Showing posts with label Noordhoek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noordhoek. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 December 2023

South Africa: Van der Poll family of Fish Hoek

Once upon a time, in those very early days, there were no more than a handful of families in this vale of Vishoek (as Fish Hoek was first called). Of these, the Van der Polls became an integral part - a big, happy, hardworking family of five boys and two girls. One little sister died at the age of 12 and was buried in the Kirsten graveyard at the Silvermyn which belonged to the grandparents of Mrs. Van der Poll.

On the grandfather’s side there had been the huge estate of Pollsmoor - the original Van der Poll home - so no wonder the boys were toughened to farming life - no easy job in those days of no electricity, nor water - tending the lamps and wood for the big coal stoves and getting up at dawn to milk the cows and feed the horses; a hard life, but a glorious one.

In fact, the Van der Polls have memories of a never-to-be-forgotten dawn after a mid-winter’s night in August 1899 when Mr. Van der Poll senior was carrying his lantern outside to hang in the cowshed and two rough, unshaven men came staggering up the mountainside to their Brakkloof home.

These men had been shipwrecked from the Kakapo on Noordhoek beach and had seen a pin-point of light all that distance away at the Van der Poll farm-house and staggered on and on until they found refuge!

This is the grave stone of the 12 year old girl Michael referred to, "Magdalena Jacoba van der Poll".

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Friday, 3 February 2023

Cape Town: SS Kakapo wreck & Van der Polls

Once upon a time, in those very early days, there were no more than a handful of families in this vale of Vishoek (as Fish Hoek was first called). Of these, the Van der Polls became an integral part - a big, happy, hardworking family of five boys and two girls.

One little sister died at the age of 12 and was buried in the Kirsten graveyard at the Silvermyn which belonged to the grandparents of Mrs. Van der Poll.

On the grandfather’s side there had been the huge estate of Pollsmoor - the original Van der Poll home - so no wonder the boys were toughened to farming life - no easy job in those days of no electricity, nor water - tending the lamps and wood for the big coal stoves and getting up at dawn to milk the cows and feed the horses; a hard life, but a glorious one.

In fact, the Van der Polls have memories of a never-to-be-forgotten dawn after a mid-winter’s night in August 1899 when Mr Van der Poll senior was carrying his lantern outside to hang in the cowshed and two rough, unshaven men came staggering up the mountainside to their Brakkloof home.

These men had been shipwrecked from the Kakapo on Noordhoek beach and had seen a pin-point of light all that distance away at the Van der Poll farm-house and staggered on and on until they found refuge!

This is the grave stone of the 12 year old girl Michael referred to, "Magdalena Jacoba van der Poll".

Purchase photo/4K video: portfolio1 portfolio2
Aerial photo/video service/inquiries: info@traveltonamibia.com
Telegram: ExploringNamibia

Wednesday, 31 March 2021

South Africa: Western Cape shipwrecks: "SS Kakapo" | Кораблекрушения Южной Африки

South Africa: Western Cape shipwrecks: "SS Kakapo" | Кораблекрушения у побережья провинции Западный Кейп, ЮАР

665-тонный пароход SS Kakapo потерпел крушение у деревни Нордхук, Кейптаун, Южная Африка 25 мая 1900 на пути из Великобритании через Кейптаун в Австралию, в свой первый после спуска на воду рейс. Причина крушения: погодные условия. Попытки снять с мели и отбуксировать судно с пляжа не увенчались успехом. Жертв нет. Остатки корпуса видны до настоящего времени.

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SHIPWRECKS

Photos: HiltonT

The historical SS Kakapo shipwreck is still visible closest to the Kommetjie side of Noordhoek Long Beach in Western Cape, South Africa.

SS Kakapo wreck in 2006

SS Kakapo (Kakapo is a type of New Zealand parrot) was a British steamer built in 1898 by the Grangemouth Dockyard Company and commanded by Captain P. Nicolayson. She was on her maiden voyage from Swansea in Wales, to Sydney in Australia.

Smoke rising from SS Kakapo funnel, 1900

The events leading to the SS Kakapo’s demise began to unfold as the steamship left Cape Town harbour in the afternoon of May 25, 1900. The 665 ton schooner rigged steamship was sailing with coal ballast for delivery to its new owners, the Union Steam Ship Company of New Zealand. This was Danish Captain Nicolayson’s first command, having received his captain’s ticket just months before.

His course would take the Kakapo south, following the west coast of the Cape Peninsula and then east around Cape Point and Cape Agulhas, the southernmost tip of Africa. In 1900, navigation depended heavily on charts, compass, sight of shore and lighthouses. The first light he would see would be the old Cape Point lighthouse, set high up on the Point and at times obscured by low cloud and fog.

An onshore North-Westerly gale was picking up as the vessel steamed south. SS Kakapo maintained her top speed of 9.5 knots, perhaps in haste to round the Point before sunset and ahead of the full onset of the storm. However the brunt of the storm soon bore down on the vessel, with huge seas, driving rain and near zero visibility.

At sunset, with poor visibility, it appears that the captain caught a glimpse of Chapman’s Peak, north of Noordhoek. Believing that he had just sighted Cape Point, he ordered the helm to steer hard to port, maintaining full steam. It wasn’t long however when the bridge caught sight of breaking waves directly ahead.

The full astern command would have little effect against the vessel’s forward momentum, the onshore gale and mountainous seas. The Kakapo run onto the sandy beach. The surge of heavy seas and tide would have shifted her even higher until the storm eventually subsided, leaving the Kakapo stranded.

Not a soul was lost in the stranding of the vessel. Two members of the crew of twenty climbed down to the beach in the dark and went in search for help. They spotted the lights of a dairy farm and were able to summon help. The next morning, all hands were able to climb down onto the sand, hardly wetting their feet.

A concerted attempt was made to refloat the ship, without success. She was firmly embedded in the sand. The Union Steam Ship Company lost its steamship before taking delivery and most of the steel of the superstructure and hull was eventually stripped for salvage.

It’s reported that the captain was so mortified by the loss of his ship that he stayed on board, refusing to leave and refusing to talk to the crowd of amazed locals, reporters and officials. Legend is that he lived on board for three years, before eventually being escorted off the vessel and taken to a mental facility.

Some 120 years later the remnants of Kakapo have been worn away by the sand, wind and waves. Only some fragments of her hull and boilers are visible in the sand now.

SS Kakapo wreck in 2002
SS Kakapo wreck in 2002


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Friday, 22 February 2019

South Africa: video of driving through Chapman's Peak | Пик Чапмана в ЮАР видео

#SouthAfrica #ChapmansPeak #HoutBay #CapeTown #drivingSA #WesternCape #CapePeninsula #paradiseOnEarth #Noordhoek #ЮАР #Кейптаун #ПикЧапмана #ХаутБэй #ЮжнаяАфрика #намашинепогорам

Chapman's Peak Drive on the Atlantic Coast between Hout Bay and Noordhoek in the Cape Peninsula in South Africa is one of the most spectacular marine drives in Africa and in the world. Chapman's Peak is named after John Chapman, an English ship's sailor. The ship anchored in today's Hout Bay in 1607. John Chapman was sent ashore to find provisions, and the name was recorded as Chapman's Chaunce. Чепмен Пик Драйв находится на Атлантическом побережье между заливом Хаут Бэй и деревней Нордхук на полуострове Кейп в Южной Африке и является одной из самых впечатляющих горных трасс в Африке и в мире.

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