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The thundering hooves of the Härdap!

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Summer 2025/2026

Rehoboth, runner-up in the Kwêla Town of the Year competition, is known for its tall camelthorn trees, perfect roosterkoek, beautiful women – and its horses. Piet van Rooyen visited the 2025 Rehoboth Winter Cup, where almost 100 horses competed in a grand total of 19 races.

The thundering hooves of the Härdap!

The people of Rehoboth are not shy to be called Basters. On the contrary, this community is proud of its name, which translates to “bastard” (see Place of the Basters, page 64). I remember seeing a beautiful dark-skinned girl in a café one day, her white T-shirt proclaiming “100% Baster” across her full bosom.

Horses have always gone hand-in-hand with Baster identity. After all, it was on horseback, with fully laden ox-wagons, that the Basters left the Cape Colony and Orange River behind in the 19th century when they moved into the southwestern interior. Carrying the Bible and a dose of Western civilisation with them, they settled in Rehoboth.

The likely founding period of the settlement was somewhere between 1840 and 1870 - more than 150 years ago - although the first riders, their followers and families, had arrived earlier. The name has Biblical roots ("Rechovot" in Hebrew) and is said to mean “comfortably spacious”, or “enough room to expand”. The town is situated where the sun reaches its southernmost turning point, right at the Tropic of Capricorn.

Protected by enfolding hills, and with a good supply of underground water, this is certainly a place worthy of Biblical blessing.

imageTHE FIRST LEADER of the Rehobothers was Captain Hermanus van Wyk, who, together with his council, administered the “congregation” according to “ancestral laws”. The Van Wyk blood still runs strongly in their veins, although other Afrikaans surnames, including Olivier, Junius and Swarts, are common. There are English, German and Scottish connections, too, reflected in names such as Dunn, Bayer, MacNab, Dentlinger and Angermund.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE go! Platteland

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The platteland here... and down under

No matter where you are, the platteland is always a unique ecosystem where the gears turn more slowly and you're filled with greater self-awareness, as Freestater Elizabeth Wasserman discovered in her new home on New Zealand's South Island.

time to read

5 mins

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

Salad and trout from the maize triangle

When you arrive on a farm in the heart of the Free State's maize triangle to find all the implements overgrown with boscage, two thoughts will go through your mind: either the farmer has grown tired of ploughing, or he knows something no one else does. And then you discover tunnels filled with vegetables and dams brimming with trout...

time to read

7 mins

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

Easy as pie

One-pot cooking is just the thing for family get-togethers as the holiday season approaches. We invite you to wow your guests with this curried venison and lamb pie. Different, yes. Delicious, certainly. And a stunning focal point for your festive table.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

A festival that grows on you

Since 2017, succulent enthusiasts have assembled in Calitzdorp in the Klein Karoo for the town's annual succulent festival, which takes place over the third weekend of September. Platteland paid a visit to the eighth edition.

time to read

7 mins

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

Survivors of the veld

Succulents are hardy and drought-resistant, and come in the most fantastical shapes and colours, and varied textures. Plus, they're easy to propagate and sow from seeds. We paid a visit to the annual succulent festival in Calitzdorp to ask the experts for practical advice on keeping these dependable plants healthy and happy.

time to read

10 mins

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

The end of my street

This is Loxton, one of those places where the wild west wind blows. Where avenues of Aleppo pines (Pinus halepensis) and rows of pear trees were planted by a visionary town clerk, a Mr Theunissen. Out of his own pocket.

time to read

1 min

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

When two worlds collide

Antjie Krog's Blood's Inner Rhyme is part-autobiography, part-reportage and part-fiction, the main theme developed through a varied multitude of narratives and conversations between the writer and her mother, two personally devoted yet ideologically opposed beings with a shared love for the Free State writes Johann Krieglar

time to read

5 mins

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

Time to read

In an era where attention economy reigns supreme, people apparently scroll far more on their phone screens than they read. But for anyone seeking depth this summer holiday, a book remains the ultimate companion. Here are eight of Platteland's favourites that were published recently.

time to read

4 mins

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

Vergelegen voted the best

The historic Vergelegen estate in Somerset West has been announced as the Best Wine Farm Experience at this year's Kfm 94.5 Best of the Cape Awards.

time to read

1 min

Summer 2025/2026

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go! Platteland

Still Bay all the way!

Still Bay – often referred to as a blend of a Mediterranean fishing village and a sleepy surfer's paradise – is growing fast and getting busy. Yet it remains the perfect work-from-home, holiday or retirement spot for anyone longing for a peaceful life in the platteland.

time to read

26 mins

Summer 2025/2026

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