SA’s top off-the-beaten-track adventures

On this arid hilltop you'll find the largest telescope in the Southern Hemisphere " SALT (Southern African Largest Telescope). With zero light pollution and cloudless night skies. Picture: Leon Lestrade

On this arid hilltop you'll find the largest telescope in the Southern Hemisphere " SALT (Southern African Largest Telescope). With zero light pollution and cloudless night skies. Picture: Leon Lestrade

Published Jul 28, 2016

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Cape Town - South Africa is famed as a tourist destination for locals as well as international visitors.

And while most of us are familiar with the iconic sights like the profile of Table Mountain, Durban’s welcoming, warm seas and the Kruger National Park’s wildlife, Shaun Pozyn, head of marketing for British Airways has some suggestions for more off-beat attractions.

Get strung out

A number of activities allow you to experience Africa’s sights and sounds with a rush of adrenaline, all while safely tethered:

The Cape Canopy Tour in the Hottentots Holland Nature Reserve recently opened hundreds of meters of ziplining – foefie-slides in local vernacular – through majestic mountains near Grabouw. You’ll slide on steel cables through this World Heritage Site and over valleys and waterfalls. Four-by- four vehicles provide access to the slides. Similar experiences are offered in the Magaliesberg, in Karkloof and the Drakensberg in KwaZulu-Natal, in the giant Outeniqua yellow-wood trees of the Tzitzikamma forest, and in Magoebaskloof in Mpumalanga.

 

See www.capecanopytour.co.za

Tandem paragliding enables you to glide over Cape Town, taking off from Lion’s Head or Signal Hill, with up to 30 minutes of airborne ogling of the city and Table Bay, steered by a qualified instructor.

See www.paraglide.co.za

If you prefer a little more altitude, you can try tandem skydiving at a number of venues around South Africa. Arguably the most spectacular is the jump over the Robertson Valley, about an hour’s drive from Cape Town, offered by Mother City Skydiving

www.mothercityskydiving.co.za.

No experience is needed, as you jump tethered to an instructor. Jumps are also available in other areas such as Durban, Mossel Bay, Plettenberg Bay, Rustenberg and Parys.

See www.skydiveafrica.co.za

 

Look up

Winter in South Africa offers more than an excuse to cosy up to fireplaces, red wine and potjies (a traditional stew prepared in a cast-iron pot).

It’s also time to don your warmest gear and head to some stargazing facilities. In the chilly – seriously, it’s coldest place in the country – climes of Sutherland in the Karoo, you can see the Milky Way through the Southern African Large Telescope (www.salt.co.za), the southern hemisphere’s largest telescope. Astronomy is a kind of space-travel and in Sutherland, it comes with the bonus of the famed Karoo cuisine.

 

 

A photo posted by Thomas (@thomas_seccombe) on Jul 25, 2016 at 9:45am PDT

 

A number of game reserves also offer a combination of game-viewing and stargazing.

 

Let it slide

The recently-opened Long Tom Taboggan at the Misty Mountain resort near Sabie in Mpumalanga is a track of nearly 2km of steel rail. You’ll ride for a couple of minutes at around 40km/h (It feels faster, say those who’ve done the ride) though some picturesque scenery.

See https://www.facebook.com/LongTomToboggan/

 

Go upscale

Long a favourite with families and nature-lovers, Cape Town’s Two Oceans Aquarium (www.aquarium.co.za) recently opened its new exhibits after more than two years of work. The much-expanded I&J Ocean Exhibit holds 1.6m litres of seawater and a 10m-long tunnel offering up-close views of dozens of species of sea-life. A large new exhibit of jellyfish has also opened.

 

Caffeine with a cause

You probably wouldn’t travel to another city just to have some coffee there, but if you need a caffeine jolt while in Cape Town, consider one – or both – of two new coffee-shops that contribute to social development.

 

Brownies and Downies www.browniesanddownies.co.za is a coffee-shop and lunch-room that’s also a training-centre for people with intellectual disabilities such as autism, Down syndrome and learning disabilities, while I Love Coffee www.eatout.co.za/venue/love-coffee- shop/ is operated entirely by deaf people.

It’s run in conjunction with Tribe Coffee Roasting www.tribecoffee.co.za in the Woodstock Foundry.

Adapted from a press release for IOL

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