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-maize-ing Free State

The Free State is the agricultural heart of South Africa. The original Boer farms were measured out by choosing a spot for the farmhouse and then riding out to mark the four corners as far as the rider could travel in one day on one horse. A good steed managed to rein in about 3 000 morgen (2 500 hectares). Although many of the farms have now been subdivided through inheritances, some very large chunks still exist. Much of the Free State is down to mielies, making it the corn-basket, as well the bread-basket, of the sub-continent. The mielie is South Africa’s name for a husk of maize and it forms the staple diet of the majority of South Africans. The name mielie, or sometimes mealie, strangely comes from the Portguese milho not from an Afrikaans root.