Featured Destinations

Malawi’s first permanently settled people were Bantu from the north, who formed villages in 1500 along the central section of the lake and westwards into what is now Zambia. By 1600 these people were trading with the Portuguese and by the 1700s their tribal cohesions seemed to be disintegrating.

Bushmen, Damara and Namaqua people have lived in Namibia since early times with significant Bantu incursions occurring from 1300 AD onwards. The first Europeans to set foot on Africa’s south-west coast were Portuguese and included Bartolomeu Dias, but they did not put down any roots. Just crosses.

Zanzibar is an archipelago consisting of two main Islands of Unguja (commonly referred to as Zanzibar Island), Pemba and about 51 other surrounding small islets....

A Case of Good Wine

Although common knowledge has it that the Huguenots initiated wine-growing in the Cape, the truth is that a number of Dutch settlers were already making some very quaffable wines by the time they arrived. Simon van der Stel’s Vin de Constance, from Klein Constantia, for example, was a world leader in the 1680s. By 1859 more than four million litres of wine had been exported to Britain from the Cape before the wine industry all but collapsed in 1866 following an outbreak of Phylloxera. The current wine harvest is estimated at 780 million litres per year, making South Africa the world’s eighth largest wine-producing country, just ahead of Australia and behind – with the largest first – Italy, France, China, USA, Spain, Argentina and Chile.