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....

One Man’s Utopian Dream

Christina Lamb’s much admired book The Africa House is subtitled “The True Story of an English Gentleman and his African Dream”. Published in 1999, it tells of the journalist-cum-author’s chance encounter with Mark Harvey and her subsequent visit to his family home at Shiwa Ng’andu. Shiwa House and the estate were developed by Harvey’s grandfather, Sir Stewart Gore-Browne, who moved out to Africa from Surrey, England, to build a mansion in the bush in the 1920s. It was surrounded by his own utopian village, which included the provision of schools, hospitals, playing fields, shops and a post office. Gore-Browne also assisted with the development of state infrastructure throughout the region, becoming active in liberal politics. He is, to date, the only white man to have been given a State Funeral in Zambia. The eulogy was delivered by none other than President Kenneth Kaunda. It’s a long way from Weybridge in Surrey!