My travel report
Impressions from the Cape – Part 4
The Winelands and the Prison on Robben Island
By Ralph Kratzer
Editor´s note: To remember the first three parts of my travelogue – click Part 1, Part 2or Part 3.
However, although the Dutch settlers were indeed hardworking people and experienced farmers and ranchers, about vineyards and the production of wine they had little idea.
The turning point came with the Huguenots, french Protestants who were persecuted in the days of the reign of King Louis XIV for their faith and killed in large numbers. Hundreds of thousands fled from France to other European countries or overseas, a number of them to the Dutch colonies in South Africa. Many Huguenots were excellent winemakers and improved the skills in wine-growing and the quality of wine at the Cape enormously.
And it is very Dutch. Old buildings in the colonial style, thatched cottages, neat front gardens, lush green parks and distinctive European flair.
After a coffee break in one of the cosy bistros of Stellenbosch and the admiration of two excellently preserved vintage motorcycles that were parked in front of it, we went to the
There, a tour through the wine-cellar, the production areas and a subsequent wine tasting was on the programme.
In the early afternoon we went back to Cape Town.
On a quay at The Victoria & Albert Waterfront a motorboat already waited for us, in order to take us to the famous prison island „Robben Eiland“ (Dutch spelling for “Seal Island”).
The World Heritage Site lies just offshore of Cape Town and had in former times served as a penal settlement, a leper colony and as a lunatic asylum at the same time. Many of the prisoners were so-called political prisoners who had to serve long-term or even life
Today, many South Africans consider Robben Island on the one hand as a symbol of oppression by the Apartheid regime, but on the other hand as a symbol of resistance and the liberation of the black people of South Africa. Nelson Mandela is also posthumously still revered as the father of modern South Africa.
This visit was also the end of our stay in Cape Town. The next day we planned to set off to the east, specifically to Oudshoorn, the “world capital of ostriches”. But more about ostriches, the unique Cango Caves, the Route 62, the Garden Route and the beautiful coastal town of Knysna in my next report.
Note: As always in my travelogues you can learn more about an issue mentioned in the article by clicking the bold links.

