"Nothing is so fatiguing as the eternal hanging on of an uncompleted task." ~William James

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Where is Cape Town : by Cape Town Active


Cape Town is in South Africa. Here are some interesting facts about Cape Town:
  • Cape Town is also know as the Mother City as it is the oldest South African city (1652).
  • Cape Town is the capital of the Western Cape.
  • Cape Town has been described by many as one of the most beautiful cities in the world.
  • Cape Town had in 2007 an estimated population of 3.5 million.
  • Cape Town is about 3 times the size of New York City
  • Cape Town is the only city in the world situated on the Indian and Atlantic Oceans
  • Cape Town has been voted as the ‘World’s Best Destination’ in TripAdvisor’s Travelers’ Choice Destination awards for 2011.
  • Cape Town is located on the shore of Table Bay.
  • Cape Town´s well-known landmarks are Table Mountain (1081m) and Cape Point
  • Cape Town borders the Table Mountain National Park
  • Cape Town is Africa’s most popular tourist destination.
  • The hotels in Cape Town provide accommodation with more than 70 000 rooms.
  • Cape Town it is one of the most multicultural cities in the world.
  • Cape Town´s weather provides a Subtropical Mediterranean climate with mild, wet winters, and dry and very warm summers.
  • Cape Town is a major destination for immigrants and expatriates to South Africa
  • Cape Town is know as the party capital of South Africa. 
  • Well known clubs in Cape Town are Trinity, Voom Voom, ZAR, Chrome, Fez Club, Cafe Caprice, Jade Champagne Bar and Lounge, Bronx Action Bar
  • Cape Town has over 70 mountains above 300 meters in the official city limits
  • Cape Town is the legislative capital of South Africa.
  • Cape Town news is covered by the Cape Argus, De Burger and Times newspapers 
  • Cape Town gets frequent strong winds from the south-east, known locally as the Cape Doctor. (No there is no wind guru in Cape Town)
  • Cape Town´s harbor is deemed to be one of the busiest shipping corridors in the world.
  • Cape Town has one of the highest levels of biodiversity of any equivalent area in the world
  • Cape Town is popular for Whale watching and cage diving (sharks)
  • The median age in Cape Town is 26-years-old, with almost half the population less than 24-years-old.
  • The Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, built as part of the docks of the Port of Cape Town, and is the city’s and Africa's most visited tourist attraction.
  • The 11 official languages of South African mean there are lots of names for Cape Town, including iKapa (Xhosa) and Kaapstad (Afrikaans).

Plus Cape Town has more to offer: the sea, the blue skies, the beaches, the mountains, the winding coastline, the restaurants and cafes, the parks, the shops, its unique culture and its people.

If you haven´t been to Cape Town yet, you really should visit this beautiful city. It is worth it. And now you know where Cape Town is, so what's stopping you?

Here are some more helpful links if you plan to visit Cape Town.

http://www.capetown.travel/
http://www.tourismcapetown.co.za
http://www.aboutcapetown.com/
http://www.tripadvisor.com/Tourism-g312659-Cape_Town_Western_Cape-Vacations.html
http://www.timeout.com/cape-town/
http://www.ctic.co.za/
http://www.capetown.gov.za
http://www.intergate-immigration.com

Capetownians: I know that you know more interesting facts about Cape Town. Please feel free to comment below in the form field.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Top 10 things not to do when checking in to a hotel


Top 10 things not to do when checking in to a hotel. From treating the staff correctly to keeping your cool, you'll be sure to have an even more enjoyable escape by using his extensive checklist.

1. Don't yell at the staff. Ever.

2. Don’t tell anyone your room number. (A desk agent should point to your room number, and not announce it to the world.)

3. Don't get bent out of shape when the night desk agent asks to see your “new friend’s” identification. Additionally, do not let a hotel employee into your room if they do not have an I.D.

4. Don't blame hotel staff for stealing your stuff. My personal experience is that the guests eventually find 99% of the items that guests report stolen from their rooms. However, it is your right to ask the manager to call the police to file a police report.

5. Don’t order from room service if you notice the pages are dirty and torn. Don’t order if the menu reads “Winter Menu” when it's spring.

6. Don’t use the bathroom washcloths to take off your makeup or shine your shoes.

7. Don't throw anything in the room garbage if you don't want the hotel staff to know about it, including insulin needles (or any needle) without properly disposing of it.

8. Don’t abuse the privilege of late checkout. If you really need one past 1:00 p.m., ask for the manager.

9. Don’t leave your luggage unattended in a hotel lobby – even for a second.

10. Don't be embarrassed! Call the hotel after you’ve checked out, and they will send your

Thursday, May 17, 2012

A motorbike run through Franschhoek, Cape Town


Petrol heads enjoy carving through this quintessential winelands town

The Western Cape is a paradise for bikers; with lush valleys, sweeping mountain passes and interesting stops along the way. A run to Franschhoek is a good start as it ticks all the right boxes in a nice, leisurely, laid-back way.
Lanner’s Landing, (+27 082 801 6226) just off the N1 at the Klapmuts turn-off (exit 47), is a good place to meet. This popular bush pub with its requisite collection of peaked caps over the bar and spacious wooden deck is so centrally situated that your buddies can all get together there, and wait for the inevitable late-comer who is still hungover or just got lost. Next door is Butterfly World with its huge variety of butterflies, insects, spiders, scorpions, reptiles and more – enough to give anyone nightmares. But, if you are carrying any kids on your pillion, take them in at your peril. They may never want to come out.
Heading away from the N1, crossover the four-way stop in the direction of Stellenbosch, there’s a BP garage and Express shop here if you need fuel for your bike or smokes for the girlfriend. Cross the bridge over the railway line and turn left towards Franschhoek – you can now relax and start enjoying the scenery.
We drag ourselves past wine estates like AnuraGlen Carlou and Backsberg, as it is still too early to drink wine, and if you’re riding sedately, you’ll catch a glimpse of the beautiful whitewashedopstal of Babylonstoren on your right. We are now entering the valley that runs all the way up to Franschhoek and the stunning peaks of Kanonkop and Simonsberg loom up over the road.
The gabled Ebenaeser church signals our arrival at Simondium. Next door Cotage Fromage (+27 (0)21 874 3991) restaurant of Vrede en Lust wine estate where they offer elegant light meals and wine-tasting in manicured garden splendour (no scruffy bikes here, only polished chrome please). We cross the disused railway line and turn right to continue our run.
This section of road can get very busy, so let’s turn in for a while at Kooperasie Stories. You can’t miss this quaint shop for its colourful collection of old enamel signs against the walls and selection of antiques on the pavement, but you’ll need a side-car to carry away some of the large pieces on sale inside. Next up is the comfortable Simondium Country Lodge (+27 (0) 21 874 1046), much classier than its surroundings suggest and popular for weddings and conferences. They also house the Enamel Shop which contains more unique bric-a-brac than some museums and a real pub with atmosphere – both places could hold you hostage for quite a while.
The route continues to Groot Drakenstein past fertile fruit farms, developed by the over-energetic Cecil John Rhodes, and all very gentrified now. A road turns off right here to sweep past the beautiful Boschendal Estate, through the little village of Pniel and over the Heshoogte Pass into Stellenbosch – a lovely route for another day. Continuing towards Franschhoek we reach Solms Delta (27 (0)21 874 3937), who rightfully claim to be more than a wine estate. Concentrating on the real history of the Cape Winelands, from pre-colonial times via slavery and apartheid to the present, their Museum van de Caab showcases archaeological excavations done on the farm. They also run a traditional restaurant, offer special-interest guided farm tours and, of course, wine tasting.
The Franschhoek Motor Museum on L’Ormarins is a must for all petrol heads. Established originally in Heidelberg, Gauteng out of Dr. Anton Rupert’s passion for the automobile, it was moved by his eldest son, Johann to its present home in the vineyards of the Cape. With an encyclopaedic knowledge of bikes and cars, Wayne Harley is the friendly curator. The museum, housing old and new, concentrates mainly on vehicles with a South African connection and has room for about 80 cars and 15 bikes in 4 de-humidified halls. But, with around 300 vehicles in the entire collection it means that the display is always changing. This allows the museum to show off their collections-within-collections such as “Single Seaters that raced in SA”, “Ferraris down the ages”, “American muscle cars” and “Monster Mercs”. Their bikes range from a Mars Carette three-wheeler with wicker seats, to a ’66 500cc Norton racer, and a completely original unrestored 50cc Vespa scooter.
We now enter Franschhoek, the domain of the rich and famous, with the occasional intrusion by a mafia don, or kleptomaniac African dictator.
What to do once you’re in Franschhoek
But it is breathtakingly scenic, with beautiful Cape Dutch estates such as La Motte andProvence. Agriculturally this is vine country and wine tasting and restaurant notice-boards grab your attention. Popular Môreson estate offers award-winning wines and the delightful alfrescoBread and Wine restaurant is perfect for a quality break in this bike run. Entering Franschhoek past the big modern BP garage (for fuel, smokes and maybe a Kit Kat?), you’re spoilt for choice, for here are shops, restaurants and accommodation to suit all palates and purses.
First up is the Station Pub and Grill, a favourite amongst bikers for its prominent parking (“Hey, check those bikes!”), good food and casual atmosphere. The Sir Herbert Baker designed building has been carefully restored to retain its original pressed steel ceilings and ticket window. You can eat and party in the old waiting room or on the covered platform. Kids are catered for with a playground and jumping castle - and don’t worry about trains, the last one departed in 1992 (+27 (0)21 876 3938).
If it’s pizza you crave, head on up the street to Col ‘Cocchio for Italian cuisine (+27 (0)21 876 4222). Choose to be cosy indoors or chill outside on benches under the oaks, and if you’re lucky there’ll be a jazz band playing on the bandstand, for a more elegant experience book at The French Connection (+27 (21) 876 4056) in the centre of town. Behind them, in the protected courtyard, is another pub and grill, The Elephant and Barrel (+27 (21) 876 4127). A wide selection of draught beer, tasty pub food, a fire in winter and the courtyard in summer – what more could you want?
Nearby, at 62 Huguenot Rd., is the seriously addictive Huguenot Fine Chocolates for handmade chocolates. They also offer tastings (11am and 3pm) and a short tour of the kitchens for chocoholics to learn more of the art and history of this ancient food of the gods (+27 (0)21 876 4096). Further up, on the left-hand side, is the friendly Kalfis restaurant, which benefits from having a large loading zone outside in the main street – perfect for parking your pride-and-joy bike in on a Sunday. Sit out at a table on the front stoep; you just might be serenaded by a strolling minstrel band (+27 (0)21 876 2520).
But we haven’t just come to ride, eat and drink, we’ve come to soak up some culture, and it’s here by the barrels-full. At the far end of Huguenot Rd. we run straight into the imposing Huguenot Monument and museum. Open 9am to 3pm on weekdays and 2pm to 5pm on Sundays, the history and contribution of the French Huguenots in South Africa is celebrated. If your surname is Le Roux, De Villiers or sounds even remotely French, go and check out your ancestry. Across the road, at the start of Excelsior Road, is a large shaded picnic area – ideal for large groups, but no fires allowed.
For the guys and girls with dual-purpose bikes, there is an interesting alternative to heading back home down the main road. Off Excelsior, take the signs to Robertsvlei and then Glenwood. There is some slippery gravel through the forests before reaching the La Motte forestry station and rejoining the R45 highway. But, probably the best way home from Franschhoek (after not too much wine-tasting) is to just keep going – up the pass and over to Villiersdorp and on to Worcester, or to Grabouw and back via Sir Lowry’s Pass. Authorised by Lord Charles Somerset, the first Franschhoek Pass was built in 1825 by 150 soldiers of the Royal Africa Corp under the command of Major WC Holloway - the little bridge over Jan Joubert’s Gat, halfway down the other side, is the first stone bridge ever built in the country. The pass served well for over a century until it was improved in 1930 and then tarred in the 1960s. It’s a great test of bike and rider with long, sweeping bends and tight hairpins, but watch out for the heavy trucks that seem to be using this route more and more.
One last thing – if you don’t make it out to Franschhoek sometime soon, consider timing your visit to coincide with the annual Bastille Day Festival happening in mid-July each year. Wear your beret and come along to enjoy the music and processions, and participate in the barrel-rolling or boule competitions. Franschhoek knows how to party!
By Mike Copeland
This article originally appeared in Bikerz Gazette, a print publication for bikers written by bikers.
Not keen on motorbikes? Then see the sights of Cape Town on a cycle tour with AWOL Tours.
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Thursday, May 10, 2012

Kayaking around the Cape of Good Hope with swimmer Lewis Pugh. - By Andrew Evans, National Geographic Traveler

Six hundred and fifty shipwrecks lie off the Cape of Good Hope. I prayed that we would not make it six hundred and fifty-one.

I had already read enough to be good and scared—I knew about the oil tankers and cargo vessels, the clipper ships and iron-hulled battleships of old and not-so-old. Many large and seaworthy ships have met an ungracious end on Africa’s southwestern point—the one with such an optimistic name.

Almost absurdly, we were launching our skinny little kayak into these very same waters, pushing the pencil-thin fiberglass boat into the heaving surf. Each new wave began as a milky green-turquoise sheet that swept towards us in whoosh, rolling high, then collapsing with a crash onto the soft white beach at Olifantsbos.

The first wave stung my toes with cold; the second wave swallowed me whole, submersing me up to the waist in numbing water.

“10 degrees Celsius,” said Lewis with great certainty. I did not question my kayak’s captain. The man knows water temperature like a dog knows its owner. Lewis Pugh has swum incredible distances in some of the harshest conditions on Earth (not to mention every ocean). On his long list of amazing swims? The North Pole, where he swam a full kilometer in water that was –1.7° C (29° F), wearing only a Speedo and some goggles.

If Lewis said it was 10° C (50° F), than it probably was. I did not doubt him, but if my legs were not paralyzed from the cold, I probably would have walked right out of the ocean and marched back up onto the bright sun-warmed beach. Instead, I swung my legs into the boat and began paddling furiously against the rising swell.

My captain entered the sea with purpose and I followed his lead—left-right, left-right. I dipped the double-blade into the perfect water, all the while our fragile boat bobbed on the sea like a wobbly grain of rice. With each new wave, I expected us to capsize, dreading the possibility of swimming back to shore. These were not leisurely waters.

In 1488, Portuguese explorer Bartholomew Dias sailed around this point without even knowing it. The man was headed to India, but after more than seven months at sea, his impatient crew revolted and he was forced to turn back. It was only on his return that he “discovered” South Africa’s Cape which he aptly named “Cabo das Tormentas”—the Cape of Storms.

A steady southeasterly wind blows across the Cape constantly, some days stronger than others. It is the same wind that rocked me through my final stretch of the South Atlantic and the same wind which has broken up ships on the rocky shoals that necklace this southwestern point of the great Africa continent.

But today was different—today was perfect. There was not a cloud around and the sea seemed almost lazy: flat, shiny, barely breathing. As our kayak made out to sea, Lewis reminded me that these were perfect conditions, almost unprecedented. I wanted to believe him—the ocean surface was calm, the water remarkably clear. Gazing down, I could see the sandy sea bottom twenty feet below us, rippled with cheerful sunlight, and showing off a bright clearness that no backyard swimming pool will ever achieve.

The perfect visibility disappointed me greatly. It was the first time I did not want to be able to stare into the ocean. I was petrified about what I would see.

Lewis had warned me back on the beach, “When we encounter a great white shark, don’t panic. If we capsize, just stick to the boat. We’ll right her quickly and then climb back in. And if the sharks get too close, just whack it on the nose with you paddle. That should send them away.”

Lewis’s last-minute shark brief was not a dramatic overture—he offered me the truth like a plucky British sea captain, with the nonchalance of a man who has served in the SAS—the elite British special service (like our Navy Seals). Lewis was not trying to frighten me—he only wanted me (his one-man crew) to be ready for any unfortunate scenario.

But I was frightened, regardless. No matter that I have encountered sharks around the world—typically I am wearing dive gear and the sharks are very small and timid.  The waters we were kayaking in are particularly notorious, home to hundreds of very big, very dental great white sharks. It wasn’t a case of, “there might be sharks here.” They are there, most definitely. I just prayed not to see any of them while I was out on the sea, straddling a fiberglass hangnail of a boat.

Unlike the crew of Bartholomew Dias, I had no intention of revolting against my captain, the great Lewis Pugh. I knew that my life depended on his strength and general knowledge of the sea. We kept paddling, turning south and following the coast at a safe distance.

We chatted like new friends at a bridge party, swapping story for story. As I struggled to keep time, Lewis paddled in front. I stared at his head from behind, focusing on the salty drops of sea that shone in his hair and doing everything in my power not to think about great white sharks.

But then we entered a kelp forest, popping and sighing with the wavy sea plants that move with the sea. Suddenly, every piece of kelp looked like a shark fin, every splash of wave hinted at something large and alive in the water. As we paddled through the beautiful canopy of kelp, my mind saw a hundred shark fins all circling around our tiny craft.

“How do you swim in these waters?” I asked him. I was having a hard enough time simply kayaking without imagining a fishy beast appearing beneath us. Lewis did not need to imagine anything because it’s already happened to him. Once when he was swimming around the Cape of Good Hope (with another group of swimmers), a sizable great white shark swam up right beneath them. He could see it with his goggles, but he kept on swimming. The shark soon sped away.

Lewis tapped his head with one finger. “It’s all in your mind,” he answered. “If I let my mind get into that space of doubt and fear, than it’s already over.” Basically, don’t think about sharks, he said. Know that they are there, even swimming beneath you, but keep your mind focused on the goal.

So just what is his goal? This man who swims impossible distances in deathly cold waters, who dives into frigid seas filled with polar bears, leopard seals and great whites—why?

“Because it’s so important,” Lewis confides. His cause is simple: the Earth and the Earth’s water. Lewis is an active environmental campaigner, who uses his endurance swimming to highlight the dire plight of the planet.

“I want to be a voice for water,” he adds, while we pushed across the water. Smaller waves now appeared, rocking us even more than before. I tried to apply this man’s advice: Don’t focus on fear, focus on hope.

My only hope was to get back to shore alive. I was not looking for a medal or a hero’s welcome. I only wanted to make it.

Bartholomew Dias first made it around the point in 1488. Twelve years later, he returned to the Cape in hopes of actually making it to India. This time, he encountered a huge storm that sunk his ship. Bartholomew Dias drowned in a storm off the Cape he had personally named the Cape of Storms. It was the king of Portugal who changed the name to Cape of Good Hope—a kind of cartographic PR slogan describing the lucrative route to India.

Following Dias, all the early explorers rounded the Cape of Good Hope: Vasco de Gama, Captain Cook, Sir Francis Drake. For centuries, the Cape has marked the halfway point between home and abroad, here and there, the known world versus the unknown. When it comes to ships, the whole world intersects at this rock in the sea: Asia meets Europe, Africa meets Asia.

As a traveler, my journey in a kayak was only a symbolic tribute to the original explorers—a mere 10 kilometers instead of 10,000, but my aim was the same: to round the point and get to the other side.

I watched the Cape of Good Hope from our kayak—the shelves of rock and the perky promontory that sticks out of the sea, a rather meek mountain tribute to the huge significance of this dot on the map.

There it is, I thought: the Cape of Good Hope—and I did in fact feel hopeful. Arriving at the Cape meant that we were nearly halfway there. Like the sailors of long ago, we could rest assured that we’d made it this far and now the odds were in our favor.

But nothing is what it seems down in this part of the world. The Cape of Good Hope is not the southernmost point in Africa, nor is it a singular feature. The peninsula is actually split into two different capes—the Cape of Good Hope (on the west side) and Cape Point (to the South). In between the two outcroppings lies a closed-in stretch of pristine sand known as Dias Beach.

“I almost drowned there once,” Lewis told me, remembering one of his swims around the Cape when he intended to head into shore and got caught up in a spin cycle of surf.

Nearly everything that Lewis does in the water is a near-death experience. Most people would fall into irreversible hypothermia in the places he swims, but not Lewis. His body temperature always recovers—he always makes it, though he accepts that he is not invincible. If anything, Lewis knows everything that can go wrong in the ocean, and his work is to fight against all that is wrong with the ocean.

But even with Lewis by my side, I had no desire to swim around Cape Point. I only wanted to paddle upright. There were too many rocks—too many waves. The sea began to jump a little.

“You get two conflicting currents here—both oceans meeting and swirling together, so the water’s a bit strange,” Lewis explained, not panicking. We were at least one full kilometer from shore and our kayak was wobbling like a child in a chair. Lewis beat the sea back with his paddle—every wave that wished to throw us over, Lewis counter-splashed. I tried to follow his rhythm and suddenly our conversation grew very quiet. Suddenly we were sailors, negotiating with the sea, one wave at a time. Splish. Splash.

The two sides of the Cape are like two different countries with two very different color schemes. We had left the sunny west coast with its Mediterranean blues and had paddled into the unsettled seas at the Point before finally turning into the subdued grey-blue waters around the Point. After more than an hour of pushing against it, the current was on our side, the eternal southeasterly pushing us back into calmer, flatter waters.

False Bay opened up before us, with its promise of arrival, a separate world of water surrounded by shark-tooth mountains. I was still trying not to think about sharks, but this very bay reminded me of a shark’s open jaws, ringed with mountainous teeth.

We paddled on, now in a straight line towards a friendly beach. We’d only been at sea a mere two hours, but the weather was already changing. Back on shore, triumphant, I looked  back towards the point we had paddled round—the waves were bigger now, a tad angrier, more Cape of Storms than a cape of hope.

Lewis insisted we go for a victory swim, “This water’s warm!” he cried. “At least 14 degrees Celsius.” But 57° F is not warm water. At Buffels Bay, I fell into the waves behind Lewis and went into shock. I did a few strokes and watched Lewis swim far in front of me. He was happy as a seal, gliding in cold, cold water, a traveler that’s arrived at his destination.

Over and over again, travel teaches me not to be afraid of the world. Every day there is so much to fear, but each time I launch myself out into the world, I am acting on the great hope of travel: that we will make it, that the adventure will be memorable, that good weather will follow bad.

In a kayak on the sea, less than an hour outside of Cape Town, Lewis Pugh taught me not to be afraid. Everywhere in world is filled with something like a Great White Shark, but to worry too much about the unseen realities only cripples us and prevents us from getting the important things done.

No. Instead, we must travel in hope, like Bartholomew Dias did so long ago and like Lewis does with his hands and feet in the sea.

This will be my memory of the Cape—how I started with a real fear of tipping our kayak amongst very large sharks, but how we rounded the beautiful cape with the force of our own hands, pushing ourselves to the other side, hoping for the best and in the end, making it.

As travelers, that is all we can ask for—to make it safely to the other side. That is my constant prayer on every plane and train and boat. And it’s how I hope to live my life, always—with good hope.


Article courtesy  http://digitalnomad.nationalgeographic.com

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Hiking routes in Cape Town and surrounds

There are so many great hiking routes in Cape Town and the surrounding areas.

Whether you’re a seasoned hiker looking for some inspiration or an inexperienced, but aspiring trail blazer not sure where to start, we have a walk or hike to suit you. From easy strolls through the forest to more challenging climbs up mountains.
We joined forces with Hi-Tec to discover some of the Western Cape’s best hikes, trails and walks, so we've spent the last couple of months wearing-in our Hi-Tec boots: we appreciated the unfaltering grip of the sturdy V-Lite Altitude Ultra Luxe Wpi when scrambling up steeper paths, and the comfort afforded by the light  V-lite Total Terrain Lace when going on easier strolls through the forest.
We’ve organised the hikes and walks into categories to make it easier for you to find what you’re looking for. Please have a look at our hiking safety guide, especially if you’re new to Cape Town, and make a note of the rescue and emergency numbers. 
Hiking in the Table Mountain National Park
Lion’s Head
This short summit offers panoramic views of Cape Town and unbeatable sunsets. It’s a popular route to do at night when it’s full moon, and if you’re relatively fit you’ll find yourself at the top quite quickly. There’s a little bit of climbing involved, but there are handholds and chains to help you on your way up and down. You can also take the roundabout way which skips the climbing part if you are walking with small children or your dogs.
Number of routes: Two routes.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Devil’s Peak
This path zig-zags up from Tafelberg Road (where the Cable Car Station is) and then takes a steep route up to the peak. There are fantastic views of Table Mountain and the city below once you reach the top.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Kasteel Poort
This climb up Kasteel Poort is not for the unfit; although, the Cable Car does offer an alternative route for those unwilling to walk up. From the top of Kasteel Poort you’ll be able to see all the way across the Twelve Apostles, and once you reach the front of the mountain, the city views are incredible.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Easy-difficult.
Deer Park
If you’re in the city and craving a nature fix then this small reserve on the lowest slopes of Table Mountain is your solution. You can walk your dogs in this forested area, or just go for a stroll. Once you’ve walked up a bit you’ll have a clear view of the mountain right ahead, and here you can choose to link up to a longer hike if you’re up for it.
Number of routes: Four routes.
Difficulty: Easy-moderate.
Woodstock Cave
You may have spotted this cave from De Waal drive, it’s a thin crack in the mountain that invites exploration. You can reach it from either Rhodes Memorial or from Tafelberg Road, both routes offer expansive views of the city below.
Number of routes: Two routes.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Bridle Path and Nursery Ravine
This hike takes you all the way to the top of the other side of Table Mountain; it’s a lot quieter than the front side and has the added beauty of large, still reservoirs. There are various routes to the top, but they are all fairly strenuous, so if you’re not used to hiking then rather start with something a bit shorter.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Elephant’s Eye
The eye of the elephant in question is a large cave in the Silvermine Nature Reserve that, with the help of a squint, resembles the head of these large creatures. Though all the way across the city from Table Mountain itself, the reserve is still part of park, and has great picnic spots next to the reservoir where you can braai in the colder months.
Number of routes: Two routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.

Silvermine East
This is also in the Silvermine Nature Reserve, but on the other side overlooking Muizenberg. It offers fantastic views, interesting rock formations and plenty of untouched fynbos.
Number or routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Beach walks in Cape Town and surrounds
Olifantsbos shipwreck trail
This isn’t your average stroll along the beach; set in the Cape Point Nature Reserve, this route may have you hiking next to a herd of bontebok or a troop of baboons foraging in the rock pools. If that’s not enough excitement for a seaside stroll, there are the shipwrecks dotted along the wild beaches to explore.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Sandy Bay
This beach walk offers a few unusual sights in addition to the vistas of rocky outcrops and expansive shoreline; it’s the only designated nude beach in the area! Apart from the manmade beauty, Sandy Bay is a gorgeous stretch of beach with clear white sand, rock formations and interesting seaside plants.
Number of routes: Two routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Muizenberg Mile
This seaside walkway winds its way alongside the beaches and rock pools in Muizenberg. You’ll want to time your walk with the tide, as the breaking waves can get a bit too close for comfort at high tide.
Number of routes: One route.
Difficulty: Easy.
Forest walks in Cape Town and surrounds
Newlands forest contour path
Trees stretching up high above the shady paths, streams to splash in and plenty of paths leading through the forest and up onto the mountain slopes above it can all be found in Newlands Forest. The routes we’ve chosen take you up onto these slopes, but if you just want a quick walk this is an ideal spot to walk your dogs (and children).
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Spes Bona Forest
You’ll need to hike up through lower slopes of the fynbos covered mountain before you reach this forest, but it’s worth the trek. A raised wooden walkway winds its way in amongst the old gnarled trees which are kept alive by the constant drips of water running down the mossy cliff on the right.
Number or routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Tokai Arboretum
Popular with cyclists, this forest is also great for a quick stroll or a steady climb up to the mountain slopes above it. The majority of the trees aren’t indigenous, but they do shade the paths just the same.
Number or routes: Two routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Deer Park
Also included in our Table Mountain National Parks routes, Deer Park is a favourite for the forest lovers. The smell of pine needles is a refreshing break from the traffic fumes that permeate the air in the city centre just a few minutes away. This forest isn’t huge, but it’s big enough to lose yourself in for a little bit.
Number of routes: Four routes.
Difficulty: Easy-moderate.
De Hel
This dense greenbelt in Constantia is surprisingly large; the path leads down into the valley leaving you feeling as though you’ve been swallowed up by the jungle. It’s a dog-friendly, kid-friendly haven of nature in the suburbs. Constantia has a number of green belts to walk on throughout the suburb.
Number of routes: Nine routes.
Difficulty: Easy.
Swimming hikes in Cape Town and surrounds
Krom River
Save this one for summer; the path leads up a river to two spectacular rock pools which can be icy even when it’s hot. The walk itself isn’t too long, so you can spend plenty of time swimming in the mountain pools.
Number of routes: One route.
Difficulty: Moderate.

Suicide Gorge
Not one for the fainthearted, this is an extreme hike with very high jumps down the river into the pools below. We recommend doing this with a guide as it can be dangerous.
Number of routes: One route.
Difficulty: Difficult.
Bontebok National Park
Take a dip in the designated swimming spots along the Breede River, the body of water that runs through this park. Choose one of the paths alongside the river, or save your swim for after the hike.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Elephant’s Eye
Also listed in our Table Mountain National Park routes, Elephant’s Eye loops around the Silvermine Reservoir, a refreshing rooibos-coloured body of water only a two minute walk from the parking lot. So pack your costume and cool off after your hike.
Number of routes: Two routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Sandy Bay
Take a dip in the sea after your hike, and since it’s a nude beach you don’t even need to remember your costume.
Number of routes: Two routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Muizenberg Mile
Muizenberg Beach has legendary warm water and waves to swim in, otherwise there’s a tidal pool at St James at the end of the walk if you prefer more sedate.
Number of routes: One route.
Difficulty: Easy.
Walks through indigenous fynbos in Cape Town and surrounds
Chapman’s Peak
Ericas, proteas and indigenous trees can all be found in the thick fynbos covering this peak. You’ll also have the added bonus of amazing views of Hout Bay, Fish Hoek and Gordon’s Bay.
Number of routes:
 Two routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Krom River
Aside from its allure as a great route for swimming, on a Krom River hike you’ll find indigenous mountain fynbos which turns to riverine forest in the wetter parts of the kloof, plus you might spot a disa or two higher up.
Number of routes: One route.
Difficulty: Moderate.

Spes Bona Forest
Aside from the indigenous trees in the forest, keep an eye out for erica urna-viridis, which can only be found in this particular area, and the bright haemanthus sanguineus, also known as april fools or velskoenblaar.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Nursery Ravine
This hike takes you past a number of different types of flora: you’ll spot sun dews on the wet rocks alongside Bridle Path, grasses and bushes on the plateau and the occasional red disa near the reservoirs.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Kasteel Poort
You may not see all 8200 plant species that grow in the Table Mountain National Park, but you’ll see quite a few of them along this route, from the yellow pincushion proteas to vibrant red ericas.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Easy-difficult.
Devil’s Peak
Along with Signal Hill across the way, the slopes of Devil’s Peak are the only place on earth where you can still find the critically endangered Peninsula Shale Renosterveld. Endemic to the Cape Peninsula, this vegetation has been threatened by urban expansion.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Elephant’s Eye
As part of the Table Mountain National Park, the Elephant’s Eye trail  in Silvermine Nature Reserve claims plenty of fynbos from the Cape Floral Kingdom, a biodiversity sector with nearly 900 species of vegetation, including various types of proteas, ericas, and restios.
Number or routes: Two routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Silvermine East
Also part of the Silvermine Nature Reserve, the slopes of the East side are covered in ericas in various shades of pink, depending on the season; leucodendrons and asteraceae provide a splash of yellow in spring.
Number of routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Fernkloof Nature Reserve
It’s said that 1474 species have been uncovered in Fernkloof, you’ll see ericas, watsonias and plenty more in a dazzling display of fynbos finery. The herbarium in the reserve has been given international status and houses 1600 montane and coastal species — that’s more than in the entire United Kingdom.
Number of routes: Four routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Kirstenbosch National Botanical Gardens
Here you’ll find all sorts of indigenous fynbos as well as afromontane forest. There are sections devoted to fragrant plants, edible plants and other interesting sub-categories. It’s also a great place to learn a bit more about indigenous species, as there is plenty of information available.
Number or routes: Seven routes.
Difficulty: Easy – difficult.
Hikes outside of Cape Town
La Motte
This hike on a wine estate is in Franschhoek, an hour’s drive from Cape Town. This walk will lead you past the picturesque vineyards of the estate and up through the mountainous property. Rewards yourself with a wine-tasting or a meal at Pierneef à La Motte Restaurant.
Number or routes: One route.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Fernkloof Nature Reserve
About an hour and a half from Cape Town, this reserve offers some beautiful walks through its well-preserved fynbos. It’s in Hermanus so you’ll find plenty of other reasons for visiting the area, visit between June and December for whale season and listen out for the whale crier’s call..
Number or routes: Four routes.
Difficulty: Moderate – difficult.
Paarl Rock
The Paarl Mountain Nature Reserve is about an hour from Cape Town. Climb to the top of Bretgna Rock, a granite outcrop with fantastic views (you can see as far as Table Mountain on a clear day).
Number or routes: One route.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Krom River
It’ll take about an hour’s drive to get to the start of this hike on the other side of the Huguenot Tunnel but the waterfalls and mountain pools are well worth the effort. You’ll need to book a permit to do this hike so there aren’t usually too many people around, making it a wonderfully quiet, unspoilt walk.
Number of routes: One route.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Tygerberg Nature Reserve
Less than half an hour from Cape Town, and a short drive away from the Northern suburbs, this nature reserve is a great place for a walk or jog. As the only piece of nature in the area there are quite a few birds of prey around and small striped mice scurrying through the undergrowth. It’s not an expansive reserve, but it does offer a great view across Cape Town from the picnic spots.
Number or routes: Seven routes.
Difficulty: Easy.
Suicide Gorge
This hike is in the Hottentots Holland Nature Reserve just over an hour from Cape Town. It’s an eight hour, physically taxing hike that should only be done with a guide or someone who has previous experience with the route.
Number or routes: One route.
Difficulty: Difficult.
Bontebok National Park
This nature reserve is about three hours from Cape Town. The walks are easy-going; you can walk alongside the Breede River depending on which route you choose. If you’re lucky (and quiet) you can spot some of the resident bontebokkies or other creatures.
Number or routes: Three routes.
Difficulty: Easy – moderate.
Just Nuisance’s grave
It’s a short, steep climb up this Simon’s Town hill to the grave of Cape Town’s most beloved canine. From the top you’ll have a bird’s eye view of the seaside suburb unravelling below, and if your timing is right you may even hear the din of the naval trainees and their marching chants.  
Number or routes: 
Three routes.
Difficulty: Easy – difficult.
Check out our Facebook albums to see photos from the hikes and follow us on Twitter for more outdoor activities in and around Cape Town. Our free weekly and monthly newsletters are packed with fun things to do and upcoming events. 

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Many Reasons Why You Should Visit Cape Town - By Richard Trott



Cape Town is really a special place that is located on the tip of South Africa and beautifully captures both the eastern and western worlds. You get to taste a bit of the Middle East, the relaxed feel of Europe and off course the amazing African culture all within an affordable price range. With this outstanding combination it is everybody's most sought after place to visit or live.

There is a wide range of activities and if you are a golfer then Cape Town has an amazing number of stunning golf courses that is well known throughout the world. The facilities are top class and are not pricey. You are also surrounded by the most fantastic views, with the Table Mountain just being one of the many visual highlights.

Another splendor is the wine lands with lush and abundant green valleys that are bursting forth with grapes. One can see the magnificently restored Dutch farmsteads that provide a wonderful romantic feeling. You can travel through the many scenic routes that have the largest amount of certified wineries in the world. There is nothing better than enjoying the very best of wines that is produced in one of the finest locations in the world.

The Cape has a climate that is typically Mediterranean. There is nothing nicer than waking up to an invigorating freshness with intermittent rains that keep the summer at lovely warm temperatures. Whilst in winter you get to see snow capped mountains and enjoy warm log fires. Sunshine is always available throughout the year and a wonderful south easterly wind acts like a doctor sweeping the polluted air and making everything nice and clear. You will be mesmerized by the arrival of spring and the abundant wild flowers. This is undoubtedly habitable weather.

If you are looking to broaden your horizons and become part of the Capetownian community then your search for property will end if you visit the estate agents websites.  All houses for sale in Cape Town are listed completely free of charge. You will learn all you need to know about dealing with reputable agents, obtaining secure services and payment terms are listed here to simplify the process of making a purchase.

There are lots of advantages to visiting or moving to Cape Town and all that is missing is for you to take the next step and start searching for the perfect home.

All houses for sale in Cape Town together with real estate agents can be found at houses in cape town

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Richard_Trott