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....

The Maasai

The Maasai are a Nilotic people numbering about 900 000, split almost equally between northern Tanzania and Kenya. Due to their nomadic ways, they are the only people not obliged to carry passports when crossing between the two countries. The Maasai culture is strongly male-dominated with the women holding a very lowly status in society. Maasai life and wealth centres around cattle and children, although calves are recognised as wealth at birth, whereas babies, due to the high mortality rate, are not recognised as existing until they have seen three moons. In death, the Maasai are equally pragmatic, leaving the corpses of the deceased out for scavengers in the belief that burial is harmful to the soil. The dead body is often smeared with cow’s blood to lure the hyenas as there is no greater disgrace than having your remains spurned in death by wild animals.