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Travel Guide

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Blyde River means 'River of Joy', so named after Henrik Potgieter and his party returned safely from Delagoa Bay in 1844. Whilst under the mistaken impression that Potgieter and his party had been killed, trekkers who had stayed behind named the river where they had camped Treur River ('River of Sorrow'). When Potgieter returned, they named the Blyde 'River of Joy'.



The Three Rondawels are three peaks isolated through geological weathering from the surrounding land.

As a result they are natural islands, where there is interesting biological speciation taking place.

A number of species have not yet been formally named.




The Blyde River Canyon and Escarpment region, including Swadini and Manoutsa, are being considered for global Important Birding Area (IBA) status by Bird Life International

This recognises the endemic species in need of protection here, including the Bald Ibis, Blue Swallow, Cape Vulture and Blue Crane.





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Blyde Canyon 'Motlatse'

The Blyde River Canyon (recently renamed the Motlatse) is the third deepest canyon in the world (after the Grand Canyon in the western U.S. and Namibia's Fish Eagle Canyon). It ranks as one of the most spectacular sights in Africa. This great Escarpment is the kind of place where brochures and guide books run out of original adjectives to describe the fresh mountain scenery and magnificent panoramic views over cliffs rising 600m-800m from the river bed. The entire canyon extends over twenty kilometres in length. The best perspective is, without doubt, by microlight.


Blyde Canyon cuts through the Drakensberg Mountain Range, one of the seven major mountain systems in Africa. The botanical wonders of these high altitude afromontane forests can be witnessed while walking some unforgettable trails laid out under the forest canopy.

Beneath the Canyon the Blyde River also yields the unique and critically threatened Lowveld Riparian Forest, which now covers only 100 hectares in extent.


The Blyde River is dammed at the mouth of the Canyon to create the Blyde Dam at Swadini. Enter the Canyon from the Lowveld (the bottom, signposted to Swadini), head to Blydesrivierpoort, and you can take boat trips across the Dam to the spectacular Tufa waterfalls, arrange canoeing, rock-climbing or abseiling activities, or simply hike into the great outdoors.

There is an information centre at the end of the road with excellent views over the dam; prior to this there are viewpoints and (approaching from Aventura Swadini), the waterfall trail up to the Kadishi Tufa is signposted around halfway along on the right, followed by a path down to the dam wall on the left.


Blydesrivierpoort is a dead-end, and you will need to return to the Lowveld in order to head up for a view down from the top. Climb up onto the Escarpment through the Strydom Tunnel (signposts direct you towards Ohrigstad).

After the tunnel, at the Abel Erasmus Pass, there is the opportunity to see one of the rarest birds in the world. The presence of the Taita Falcon in South Africa was discovered only in the 1990s. There is currently a nesting pair in the mountains opposite the curio sellers at the Strydom Tunnel (look for the sign painted onto a rock simply advertising the 'Place of Bird').

Map of the Panorama Route
Courtesy of Jacana Media

There are then some spectacular sights in quick succession as you follow the road along the rim of the Canyon (turn left onto the Panorama Road (R532/ R534) at the top).

The Three Rondavels are huge rock spirals rising out of the far wall of the canyon.


Where the Blyde and the Treur Rivers meet, water erosion has formed one of the most remarkable geological phenomena in the country, known as ‘Bourke’s Luck Potholes’.


Over thousands of years, surreal cylindrical rock sculptures created by whirling water, have formed a series of dark pools which contrast spectacularly with the streaked white and yellow lichen-covered rocks.

Following the road and the Treur River south, there are further spectacular viewpoints: Wonder View, God’s Window and the Pinnacle.


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