Namibia
Published in Travel Africa Edition Eight:
Summer 1999
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NAMIBIA: PLATEAU OF
COLOUR by Amy Schoeman
A plateau rich in flora
and fauna, history and geology rises from
the Kalahari, south of Etosha National Park.
Amy Schoeman explores this multi-dimensional
conservation area: the Waterberg Plateau Park.
There is a certain incongruity
about a park named Waterberg featuring prominently
in an arid country famous for the Namib and
Kalahari deserts. Be that as it may, with
its turbulent history, species-rich flora
and fauna, striking geological formations
and extensive rest camp, the Waterberg Plateau
Park is one of Namibia's most colourful and
interesting conservation areas. Moreover,
it has fully lived up to the rationale behind
its creation, namely to serve as a sanctuary
for rare and endangered species.
Rising above a sea of African
bush and savannah about 270 km north-east
of Windhoek, the Waterberg Plateau is an island
of vibrant colour, its vivid Etjo sandstone
cliffs glowing brick-red against lush sub-tropical
vegetation.
The Waterberg complex has a
south-west to north-easterly orientation and
can be divided into the small Waterberg in
the south, followed by the Omuverume Plateau,
which has the highest elevation and is saddled
to the main plateau, and the Waterberg proper,
roughly 48 km in length and varying in breadth
from 8 km to 16 km. With the exception of
its northern extremity, the plateau is surrounded
by a wall of cliffs, which become steadily
lower and more broken towards the north. The
highest point is at the Okarakuvisa range,
and it is here that the column-like erosion
of Waterberg sandstone is at its most striking.
The Waterberg is an erosion
relic of sedimentary rock originating from
the Karoo System. A lower section, the Omingonde
Formation, is composed of approximately 350
metres of conglomerate and reddish-brown mud-,
silt-, sand- and grit-stone. The upper formation
consists of reddish-brown Etjo sandstone,
which forms the perpendicular cliffs of 70
m to 75 m high lying directly under the crest.
Fossils of mammal-like reptiles found in the
Omingonde formation, and tracks of bipedal
and four-footed dinosaurs which can be seen
embedded in Etjo sandstone on top of the plateau,
indicate that the rock formations were deposited
during the upper Triassic period and vary
in age between 180 to 200 million years.
The plateau's elevated position
is due to the resistance of Etjo sandstone
to weathering, and to pressure in the earth's
crust which lifted the Karoo layers millions
of years ago. It is partly due to this tension
that over the centuries pillar-like seams
developed in the sandstone. Rainwater falling
on top of the plateau flows into the seams
and seeps down until it is stopped by the
impermeable mud- and silt-stone from the Omingonde
Formation. It emerges further down the slopes
from numerous fountains.
The Waterberg's vegetation changes
dramatically from acacia savannah at the bottom
of the plateau to lush sub-tropical dry woodland
with grassy plains and tall trees at the top.
During the summer months the dominant tree,
silver terminalia, gives the plateau a silver-green
glow, and in spring the weeping wattle, shaped
like a jacaranda, bears heavy clusters of
yellow flowers.
Other trees found on the plateau
are the Kalahari apple-leaf, bush-willow,
silver bush-willow, wild syringa, wild plum,
flame acacia and coffee mimosa.
Common shrubs are the lavender-bush,
cork-bush and white bauhinia or coffee-bush,
recognised by its white orchid-like flower.
The flamboyant flame lily associated with
Zimbabwe also grows on the plateau. Below
the cliffs, where the fountains seep through,
Waterberg ferns, some species of which are
endemic, flourish among the wild fig trees.
In the 1960s, when the West
Caprivi Game Park was de-proclaimed in order
to create homelands in line with South Africa's
apartheid policies, it was feared that the
scarce and endangered species of the Caprivi
would not survive the pressure of hunting
and poaching.
It was recommended that, since
the vegetation of the Waterberg area was similar,
it be set aside as a reserve for eland and
refuge for the scarce and endangered species
of the Caprivi. In 1970 the Namibia Administration
started buying up farms at Waterberg, and
in 1972 the park was proclaimed.
In the same year the Department
of Nature Conservation and Tourism embarked
on an ambitious translocation programme to
populate the new park with game.
From locations as far afield
as Natal and Addo in South Africa, a large
variety of species were translocated to the
park. These included white rhino, eland, giraffe,
buffalo, roan and sable antelope, tsessebe,
blue wildebeest, hartebeest, impala and duiker,
all of which had occurred naturally at Waterberg
in former years.
Today the park also harbours
gemsbok, kudu, baboon, brown hyaena, leopard,
cheetah and smaller animals such as warthog,
steenbok, klipspringer, Damara dik-dik, black-backed
jackal, caracal and rock hyrax.
The abundance of trees and large
quantities of natural food sources at the
Waterberg support a rich birdlife of over
200 species, some of which occur only at a
few other locations in Namibia. Examples are
Bradfield's hornbill, the Pallid flycatcher,
Hartlaub's francolin, Rüppel's parrot,
the Alpine Swift and, on the Okarakuvisa cliffs,
a breeding colony of Cape vulture. Also found
in the park are White-backed andLappet-faced
vultures, and eight eagle species, including
Black and Booted eagles.
Of the population groups known
to have inhabited Namibia in earlier years,
the so-called yellow Bushmen were the first
inhabitants at the Waterberg. Today their
engravings of animal tracks can be seen on
the rocks surrounding a large waterhole at
Okarakuvisa. A group of Damara cohabited with
them towards the middle of the nineteenth
century, and at roughly the same time the
first Herero moved into the surroundings.
In the 1850s the two celebrated
explorers, Charles John Andersson and Francis
Galton, visited the Waterberg area, and from
1875 to 1880 the intrepid Dorsland (Thirstland)
Trekkers settled there briefly before trekking
further north to Angola. It is thought that
these people, reminded of the Waterberg in
South Africa's Transvaal province (today's
Gauteng), gave the mountain its name.
When German colonial forces
moved into the area in the 1890s they were
on friendly terms with the Herero. However,
in 1904, when the Herero attacked and massacred
some German garrisons, the German forces led
by General von Trotha cornered them at Waterberg
and wiped out their fighting force virtually
to a man. This bloody encounter became known
as the Battle of Waterberg, and is commemorated
every year at the cemetery near the battle
site, where more than 70 Schutztruppe lie
buried.
Below the rocky escarpment of
the plateau is the Bernabé de la Bat
Rest Camp, named after the founder and long-time
Director of Namibia's Department of Nature
Conservation. Regarded by many as Namibia's
most attractive tourist camp, the red-brown
brick and russet-coloured roofs of the buildings
echo the rich colours of the Waterberg's sandstone
cliffs. The Okatjikona Environmental Education
Centre at the foot of the plateau plays a
pivotal role in environmental education and
hosts training courses in wilderness management.
A wilderness area of 19,000 hectares in the
western section of the park is used for guided
wilderness trails.
Amy Schoeman is a regular contributor
to Travel Africa. She is a well-known Namibian
photographer, writer and author whose work
has been published and exhibited around the
world.
Contact
Alexa for your very own experience!
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