Life in Newburgh on Ythan

By Talpa

A day of rest.

Sunday is, of course, a day of rest. I guess that's why Mrs Talpa put me to work chopping down the various trees and bushes, in our garden, that lost the will to live during the recent harsh winter.

As a result there was not much time, and even less energy, for photography. All that I have managed is a portrait of an old friend from South Africa. I purchased this stone head when I was still working for a living and engaged in a study of African wild dogs Lycaon pictus in the Kruger National Park. One weekend we left the park and headed into the hills to the old gold mining settlement of Pilgrim's Rest.

The village dates back to 1873 when a miner, Alex Patterson, discovered alluvial gold on the farm named Ponieskrantz. News of the discovery spread and gold panners and prospectors soon arrived from all over the World. On 22nd September 1873 Pilgrim's Rest was officially proclaimed a gold field and the scatter of tents and rudimentary shacks soon grew into a flourishing little village complete with sturdy brick houses, church, shops, canteens, a newspaper, a tramline and the Royal Hotel.

Eventually the gold deposits were depleted and the locals turned to forestry. The village has been painstakingly preserved as a "living museum" and is now a major South African tourist venue.

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