March 9, 2021
Zuurberg Mountain Village (Zuurberg Inn)
The bad weather of yesterday afternoon and last night put paid to any hopes we had of seeing much wildlife. We were lucky enough to have a Kudu bull browse briefly in front of our digs but that was it. Folks we chatted to said they had, against the suggestion of the park staff, been on the night drive and had seen very little, so I think we made the right call. We have spent a great deal of time in the park in the past and will have many opportunities to again in the future so it wasn't the end of the world.
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We got going at about eight thirty again this morning. With barely twenty kilometers to the Zuurberg Inn there was no rush. We backtracked for a few kilometers towards Addo town to get to the turnoff to the Zuurberg Pass and on the way we met a cyclist coming from the south who stopped and chatted to us. He had cycled from Upington in the Northern Cape, about a thousand kilometers away while his wife drove a support vehicle and was on his way to Port Alfred, about a hundred and fifty kilometers further east.
The road leading to the pass and the pass itself is unsealed but was in much better condition than yesterday's section from Colchester to Addo. After dipping into a shallow valley we started the five hundred meter climb up to the Zuurberg Inn.
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The Zuurberg Pass extends from approximately 35 km north of Addo and 75 km south of Somerset East. At 27,5 km and with 158 bends, corners and curves it is one of the longer passes in South Africa and traverses all four tiers of the dominant Zuurberg Mountain range. It was originally constructed by Henry Fancourt White in 1849, but White resigned during the construction phase to take up a post in parliament, leaving the project in the capable hands of the assistant roads engineer, Mr. Matthew Woodifield, whose name appears carved into a rock slab near the southern end of the pass.
The climb up the pass wasn't too bad. The gradients were kind and the great road surface meant that traction was good. We took it very easily, wanting to preserve our strength for tomorrow's tougher ride.
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The Zuurberg Inn has been renamed to Zuurberg Mountain Village. In the nineteenth century this was the first of the coach stops after leaving Addo, the second being Ann's Villa where we will spend tomorrow night. We last stayed here twenty two years ago when it was rather tired and neglected. It is a bit more upmarket now and we have a really comfortable room, complete with a well-stocked minibar and an outside shower! We are going to enjoy the luxury while it lasts because tomorrow promises to be a hard slog.
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We came down the railway service road all the way from Trompsburg in the Freestate to Klipfontein station, a very nice route.
3 years ago
3 years ago
Today's ride: 21 km (13 miles)
Total: 63 km (39 miles)
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John
3 years ago
3 years ago