For all my boasting about the abundance of natural life at Cape Point, there’s one other thing you’ll see of lot of there. And that’s death.
It’s everywhere – bones, skulls, old carcasses, broken tortoises and discarded seashells – but don’t be surprised: Cape Point, or to be more precise the Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve, may only cover a modest 75 square kilometres but it is home to just about every aspect of the natural world you can think of.
There are over a thousand different plants in the reserve plus herds of big mammals and a bird list of nearly 300 recorded species. Whales and dolphins regularly visit the Cape Point coast, famous for its seal and shark populations, and if you are into marine limpets then the reserve over-indulges you with no fewer than 17 individual species. Twenty two different kinds of snakes too. It would be pretty weird if one didn’t see dead stuff at Cape Point.
There was a time when all this death played a vital role in our life. And there’s nowhere better to demonstrate this than on the reserve’s storm-lashed Atlantic coast. Let’s take a walk between two places that, when translated from Afrikaans, sound like they should be on a treasure map – Poison Cove and Flat Tree – and see for ourselves.
I’ve read differing accounts of just how long Homo sapiens has been living in the Cape but pick a date between 150 000 and 1.5 million years ago and you’ll be as close as any academic could guess. Either way it’s truly a long period of time and nowhere in the world is it longer (the British Isles have only been inhabited for the last 12 000 years by way of comparison). But if there’s one thing that’s common to all humans – as you yourself will grudgingly admit – it is that they tend to take the path of least resistance. (Don’t take it personally: it’s a law of nature – even light does it.)
And so it was in the Cape. Homo sapiens taking the path of least resistance in the eternal quest for food: why waste energy or risk life and limb hunting big, dangerous animals when you can go for a leisurely stroll and find them lying around waiting for you?
This eland carcass was next to the path and just a few metres from the refrigerated air of a cold Atlantic beach. There were flies of course and the eyeballs had gone but it smelt no worse than a gamey pheasant and putrefaction had not yet set in. Try not to gag but it would have been a lucky find just a few hundred years ago, providing meat for your family over many weeks if not months. (One problem back then was that you’d also have to fight off fearsome Cape lions and scavenging hyenas for ownership rights.)
And if a free eland – weighing in at 800 kilos (1700 pounds) – was cause for celebration, imagine the joy at finding a beached whale. The Cape coast is still visited by southern right whales between July and October and humpback whales at the end of the year; now we count them in their hundreds but in the past there were tens of thousands of them and they must have washed up on the beaches all the time.
The Cape’s free protein came in all shapes and sizes and it wasn’t all lying around dead: low tide reveals countless limpets and mussels while seabirds – penguins, gannets, cormorants – once nested here in their millions. And if there’s another thing you need to be prepared for in the Cape of Good Hope Reserve, it’s that anything can turn up at any time. It may not be whale season but look what’s lying helpless on the beach ready for a clubbing: 3000 kilos of elephant seal.
And given the Cape of Good Hope’s notorious reputation as a devourer of ships, it would be equally strange not to find evidence of human boneyards. And they are here. Hundreds of ships have fallen victim to the Cape’s stormy weather and unforgiving coastline; nearly all of them have vanished but a few persist, sticking out of the sand like great rusty-iron fossils. Most ships were lost in the 1800s when marine traffic to the Cape was at its peak but empty boats – small ones – turn up on the Cape’s beaches from time to time – silent witnesses to events you’d rather not think about.
If all this talk of death has made you feel a little down, then it’s easy to cheer oneself up in the Cape of Good Hope Reserve: the geology is captivating (no, really!) and the views are ridiculously beautiful. As well as carcasses and bones I also saw grazing bontebok antelope, happily foraging baboons and ostriches, sun-bathing lizards and shiny-feathered sunbirds. After all, there’s no death without life first.
I wonder what the eland die of? Can’t be lack of food now, when everything is lush and green.
Yes, I’ve been thinking about that: this one looked in good condition – if you know what I mean – with no obvious wounds. And it didn’t look so old; an adult, but not a great big ox like they get. Snakebite? A dog is dead after a Cape cobra bite in a few hours.
Decomposition animal material is in fa t essential for any healthy ecosystem specifically plant life.
I do not see a dead eland not consumed by humans as a bad thing
Maybe just old age?
This is fascinating. My husband and I wanted to get a Wild Card so we could visit all the time, but we’re unable to do so because he has refugee papers. The problem is, he has been trying to get SA residency for the past 15 years or more! An ongoing nightmare that restricts his life in so many ways – not least of all by keeping us away from this beautiful, pristine place!
I’ve been perhaps 3 times to Cape Point. So many locals are deprived of visiting Cape Point because the entry free is prohibitive. Locals with SA id’s should be allowed in at a much reduced rate. Pensioners free. Then the beauty of Cape Point may be enjoyed by all.
Love the way you make everything come to life. Your descriptions make me want to go every day, even though I am already a frequent visitor!
Came across two buck carcasses today at the edge of Sirkelsvlei at Cape Point. Puzzling how they died.
Yes, I have seen a few dead buck there too: an eland & 2 or 3 bontebok; I was also wondering what got them; disease and/or old age perhaps, but I also have a feeling that the ecology of the reserve is a bit on the brink. And so I’m wondering if malnutrition/starvation is part of it. The herds may have reached peak size for the carrying capacity of the park & with no big predators to thin out the ranks, I guess we’re seeing the result. Thanks for the comment – interesting.
Hi how u l am looking for the history of the San people in the cape point area,work on a farm opposite cape point, gave a deed dated back too1822 .also how did the 1822 farmers get there ,I no ox wagon but what route
Thanks
Hi Steve – I don’t know much about the San on the peninsula other than they were predominantly foragers (strandloopers) as there can’t have been the densities of wildlife as there were out in the Overberg/Swartland. I read that the pastoral Khoi regarded the San strandloopers as the lowest class in their society. There’s a nice bit about them in Noel Mostert’s Frontiers. But you may need to get hold of one of the modern groups that represent the pre-colonial Khoisan. There are several of them but I don’t know how you contact them – have a look online. As for the 1822 route, we can probably deduce via the False Bay coast. Chapman’s Peak Drive was only opened 100 years later and the Ou Kaapse Weg is a total misnomer: it was built in the 1960s!