Featured Destinations

Two mountain ranges provide a spectacular backdrop to the Cape Winelands, whilst the sea and Cape Town, The Tavern of the Seas, form the front-drop. And what better backdrop to a tavern could there be than one of the world’s prime wine-producing areas?

Probably the world’s best-known waterfall. Made up of five separate falls stretching over 1 700 metres, it is the largest curtain of water in the world, with a drop of between 90 and 107 metres. A spectacular gorge below the falls offers rafting for the brave. Everybody else flies above it in the ever-buzzing helicopters and light aircraft.

The Cape Garden Route is South Africa’s Garden of Eden, a combination of long, deserted beaches and tranquil lagoons, lush green forests and majestic mountain ranges....

A Very Old Child

The North-West region of South Africa (and neighbouring Gauteng) have produced some of the world’s most significant paleontological finds. Found in a limestone quarry, in 1924, the Taung Child was the first hominid to be discovered in Africa and led to the exposure as a hoax of Britain’s Piltdown Man. The Taung skull belonged to a three-year-old child. Debate continues to rage as to how he died. Possibly a leopard? Possibly a large bird of prey? Possibly another Australopithicus Africanus? What is certain though, is that the child died a very, very long time ago. Probably about 2.5 million years.