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 The James Clarke Column


James Clarke describes a new destination in the Eastern Cape

It's not that it's malaria-free and has the big five - the elephant, lion, buffalo, black rhino and leopard - the attraction of Kwandwe Game Lodge is that it's in that Lost World area of South Africa, the Eastern Cape.

Kwandwe, (its name means "the place of the blue crane") is not far off the N2 - just 20 minutes from Grahamstown. It is set inside the vast wilderness that, in the 19th century, was the first part of Africa witnessed by many of Europe's historical figures - missionaries, botanists and hunters.

The region around Kwandwe has changed very little since then. At night one still hears the lions' rumbling call and on a recent dawn game drive visitors saw four black rhino in separate sightings, four bull elephant interacting with a pair of lions, four cheetah, two white rhino, a male lion, two aardwolf and cubs, jackal, eight species of antelope, giraffe and zebra. Most astonishing of all they saw a pair of aardvark.

I was there in winter and what impressed me most was not so much the new species I was seeing but the great vistas aflame with red and orange aloe spikes. It is a very singular part of Africa.

One indelible sight epitomised three of Kwandwe's great qualities - its solitude, its links with the past and its bird emblem - it was a pair of blue cranes in a natural meadow spotlighted by a sunbeam in a great ocean of veld - it was a skyscape rather than a landscape. In the far distance the 1830 fortified Settler farmstead which now serves as Kwandwe's reception centre. It has been restored and furnished in Settler style.

Here one leaves one's car and we were fortunate in having assigned to us ranger Mark Galpin who was born in the area, speaks the Xhosa language and reads the bush well.

Kwandwe's owner, a retired American pharmaceutical entrepreneur, Carl DeSantis who sold his company Rexall-Sundown not long ago for $1.8 billion, lost his heart to Africa and its wildlife on his first visit three years ago.

A chance over-dinner encounter with Angus Sholto-Douglas, then a 29-year old who was managing a camp in Botswana, so inspired DeSantis that he asked Angus to find him a game-reserve and partner him in the venture.

Now three years later, DeSantis has invested $12 million in Kwandwe, has demolished 22 homesteads, removed 2 000 kilometres of fencing, cleaned up the original landscape and restocked it - and Angus is now MD.
But what has been kept and restored makes this 16 000 ha reserve a unique restoration of 19th century Eastern Cape. Conservation Corporation Africa (CC Africa) which operates 25 game-lodges on the African continent manages it.

For those who want total seclusion there's a luxurious, self-contained character homestead called Uplands with three large period bedrooms, swimming pool and a staff which includes a butler, ranger and vehicle.

The main lodge with its chalets is hidden away up in the hills above the Great Fish River that runs through the reserve. It decor sets a new benchmark for safari lodges and its cosy, glass-fronted lounge has a breathtaking panorama. Guests stay in nine unobtrusive stone and thatch cottages, luxuriously furnished and each with its own reed-screened private plunge-pool and river-bank game viewing.

A just added feature is a beautifully restored 19th century chapel for wedding ceremonies, the reception being held in the spacious old farmhouse.

Within 20 minutes you're in Grahamstown and a short drive on you are watching whales in some bay (I saw them almost every time I stopped) or playing golf at one of the marvellous golf courses that characterise the southern Cape coast.

 
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