April hikes to St James Mule Track, Gifkommetjie, Blackhill and Noordhoek Fire Lookout

  

by Diana Studer

- gardening for biodiversity

 in Cape Town, South Africa

 

Hiking among wildflowers

in the mountains

around Cape Town

 

We begin on the Mule Track above St James and Kalk Bay. Crassula saxifraga is a delicate little one sheltering in some shade. Cassine peragua barbara our coastal subspecies with berries. Roella ciliata in and out

 

On the Mule Track above St James in April
On the Mule Track above St James in April

Looking from Trappieskop to Simon's Town across the sea, with our house in the valley behind that green ridge.

 

From St James to Simon's Town
From St James to Simon's Town

Gifkommetjie at Cape Point. First stop at Witsenia maura. Grows with wet feet. Strange plant is a woody iris. Common name bokmakieriestert as it shares its unusual colours with the bird's tail. The yellow is deep pile velvet; the dark below the green band is shiny and iridescent in the sun. 4 by 2 yellow points Gnidia imbricata (flowers at the tips). One long petal says Selago luxurians. Typical daisy? But this one has NO ray florets. Senecio triqueter.

 

Witsenia near Gifkommetjie in April
Witsenia near Gifkommetjie in April 

My group walked on the ridge, the faster ones looped around and returned via the beach.

 

Gifkommetjie ridge down to the beach
Gifkommetjie ridge down to the beach

Furry white stars with red tipped green hearts for Phylica ericoides. A nother pink erica. Erica glabella has red bracts. The soft Muraltia satureioides (more common M. heisteria has teeth!) Delicate white flower on a wire is Prismatocarpus sessilis.

 

Pink and white on Gifkommetjie in April
Pink and white on Gifkommetjie in April

On that ridge, each rock seemed to have a different lichen community. I can only name the distinctive last one - hair lichen with flat blades and cups - Teloschistes.

 

Lichen on Gifkommetjie rocks
Lichen on Gifkommetjie rocks

Blackhill (AKA as Jonkersdam - which doesn't exist). All 4 April hikes are within Table Mountain National Park. Easy walking when on the jeep tracks, which are either remnants of former farms, or used for firefighting access.

 

Blackhill jeep track looking to Chapman's Peak
Blackhill jeep track looking towards Chapman's Peak

Erica mammosa is usually red or blonde, but this one has pink tips. Osteospermum moniliferum species name means wearing a necklace, as seen here (a daisy with berries - who expects that?) Pink stars for Stoebe fusca (which has leaves flattened against the stem). Good news! Biocontrol on invasive Australian wattles. Port Jackson gall rust.

 

Blackhill flowers in April
Blackhill flowers in April

To the Noordhoek Fire Lookout in Silvermine. Neatly folded bark spider. The world drops away over that edge down to a hidden waterfall, which we could hear. Shiny Granny Smith apple green, typical protea flower colour, not. Protea coronata. An exuberant Oxalis polyphylla.

 

April flowers at Noordhoek Fire Lookout
April flowers at Noordhoek Fire Lookout

Since I reported that invasive pine in December 2020. I was delighted to see it felled! View across to Kommetjie, with Chapman's Peak straight ahead.

 

Felled pine at Noordhoek Fire Lookout
Felled pine at Noordhoek Fire Lookout

Our target today Erica physodes. Flowers are sticky to deter nectar thieves from boring a hole thru the flower tube and skipping pollination duty. Backlit to show the fur Erica cerinthoides is usually blooming then I forget to blog it. Again 8 yellow points with leafy tips Struthiola ciliata. 4 broad yellow points Gnidia tomentosa (flowers at tips).

 

Erica physodes at Noordhoek in April
Erica physodes at Noordhoek in April

My hikes are listed on my page.

 

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Comments

  1. Stunning scenery. What an adventure you live in!

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  2. The Witsenia is an attention-grabber. I admire your commitment to these regular hikes, many of which appear quite rigorous!

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    Replies
    1. We walk for a morning. Home for a late lunch. At a gentle pace, allowing for What Is It discussion, and for the photo queue.

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  3. Amazing views--over the mountains, at the beach, and close up on the wildflowers! You are so fortunate to live in such a beautiful place!

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  4. Lovely to see more of the Cape on your hikes and pleased that you could report an invasive pine and actually get it cut out.

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  5. Testing - ok I can comment with my iPad but as usual with iPad I have to be Anon. Enjoyed your hikes, views and wonderful wildflowers.
    Mandy

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  6. What a beautiful way to spend a morning, with companionship amidst nature's most spectacular flora show. Thanks for sharing it.

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