| Division of Labour
New land for the cattle was not the only reason many of these people moved on. In their blood, there developed a 'trek spirit' or 'trekgees', the hope of a better land over the horizon. Each member of the family knew his or her exact duties.
The women would ride in the wagons, the children and servants would lead the oxen and the men would ride ahead scouting for the night's stopping point. All this time in the saddle taught the men to become proficient horsemen and expert shots. Each day they would be five or ten miles further away from Cape Town.
The people adapted to the vagaries of a nomadic life in Africa. It also enabled the stock to become disease resistant. Each year, they would return to Cape Town to barter skins, ivory, beeswax, to arrange marriages and to buy essentials such as coffee, gunpowder and agricultural implements.
However, they increasingly saw themselves as being different from their countrymen in the town and referred to themselves initially as Afrikanders, then Afrikaners.
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