* Ben 10 Eco Challenge V6 (Dec)
* Mountain Kingdom Tour (March)
* Novice 4x4 Training
* Swartberg Tour Day 2(b)
* Pass of the week
We will be running the ever popular Ben 10 Eco Challenge (Version 6) from the 10th to 15th December, 2022. The Ben 10 is never the same. There are always challenges and surprises and the mid-summer timing adds the element of thunderstorms, mud and river crossings to up the ante a bit. Join us for 5 days of technical gravel travel as we guide you through the myriad obstacles and complex navigation to earn your badge of completion. This trip is not suitable for novice offroad drivers.
You can get the full itinerary and pricing here: BEN 10 V6 OFFICIAL TOUR
You've been waiting patiently for this long awaited tour. With all Covid restrictions lifted we have put together (as promised) the ultimate Lesotho tour package, working with an expert on the Mountain Kingdom in a joint venture, where you will experience some of the finest highlights on offer which will include Sani Pass, Maletsunyane Falls, Katse Dam, Mohale and many of the highest and steepest passes on offer during this spectacular 6 day tour from 12th to 18th March, 2023. Accommodation and meals will be pre-booked in the best lodges. If you want to put your name down on our priority list, pop us an email to
There are hundreds of thousands of 4x4 owners in South Africa who don't know how to drive offroad. We have created a one day introductory course for novice 4x4 drivers. The course covers all the basics you need to know, including recovery techniques. The idea is to give you the confidence to venture out on your own to enjoy the freedom that 4x4 ownership offers. We still have one place open for our Grabouw 4x4 Novice Day on October 30th. Full itinerary and pricing available on this link: GRABOUW TRAINING DAY.
The perfect winter weather ensured perfect conditions for touring as our route covered a short stretch of smooth tar along the R328 heading south through Schoemanspoort along the banks of the Grobbelaarsrivier. A short-left halfway through the poort took us past the Cango Resort (a nice camping spot run by the Oudtshoorn municipality) and on to the Koos Raubenheimer Dam.
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* Winter weather
* Trips & Tours
* Swartberg Tour - Day 2
* Not all heroes wear capes
* Pass of the week
Several cold fronts swept in from the west during August sending temperatures plummeting with lots of rain and snow. It would appear that August was on average a colder and wetter month than July for most of the southern parts of the country as far as north as the Gariep River.
Despite some decent rain falling in the Port Elizabeth area, dam levels remain a concern. The Kouga Dam near Patensie was at 4,5% this time last year and is currently on 16,4% - and that with spring around the corner and a long hot summer to get through.
The Garden Route Tour is coming up during September. This is our first version of this tour, which is fully booked. We will be reporting in detail once the tour is completed.
During October, we have the Seven Sisters Tour (also fully booked) and our novice 4x4 training day scheduled for October 30th. There are two spots available. Click here for more details and online bookings.
The Kouga-Baviaans Tour in November remains fully booked.
The Ben 10 Eco Challenge V6 Tour will open for bookings next week. It is scheduled for 10th to 15th December.
Our convoy departed the tar in Calitzdorp for the more enjoyable gravel roads. Our routing took us northwards following the eastern flank of the Nelsrivier valley. The road soon develops into a small mountain pass as the dam wall of the Calitzdorp Dam comes into view.
Tucked behind Besemkop in the Nel’s River valley, about 5 km north of Calitzdorp in the Little Karoo lies the Calitzdorp Dam or, more correctly, Nel’s River Dam. Completed in 1918 it is South Africa’s first and oldest concrete gravity dam that was built for irrigation purposes and that is still in working condition – a living pioneering engineering achievement.
* Trips & Tours
* Winter weather
* Swartberg Tour - Day 2
* Pass of the week
Whilst Europe and the UK are experiencing serious heatwaves and Canada is roasting in temperatures above 30C with the associated drought warnings and runaway bush fires, sunny South Africa is shivering in the grips of an ice cold winter. Snow, gale force winds, heavy rain and even a tornado or two at Velddrift on the West Coast has seen locals scrambling to refill gas bottles, stock up on firewood and the sale of heaters and electric blankets reaching new records (despite load shedding).
Snow has fallen from Matroosberg all the way up to Lesotho as winter's frozen fingers continue to reach us. Your editorial team are currently operating from a mobile office in Wilderness, where we logged a minimum temperature two nights ago of 3C. That is most unusual for a coastal venue. Rain and snow in South Africa is something we all happily endure in this arid land of ours.
Garden Route Tour (10 to 16 Sep) - 1 place available.
Seven Sisters Tour (15 to 16 Oct) - Fully booked
Grabouw Novice 4x4 Training (30 Oct) - 3 places available
Kouga-Baviaans Tour ( 15 to 19 Nov) - Provisionally sold out. Please contact us to be placed on our waiting list, if a spot opens up.
Ben 10 Eco Challenge ( 10 to 15 Dec) - 12 places available (launching next week)
* Training, trips and tours
* Ben 10 in December
* Wild Coast V5 Tour - The final day
* Swartberg Classic Tour - Day 2
* Podcast
* Pass of the week
September 10 - 16. Garden Route Tour. We had two cancellations and then resold both those places, but there is still one spot available. Click here for the full itinerary and online bookings.
October 15/16th. Seven Sisters Tour. Fully booked.
October 30th. Grabouw Novice 4x4 Training Day. (5 places available)
November 15th to 19th. Kouga-Baviaans Tour. This popular tour always gets booked out quickly. We will be loading the tour onto the Shop page next week, so please book early to avoid disappointment. We have added some new features into this tour and extended it by a day, so as to allow a fuller exploration of the kloof. We have also included new starting and end venues with a great final night planned at the Karoo Theatrical Hotel in Steytlerville.
December 9th to 14th. Ben 10 Eco Challenge - Our final tour of the year will be held in early December. This tour is suitable for intermediate to more experienced offroad drivers. This tour is not suitable for novices. This will be our 7th running of this ever-popular challenge. If you want to put your name down on a priority list, send us an email to:
The weather had cleared and the mud on the roads dried somewhat, ensuring a much easier day for our final day from Kob Inn to Morgan Bay. This is normally a very easy day from a technical driving perspective, but we had been hearing rumours that the ferry at Kei Mouth might be closed. An early morning call confirmed the rumours. The Kei River had been coming down in heavy flood, causing major silting with strong currents making it too dangerous for the ferries to operate. The crossing of the Kei by ferry is always one of the highlights of the tour and much anticipated by guests.
These things happen and that's why we always have a number of alternative routes in such an event. We left Kob Inn after another hearty breakfast at a more leisurely time of 09.30, heading north west along the eastern flank of the Qora River. The first pass for the day was the oddly named Cats Pass. Despite digging around a lot, we have never been able to find out after who or what this pass was named.
Then there's another oddity about Cats Pass. It is shown in the incorrect place on most maps - including Tracks4Africa. The pass is actually the road that traverses the Qora River Valley. Three rivers form a confluence just below the point where the road crosses the river. The first river is the Ngqageni; the middle one is the Qora and the last one is the Ntyiaba. The two smaller rivers form confluences with the Qora River just a little further downstream. For some unknown reason cattle love to spend time around these three bridges, as can be attested by the large volumes of cow dung on the roadway. There is so much of it, that drivers have no option but to drive through it. Your car will smell like a 'plaas bakkie' when you get home!
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* Out & About
* Wild Coast Tour V5 - Day 9
* Swartberg Classic Tour - Day 1
* Podcast
* Pass of the week
We've had a lot of requests to repeat a novice 4x4 training day. The whole idea of owning a 4x4 is to allow you to get to places normal cars cannot go, yet many people have never even put their vehicles into low range and tested the limits of their vehicles and themselves. This should take place is stages. The building of confidence.
We've put together an attractive package in the beautiful mountains near Grabouw and Elgin, where not only will you complete the training module but it will also be a fun day in pristine surroundings with great mountain and lake views.
We've gone a step further and will have a professional videographer/photographer on site to get all those action packed moments onto a video stick for each driver. Tickets will sell fast on this one, so book your spot right away. We can only take 12 vehicles. There will be two facilitators to ensure everyone gets one on one training. The course comes with a certificate of completion. Everything including instruction notes, folders, radio hire, permit fees, certificates and memory sticks are included in the price.
The program will include tuition on how drive trains work, gearboxes, differentials and diff-locks, low range, traction control, and downhill assist. This will take place classroom style at the start of the tour and will last about an hour. Then comes the practical side of things where you will get to put your new found knowledge into practice. We will limit the obstacles to Grade 1 and 2.
The day will include a lunch break in the mountains. bring your own 'padkos'
Note: No alcohol allowed during training or tours. Click on the link for full itinerary and pricing:
GRABOUW NOVICE 4X4 TRAINING DAY - 30th October, 2022.
Our inaugural Garden Route Classic Tour is almost fully booked. One ticket is still looking for ownership! Come and enjoy the very best of Thomas Bain's passes as we work our way from west to east over a number of mountain ranges and some places you've unlikely seen before. The traverse of the old oxwagon route (Voortrekker Pass) will set the pulses racing, but the quality of the venues we will be staying out will soothe the most frazzled soul.
Amongst the bigger passes we will be driving include Cloetes Pass, Robinson Pass, Outeniqua Pass, Kaaimans Pass, Montagu Pass, Voortrekker Pass, 7 Passes Road, Millwood, Kom se Pad, Prince Alfred's Pass, Paardekop Pass, Grootrivier Pass and the Bloukrans Pass.
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* 4x4 Novice Driver Training (30th October)
* Garden Route Tour
* Wild Coast V5 Tour (Day 8)
* Swartberg Classic Tour (Day 0)
* Pass of the week
There's a constant need for driver training. Many people buy 4x4's but have never been off-road with them. Owning a 4x4 allows one to get to places others cannot. Once you have the confidence to venture off on your own, there's a whole new world of adventure travel waiting for you. Once or twice a year we offer a novice training course, which is always popular. This year's training day will take place at the Grabouw 4x4 facility in the Western Cape. The course will be facilitated by Trygve Roberts in person, with Philip Wantling assisting. The tour price includes take-home training material and professional photos/videos of you and your vehicle loaded onto a memory stick as a memoir for the day. You will also receive a Certificate of Completion. This is an ideal training session for rank novices as well as intermediate drivers to brush up on your skills. Bookings will open soon.
We have 1 place open on our inaugural Garden Route Tour (10th - 16th September). Click here for full itinerary and pricing: GARDEN ROUTE CLASSIC
Our route for the day looked so easy on the map, but the heavy two day rain scenario had left the Wild Coast roads very wet and muddy. This is exactly why we insist on 4WD vehicles on these tours. We were going to need every ounce of traction available.
The highlight of the day was undoubtedly the Mbashe River Pass. To get to the eastern start of the pass, involved a long pull inland to an area known as Ntonyane. From 'The Haven' at the coast we climbed 417m in altitude to reach the eastern rim of the Mbashe Valley. Everything about the river and its valley and gorges is on an impressive scale. The pass itself is 14 km in length and loses/gains 383m in altitude. It offers lofty views of deeply incised and heavily wooded valleys, several Wild Coast villages and the crossing of the powerful Mbashe River via the historical Fyfe-King Bridge.
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* Overview
* Garden Route Classic
* Wild Coast - Day 5 & 6
* Swartberg Tour report back
* Pass of the week
Another week of ups and downs with loadshedding, the usual SARS scams at this time of year and the Boks pulling off a decent win against Wales in Cape Town. The MPSA squad have unpacked, pressure washed all the mud off the Cruiser and crash landed into the world of administration as we depart the heady euphoria of an amazing Swartberg Tour. We'll cover that a bit later in this newsletter.
All current tours are fully booked except for one place left on the Garden Route Tour. Here is the itinerary:
Saturday 10th September: The group meets up at the Rooiberg Lodge just outside Vanwyksdorp between 1400 and 1700 where we fit your two way radio and magnetic aerial, deflate tyres for gravel travel and have our meet & greet session where the finer details of the tour will be explained, indemnity forms signed, distribution of personal folders with notes, convoy driving order sheets, name tags and maps as well as a Q&A session. We enjoy a hearty dinner and a good night’s rest in preparation for the next day.
Sunday 11th September: 08h30 After breakfast we run a radio check to ensure everyone has comms and then we take to the road. Our route heads south towards the Langeberge along the R327, then east to cross the Gouritz River via the single lane low level bridge at the Jan Muller Pass and remain on gravel via Cloete’s Pass and descends to Herbertsdale. We take some fabulously scenic back roads via Haelkraal where we intersect with the tarred R328 and stop at the lovely 8 Bells Inn for lunch.
Our route ascends the Robinson Pass where after which we take a shortcut through some Klein Karoo farms to bypass Oudtshoorn. We descend the stunning Outeniqua Pass and finish the day at our overnight venue in Wilderness.
The passes are marked (G) for gravel and (T) for tar:
Jan Muller Pass (G); Cloetes Pass (G); Hagelkraal Pass (G); Robinson Pass (T) – Ascending; Brakpoort (T); Beweraaskloof Pass (T); Outeniqua Pass (T) – Descending; Kaaimans River Pass (T)
Overnight at Wilderness Karos Hotel in Wilderness. (Dinner, bed and breakfast)
Monday 12th September: Depart 0900 after breakfast.
Our routing will be: White’s Road (G) (ascending); ** Map of Africa ** viewpoint; Silver River Pass (T) (7 Passes Road); Kaaimansgat Pass (T) (7 Passes Road); Montagu Pass (G) Oldest unaltered pass in SA; ** Louvain Farm**; Old Voortrekker Pass (G) (Quite a technical drive); ** Bergplaas Forestry Station **; Hoekwil Pass (T)
Overnight at Wilderness Karos Hotel. (Dinner, bed and breakfast)
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* The drama continues
* Trips & Tours
* Wild Coast - the final leg
* Pass of the week
I can't think of any two years in my lifetime more dramatic than the last two.
Droughts, Day Zero Water, graft & corruption, a failing economy, Covid, Ukraine, rocketing fuel prices and now Stage 6 load shedding. One needs broad shoulders to deal with all this stuff. Our backup generator decided to fail right as Stage 6 started last week leaving us literally and figuratively in the dark. You can't find the little burglar alarm and gate batteries anywhere as the public begin to realise how vulnerable their systems are. At least they're not rushing about to buy bakkie loads of toilet paper! The name of the game is remain positive and put some of that energy out there - even if its not in the form of electricity.
MPSA is hugely dependent on having fast internet 24 hours a day, so we will have to invest in an upgraded inverter system to keep the lights on when Eskom cannot.
Trips & Tours are selling extremely well.
SWARTBERG CLASSIC (July) - Fully booked and as you read this newsletter we will be enjoying our final day of the tour. Expect an action packed report.
GARDEN ROUTE CLASSIC (Sep) - Two spots available.Come and enjoy this inaugural tour and lets make some history.
SEVEN SISTERS TOUR (Oct) - Fully booked.
WILD COAST TOUR (May 2023) - Fully booked
Once our new group of guests arrived in Coffee Bay, it was back to basics; fitting radios and running through the driver's briefing details. The weather remained miraculously fine, but the big rain forecast that had been threatening for a week was creeping onto the forecast map.
On day one, we took our group to Mapuzi Caves - the first time we have ever gone to this remote and difficult to reach spot. We parked our vehicles on a grassy ridge and negotiated a "fee" for parking there with the landowner across the road - all of this done via our local guide Mzo, acting as interpreter. Not many locals can speak English, so it's a sound idea to use a local guide to ensure there are no misunderstandings (especially when it comes to money). This fellow started his negotiations off at R100 per vehicle to park for an hour, immediately putting Sandton City to shame. We ended up at R10 per vehicle which seems to be about the average price most people are happy with.
The more agile guests followed Mzo down to the caves via a footpath that is perilously close to vertical. The only way to ensure you won't fall, is to go down on your backside. One guest turned around when the gradient became too much, but the rest of the guests all made it down to the rocky beach where the caves are located. The caves are huge and according to the locals, this is where the ANC stored arms and ammunition during the armed struggle. They rigged a gantry with a pulley system to lower their cargo down the mountainside. The arms stash was never discovered by the South African government at the time.
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* Trips & Tours
* Wild Coast V4 Tour Day 6 & 7
* Cartography & myths
* Hole in Wall
* Pass of the week
July: The Swartberg Classic Tour (fully booked) starts this Sunday. The weather is looking great!
September: Garden Route Classic (5 days) - 2 tickets still available
October: Seven Sisters Tour (2 days) - Fully booked.
October: 4x4 Novice training day (1 day) - Details to be announced soon. (Western Cape)
November: Kouga Baviaans (4 days) - Details to be announced soon.
May 2023: Wild Coast V6 Tour (11 days) - Fully booked.
Another perfect weather day saw the group departing Cremorne Estates at Port St Johns, heading up the R61 towards Libode over a series of tarred passes, which included Isinuka Poort, Butyabuse Pass, Mngazi River Pass and impressive Tutor Ndamase Pass. Our goal was to drive the Mlengana Pass which allows a close up view of Execution Rock.
Our cartographers in the early 1900's had mistakenly noted the Mlengana Mountain as Execution Rock. This stems from Xhosa legend when King Faku is said to have thrown his enemies off the rock to certain death and their blood flowed red down the Mngazi River. Once you see this little piece of real estate for yourself, you'll quickly realise that scaling the vertical cliffs of the mountain with or without prisoners would have been close to impossible. Also it is a fair distance away from the river. The real execution rock is a much smaller cliff further down the valley, much closer to the river. Moral of the story is: Don't believe everything you see on the maps. Still, it's a nice myth that seems set to remain forever. Why spoil a good story with facts?
Our photos and videos done, we continued down the lovely old pass and through the village of Masameni. Instead of returning to Port St Johns via the R61, we went exploring and took this group on a proper recce trip into the mountains. The drive was brilliant, through lofty hills, with attractive villages as well as the Majola Tea Estates, which is not quite as big as Magwa, but a major tea grower in the area.
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* Bain's Kloof Pass
* Tours & Trips
* Escom - a lost cause
* Wild Coast V4 Tour - Day 5
* Podcast
* Pass of the Week
* Plato
Last week we reported that the pass had reopened to normal traffic. Just one day after writing that newsletter a pantechnicon attempted driving over the newly opened pass and got itself horribly stuck, causing some damage to the roadway and retaining walls. We posted the photo (above) on our social media platforms and a storm of comments followed. It would appear that rookie truck drivers relying on GPS instructions are often routed from the N1 via Bain's Kloof Pass. Once they have made the commitment and entered under the gantry with the chains just after the Breede River crossing in the north, it's already too late, as there is nowhere to turn a large truck around, so they carry on getting themselves ever deeper into trouble.
The question must be raised whether Bain's Kloof Pass should become a toll road, reserved strictly for vehicles under 5 tons, motorcycles and cyclists. There are two safe alternative routes (N1 and R46) for heavy trucks and fast traffic. The new road surface allows for faster speeds. Motocycles might well be heading that way to race their machines around the many curves and corners. A toll road would solve the problem of trucks heading up the pass, plus funds generated could pay for the installation of CCTV camera systems to control grafitti vandals and speed offenders. We would recommend a maximum speed of 40 kph on the pass. The pass is a national monument and although no-one likes a toll road, it seems like a very sound solution.
July - Swartberg Tour - Fully booked
September - Garden Route Classic (5 days) - 3 places left
October - Seven Sisters Tour (2 days) - Bookings have just opened - 8 places left
Load shedding has done an enormous amount of harm to our country. It affects the entire population negatively. Reading up on the state of the power utility it seems that Eskom is not trying to raise more capital for increased generating capacity. This is due to the fact that private companies are standing by ready to breach the gap with solar and wind power (many wind farms have been built but are not yet connected to the grid). Eskom will shrink in size in the months and years ahead and become an ever decreasing role player in the power game (pun intended). The sooner the better!
The day of the waterfalls.
It was time to say farewell to our hosts at Mbotyi River Lodge and head south. We did our 6th traverse of the Mbotyi Pass and drove the short jeep track to the Fraser Falls view point. The feature of this waterfall is that one is not expecting such a dramatic scene after driving through some flat and innocuous meadows. At first glance it looks like the water is pouring out of a hole or tunnel in the mountain, but this is merely an optical illusion.
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