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Western
Cape
The Western Cape is one of South Africa’s
premier tourist attractions, and for good reason. It is home to
the famous Table Mountain, vast winelands, magnificent beaches,
world-class restaurants and cosmopolitan entertainment haunts. The
Cape boasts exquisite scenery and a myriad of cultures and tourist
treasures that are just waiting to be discovered, so get going to
the fairest Cape…
Overview
Situated on the south-western tip of Africa, the Western Cape is
the meeting point of the cold Atlantic and the warm Indian Oceans.
Its capital city Cape Town, is dominated by the flat-topped bulk
of Table Mountain. The province has South Africa’s fifth largest
population, numbering in the region of 4.5 million inhabitants.
The story of the Republic of South Africa began in the Western Cape,
some 350 years ago, when it was inhabited by the Khoi, San and other
Bantu-speaking groups. In the late 15th century European seafarers
arrived here in search of a halfway stop on trade routes to the
East and thereby changed the face of South African history forever.
Climate
The Western Cape enjoys hot summers and mild, green winters–
perfect weather for the production of fruit, grains and, most important
– wine.
GETTING TO KNOW THE WESTERN CAPE
Thanks to its scenic beauty and many attractions, tourism is a major
and growing force in the Western Cape, which hosts over 50% of the
country’s international visitors.
Major attractions in the area:
Cape Town Metropolitan area
The area between Table Mountain and Hottentots Holland comprises
the Cape Town Metropole and encompasses pulsating cosmopolitan city
life, beach playgrounds, forests and exquisite nature parks.
Table Mountain
Cape Town’s most famous landmark – a quick spin by revolving
cable car to the 1 086m summit will give the visitor a grand view
of one of the most beautiful cities in the world, and of course
the equally famous South African `Alcatraz’ – Robben
Island.
The Famous V & A Waterfront
The most visited attraction in Cape Town is the Victoria & Alfred
Waterfront with its assortment of shopping, eating, entertainment
and sightseeing facilities, all set within a working harbour.
Robben Island
The V & A Waterfront is also the gateway to Robben Island, a
former prison (now national monument) where a visit is an emotional
journey echoing with the sorrows of stalwarts of ‘the struggle’
against apartheid. The island was `home’ to many of South
Africa’s freedom fighters including Nelson Mandela.
Cape Fortress
The oldest surviving building in South Africa, and well preserved
too, is the Castle of Good Hope, the pentagonal fortress built by
personnel of the Dutch East India Company back in the 1660s-70s.
Today it houses the regional headquarters of the South African Defence
Force in the Western Cape, and a military museum.
Africa’s Most Southerly Point
Cape Agulhus is the most southern point of South Africa with spectacular
views of the ocean. It is at this point that the Indian and Atlantic
Oceans meet.
Cape Point
A stop at Cape Point gives the visitor the opportunity to boast
of having been at the most southern point of the Cape Peninsula.
Some 26 shipwrecks have been recorded at Cape Point, some of them
presenting good diving spots. A funicular takes visitors on scenic
trips to an old lighthouse and the spot is a bird watcher’s
paradise.
Township Vibes
Township tours will remind the tourist how the will to survive can
overcome any adversity. In Guguletu and Langa expect to be overwhelmed
by hospitality, informal roadside traders, rowdy taverns serving
local beer and toe-tapping jazz. Guided tours are recommended to
get to most out of the experience.
Most Fabulous Beaches in the World
There’s a beach to suit every mood in Cape Town:
Clifton for those who want to see and be seen
Sandy Bay for the nudists
Muizenberg with its colourful bathing boxes for a good swim in warm
water
Kommetjie for watersports.
Fishhoek is a quaint seaside village
Hout Bay has a colourful fishing harbour and craft market
Kalk Bay attracts antique hunters
Boulder’s Beach at Simon’s Town is home to a colony
of Jackass penguins.
Shopping Frenzy
Cape Town has many markets and impressive shopping centres and malls.
One of the most talked about shopping venues is the impressive 400-outlet
Canal Walk Century City. It also boasts a 20-theatre cinema complex
and for adrenaline-pumping entertainment, there’s Ratanga
Junction, a 30-attraction theme park with and the glitzy Grand West
Casino & Entertainment World.
Great Gardens of the World
A day in Cape Town might end with a classical concert at sundown
in one of the world’s great botanical gardens – Kirstenbosch,
a repository for many rare fynbos species and a wealth of indigenous
plants, trees and flowers.
Nightlife
Cape Town city centre is known to many as the party capital of Africa,
down just a few streets in the Mother City there are hundreds of
bars, restaurants and clubs just waiting to be explored through
to the wee hours of the morning. Cape Town is also known as a pink
city, offering a warm welcome to the gay and lesbian community.
The West Coast
The West Coast offers some of the greatest of small town experiences
in South Africa. This is a region that needs to be savoured, slowly,
and therefore road trips along the West Coast are a firm favourite
with locals and international visitors. Not only does the area offer
some of the most beautiful scenery in the world – mountains,
oceans and views that go on forever, this coast is also a haven
for the finest South African hospitality.
The West Coast National Park (close to Langebaan) is where 50 000
migratory birds can be seen in the summer, and at Bird Island at
Lamberts Bay, an unobtrusive viewing platform affords close-ups
of a jam-packed breeding site.
The national park also contains 40% of the earth’s remaining
strandveld fynbos, while the West Coast at large really blooms in
the spring months of August – October, even the roadsides
bursting forth with lilies, vygies and daisies.
Endemic Clanwilliam cedar and snowball protea can be sighted in
the Cederberg Wilderness Area, which also claims unusual rock formations
and well-known hiking trails.
The West Coast has two official wine routes, the Swartland Wine
Route and the Olifants River Wine Region. West Coast seas also produce
a bounty of quality seafood and line fish to accompany the fruit
of the vine and some of the country’s finest restaurants are
found along this coastline.
The Winelands
Just a 45-minute drive from Cape Town and you’re in the mountains
and valleys of the Winelands – all gracious gabled Cape Dutch
homesteads, cask-lined cellars, oak-treed towns and ultra fine restaurants.
The towns of Stellenbosch, Franschoek and Paarl are delightful and
beg to be explored and savoured very slowly, like good wine.
The Garden Route
This land of lakes, bays, mountains and forests languishes on the
southern coast from Heidelberg to the Eastern Cape's Tsitsikamma
Forest and Storms River. It’s a nook of the country that offers
inspiration to writers and artists whose presence gives the Garden
Route a trendy flavour. It is also a top priority of many a foreign
visitor.
This coastal drive links a series of charming towns interspersed
with natural wonder. Along the way, every kind of adventure activity
is possible – scuba diving, abseiling, fishing and more.
The Klein Karoo
One of the most geologically interesting parts of South Africa is
the Klein Karoo, with its towering mountains and sheer gorges. A
notable geological feature is the Cango Caves, a series of caverns
and chambers naturally hewn out of limestone, outside of the city
of Oudtshoorn. These caves are among the top ten most visited South
African attractions.
Oudtshoorn itself, the heart of the ostrich feather industry when
it was at its zenith in the late 1800s/early 1900s, is worth a visit.
The grandiose, old feather palaces are still to be seen, while ostrich
farms, now involved in the commercial production of meat, leather,
eggs and feathers, can be toured, with the possibility of riding
an ostrich. The town also hosts an annual music and theatre fest
– the Klein Karoo Kunstefees.
The Central Karoo
The semi-arid Karoo derives its name from an indigenous word meaning
‘thirstland,” but the starkness this implies is deceptive.
Dig a little below the surface and you find fossil-rich terrain,
fascinating rock art, ancient stone-age sites, one of the largest
varieties of succulents on the planet and star-filled skies to thrill
the astronomer, no matter how amateur.
Peaceful Prince Albert at the foot of the spectacular Swartberg
Pass makes a convenient base from which to venture out and explore.
It’s close to Gamkaskloof or Die Hel (The Hell), once home
to an isolated farming community that for a century was accessible
only by foot or horseback. The Karoo National Park, as the largest
ecosystem in South Africa, reveals how fauna and flora have adapted
to their harsh environment.
The Breede River Valley
Some 15 attractive small towns have the good fortune to nestle in
the fertile Breede River Valley, wall-to-wall in orchards and vineyards.
There’s Ceres, aptly named for the Roman goddess of fertility;
Tulbagh with 32 historical buildings making for the largest concentration
of national monuments in the country; Montagu, home of hot mineral
springs famed for curative powers; Worcester and Robertson - known
for their noble vintages.
Attractions in the valley include one of the largest brandy distilleries
in the world (KWV Brandy Cellar), game reserves, tribal art and
museums (try Kleinplasie Living Open Air Museum which revives early
settler days with demonstrations of candle making, sheep shearing
and harvesting).
The Overberg
An hour east of Cape town `over the mountains’ is the Overberg,
marked by a coastline of holiday-friendly beaches, picturesque seaside
towns, an ancient lighthouse that has witnessed many a shipwreck
(at Cape Agulhus) and a whale route that draws more whales and more
watchers each year. Between June and November crowds flock to Hermanus
and its surrounds to watch the great mammals court and cavort.
In the interior, wheatfields are broken by Morovian mission towns
such as Elim and Genadendal, agricultural museums (Grabouw and Swellendam)
and a new casino, hotel and spa resort at Caledon. Ecotourists can
plan an itinerary around the fynbos route that includes nature reserves
and wild flower gardens.
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