With the previous week’s temperatures better suited to cooking in an air fryer than botanizing, our Pondoland CREW group longed for gentler conditions. Anne wisely suggested Cascades at Western Heights — a place where clean, falling water might cool both body and spirit. Costumes were packed, just in case. And as if that were not reason enough, Cascades offered the rare gift of both grassland and forest — two worlds meeting — promising a day rich in discovery for those willing to wander slowly and look closely.
We had not visited the area for some time, and with months of heavy rain behind us, uncertainty accompanied our anticipation. Yet, with two Jimnys and quiet confidence, we pressed forward. The grassy tracks were unkempt and puddled, and Anne’s Jimny powered through the shlooshy water-filled hollows with admirable determination — a moment Gail regretted not capturing.
The day opened with avian brilliance. A
European Roller flashed its impossible blues against the morning sky, followed
by Barn Swallows, their elegant forms stitching invisible threads between earth
and air. A herd of cattle stood watchful in the distance — magnificent animals,
though their presence within a protected reserve carried an uneasy reminder of
the pressures faced by these fragile ecosystems. Nearby, a collapsed
barbed-wire fence, now rusting into the earth, had been repurposed by swallows
as lookout perches — nature adapting, as it always does.
After greetings, tea, and shared biscuits, we
descended the hillside. Dorothy, ever generous in her knowledge, pointed out
the subtle but diagnostic differences between Indigofera abbottii and Indigastrum
fastigiatum, reminding us how easily assumption can mislead the untrained
eye.
Soon we were immersed in colour. The grassland
was alive with pink — a palette that would have delighted Rachel, Gail’s
daughter. Polygala amatymbica and Polygala hottentotta lay
scattered amongst Watsonia densiflora, while Argyrella canescens
— still known on the Red List as Dissotis canescens — added its soft
blush to the slopes. The delicate flowrs of Hybanthus enneaspermus, Tephrosia
macropoda subsp. macropoda, and the carnivorous Drosera
madagascariensis contributed their own subtle hues. Nearby, Hesperantha
baurii and Zaluzianskya angustifolia completed the scene, together
transforming the grassland into a living mosaic of pink.
Amongst rocks entwined with Smilax anceps,
we found Kniphofia laxiflora, its presence a quiet indicator of intact
grassland ecology. Other species revealed themselves in succession: Searsia
pondoensis, Exochaenium natalense, Exochaenium grande, Pachycarpus
grandiflora, Psoralea glabra, Buchnera dura, and Melasma
scabrum.
At the waterfall, the landscape shifted. Here,
water shaped everything — rock, soil, and life itself. Mermaid Tracy, radiant
and entirely at home in the cool cascade, reminded us why we had come. The
pool, however, was hers alone that day.
Along the damp embankments, Disa
tripetaloides flowered quietly amongst ferns, nourished by the constant
seepage of water. Nearby, tiny carnivorous Drosera madagascariensis
thrived in saturated pockets, their glistening traps waiting patiently for
unsuspecting prey.
Entering the forest was like crossing a
threshold into another ecological realm. There, in delicate flower, was Liparis
bowkeri, an orchid easily overlooked but unforgettable once seen.
The force of recent rains was written clearly
in the landscape. Debris hung tangled high in branches, far above our heads —
silent markers of water’s immense power.
Nearby, Plectranthus saccatus subsp. pondoensis
flowered in soft mauve tones, while Clivia robusta held heavy seed heads
— evidence of past flowering and future generations.
Near the rock pools, Cassinopsis tinifolia
and Maytenus cordata were in flower. It was here that Tracy, balancing
carefully on a boulder, followed the line of a creeper threading through the
branches. Her persistence revealed Emplectanthus dalzellii — a rare and
endemic climber. This was the day’s defining moment: the reward given only to
those who observe closely and question what they see.
Along the stream, Hypoxis angustifolia
lit the margins with small yellow flowers, while high on an inaccessible rock
face, Streptocarpus formosus flowered beyond reach — a reminder that
some beauty is meant simply to be witnessed, and not photographed unless one
had a zoom lens.
Asparagus setaceus had set
seed, its small green spheres turning black before falling — continuing a life
cycle.
Further along, growing epiphytically on the
trunk of a waterberry, was Cyrtorchis arcuata subsp. arcuata, a
magnificent orchid perfectly adapted to life above the forest floor.
As we moved upstream, the signs of disturbance
became impossible to ignore. The embankments were eroded, worn down by repeated
cattle crossings. These grasslands, once pristine, now face ongoing pressure
from grazing, development, and insufficient awareness of their ecological
importance.
Grasslands are among the most threatened
ecosystems on earth — and yet they are home to some of the richest plant
diversity per square metre.
Later, as the sun lowered, the grasslands once
again revealed their treasures. Aspalathus gerrardii, Argyrella
canescens, Exochaenium grande, and the delicate Exochaenium nana
glowed in the softening light.
Nearby, Uschi and Dorothy were deep in study,
examining a small aloe with their hand lenses. Their persistence confirmed it
as Aloe linearifolia, growing precariously alongside a cattle path — its
survival balanced between resilience and vulnerability.
As the day drew to a close, Cascades had given us more than species lists. It had reminded us of the intricate relationships between water, grassland, forest, and time. Of resilience and fragility. Of discovery and loss.
| Searsia pondoensis ANACARDIACEAE South African endemic Photo credit: Tracy |
| Kniphofia laxiflora ASPHODELACEAE South African endemic Photo credit: Tracy |
| Hesperantha baurii subsp. baurii IRIDACEAE |
| Anne dissecting a flower Pachycarphus flower. Open-flower surgery. |
| Pachycarpus grandiflorus subsp. grandiflorus APOCYNACEAE South African endemic Photo credit: Dorothy |
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| Psoralea glabra FABACEAE Narrow-leaf Fountain-bush Photo credit: Dorothy |
| Tephrosia macropoda var. macropoda FABACEAE |
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| Disa tripetaloides ORCHIDACEAE |
| Hypoxis angustifolia HYPOXIDACEAE Photo credit: Tracy |
| Cassinopsis tinifolia ICACINACEAE |
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| Liparis bowkeri ORCHIDACEAE |
| Gail enjoying the cool shade beside the waterfall at lunchtime, grateful for the quiet relief offered by water and forest. Photo credit: Tracy ![]() |
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| Maytenus cordata CELASTRACEAE |
| Oldenlandia tenella RUBIACEAE Photo credit: Tracy
|
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| Anne trying to get Uschi a fern leaf. |
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| Phlegmariurus verticillatus LYCOPODIACEAE
|
| Protea roupelliae subsp. roupelliae PROTEACEAE Photo credit: Alf |
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| Satyrium trinerve ORCHIDACEAE |
| Photo credit: Dorothy |
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| Cyrtorchis arcuata subsp. arcuata ORCHIDACEAE |
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| Exochaenium grande GENTIANACEAE |
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| Dissotis canescens MELASTOMATACEAE |
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| Melasma scabrum OROBANCHACEAE |
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| Aloe linearifolia ASPHODELACEAE South African endemic |
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| Tracy and Uschi looking at Aloe linearifolia. |
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| Gail and Anne's Jimny's parked along side a derelict Parks Board "fence". |
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| Tracy telling the cows to please stay out of the reserve. |
| The cattle path. Save Western Heights. Pondoland CREW Maggie Abbott, Uschi Tercher, Dorothy McInytre, Anne Skelton, Gail Bowers-Winters, Tracy Taylor, Alf Hayter and Hiliary Henderson. |

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