The tradition died out in the early 1800s for two reasons. First, the British took control of the Cape and banned "public displays of aggressive noise pollution" (or something similar—they basically thought it was uncivilized hooliganism). Second, the hippo population near the Cape had been hunted to nearly nothing, making the sacred sjamboks impossible to replace.
There is no official or widely recognized event known as "Whipping Day" at Table Mountain whipping day at table mountain
Public whipping at Table Mountain began to decline after the British First Occupation (1795) and the formal abolition of the slave trade in 1807. Humanitarian reforms in the 1820s, led by figures like Dr. John Philip of the London Missionary Society, condemned such open brutality. The last recorded public flogging at the mountain’s base occurred in the , replaced by private prison punishments and, later, banishment to penal colonies. The tradition died out in the early 1800s for two reasons
Or, if you want to provide information:
“You see that? (He pointed to a scrape on his forearm). That’s the whip. That’s the mountain reminding you that you are dust. Your fancy GPS watch doesn’t mean shit when the south-easter hits 40 knots and the rock turns to glass. On Whipping Day, you don’t conquer Table Mountain. You negotiate with it. And sometimes, the negotiation involves getting whipped.” There is no official or widely recognized event