seen from China
seen from China

seen from France
seen from China

seen from Indonesia

seen from United States

seen from Bulgaria

seen from Indonesia
seen from China
seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from Japan
seen from T1
seen from China
seen from France
seen from China

seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from T1

seen from Sweden
Sibebe is always special. Do you see me sitting in the cave ? . . Having a small break and snack whilst enjoying the view into Pine Valley. . . 📸 @mypinkbumper . . #sibebe #sibeberock #eswatini #eswatinitourism #wandernmachtglücklich #swaziland #swasiland #vakashaeswatini ##rock #boulder #formation #bouldercolorado #formationworldtour #outcrop #bedrocksandals #hike #landscape #formations #worldofwanderlust #safarihike #safarihikes #outdoor (hier: Sibebe Rock, Pine Valley - Swaziland) https://www.instagram.com/p/CD9TuWoH2R6/?igshid=zwblo91t3aao
Did you hike SIBEBE ? . . If you did, you know how much effort it is to climb up this steep „monster“. . 👇🏾 put your comment about your personal experience with Sibebe Rock. . 📸 @safarihike . . Did you know? Sibebe is the second-largest monolith in the world and the largest exposed granite pluton, rising 350m above the valley of the Mbuluzi River. It is also known as 'Bald Rock'. . If you never walked it, please get your tekkies on and get your bud in gear ⚙️🥾⛰❤️ . #sibebe #sibeberock #sibeberesort #sibebesurvivor #mbuluzi #eswatini #swaziland #swasiland #eswatini🇸🇿 #vakashaeswatini #travelphotography #wandern #wandernmachtglücklich #wordofwanderlust #biggestmonolith #biggest #sanibonani #mypinkbumper #bucketlist #reisetipps #hiking #hikingadventures #hikinggirl #hikingtheglobe #wanderlust #wanderer #womenhiking (hier: Sibebe Rock, Pine Valley - Swaziland) https://www.instagram.com/p/CDZeH9AD_rB/?igshid=chm66pilx0yr
Its really cold during the nights, but having a cool down bath after a hiking work out is extraordinary brillant - at least dip the hot feet and cool them down 🥶#bushwalk #eswatini #swaziland #kingdomofeswatini kingdomofeswatini #sibebe #sibeberock #hiking #wandern #trail #trailrun #exploreeswatini #vakashaeswatini #pinevalley #waterfall #wasserfall #wasserfallwanderung #waterfallhike #mavicair #dronephotography #eswatini🇸🇿 #droneflight #africa #nature #neverstopexploring #worldofwanderlust #sanibonani.de #mypinkbumper (hier: Sibebe Rock, Pine Valley - Swaziland) https://www.instagram.com/p/CDEsJunDnhx/?igshid=qxco7admmcrl
Top of the (Sibebe) Rock. Standing at a height of nearly 1500m, this relatively unknown volcanic slab is the world’s largest granite dome. Australia’s Uluru (Ayers) officially claims the title of ‘world’s largest rock’, but while Uluru is actually an eroded layers of sandstone sediment, Sibebe is a batholith - one giant molten bubble that erupted through the earth’s crust before cooling to become one large form of granite. #sibeberock #sibebe #eswatini #swaziland #swazlilife #southernafrica #batholiths #giganticrock #hiking (at Sibebe Rock, Pine Valley - Swaziland) https://www.instagram.com/p/B3WuUUWnI9D/?igshid=ya2l54vhkr4k
#sibaby #sibebe #tkm 🤬🔪🔪🔪
Bengika gogo e-Galile leka-Gwane sengisho eswatini ngitidlela #Maganu nanangu bhiya lobitwa #Sibebe
You call that a hike?
We parked in the yard of a couple of other expats whose house is right at the foot of Sibebe. This was the note we left on our car in case they came to investigate this strange vehicle (turned out they were out of town anyway).
Because I call it “more like a scramble toward death” and “the only time I've ever cried while climbing a mountain, if only just for a minute.”
There's a lot of granite in Swaziland, but Sibebe is Swaziland's most famous hunk of it. It isn't the tallest mountain in the country, but it is the second largest freestanding rock in the world. It's also called “Bald Rock,” the reason for which becomes quickly and painfully evident to anyone trying to scale the face of it, as Shaun and I did a couple of weeks ago.
The rock
To reach the top of Sibebe, you may choose to go up the back route, which is more of a typical hike along a real path, but takes a couple of hours. Or, if you're short on time and/or a healthy wish to avoid death, you can simply throw both hands and feet against the steep front, hugging it desperately like a tree frog against a screen door, and knock it out in 45 terrifying minutes.
This is actually a photo from two years back of some friends of ours on Sibebe, to help convey the level of steepness I'm talking about. We didn't take any pictures on our hike due to the aforementioned paralyzing fear. Thanks to Laura at muzungalo.blogspot.com!
I've never considered myself afraid of heights, but I'm not sure any degree of acrophobia is required to be afraid on Sibebe. There's not a thing irrational about being afraid of tumbling hundreds of meters down a granite slope, with no ledge or overhang in sight to stop you, a future which seemed perfectly plausible to me on this little mountain jaunt. Nevertheless, I have heard tell of hikers who scamper both up and down the face of Sibebe without a care in the world, so I will entertain the concept of some latent height fear lurking within me that those people just don't have.
The upside is that while from a distance the rock appears to offer few hand- and footholds, the surface is actually pocked all over and so quite friction...ful (no word that's the opposite of “frictionless”? Really, dictionary?). It's grippy, is what I'm saying. Even so, Shaun and I kept our hands down as well as our feet most of the way up, and we had to stop occasionally to raise our heads to their usual position and recover a little lost composure. During these breaks, I found it best to look neither ahead of nor behind me. And I certainly didn't take any pictures, if you're wondering.
Despite our anxieties, we hustled our way to the top pretty quickly and began our descent down the back route, landing in a beautiful green pasture with a rock cave on one side and cows grazing in our midst. I then made Shaun promise that, in the interest of being true to ourselves, we would not look back on this experience - at least, not the uphill part - as being “not that bad” just because it was over. It was bad. I'm not eager to do it again. But the fact that we did it? Admittedly, that felt (and feels) pretty great.
Shaun, safely at the top
What awaited us at the bottom. Ahhh.