Some places enter your life loudly. They announce themselves through spectacle, through scale, through the force of first impression. Rosendal did not arrive like that for me. It came quietly and then refused to leave.
Years ago, I stopped here for lunch on my way to Lesotho. It should have been nothing more than a pause in transit, one of those brief interruptions that disappear into the blur of a longer journey. Instead, the town lingered. The single tarred street. The sandstone buildings. The way conversation seemed to unfold without hurry. I drove on, but some part of Rosendal travelled with me.
So when I return for a weekend and let myself into The Black Swan, it feels less like checking into a cottage than answering something that has been waiting for me.

The house sits in the heart of town, light-filled and generous, with an upstairs mezzanine and balcony looking towards the NG Kerk and, beyond it, Motaung Mountain, the rocky rise that steadies the town’s horizon. I place my bag down and stand for a moment without moving. Already, something in me is beginning to loosen.
Johannesburg has taught me how easily attention can be broken apart. Even in moments of rest, some part of me remains half turned towards the next vibration, the next lit screen, the next digital tug from one device or another.
Here, that reflex starts to weaken. The hotter stretch of the year has passed. The air carries a new edge, cooler, cleaner. Four hours after leaving the city, with the Maluti mountains holding the horizon, I can feel my inner tempo beginning to shift.
A cottage at the centre of things
The Black Swan shapes the rhythm of the weekend almost immediately. Because it is so centrally placed, I can leave the car where it is and walk everywhere – and Rosendal is a town best explored on foot. I drift to ark. contemporary, where the gallery’s white walls hold contemporary work by local artists. Later, I walk all around the village, past old houses and stone walls burnished by years of weather and light.
Rosendal does not reveal itself in a single sweep. It accumulates. A patch of late light on a wall. A figure crossing the street with no sign of haste. A greeting that feels open rather than polite. Earlier that afternoon, during one of those slow wanderings, I pass Liela Magnus on her roof. Curious, I stop to greet her. We speak briefly before carrying on. I will realise that this interaction contains much of what Rosendal is – a place where conversation is not an interruption to life, but one of its basic forms.

Late that afternoon, Henri Kruger picks me up and we head out towards Holkrans Cave for sunset. After the drive over several farm tracks, there is a short walk to reach the sandstone cave, enough to feel the ground underfoot before the land opens fully before us. Then, suddenly, it does. Grassland, stone and valley spread out beneath the cave as the light begins to soften.
Sundown above the valley
What strikes me first is not grandeur, though the view has that. It is the stillness. When the sun slips behind the ridge, the silence gathers around us with such completeness that it changes the quality of thought itself. Kruger and I say very little. I am startled by how quickly the place strips away the noise I arrived carrying.

Back at The Black Swan, I light a fire in the lounge before doing anything else. The room gathers warmth around it quickly. I pour a drink and sit in the glow for a few minutes, feeling the early evening settling more deeply inside me. Only then do I shower and dress for a night on the town.
At the Service Station Wine Bar, people sink into couches and old armchairs, glasses in hand, the room carrying the warmth that comes when a place belongs fully to its community. When I see Magnus again, I ask how the waterproofing project on her roof is going, picking up the thread of our earlier exchange.
Around us, talk moves easily between farming, art and village life. This, to me, is one of Rosendal’s true luxuries. Not exclusivity, not polish, but access to the human texture of a place.
What Rosendal restored
Saturday morning arrives after a sleep that only country air seems able to draw from me, deep and uninterrupted, as though the body has finally remembered what rest is for. When I wake, the light is gentle. Smoke lifts from chimneys. The village seems to be easing itself into morning, and I with it.
At Rosendal Handelshuis, the smell of waffles reaches the pavement before I do. Inside, the room hums with weekend conversation. Magnus greets me with warmth and wit, and I order Eggs Benedict on a waffle, a dish that sounds slightly improbable until it arrives and makes perfect sense. Homemade ginger beer follows.

The afternoon brings social tennis at the local club. Here too, the point is not excellence but gathering. Farmers, artists, weekenders, travellers. Some play, some watch, some remain for the talk that follows.
By evening I am back at The Black Swan, and dinner arrives from Kasi Pizza in Mautse. Eating it in the warmth of the cottage is the right close to the day.
On Sunday morning, before the drive back, I take my camera and head out into the village that has, over the course of a single weekend, worked its way subtly but decisively into my heart. I photograph sandstone walls, still streets, and roofs beneath the mountain, trying in some small way to hold on to what Rosendal has made me feel.
Eventually, I have to leave. But by then the town has already altered something in me.
Driving away, I realise Rosendal has offered me something more useful than escape. Over three days, through mountain air, conversation, art, stillness, food and firelight, the town has reminded me that a life can be moulded not only by momentum and acceleration, but by attention, friendship, appetite and time allowed to move at its own pace.
That is the quiet indulgence of Rosendal. Not that it takes you out of the world, but that it returns you to it differently.
For all things Rosendal, go here.
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Top image: Ryan Enslin
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