arrived in

Makhanda (then Grahamstow­n) in 1983, the region was in the midst of a severe drought. During that time, the wall of Settlers Dam had been raised.

In September 1985, Strauss and Augusta’s first child, Jans,

was born.

“On that day, it started raining. It went on and on raining — a bit like it has been these past few weeks — and eventually in December, the dam overflowed,” De Jager said.

A dry period followed and in August 1989, their second son was born.

“We couldn’t believe it,” Strauss said. “It started raining again, and eventually the dam overflowed again.”

Again, a long, dry period followed. The story doing the rounds that a group of farmers had then approached the couple to consider having a third child could not be confirmed.

Rainfall and temperatur­es in Port Alfred for the week Wednesday October 11 to Tuesday October 17 2023. (Rainfall in millimetre­s and temperatur­e in degrees Celsius)

● Wednesday: 1 (16°C)

● Thursday: 0 (18°C)

● Friday: 1 (13°C)

● Saturday: 12 (14°C)

● Sunday: 0 (12°C)

● Monday: 8 (15°C)

● Tuesday: 3 (14°C)

● Total: 25mm

● Seven-day mean temperatur­e 14.5°C (Median 14)

● YTD 619mm ● MTD 58mm — Rainfall and temperatur­e measuremen­ts, recorded at 6am in Forest Downs, Port Alfred by Emil Jurgensen. Average for October 94.75mm.

 ?? Picture: MARCUS HACKART ?? LONG-AWAITED SIGHT: The Kariega River (seen here from the N2) is full for the first time in years. It has been a dry river bed for close to a decade.
Picture: MARCUS HACKART LONG-AWAITED SIGHT: The Kariega River (seen here from the N2) is full for the first time in years. It has been a dry river bed for close to a decade.
 ?? Pictures: MAKANA RESIDENTS ASSOCIATIO­N ?? AT CAPACITY: Settlers Dam overflows for the first time in around eight years.
Pictures: MAKANA RESIDENTS ASSOCIATIO­N AT CAPACITY: Settlers Dam overflows for the first time in around eight years.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa