Showing posts with label South Africa shipwreck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Africa shipwreck. Show all posts

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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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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Tuesday, 3 March 2020

South Africa: newly found shipwreck at Bloubergstrand Beach, Cape Town

Newly found shipwreck at Bloubergstrand Beach, Cape Town, South Africa

Photos: Dronesberg


Special thanks: Clare Lindeque


Shipwrecks in Namibia: link

We were in Cape Town in January 2018. While walking around Bloubergstrand beach on 30.01.18 we saw a group of workers digging out some wooden pieces of shipwreck (?). Do you know what this ship was? I found your blog when searching for information about Athens wreck at Green Point.
Hi,

I am not familiar with that wreck - it looks as though it was buried very deep in the sand! The people doing the work were probably from SAHRA, The South African Heritage Resources Agency. There are many, many forgotten wrecks under the sand and in the shallows along that stretch of coastline, and it is great to see one of them getting some attention!

Hi,

I messaged SAHRA about the wreck you saw, along with one of your photos, and this is what they said:

There is currently a project being undertaken along the beach at Blouberg to locate the wreck of the Haarlem which wrecked somewhere along the bay in 1647. A geophysical survey was undertaken to try and pinpoint places to look more closely at and then small test excavations were undertaken to uncover what was picked up in the survey. A few pieces of wreckage were uncovered but as yet they have not been identified. The African Institute for Marine and Underwater Research (AIMURE) is the organisation that has been undertaking the project and have been doing it under permit from SAHRA. They will publish the results of the survey in the near future.

This is really cool - the Haarlem was a Dutch ship that wrecked at the Cape in 1647. The survivors of the wreck spent a little bit of time here before being rescued, and I think when they got back to Holland they reported that the Cape had water and fertile soil etc etc - and that it would be a good place for a settlement/refreshment station. Following that, Jan van Riebeeck was sent here and the rest is history. So it is a very significant wreck in the history of European settlement at the Cape, and finding it would be extremely exciting!
The shipwreck that changed South Africa forever

The "Haarlem" ("Nieuw Haarlem"), Dutch East India Company's (VOC) ship (one of numerous "Indiamen"), sank at the coast of Table Bay on Sunday, 25 March 1647 during the storm. "Haarlem" was constructed at the VOC Amsterdam shipyard with a length of about 45 metres and a width of 10 metres.
The route around the Cape was particularly treacherous and was officially known as the Cape of Good Hope or Cabo do Bona Esperana (Portuguese). It was soon renamed the Cape of Storms as many "Indiamen" ran aground or sank while negotiating the route around the Cape Peninsula.

58 crew members were repatriated by accompanying ships soon after the incident with 62 men left behind to salvage as much of the cargo as possible - spices, pepper, porcelain and textiles. They built in a makeshift camp, Fort "Zandenburch" (Dutch for Sandcastle), where they lived for about one year, bartering livestock and fresh meat from the indigenous Khoe Khoen people. They had a great success fishing in the nearby Salt River and ventured as far as Robben Island.
Crew men reported favourably on their experiences when they returned to Holland and, as a result, VOC management decided to establish a stopover for their ships. This restocking settlement, known as the "Tavern of the Seas", where ships stopped for replenishing of water and food supplies, later developed into the city of Cape Town. The wrecking of Haarlem can be regarded as the starting point that created the roots of the modern South African society.

The site is situated just off shore at a depth of about 3 to 4 m below the sea bed, close to the Dolphin Beach Hotel in Table View, Sunset Beach and parking area at Rietvlei, Cape Town. No shipping accident around the world had ever such an impact on the history of a whole nation, according to AIMURE. Table Bay is location of more than 350 recorded shipwrecks.
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