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The view from this spot … is the most picturesque of any I had seen in
the vicinity of Cape Town.
William Burchell — Travels in the Interior of South Africa, 1822
Kirstenbosch is a name that resonates around the world as the home of a
uniquely rich flora in a setting of unsurpassed beauty. Established
soon after the unification of South Africa in 1910, the Garden
continues to draw both tourists and locals to its enchanting spaces and
botanical riches.
This book tells of how the Garden came to be, its setbacks and
triumphs, its benefactors and heroes. It outlines the Garden’s
scientific eminence as the repository of knowledge on our prized flora
and presents its many attractions.
In this new edition, the story is brought up to date with details of
new developments and attractions, making it a quality memento for
visitors and the thousands of locals who flock there annually.
This book describes in fascinating detail the wildlife, wild places
and wild personalities that occupied Angola’s conservation
landscape through four decades of war and a decade of peace.
Intrigues, assassinations, corruption, greed and incompetence ?
during the colonial era, through the horrific war and most
especially throughout the crony-capitalist kleptocracy of President
Jose Eduardo dos Santos ? have resulted in the extinction of most
of its formerly abundant wildlife populations and the decay and
erosion of a once endless Eden. This is the first book to integrate
the political, economic and environmental threads that account for
the post-colonial tragedy of one of Africa’s most biologically
diverse countries. A corrupt government has robbed the country of
its vast oil and diamond wealth, of its environmental health, of
its morality and of its soul. It was not always so. The author was
appointed ecologist to Angola’s National Parks in 1971. But the
vast open spaces, peaceful stillness and tropical luxuriance that
he found during the four years they spent exploring and developing
the country’s wildlife reserves was not to last. The powder keg of
anger against centuries of colonial exploitation ? of slavery, of
forced labour and of an abusive system of penal settlement ? could
not be contained. Bloody nationalist uprisings led to the
abandonment of Angola by Portugal and the transition from random
guerrilla skirmishes with a colonial army into a brutal civil war
that cost over one million lives. Despite its scarred history, the
author believes the country can still rebuild its national parks
and save much of its wildlife and wilderness. But this can only
happen if the current ageing autocracy makes space for a new
generation of Angolan conservationists.
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