At Kersefontein the cottages are set up for self catering but when I was there, one of the highlights was dinner of wild boar served by Julian in the main house.The boar was, at that time, shot on the farm by Julian himself to protect his crops from too much damage. The normal food is good wholesome farm fare, the kind of thing a good trencherman would expect in the days of Queen Victoria. You might want to enjoy an aperitif or an after dinner brandy in the Slip Bar or just have a stroll along the banks of the Berg river, or, then again, you may be lucky enough to get Julian to entertain on the grand piano.
www.sullatoberdalton.com
Wednesday, 26 July 2017
Wild Boar
Labels:
Berg River,
grand piano,
Kersefontein,
Wild boar
Wednesday, 19 July 2017
A storehouse of history
Kersefontein is a national monument but is kept going like any farm. On the day I visited, I was lucky the mist hadn't lifted or Julian, the owner having served breakfast to his paying guests, would have been off on the combine. Having nothing better to do, he showed my wife and me round the house. First the passage with the scull of what I assumed was some kind of large bush pig or other but turned out to be that of the last hippo shot in the Berg river. He showed us into the lounge with its grand piano and furniture from 1690 and the 18th century, all carefully looked after as family heirlooms. Among the many portraits is one of Esau Coetzee who served four generations of the Melcks and taught Julian to ride. The house is a veritable storehouse of history and we were lucky to see round it before the wheat dried enough for the combine.
www.sullatoberdalton.com
www.sullatoberdalton.com
Labels:
Acccomodation,
Berg River,
Cape Colony,
Cape Town,
Hippo,
Kersefontein,
Melck
Sunday, 16 July 2017
Kersefontein
Having finished with Rickety Bridge, I was scratching around in my files when I found a note on Kersefontein farm on the Berg river. I've checked and it is still owned by the Melcks and is still taking visitors. The old house was originally built in 1740 but was bought by Martin Melck in 1770. Martin had emigrated to the Cape in 1740 to work for the Dutch East India Company when jobs were scarce in his native Prussia. He worked on the silver mine scam at Stellenbosch for a while (I'll get to that another day) but did well and when he won a contract to supply meat to the Company, he bought Kersefontein. While the farm is now a National Monument, the present owner, Martin works it as a mixture of farm and cowboy ranch.
www.kersefontein.co.za
www.kersefontein.co.za
Labels:
Accommodation in the Cape,
Berg River,
Cape Town,
Cowboys,
Kersefontein,
Rickety Bridge,
Silver Mine
Saturday, 8 July 2017
Duncan Spence introduced light lunches served inside or on the terrace but the addition
of the restaurant meant it was possible to eat outside on a terrace, which is
enclosed and cosy in the winter months. When Duncan Spence took over this was
the wine tasting area and was initially converted into offices before the final remodelling into an eatery.
The
restaurant was serviced from a bar in the modern cellar, its temperature
control installation dating from Alan Tonkin.
Duncan
Spence added to the range of wines being produced with a blended red and a
blended white, both bearing the name Duncan’s Creek.
Continuing
the tradition of prize-winning wines Duncan Spence has won several awards. The
winery has competed overseas, winning several international awards and among its
accolades is the Decanter UK.
Never mind the prizes, for me the Rickety Bridge Sauvignon Blanc ranks among the best in the world especially when drunk on the terrace looking at the mountans.
Never mind the prizes, for me the Rickety Bridge Sauvignon Blanc ranks among the best in the world especially when drunk on the terrace looking at the mountans.
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