Hi guys I must take my hat off to both of you at the lengths you go to in making these videos. Gravel all the way what amazing drive real pioneer stuff in a 2 wheel car .op de Berg speaks for its self loved it this is how I remember SA lawns down to the road and no fences and what a surprise space ship church. Eselbank definitely out in the sticks thatched roofs the sheep in town so cute .spotting the donkeys always makes me smile. Wuppertal blows my mind it's like the equivalent of Shangri-la but in so SA. The charm used from every buildings and the history amazing loved the shoe factory you couldn't make this place up and surrounded by the spectacular Cederburg mountains unbelievable video thanks for taking me along cheerio till the next one
Thanks for the drone footage. Such nice small towns and they persevere. Fantastic drive and scenery. Some times Sonia kept her breath hey! But you made it. Well done. Tha ks for all the effort that went into this trip. I enjoyed it so much. I am on board next time
I'm always happy to hear when you enjoy the drone shots. I loved flying the drone over both Eselbank and Wuppert(h)al. It's so much easier to cover the smaller places. Sonia was super nervous almost all the way and very relieved when that steep climb over and down the mountain was over. 🚙😁
My mothers hometown❤ Havent been there since before the fire. House was completely destroyed and was finished being rebuilt in 2023. Thank you for this stunning video
My kind of journey - just spectacular! I loved every moment of it. The beauty and the peace the Cederberg holds is all-consuming. I now understand why you choose to travel those roads in a Renault Kwid Curtis. The car handled those sump-destroying rocks like a 4X4 RV! Sonia's somewhat anxious comments at 43:13 ("I would like Wupperthal to show up now") and especially at 45:24 ("Don't look anywhere ... but in front") had me in stitches. I deemed it fit to enjoy an extra glass of wine tonight in celebration of Sonia's comments (and resilience). As always, it was a pleasure travelling with you. Thank you to the both of you.
I’m so glad to have found this channel.Although I’m English I grew up in Cape Town and lived in South Africa for decades, my son was born there and I still have close connections with SA. What is so interesting listening to this, now I have been back in the UK for a long time, is how the buildings you are looking at are considered so old. 😊 A building of 1830 would be a baby here 😂 The old Cape buildings are so beautiful, especially against that lovely blue sky. I’m looking forward to watching more 😊👍🇬🇧
What a wonderful drive this was. The drone footage is amazing. You got into a church again 😊 the donkies all the little river crossings. These people live a wonderful life. Really beautiful places in the mountains. Lotsa love to you two ❤🎉❤
Lovely area, so glad you have been to see Wupperthal. At 20:10 you passed that sign by the Cape Leopard Trust on the left of the road. On one of my travels I stopped there, got out and was having coffee when I saw a vehicle slowly approaching from the north. When they reached me they told me they were following a leopard that was in the veld coming this way but has now disappeared. Well needless to say I immediately got back in the vehicle and then tried to find the leopard using my binoculars but nowhere to be seen. That cement road down to Wupperthal is quite steep but you ...and Sonia...did very well.lol. See you in the next one..
Thank you for the video. My daughter and grandson moved there earlier this year. At least now I have had a beautiful tour of their little town,thanks to you ❤ God bless you two.
I won't even comment on the scenery today. All I will say is well done Curtus on your driving. I thought I wad about to get a heart attack with yhe road high up there anf no barriers. O couldn't wait for you all to get to the next town. Be safe.
Looking at the title, the first thing coming to mind is “Die Berggans het ‘n veer laat val van die hoogste krans by Woeperdal….” (Boerneef - I W van der Merwe). Beautiful area you’re visiting this time.
Thank you kindly! For watching every video and for your incredible support of our channel. I hope you know how much we appreciate you sticking around. 🚙🤩
@@DustBugsTravel I have loved every video. For me it's a "curious escape" to get outside and see places I may never get to myself. I'm addicted and love going on drives even if it's thru your camera lens. You are both appreciated
Ja, ek het nie so gebid in my lewe nie, my heart was pumping overtime, I am afraid of the heights and that pass, the gravel road I just say, Baie dankie julle, I will not go there, not now not ever, you did it for me, I now know that place through you guys, Baie Baie dankie for this informative and interesting journey.
Fantastic trip, thank You! Pretty scary in places, rather you than me driving! Was last in the Cedarburg 64 years ago, still remember those amazing landscapes. Keep on truckin 😅 Kiwi Jim.
I'VE BEEN THERE IN EARLY 2009. WHEN WE HOT THERE IT WAS TO DARK TO ACTUALLY ENJOY IT, BUT YOU MADE IT POSSIBLE TO SEE WHAT I MISSED, THANKYOU. WE GOT THERE ON A DOFFERENT RD AND PASS, AND LEFT ON ANOTHER PASS ONTO CLAN WILLIAM. ON THE TOP OF WHICH I VISITED LEOPOLD'S GRAVE, THAT WAS THE NEXT MORNING. THANKYOU FOR THE ADVENTURE.
Thank you for the interesting video! We visited Wupperthal before and again after the great fire of 2018. Many of the buildings and most of the houses that you filmed had to be rebuilt after the fire. It was very sad to listen to people's stories about the fire. They were busy renovating the church when we visited the town. We still want to take the route past Eselbank. Thanks for the preview!
Hi Curtis Sonia and Dusty ❤❤❤, you are a trooper Sonia, even my toes were curling for those gravel stretches, Curtis you are a cool cucumber hey, thanks for another nail biting journey, safe travels 🥾🥾
I had a grand old time, but Sonia and Dusty inhaled sharply quite a few times during the journey. 😍🧸 The road was steep and uneven at times, but super exciting! And of course the beautiful scenery made up for all the stress in the end. Thank you for coming on this incredible trip with us, we always appreciate your company. 😊🚙
Hi guys Sonia I felt for you on this trip I was just as scared for you both just watching this video well done for making love both of the towns very interesting thank you both. ❤❤
We came up that cemented part of the road, coming from Wuppertal, and a vehicle came from the front and we had to backup all the way down so they could pass us! That was very nerve wrecking! 😱😱
There was no way we could miss those blackened tree trunks. It was clearly quite a major fire to have caused such extensive damage. 🌴🔥 There's not much evidence other than the tree trunks remaining though, so the community has rebuilt rather well, which is incredible proof of their resilience.
When I read Wuppertal I immediately thought Pakhuis Pass. Or maybe I am confused with something else. When I was little I thought Pakhuis was a place where you got lots of hidings. 😅 Never heard of Oppieberg before. What a beautiful place and lovely church. Gravel roads are the most scenic and this one is beautiful. Mountains are fantastic! I had an idea you would save some supper for padkos. For me i would need a thermos of coffee too 8 hours? Yes, definitely enough coffee Eselbank looks like a place that developed from a farm into a community. I would love to live there. Roger and i were on some hairy roads too, in an Opel Kadet. But take it slowly and carefully and you will get through. What a view!
It took us about 4h15m to reach Wuppertal from Prince Alfred Hamlet, so I can fully understand that it would take some folks much longer than that, especially if they make stops at friends and family along the way or to drop off and pick up passengers, which I'm sure happens frequently. It's a painfully slow drive and I don't imagine it going much quicker in an offroad vehicle without doing some damage. It was a super fun drive though (for me, less so for Sonia) and the scenery was absolutely spectacular. 😍⛰️ Pakhuis Pass is on the road between Calvinia and Clanwilliam, but very close to Clanwilliam. I'm sure you've seen it, but Episode 61 was filmed in that vicinity. 🚙😁
What an episode that gave me too much stress.😄😄 That drive yooohhh. But again I watched the episode with hubby, I was like you have to see this... Thank you so much guys....❤❤❤
I'm sure you have the car's wheel alignment checked regularly. After a drive similar to yours between Golden Gate and Harrismith in 1990 I should have had the alignment of my car checked, which I did not do. Only 20 000 k's later I had to replace the tyres due to uneven wear.
The scenery, and the drive, was absolutely magnificent! I'm so glad you enjoyed it too! 🚙⛰️ We've chatted to quite a few vehicle manufacturers already, but the moment their requirements will necessitate us compromising on the authenticity of our videos, I walk away. So no deal has been struck just yet, but we hope one day to partner with a company whose thinking aligns with our own. 🤞🏻
Good afternoon Dustbugs, not sure if anyone commented on the beautiful church in Op-die-Berg? It is the Dutch Reformed Church, inaugurated on 31 July 1966. Another breathtaking journey, thank you so much for sharing. Lots of love and stay safe.
Several viewers commented on the beautiful design of the church. Thank you for the info, we were wondering about the date since we couldn't find the cornerstone. 💒 We appreciate you travelling with us in this beautiful area. 🚙😊
Done and _dusted_ ! I see what you did there. Most important, but sort of irrelevant observation: If a flood over a drift is 0.8m deep, I suspect that you'd be putting your life at risk taking a chance on it. To know, just get a measuring tape and measure up how high the sill of your vehicle's doors are above the road surface. A flood is surprisingly powerful, and there's definitely a point at which your car would float enough to have zero "side traction" for even a mild float to cause you some inconvenience. Even shallow water is dangerous. That's the point. As for thatch being redone, that's one of the main reasons people avoid using it for roofing these days. Grass thatch needs to be redone approximately every 15 years. I think in the Cape they might use _hardebiesie_ reed thatch, which is a lot more durable, but even with that, a house dating from the 1800's will have been redone several times since. (It also pushes your insurance premiums up. A nice compromise is to put Marley tiles - or is it Harvey tiles? - over the thatch. That lets the thatch keep much longer, and some insurance companies will accept the roof as fireproof enough for a lower premium if you do that.) Wupperthal was beautiful. Again, yes, Authentic. That's what makes it so. Also seemed to be very much a living community, which makes it double beautiful. The spellings probably differ due to German spelling reforms. German isn't government regulated the way French is, but there's a semi-official "Taalbond" there that makes recommendations people tend to follow, that changes things every ever so often. So in the 1830's a dale (or "thal" in olde German, of "dal" in Afrikaans, nogsteeds?) would've been spelled with the "th", and then in more recent times, there might've been a spelling reform that simplified away all the "th" 's to make the spelling more regular, and easier for everyone, so "thal" was changed to "tal", and the sound stayed the same. A recent spelling reform some people follow is the removal of some special characters, like the "es-tsett", or "double-s", ß , replacing it with "ss", which quite a lot of spellings use, anyway. They also seem to be getting rid of ümläütën (those "kolletjies"? - I forget the right name in Afrikaans), so for instance Düsseldorf can now be spelled "Duesseldorf". Without the umlaut the "u" has an "oe" sound (in Afrikaans), and with it, it has the "u" sound (as in the Afrikaans word, "U"). If you say it with an "oe" sound, you're calling the place "Idiootdorp", so the new spelling might remove some nice insults from the language if it becomes the general usage. There's one more thing. (Sorry, this is going on a bit, but there is one more thing, so .. ) There's a city called Wuppertal in Germany (but there wasn't one in 1830), just the valley (or dale, or dal, or thal) of the river Wupper, in which there were several towns, becoming ever more unreachable, the further up the tal you went. And then the railways changed that, and the valley become a single conurbation. The way they did it was to build the world's first Schwebebahn. I think I'll leave that as a mystery for the railroad enthusiasts round here who've yet to hear of it. Look it up, and I think you'll find it entertaining. It's still running to this day, even now the bahns that connect everything up are like Autobahns. What might "Schweben" mean? I think you'll find the answer goes nicely with the sound of this word.
I hope you realised Sonia was just joking about the flood levels, I wouldn't even take a chance in 15cm of water, let alone 80cm! 🚙🌧 We have most definitely seen places with original thatch, absolutely falling to pieces. It's always encouraging to see it being redone though. I get the insurance premiums, the upkeep and all of that, but few things add as much character to a building as thatch. We both love it, as you probably know by now. We thought it best to include both spellings of Wuppert(h)al to appease both schools of thought.
@@DustBugsTravel Sorry, I was a bit slow on the joke, and took it as a literal estimate. (It did occur that the estimate might have a decimal place out or something like that.) Oh well, no harm done, hey? As for the spelling, I incline to the view that "all spellings are right". I mean any spelling that isn't too weird, and might be used. My spellchecker irritates me. If I want to say humour in the American world, I feel I should be free to. And likewise humor in the rest of the English world. Did you look up the Schwebebahn?
I did and it's absolutely fascinating! 🚟 The oldest electric elevated railway with hanging cars! I hope to go and check those out myself one day. It sounds rather unique and must be quite the experience! Thanks for the info.
@@DustBugsTravel Lekker. Glad you enjoyed finding out about it. If you ever travel there, take a ride on the train. It's like flying a plane at just over the ground (or how I imagine that). Lots of fun. (And it's priced at ordinary urban transit prices, since that's what it is.) Oh, and when I visited there, their "Döner Kebab" were half the price of anywhere else. Made me wonder whether they weren't part of the "Gammelfleisch Döner" scandal at the time. That's "Offal Kebabs". Someone got hold of some condemned meat, and recycled it as fast food. Good grub. Turkish. Lots of Turks there. If they ask you if you want some "Sharf" with it, that means hot spices. They're fairly mild. I generally said yes.
OMW that was an exciting but nerve racking trip shooo. I felt every bump on that narrow rocky road. My heart was pounding, my throat was dry until we reached Wupperthal, then I could breathe again 😳🤪🤣 I expected to see Cowboys 🤠 and Indians pop out from behind those big rocks 😂 It was a very interesting trip chaps thank you❤ Dusty was extra quiet on this trip 😅 Sonia I could feel your anxiousness in the car, don't blame you at all. Wouldn't like to travel there when it's storming! Where does that sand come from? Take care 🙏❤
That's a good question, because it's quite far from the ocean. We did notice a lot of sandy soil on the rest of our trip too. I can't explain it. 🚙😁 It was a super exciting trip for me, I loved every moment! Thanks for coming along, it was great fun!
Hi guys, i enjoyed yiur trip to Wupperthal, but you forgot to mention the huge fire in which most houses were destroyed... and then rebuild and the recents floods. Yet the town look good. Regards
Hi, Brenda my wife and I really enjoy your channel, thank you very much for the entertainment and the visits to places we'll never see. One question though, what model Renult do you use or do you change models?
We don't own a Renault at all. We've rented 27 Renault Kwids so far for our 27 trips over the last three years, so we get a different one each time. 🚙😁
Eslebank and Op-die-berg are very descriptive names of these town! Wonder how long the donkeys have been around! When you went up that steep gravel road with the potholes, I was so nervous that it felt as if I was watching a horror movie! Glad you made it safely to the other side!
We took the road towards the Englishman's Grave and then on to Clanwilliam over the Pakhuis Pass. 🚙🛣️ I indicated the route on the map at the beginning of the Clanwillam episode, number 491.
Do you study these places before you go? There was a massive fire in 2018 which nearly destroyed the whole town. Those little houses are what they built to accomodate the 200 people misplaced in the fire. Also its the Rooibos country where they grow and pick rooibos.
Nope, we don't. We travel and make videos for fun and we will never burden ourselves with excessive research. We're totally happy to read up on a place once we've arrived. We mentioned very clearly in our video that there was no cellphone signal, so we were unable to do research online. Not a single one of the locals we spoke to, mentioned the fire so that's definitely not all the village is known for. The blackened tree trunks told their own story. Hopefully you also heard the interesting information and saw the beautiful scenery that we did share. 🚙⛰️
Hi guys I must take my hat off to both of you at the lengths you go to in making these videos. Gravel all the way what amazing drive real pioneer stuff in a 2 wheel car .op de Berg speaks for its self loved it this is how I remember SA lawns down to the road and no fences and what a surprise space ship church. Eselbank definitely out in the sticks thatched roofs the sheep in town so cute .spotting the donkeys always makes me smile. Wuppertal blows my mind it's like the equivalent of Shangri-la but in so SA. The charm used from every buildings and the history amazing loved the shoe factory you couldn't make this place up and surrounded by the spectacular Cederburg mountains unbelievable video thanks for taking me along cheerio till the next one
Thanks for the drone footage. Such nice small towns and they persevere. Fantastic drive and scenery. Some times Sonia kept her breath hey! But you made it. Well done. Tha ks for all the effort that went into this trip. I enjoyed it so much. I am on board next time
I'm always happy to hear when you enjoy the drone shots. I loved flying the drone over both Eselbank and Wuppert(h)al. It's so much easier to cover the smaller places. Sonia was super nervous almost all the way and very relieved when that steep climb over and down the mountain was over. 🚙😁
My mothers hometown❤ Havent been there since before the fire. House was completely destroyed and was finished being rebuilt in 2023. Thank you for this stunning video
Wupperthal looks beautifully rebuilt after the devastating fire that destroyed most of the precinct and surrounding buildings in 2018
My kind of journey - just spectacular! I loved every moment of it. The beauty and the peace the Cederberg holds is all-consuming. I now understand why you choose to travel those roads in a Renault Kwid Curtis. The car handled those sump-destroying rocks like a 4X4 RV! Sonia's somewhat anxious comments at 43:13 ("I would like Wupperthal to show up now") and especially at 45:24 ("Don't look anywhere ... but in front") had me in stitches. I deemed it fit to enjoy an extra glass of wine tonight in celebration of Sonia's comments (and resilience). As always, it was a pleasure travelling with you. Thank you to the both of you.
I’m so glad to have found this channel.Although I’m English I grew up in Cape Town and lived in South Africa for decades, my son was born there and I still have close connections with SA. What is so interesting listening to this, now I have been back in the UK for a long time, is how the buildings you are looking at are considered so old. 😊 A building of 1830 would be a baby here 😂 The old Cape buildings are so beautiful, especially against that lovely blue sky.
I’m looking forward to watching more 😊👍🇬🇧
What a wonderful drive this was. The drone footage is amazing. You got into a church again 😊 the donkies all the little river crossings. These people live a wonderful life. Really beautiful places in the mountains. Lotsa love to you two ❤🎉❤
Good driving Curtis. What a spectular road through the mountains. I have so much enjoyed this video. Thank you.
The housing on the sports field was to accommodate the people whose homes were destroyed during the fire. Seems people have settled in there now
Lovely area, so glad you have been to see Wupperthal. At 20:10 you passed that sign by the Cape Leopard Trust on the left of the road. On one of my travels I stopped there, got out and was having coffee when I saw a vehicle slowly approaching from the north. When they reached me they told me they were following a leopard that was in the veld coming this way but has now disappeared. Well needless to say I immediately got back in the vehicle and then tried to find the leopard using my binoculars but nowhere to be seen. That cement road down to Wupperthal is quite steep but you ...and Sonia...did very well.lol. See you in the next one..
Those palm trees are black.....and all buildings are painted shortly ago...the video is beautiful with stunning mountains....thanks❣
Thank you for the video. My daughter and grandson moved there earlier this year. At least now I have had a beautiful tour of their little town,thanks to you ❤ God bless you two.
I won't even comment on the scenery today. All I will say is well done Curtus on your driving. I thought I wad about to get a heart attack with yhe road high up there anf no barriers. O couldn't wait for you all to get to the next town. Be safe.
Looking at the title, the first thing coming to mind is “Die Berggans het ‘n veer laat val van die hoogste krans by Woeperdal….” (Boerneef - I W van der Merwe). Beautiful area you’re visiting this time.
Thanks! ❤
Thank you kindly! For watching every video and for your incredible support of our channel. I hope you know how much we appreciate you sticking around. 🚙🤩
@@DustBugsTravel I have loved every video. For me it's a "curious escape" to get outside and see places I may never get to myself. I'm addicted and love going on drives even if it's thru your camera lens. You are both appreciated
Ja, ek het nie so gebid in my lewe nie, my heart was pumping overtime, I am afraid of the heights and that pass, the gravel road I just say, Baie dankie julle, I will not go there, not now not ever, you did it for me, I now know that place through you guys, Baie Baie dankie for this informative and interesting journey.
Fantastic trip, thank You! Pretty scary in places, rather you than me driving! Was last in the Cedarburg 64 years ago, still remember those amazing landscapes. Keep on truckin 😅 Kiwi Jim.
Thank you for the great video! We were there in 2022 and was fascinated by the friendly people and the peacefulness of Eselbank.
Thanks showing wupperthal got pictures of 1968 when we visit the zimris with small table mountain in back ground thanks again
Smart, stunning werk soos altyd, dankie erg baie!
I'VE BEEN THERE IN EARLY 2009. WHEN WE HOT THERE IT WAS TO DARK TO ACTUALLY ENJOY IT, BUT YOU MADE IT POSSIBLE TO SEE WHAT I MISSED, THANKYOU. WE GOT THERE ON A DOFFERENT RD AND PASS, AND LEFT ON ANOTHER PASS ONTO CLAN WILLIAM. ON THE TOP OF WHICH I VISITED LEOPOLD'S GRAVE, THAT WAS THE NEXT MORNING. THANKYOU FOR THE ADVENTURE.
Thank you for the interesting video! We visited Wupperthal before and again after the great fire of 2018. Many of the buildings and most of the houses that you filmed had to be rebuilt after the fire. It was very sad to listen to people's stories about the fire. They were busy renovating the church when we visited the town. We still want to take the route past Eselbank. Thanks for the preview!
Hi Curtis Sonia and Dusty ❤❤❤, you are a trooper Sonia, even my toes were curling for those gravel stretches, Curtis you are a cool cucumber hey, thanks for another nail biting journey, safe travels 🥾🥾
I had a grand old time, but Sonia and Dusty inhaled sharply quite a few times during the journey. 😍🧸 The road was steep and uneven at times, but super exciting! And of course the beautiful scenery made up for all the stress in the end. Thank you for coming on this incredible trip with us, we always appreciate your company. 😊🚙
I am so glad to have seen this place . Thank you 😊
Hi guys Sonia I felt for you on this trip I was just as scared for you both just watching this video well done for making love both of the towns very interesting thank you both. ❤❤
Lovely video, thanks😎👍🏻
Enjoying the ride with you - much love to both of you❤
We visited Wuppertal and Several other places to see the flowers .It was beautiful there.
We came up that cemented part of the road, coming from Wuppertal, and a vehicle came from the front and we had to backup all the way down so they could pass us! That was very nerve wrecking! 😱😱
Op die berg hometown of Breyten Paulse. Noticed that blackened palm trees in Wupperghal? Caused by the major fire they had.
There was no way we could miss those blackened tree trunks. It was clearly quite a major fire to have caused such extensive damage. 🌴🔥 There's not much evidence other than the tree trunks remaining though, so the community has rebuilt rather well, which is incredible proof of their resilience.
This is amazing. Would love to drive there myself
When I read Wuppertal I immediately thought Pakhuis Pass. Or maybe I am confused with something else. When I was little I thought Pakhuis was a place where you got lots of hidings. 😅 Never heard of Oppieberg before. What a beautiful place and lovely church. Gravel roads are the most scenic and this one is beautiful. Mountains are fantastic! I had an idea you would save some supper for padkos. For me i would need a thermos of coffee too 8 hours? Yes, definitely enough coffee Eselbank looks like a place that developed from a farm into a community. I would love to live there. Roger and i were on some hairy roads too, in an Opel Kadet. But take it slowly and carefully and you will get through. What a view!
It took us about 4h15m to reach Wuppertal from Prince Alfred Hamlet, so I can fully understand that it would take some folks much longer than that, especially if they make stops at friends and family along the way or to drop off and pick up passengers, which I'm sure happens frequently. It's a painfully slow drive and I don't imagine it going much quicker in an offroad vehicle without doing some damage. It was a super fun drive though (for me, less so for Sonia) and the scenery was absolutely spectacular. 😍⛰️ Pakhuis Pass is on the road between Calvinia and Clanwilliam, but very close to Clanwilliam. I'm sure you've seen it, but Episode 61 was filmed in that vicinity. 🚙😁
@@DustBugsTravel thanks yes I remember now. Another awesome video
What an episode that gave me too much stress.😄😄 That drive yooohhh.
But again I watched the episode with hubby, I was like you have to see this... Thank you so much guys....❤❤❤
I'm sure you have the car's wheel alignment checked regularly. After a drive similar to yours between Golden Gate and Harrismith in 1990 I should have had the alignment of my car checked, which I did not do. Only 20 000 k's later I had to replace the tyres due to uneven wear.
Amazing drive, thanks for the upload 🏆
Sonia , i am with you all the way those road and fall down the mountains.
Stunning video.amazing outcrops and you two are very brave to tackle these roads in your vehicle.❤
Madiba tree👌🙌🙌
Incredible scenery and such an interesting episode! Your car did you proud on that road. Time to ask the manufacturer for a sponsorship?
The scenery, and the drive, was absolutely magnificent! I'm so glad you enjoyed it too! 🚙⛰️ We've chatted to quite a few vehicle manufacturers already, but the moment their requirements will necessitate us compromising on the authenticity of our videos, I walk away. So no deal has been struck just yet, but we hope one day to partner with a company whose thinking aligns with our own. 🤞🏻
18:40 al lê die berge nog so blou🎷🎹🥁🎸.
Good afternoon Dustbugs, not sure if anyone commented on the beautiful church in Op-die-Berg?
It is the Dutch Reformed Church, inaugurated on 31 July 1966.
Another breathtaking journey, thank you so much for sharing.
Lots of love and stay safe.
Several viewers commented on the beautiful design of the church. Thank you for the info, we were wondering about the date since we couldn't find the cornerstone. 💒 We appreciate you travelling with us in this beautiful area. 🚙😊
Done and _dusted_ ! I see what you did there.
Most important, but sort of irrelevant observation: If a flood over a drift is 0.8m deep, I suspect that you'd be putting your life at risk taking a chance on it. To know, just get a measuring tape and measure up how high the sill of your vehicle's doors are above the road surface. A flood is surprisingly powerful, and there's definitely a point at which your car would float enough to have zero "side traction" for even a mild float to cause you some inconvenience. Even shallow water is dangerous. That's the point.
As for thatch being redone, that's one of the main reasons people avoid using it for roofing these days. Grass thatch needs to be redone approximately every 15 years. I think in the Cape they might use _hardebiesie_ reed thatch, which is a lot more durable, but even with that, a house dating from the 1800's will have been redone several times since.
(It also pushes your insurance premiums up. A nice compromise is to put Marley tiles - or is it Harvey tiles? - over the thatch. That lets the thatch keep much longer, and some insurance companies will accept the roof as fireproof enough for a lower premium if you do that.)
Wupperthal was beautiful. Again, yes, Authentic. That's what makes it so. Also seemed to be very much a living community, which makes it double beautiful.
The spellings probably differ due to German spelling reforms. German isn't government regulated the way French is, but there's a semi-official "Taalbond" there that makes recommendations people tend to follow, that changes things every ever so often. So in the 1830's a dale (or "thal" in olde German, of "dal" in Afrikaans, nogsteeds?) would've been spelled with the "th", and then in more recent times, there might've been a spelling reform that simplified away all the "th" 's to make the spelling more regular, and easier for everyone, so "thal" was changed to "tal", and the sound stayed the same.
A recent spelling reform some people follow is the removal of some special characters, like the "es-tsett", or "double-s", ß , replacing it with "ss", which quite a lot of spellings use, anyway. They also seem to be getting rid of ümläütën (those "kolletjies"? - I forget the right name in Afrikaans), so for instance Düsseldorf can now be spelled "Duesseldorf". Without the umlaut the "u" has an "oe" sound (in Afrikaans), and with it, it has the "u" sound (as in the Afrikaans word, "U"). If you say it with an "oe" sound, you're calling the place "Idiootdorp", so the new spelling might remove some nice insults from the language if it becomes the general usage.
There's one more thing. (Sorry, this is going on a bit, but there is one more thing, so .. )
There's a city called Wuppertal in Germany (but there wasn't one in 1830), just the valley (or dale, or dal, or thal) of the river Wupper, in which there were several towns, becoming ever more unreachable, the further up the tal you went. And then the railways changed that, and the valley become a single conurbation. The way they did it was to build the world's first Schwebebahn.
I think I'll leave that as a mystery for the railroad enthusiasts round here who've yet to hear of it. Look it up, and I think you'll find it entertaining. It's still running to this day, even now the bahns that connect everything up are like Autobahns.
What might "Schweben" mean? I think you'll find the answer goes nicely with the sound of this word.
I hope you realised Sonia was just joking about the flood levels, I wouldn't even take a chance in 15cm of water, let alone 80cm! 🚙🌧 We have most definitely seen places with original thatch, absolutely falling to pieces. It's always encouraging to see it being redone though. I get the insurance premiums, the upkeep and all of that, but few things add as much character to a building as thatch. We both love it, as you probably know by now. We thought it best to include both spellings of Wuppert(h)al to appease both schools of thought.
@@DustBugsTravel Sorry, I was a bit slow on the joke, and took it as a literal estimate. (It did occur that the estimate might have a decimal place out or something like that.) Oh well, no harm done, hey?
As for the spelling, I incline to the view that "all spellings are right". I mean any spelling that isn't too weird, and might be used. My spellchecker irritates me. If I want to say humour in the American world, I feel I should be free to. And likewise humor in the rest of the English world.
Did you look up the Schwebebahn?
I did and it's absolutely fascinating! 🚟 The oldest electric elevated railway with hanging cars! I hope to go and check those out myself one day. It sounds rather unique and must be quite the experience! Thanks for the info.
@@DustBugsTravel Lekker. Glad you enjoyed finding out about it. If you ever travel there, take a ride on the train. It's like flying a plane at just over the ground (or how I imagine that). Lots of fun. (And it's priced at ordinary urban transit prices, since that's what it is.)
Oh, and when I visited there, their "Döner Kebab" were half the price of anywhere else. Made me wonder whether they weren't part of the "Gammelfleisch Döner" scandal at the time. That's "Offal Kebabs". Someone got hold of some condemned meat, and recycled it as fast food. Good grub. Turkish. Lots of Turks there. If they ask you if you want some "Sharf" with it, that means hot spices. They're fairly mild. I generally said yes.
My nerves were shot when you guys were driving with those steep drops right next to your vehicle. Gosh
Love your videos. You should incorporate Geocaching into your trips. That will be exciting :D
OMW that was an exciting but nerve racking trip shooo. I felt every bump on that narrow rocky road. My heart was pounding, my throat was dry until we reached Wupperthal, then I could breathe again 😳🤪🤣 I expected to see Cowboys 🤠 and Indians pop out from behind those big rocks 😂 It was a very interesting trip chaps thank you❤ Dusty was extra quiet on this trip 😅 Sonia I could feel your anxiousness in the car, don't blame you at all. Wouldn't like to travel there when it's storming! Where does that sand come from? Take care 🙏❤
That's a good question, because it's quite far from the ocean. We did notice a lot of sandy soil on the rest of our trip too. I can't explain it. 🚙😁 It was a super exciting trip for me, I loved every moment! Thanks for coming along, it was great fun!
Never fear when Curtis is near😅🚙
That mountain upfront looks like table mountain
thanks for a wonderful trip - i think Renault need to invest in you - if they haven't already - my next car would definitelty be a Renault Kwid -
Hi guys, i enjoyed yiur trip to Wupperthal, but you forgot to mention the huge fire in which most houses were destroyed... and then rebuild and the recents floods. Yet the town look good. Regards
Hi, Brenda my wife and I really enjoy your channel, thank you very much for the entertainment and the visits to places we'll never see. One question though, what model Renult do you use or do you change models?
We don't own a Renault at all. We've rented 27 Renault Kwids so far for our 27 trips over the last three years, so we get a different one each time. 🚙😁
@@DustBugsTravel Thats one way to do it, the Kwid really impressed me the way it handles the dirt roads (or maybe its The Driver 🤔)
Moenie worry nie, watch net!!!!🙃😂😂🙏💕
Eslebank and Op-die-berg are very descriptive names of these town! Wonder how long the donkeys have been around! When you went up that steep gravel road with the potholes, I was so nervous that it felt as if I was watching a horror movie! Glad you made it safely to the other side!
I think the donkeys may have been there before the humans! 😍🐴
Baie dankie vriende.
😌❤
OH I FORGOT TO MENTION, THE NIGHT WE GOT TO WIPPERTHALL WE SLEPT OVER ON A FARM B&B NEAR THERE.
My mom so much wanted us to go back to that shoe factory to buy shoes of them.
Hi julle wat n pad het my oè n paar keer toe geknyp.
My longest wait was hour and 20 min
at these new places, do you stop for munchies and coffee?
Sometimes, as long as we don't have to go too far out of our way. Beverages are always at hand and they're the most important.🥤
Which route did you take out of Wupperthal?
We took the road towards the Englishman's Grave and then on to Clanwilliam over the Pakhuis Pass. 🚙🛣️ I indicated the route on the map at the beginning of the Clanwillam episode, number 491.
Koue Bokkeveld is where Breyton Paulse grew up.
was there fuel in wupperthal?
We didn't need any, but I didn't notice any pumps in the village, so I'm thinking no. ⛽
all food tastes better when cold especially pork chops and chicken
Yea that town so small drive to hard pass it unever new of that small town
and look for food
Do you study these places before you go? There was a massive fire in 2018 which nearly destroyed the whole town. Those little houses are what they built to accomodate the 200 people misplaced in the fire. Also its the Rooibos country where they grow and pick rooibos.
Nope, we don't. We travel and make videos for fun and we will never burden ourselves with excessive research. We're totally happy to read up on a place once we've arrived. We mentioned very clearly in our video that there was no cellphone signal, so we were unable to do research online. Not a single one of the locals we spoke to, mentioned the fire so that's definitely not all the village is known for. The blackened tree trunks told their own story. Hopefully you also heard the interesting information and saw the beautiful scenery that we did share. 🚙⛰️
Are here any Zimiri's watching?
There may very well be, but whether they read the comments, is another matter altogether. 🙂
@@DustBugsTravel true
that means that neither will
🤷🏻♂️