Front view or is this the back view?
Lighthouse at Cape Agulhas, was built on the 1 March 1849.
In 1962, the sandstone from which the lighthouse was built started crumbling and a new aluminium lighthouse was erected nearby.
Shipwrecks
Over the past few hundred years it has been believed that around 150 ships have sunk around Agulhas.
These conditions are caused by a number of factors. The naturally strong winds of the roaring forties, which blow from west to east, and the cold Antarctic Circumpolar Current flowing in the same direction, come up against the warmer Agulhas Current in the region of the Cape. These conflicting currents of water of different densities and the west winds blowing against the Agulhas Current, can create extremely hazardous wave conditions, these are further exacerbated by the shallow waters of the Agulhas Bank, a broad, shallow part of the continental shelf which juts 250 kilometres (155 mi) south from the Cape, after which it falls steeply away to the abyssal plain.
Point were the two oceans meet
The rocks that form Cape Agulhas belong to the Table Mountain Group, often loosely termed the Table Mountain sandstone. They are closely linked to the geological formations that are exposed in the spectacular cliffs of Table Mountain, Cape Point and the Cape of Good Hope.
Daisy Rowe, daughter of the Light keeper stationed at L’ Agulhas between 1899 and 1901, died on December 28 1899 as a result of diphtheria. She was only seven months old and was buried in the present parking area of the Lighthouse. During the construction of the parking area the grave was lifted. The original stone cross was found broken under the soil and was reattached on top of the gravestone.
History lesson over, let’s get back to some pix’s
This lady once adorned one of the ships on her sea fairing journeys
With the howling wind it did make for some spectacular seas
