Mini Hike Reports

22 Mar 2018 21:24 #73037 by Smurfatefrog
Replied by Smurfatefrog on topic Mini Hike Reports
On the night of 9 March seven of us set off for Bannerman Hut, arriving at 1am!
The next morning we headed up Bannerman Pass. There a few Basuthos with about 5 dogs barking at us on the cliffs, we were a little worried when one dog came running down the pass towards us, but it aborted its mission and the locals didn't even come up to us.
We headed down to camp near Langies pass, and then headed down on Sunday

Starting with beers on Friday night




Snack stop at Spare Rib cave






Decent views with our sundowners




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27 Mar 2018 08:22 #73068 by AdrianT
Replied by AdrianT on topic Mini Hike Reports

WarrenM wrote:
Settling into Mponjwane cave for the night


Nice stokies Stijn. Great idea. Might have to swop out my Crocs for this option. First time I've seen that. Retirement has been kind to you :thumbsup:
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27 Mar 2018 08:52 #73069 by ASL #Bivak
Replied by ASL #Bivak on topic Mini Hike Reports
ditto on the stokies! Stein looks sooo comfy!

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27 Mar 2018 16:17 #73075 by Stijn
Replied by Stijn on topic Mini Hike Reports
Ha! So much better than slops on every level :) Use them as crag shoes for in between climbs too :thumbsup:

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28 Mar 2018 08:51 #73082 by Croco
Replied by Croco on topic Mini Hike Reports


Castle gorge this weekend. Water was flowing

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04 Apr 2018 17:24 - 04 Apr 2018 19:26 #73114 by elinda
Replied by elinda on topic Mini Hike Reports
Mnweni Easter Trip Report


Our plan had been to meet up with the MCSA Joburg group Andrew Porter was leading at the Hanging Valleys in the Mnweni. The guys were going to be climbing the Mnweni Pinnacles while Tony Marshall was going to tackle some passes in the Mnweni Cutback. Our group was going to head up Rockeries Pass and tent on top, and then make our way to the Hanging Valleys the next day and we were looking forward to watching the climbers and taking some photographs. The weather forecast was not looking promising but we were hoping that conditions would improve. Unfortunately mother nature had other ideas and all the plans changed…..

We set off from the drop off point at the Rockeries with the skies over the Mnweni looking cloudy and a little threatening, and made steady progress up the pass, reaching the top in the mid afternoon. By now there was a strong wind blowing and the mist was coming in. It had been a long day and it was good to get inside our tents and settle down. It rained heavily during the night for quite some time and we woke to a thick mist and a light drizzle. We hoped it would burn off, but apart from a few occasions when the mist lifted momentarily, it remained the same for the entire day. We made our way north to the cutback taking the path that overlooks Eeny Meeny Miny Mo and the Twelve Apostles (not that we saw anything!) and then, as the mist and drizzle continued, decided to tent in the small valley to the South of the Hanging Valleys. We found a beautiful site right at the edge of the escarpment close to the source of the Mnweni river which plunges over the escarpment ( this is what it appears from the map - please correct me if I am wrong!). Richard was very excited as he could only imagine what sights would unfold when the mist lifted. As we were putting up our tents, the mist did indeed lift for a few minutes and I managed to capture this photo.




It closed in again and we were engulfed in thick mist the entire afternoon and everything became rather wet - its amazing how the mist manages to get in to everything. We spent a peaceful night with the sound of the rushing river and it rained heavily at times. In anticipation we opened our tent flaps the next morning only to discover yet more thick mist and drizzle. To say we were disappointed is an understatement! We have vowed to return to this spot sometime soon. As we were pretty sure that the climbers would have abandoned their plans, we decided to return south and spend the morning walking along the escarpment edge past Ledgers Cave and then on to Mponjwane Cave where we would spend the night. By now our tents were sodden and we were hoping for some sun at some point to dry out our gear. We came across the MCSA camp close to the top of Mnweni Pass - they had left on a day hike so were sorry to miss them. The ground was extremely wet, little rivers and pools everywhere, I have never seen the Mnweni with so much water. We collected water on our way to Mponjwane Cave but as we discovered later, could have got water a lot closer to the cave. By now the sun was making more of a show and we could see clearer skies to the south. The mist persisted though, along the escarpment until dusk. The path down to Mponjwane Cave is very eroded and some care is needed to negotiate it. On arrival we all spread out our tents and wet gear on the grass in front of the cave and happily it all got dry as the sun vied for attention with the sporadic mist. It was interesting to see where we had climbed up the Rockeries Tower on an epic trip a while back when we climbed up Mponjwane Gully. See www.vertical-endeavour.com/forum/11-drakensberg-passes/56169-mponjwane-pass.html#70406

Monday morning dawned clear and bright - celebrations! But as is often the case, it was the day we were going back down the escarpment via Rockeries Pass. We thought we would stretch our stay in the mountains and overnight at Sunshine Cave. However the rain had swelled the river in front of the cave and it looked very dodgy - we decided against it, and walked out to the road. We encountered a few other hiking groups, amongst them some of the MCSA group and we all gathered at the pick up point, hoping to organise a lift. There was no cell phone signal so we resigned ourselves to the 5km trudge back to the Mnweni Cultural Centre. We understand that Andrew Tony and Roger (Diamond) had stayed back to do a descent of the gully at the back of the cutback which involved several abseils . One of them will be doing a write up soon so we can look forward to an epic read!
The day which had started out with beautiful blue skies had changed and become cloudy and threatening and there were distinct rumbles of thunder. On cue the rain started falling as we started our walk and there were quite a few hikers on the road, one guy with an umbrella ( did he really carry that all the way up to the escarpment and back??). We met a local woman on her way back to her hut, and after exchanging greetings and Two Minute Noodles and energy bars, she insisted that she would arrange a lift for us. She instructed us to wait at the “Taxi pick up” which is near the bridge. Sure enough our lift arrived within 15 minutes. - the driver a lovely elderly traditional Zulu with a beautiful smile. It was an interesting trip. Richard sat in the front and observed our driver pumping the brakes on steep declines as they didn’t work all the time and told us afterwards that it was only the rut in the road which ensured our safe trajectory! In the meantime we enjoyed a very erratic and bumpy ride in the back complete with water streaming in all the various openings accompanied by a dubious smell……….. all part of the fun!


So, the weather didn’t play ball, but we still enjoyed a memorable hike. Thats the Mnweni for you.











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Last edit: 04 Apr 2018 19:26 by elinda.

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04 Apr 2018 20:46 #73116 by ghaznavid
Replied by ghaznavid on topic Mini Hike Reports
So Mike and I did a 3 dayer at Giants over easter.

The goal was an easy loop up Giants Pass and down Langies. With a minor detour to Didima Cave, you know - just so we wouldn't finish every day before 10AM.

On Friday we only started walking just after 9AM. We hit the contour path in under 3 hours, and took a break at a small rock pool on the contour path. We took a very slow pace up the pass, hitting mist high up and reaching the escarpment in the rain around 4PM.

It was misty all night, and our sleeping bags were soaked by midnight (although somehow were dry again by the next morning). The mist got my phone - fortunately a R100 cheap phone that I use for hiking, partly because it has a 5 day battery life, and partly because of events like this. Needless to say - the phone was trashed and the 4AM alarm didn't go off.

By 7AM we were off, but had to skip Thaba Chitja because we started far too late.

In the mist, we accidentally bagged Carbineers Point


We then bagged Durnford - intentionally:


Mist was clearing on the way up Sanqebethu. So much so that we stopped by a rock pool on the Langalibanene River (the name the locals have for the river behind Langies Pass)


We bagged Sanqebethu as well:


By the next valley, we were in the mist. Fortunately I know this part of the Berg better than basically anywhere else in the range - so with some help of my GPS, we found our way to the summit of my good old Popple:


We then found the trail in the valley and made our way up Mafadi:


By this point we were sopping wet and cold, and didn't feel like doing the roughly 20km to Champagne Castle, knowing that there was no cave for a long time, so we chickened out and headed to Upper Injisuthi Cave - via the long way around, the Trojan Wall saddle.

The cave had two other teams in it - the 4 guys doing the MBC annual GT, and a team doing Mafadi. They made space for us in the very wet cave, and we were lucky to only be under a few drips.

Sunday morning we set off just after 7AM - UIC to Giants is very easy, no need for an early start. We didn't bother with any khulus, and stopped for a break at a rock pool behind Langies Pass before heading down the pass (my 18th time on Langies, Mike's 13th).

The pass has been badly hit by recent storms and is very lose and slippery. One bit of the trail has actually been washed away, so there is a short rock step to hop across at the moment.

I picked up a very bad blister the day before from my Scarpa trail shoes (I'll review them soon, but I am really not impressed with them), so we took the day slowly. Still - 6h46 from Upper Injisuthi Cave to Giants Camp isn't terribly slow. Incidentally it is actually one of the shortest routes from Mafadi to Giants Camp - just probably not the fastest.

The full story will be told at the MCSA Adventure Talk on Tuesday 24 April at Crossways/Old Main Brewery in Hilton - for anyone in the area.

Total distance: 62km
Target distance: 140km
[insert excuses for why we chickened out here]

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17 Apr 2018 14:14 #73225 by ghaznavid
Replied by ghaznavid on topic Mini Hike Reports
Shortest Ghaz hike report ever:
We got up early to do Makheka in a day, got apathetic half way up Langies and had a picnic on top:

We ended up spending about 2h30 at this spot and then decided to run back to the camp, which we did in 1h33m37, including getting down the pass in 18m39. So a new PB on both the pass and top to car.

Incidentally we took over 7 hours to get up the pass - perhaps the SKT?

Well that marks the end of my GT training - now off to do sub-100h next weekend :lol:

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17 Apr 2018 14:51 #73226 by Stijn
Replied by Stijn on topic Mini Hike Reports
All the best for your attempt Ghaz (and Hobbit, I presume?). Here's hoping for good weather and smooth sailing! :thumbsup:
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17 Apr 2018 14:57 #73227 by ghaznavid
Replied by ghaznavid on topic Mini Hike Reports

Stijn wrote: All the best for your attempt Ghaz (and Hobbit, I presume?). Here's hoping for good weather and smooth sailing! :thumbsup:


Thanks Stijn :thumbsup:

Indeed the team is myself and Hobbit. Weather forecast is looking good at this stage, but it's too early to really tell.

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