One of the larger surviving stands of naturally-occurring cedars - looking down on Eselbank. The tree peeping over the skyline in pic 2 is at approx 1800m above sea level and might be one of the highest-altitude cedars in the Cederberg.
Cassine commented: "Now it is a different species. (W. nodiflora: See the taxonomy links). That is because the specimen of Wallich, which is better known for his Indian collecting, which he collected in the Cederberg (1843), has a locality given as Swellendam.... It will take a while to sort this out."
I replied: "I was testing the waters with this one, as no one seems willing to give a definitive answer on That Name .."
However I see that iNat has already decided that this is no longer W cedarbergensis - can anyone give a definitive answer on this?