Cape Town Day, Overnight Tours - South Africa

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Revised: 04 Jul 2010 14:10:49 +0200.

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These 10 interconnected stories present a portrait of a young coloured woman's coming of age in apartheid South Africa, spanning the mid-1950s to the mid-1980s.

Cape Town Airport Transfer, Full Day Four Passes Tour, Full Day Hermanus Tour, Full Day Hinterland Tour, Full Day Peninsula Tour, Full Day Robben Island Tour, Full Day West Coast Tour, Full Day Winelands Tour, Half Day City and Waterfront Tour, Half Day Table Mountain Tour, Half Day Table Mountain Hiking Tour, Half Day City Walking Tour, Full Day West Coast Wild Flower Tour, Full Day Hermanus Whale Tour, Cape Town By Night Tour, Cape Town Private VIP Tours, Travel Information, Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, Eastern Cape, Western Cape, Northern Cape, North West, Mpumalanga, Free State, Limpopo, Photo Albums, Garden Route Tours, Kruger National Park Tours, Wildlife Tours, Farmers Tours, Wine Tours, Wild Flower Tours, West Coast Tours, Western Cape Tours

Cape Town Day, Overnight Tours - Photo Album

Cape Town Day, Overnight Tours - Photo Album Click Here To Book.

Full Day Cape Town Peninsula Tour - Cape Town

CITY NATURE CULTURE SHOPPING FOOD
CITY NATURE CULTURE SHOPPING FOOD
HISTORICAL WILDLIFE
HISTORICAL WILDLIFE
Tour Highlights:
  • Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve
  • Sea Point
  • Camps Bay
  • Hout Bay
  • boat ride to seal island
  • Simons town
  • Jackass Penguins
  • Boulders Beach
  • Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens
We will depart at 07:00 am from your Cape Town city hotel to the Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve along one of South Africa's most beautiful coastlines. Your journey takes you through Sea Point to Hout Bay via Camps Bay for a boat ride to seal island. We will visit Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve for a short walk and a chance to see the light house at Cape Point. We will then continue to Simons town for lunch where you visit the rare Jackass Penguins at Boulders Beach. From Simons town you travel to Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens. We will return to Cape Town hotel at approximately 17:30.

Included: All entrance fees, professional tourist group leader with coach  transport, lunch, bottled water.  
(Daily Departures)
Excluded: Cost of Vernacular at Cape Point. All cost of a Personal Nature.
Tour Price: valid until 30/10/2010
No of persons 1 2 3 4-7
Price per person R1950 R1500 R1000 R850
Click here for your Currency Converter.

All Day Tours, Overnight Tours and transfers are conducted according to the terms and conditions of TISA.

ADVENTURE CITY CULTURE ENTERTAINMENT FOOD
ADVENTURE CITY CULTURE ENTERTAINMENT FOOD
HISTORICAL NATURE RELAXATION SHOPPING WILDLIFE
HISTORICAL NATURE RELAXATION  SHOPPING WILDLIFE
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Cape Town Day, Overnight Tours - Photo Album

Cape Town Day, Overnight Tours - Photo Album Cape Town Day, Overnight Tours - Photo Album

Kirstenbosch Information

Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden is a floral treasure, famous for its beauty and the diversity of the Cape flora it displays. The setting is magnificent, against the eastern slopes of Table Mountain, and only 13 km outside of Cape Town.

The estate covers 528 hectares, and only indigenous South African plants are grown here. A diverse range of fynbos flora and forest grows naturally on the mountainside, and a number of trails lead through the natural Garden. The cultivated garden (36 hectares) displays collections of South African plants, particularly those from the winter rainfall region of the country.

Special features

The Botanical Society Conservatory displays South African plants which cannot be grown in the outdoor gardens. The conservatory features plants from a range of natural habitats, from high mountain peaks and shady forests to hot, dry deserts. In the main house, a large baobab tree dominates a display of succulents from the arid regions of Southern Africa. Special collections of bulbs, ferns and alpines can be seen in smaller corner houses.

The Peninsula garden features some of the 2 500 plant species found on the Cape Peninsula.

In the Water-wise garden you can learn how to create a garden which requires far less water and maintenance than a conventional garden.

Close your eyes and let your olfactory sense take over in the Fragrance garden, which features plants with interesting textures and scents.

The Medicinal garden demonstrates one of the oldest uses of plants, and teaches about the medicinal values of South African plants. The garden was redeveloped and extended to form the Useful Plants garden.

The oldest part of the Garden is The Dell, a lovely oasis of tranquility featuring Colonel Bird's Bath, tree ferns and a variety of shade-loving plants.

The Protea garden is exceptionally spectacular in winter and spring. During these months the proteas (family Proteaceae), cone bushes and serrurias are in flower. In early summer, pincushions provide a colorful display in yellow, orange and red.

The Restio garden focuses on the incredible variety of texture and form found in the reed family (Restionaceae).

The Kirstenbosch Restaurant caters for breakfast, lunch and dinner

Musical Sunset Concerts are held on the lawns on Sundays during the summer months from December to March. 

Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve Information

The Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve forms part of the Cape Peninsula Park and is managed by the South African National Parks. The Nature Reserve is recognized globally for its extraordinary land formation, rich and diverse fauna and unique flora. Nowhere else in the world does an area of such spectacular beauty and such rich biodiversity exist almost within a metropolitan area - the thriving and cosmopolitan City of Cape Town.

The legendary Cape Point and Cape of Good Hope form part of the Nature Reserve. These promontories were key beacons for the early explorers and are the source of many myths and legends. In 1488, Bartholomew Dias named the Peninsula Cabo Tormentoso, or the Cape of Storms. King John II of Portugal later gave it the name Cabo da Boa Esperanca - the Cape of Good Hope. In 1580, Sir Frances Drake proclaimed it to be " … the most stately thing and the fairest Cape we saw in the whole circumference of the earth."

In 1860, the first lighthouse was erected at Cape Point. However, due to its high location 238m above sea level, it was often obscured by clouds and mist. When the Portuguese liner, the "Lusitania", was wrecked in 1911, the lighthouse was relocated to its current position above Dias Point, only 87m above sea level.

In the 17th century a Dutch Captain, Hendrick van der Decken, attempted to round the Cape in strong headwinds. Mysteriously his ship and crew disappeared, and legend now tells of the ghost ship "The Flying Dutchman", which has allegedly been sighted around Cape Point.

The Flora of the Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve

The Nature Reserve is a floral treasure, with over one thousand different species of Cape Fynbos (Afrikaans for "fine bush"). The Cape Fynbos has earned international recognition as one of the world's six Floral Kingdoms, albeit definitely the smallest. The Cape Peninsula with 2256 species, and the Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve with 1036 species, have the highest concentration of plant species for similar sized areas in the world.

Plants characteristic of the Cape Fynbos are proteas, ericas (heath) and reeds. The marvelous location of the Nature Reserve at the tip of a great continent where two oceans meet, the prevailing legendary strong winds and the sandstone soil all influence the unique flora found in this area.

The Fauna of the Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve

The Nature Reserve is built on thin and sandy soils, providing an environment where the Cape Fynbos flourishes but which can be harsh on animal life. Although the Reserve is not primarily a game reserve, animal lovers will not be disappointed.

The Chacma Baboon troops on the Cape Peninsula are the only protected population of this species in Africa. Urban development and geographical isolation from other baboon populations threatens their existence. While they feed mainly on fruits, roots, bulbs, honey, insects and scorpions, they may be seen roaming the beaches during low tide, seeking sand hoppers and shellfish.

Bird lovers can spot 250 species of birds, from the large Black Eagle down to the tiny Spotted Prinia. Seagulls and cormorants leave their footprints on the beaches. Sugarbirds and sunbirds feed on the sweet nectar of the proteas, while Egyptian Geese soak up the sun on the rocks. The vegetation is low lying and does not provide much cover or foraging habitat for bush birds. Other bird species include the Fish Eagle, the Steppe Buzzard, the Spotted Eagle Owl and Baaird's Sandpiper, as well as the large yet agile Ostrich - these are but a small selection of what the Reserve has to offer.

There are a number of antelopes in the Nature Reserve. Animal lovers will be able to see the elusive Cape Mountain Zebra, Eland, Cape Grysbok, Red Hartebeest and Grey Rhebuck. The beautiful Bontebok closely escaped extinction in the early 1900's and was branded the rarest antelope in the world, but it has recovered well here in the Reserve.

Other smaller animals include the Lynx, Cape Grey Mongoose and Dassies, and particularly at the car parks, Striped Field Mice. There is also a wealth of insects, tortoises, snakes, lizards and frogs in the Reserve, and during winter and spring the Southern Right Whales return to our waters to mate and give birth to their calves.

Cape Point Beaches

The Cape of Good Hope is a scenic wonder, where soft white sandy beaches alternate with rugged stretches of rock and breathtaking cliffs. The cliffs at Cape Point are among the highest coastal cliffs in the world. The mingling of the icy Atlantic Ocean with the warmer Indian Ocean results in a unique coastal environment and one of the most productive marine zones worldwide.

Dias Beach offers excellent surfing waves in an idyllic setting with perfect coloring. The beach just before Olifantsbos Point is a secluded haven for a beautiful bird life. This beach is littered with tiny whalebones, and a jewel of serenity and tranquility. Famous shipwreck diving spots are also found along the beaches of Cape Point.

If you have any questions or comments please call us on +27-0720390184 or fax us at 0865657301 in south africa or e-mail us on info@12234455.co.za.
You could also contact us with snail mail at: PO Box 12216 Die Boord 7613 Stellenbosch South Africa
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