SafariNow

Friday, August 21, 2009

2010 FIFA World Cup Semi Final (II) B vs D

Where Durban 
When 2010/07/07 08:30 pm to 10:30 pm
Venue Durban Stadium

Will you be there to watch your team go for glory in Durban? Durban Stadium is where the 2010 FIFA World Cup Semi Final (II) B vs D match kicks off at 20:30 on Wednesday 7 July 2010. Start blowing your vuvuzela when your team makes a killer pass. Who will make it to the Finals? Eish!

The professional season in South Africa is between August and May with teams participating in the Premier Soccer League and a few other competitions. The Chiefs and the Pirates have a nationwide following and their contests are a colourful climax of the Premier Soccer League's matches. South Africa's national squad, affectionately nicknamed Bafana Bafana qualified for the 1998 and 2002 World Cup Finals and will have the privilege of competing in the 2010 World Cup on home soil.

Vuvuzela? Contributing to the jovial atmosphere of South Africa's football games are the unique sounds of the vuvuzela, a plastic horn, along with singing and countless other homemade instruments.


Contact Person
 
Contact Details
 
Event website
www.fifa.com



 



PERSONAL SAFETY

 

Crime continues to be a contentious issue in South Africa but media reports often tend to be overblown. Most tourists who visit South Africa depart after their vacation without any unpleasant occurences. Certain areas witness violent crime as a daily occurrence but this tends to be in places like downtown Johannesburg and certain townships which are the poorer areas.

Tourist venues are pretty safe, especially in places like the Waterfront and central Cape Town which have privately funded police and 24 hour surveillance cameras. The South African authorities have made it a high priority to protect tourists and have deployed special 'tourism police' in the cities and large towns.

As far as your personal safety is concerned, don't be paranoid, let commonsense prevail and take care as one would in most cities around the world.
Avoid deserted places, wearing expensive jewellery, slinging camera and video equipment over your shoulder, carrying lots of cash and leaving valuables in vehicles.

Most safari lodges, hotels, guesthouses and B&Bs have safe facilities for valuables in rooms or with reception.

USEFUL LINKS:

U.K. Foreign & Commonwealth Office Travel Advice
U.S. Department of State Travel Advice

Mount Edgecombe Golf Estate

Mount Edgecombe Golf Estate

Fairways Lodge is situated on the prestigious Mt Edgecombe Golf Estate and guests may play on both courses at membership rates. The Lodge has golf carts available for hire. In addition, the hotel will arrange play on other courses in the vicinity for its guests, including Durban Country Club, Zimbali, Princes Grant, Beachwood and (further a field) Wild Coast Sun. To cater for the golfing fraternity, Fairways Lodge has launched its own unique golf package. Guests have the opportunity to 'build their own tour', with a selection of daily options each individually priced. The package caters for the non-golf playing partner as well, and has full day and half day tours and outings for the guest's leisure time. The package is competitively priced and extremely flexible.

View accommodation at Fairways Lodge

Cathedral Peak Hotel - golf course

Set in the Ukhahlamba Drakensberg Park (recently declared a World Heritage Site) lies Cathedral Peak Hotel with its spectacular golf course surrounded by the finest of the Drakensberg scenery. Located only 250km from Durban and 400km from Johannesburg the Cathedral Peak Golf course was designed and built by Roly Taylor with the collaboration of his well known brother, Reg.

Cathedral Peak Tee Off

The course has been aptly termed 'the thinking golfer's course' and was opened by Dayle Hayes on 13 January 1996. The Complete Golfer once stated 'Few courses in the World have a more spectacular setting and although it clearly has no pretensions to being a championship test, it must be added to the list of veritable gems among our country courses'. This challenging golf course has recently undergone quite extensive renovations and upgrades including the construction of 'Philip's Folly' - the new golf clubhouse. This upmarket facility incorporates change rooms, a pub, lounge area and terrace; it is the perfect 19th hole offering breathtaking mountain views, ideal for early evening sundowners after a great day's golf.

View accommodation at Cathedral Peak Hotel

FAMILY HOLIDAYS

Knysna lagoon exploration
©South African Tourism

With its first world infrastructure, favourable exchange rate and varied attractions, South Africa is a great family holiday destination.

Children of a sufficient age to walk and talk and communicate with ease will find a visit to a game reserve or national park fascinating. Many of the private game reserves do not allow children, but some particularly welcome them, and many that do allow children don't allow them on game drives, unless the whole vehicle is taken by one family or party, so do your homework. Bear in mind that the main game viewing destinations are in malarial areas, where it is risky for young children and pregnant women, so you might want to stick to the Eastern Cape, Northern Cape and North West Province reserves. As a rule the national parks are very child-friendly, with self-catering family chalets and perhaps even playgrounds.

Fishing in tidal rock pools
©South African Tourism

Beach holidays are another great favourite with families and, with such a long coastline, there are some really good options. The Wild Coast, in the Eastern Cape, is a favourite with local families, and many of the hotels have special children's programmes, playgrounds, children's dining areas and baby sitting services. The Garden Route is a good option if you're looking for a more exclusive experience, as there are a number of luxurious hotels and guesthouses that cater specifically for families, and many child-friendly attractions like a monkey park and walks with elephants. Dolphin and whale watching is another experience most children would never forget.

Springflowers near Clanwilliam
©Licia Erasmus

If you are travelling in spring, it's hard to resist the temptation to travel from Cape Town up the West Coast and into the main flower area of Namaqualand, where you could photograph your little darlings frolicking in fields of flowers stretching to the horizon.

But, really, there is something in almost every centre that you and your children will find interesting so it's just a matter of planning carefully and ensuring that you get child-friendly accommodation. Also bear in mind that, if you want a child seat in a rental car, you need to book it in advance.

Travelling by car? Try 13 games for kids in our Travel Matters article - Travel with Kids

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Nelspruit

 
Author:Samantha Black
Submitted:05 May 2009

Nelspruit is the biggest town in Mpumalanga, so it's definitely the place to go for real shopping or any other infrastructural need. The KMIA (Kruger Mpumalanga International Airport), which is just outside the town, is the nearest airport to the Kruger National Park. Nelspruit is the main town on the N4 which heads east towards Mozambique, and it's also en route to Swaziland from either Johannesburg or Pretoria.

The Lowveld National Botanical Gardens is spectacularly situated on the confluence of the Nels and Crocodile Rivers, just outside the town. It's a good place to do a crash course on all the trees you'll be seeing on safari, and it has one of the most comprehensive cycad gardens in the world.

Not far from Nelspruit, you can do a hike or a horse trail though the lovely Kaapsehoop, with its rolling montane grasslands and deep forests. You're likely to catch a glimpse, at least, of one of the many feral horses that roam the hills and, if you're into birds, you may see the very rare blue swallow.

Nelspruit shopping mall
Nelspruit shopping mall
© South African Tourism

Horse riding through montane grasslands
 Horse riding through montane grasslands
© South African Tourism

Kruger National Park

 
Author:Samantha Black
Submitted:05 May 2009

The Kruger National Park, which measures a whopping two million hectares, is approximately the size of the whole of Wales. Although there are still fences between parts of the Kruger National Park and Mozambique and Zimbabwe, so the planned Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park is not quite yet a reality. When it is, it will be spectacular. Actually, Kruger already is. Most of the park is situated in the Lowveld. Restricted to broad valleys below 1 000m above sea level, the Lowveld is what many people consider to be the 'real' Africa. In this low-lying subtropical climate, broad-leaved trees and thorn trees co-exist happily in relatively open woodland, interspersed with long grass - and, of course, game. Wildlife abounds.

In the far north, it gets hotter and the vegetation changes to mopane woodland and, right in the northern part of the country, huge baobab trees dominate the landscape. The rivers here tend to be broad and slow-moving and may consist of no more than a few unconnected pools at the end of the dry season but that's when the game congregates around the few known water sources - so it all evens out. You may have heard the cynical remark that Kruger is 'too developed' with loads of town-like camps and other infrastructure. Well, yes. The park does have a number of good accommodation options - more than 20 SANParks camps and a few private luxury lodges as well. That may sound like a lot - but remember that Kruger is the size of Wales - and in all that space there is one town - the main camp, Skukuza, is virtually a small town - about a dozen tiny hamlets with less than a hundred families and a few out of they way camps that would probably relate to a small farmstead. That leaves an awful lot of real wilderness.

You can do Kruger as a self-drive or as a guided tour. Other exciting options include walking safaris, mountain bike trails and a self-drive 4x4 trail. The nearest airport to the park is the Kruger-Mpumalanga International Airport, just outside Nelspruit. The southern, more popular, part of Kruger is about four hour's drive from Johannesburg, and a little less from Pretoria. The drive to the more remote, far less utilised, northern part, takes a few hours longer, but it's not on the same route. You could do a great circular tour if you had ten days or so to spare. Fly in to KMIA and enter the park in the south, drive very slowly to the north, spending a day or two at different camps en route, and then drive back to Johannesburg. (Or the other way round, of course.)

Strangely - and contrary to expectations - the northern part, which is truly wild, has less animals than the south so don't feel you're missing out if you've only got a few days in the more busy part of the park. As well as the Kruger National Park, the lowveld is well endowed with private nature reserves, most of which have luxury lodges, where guests are subjected to an outrageous level of pampering and taken on fantastic game drives and optional walks by very knowledgeable and attentive guides. Many lodges even have attached wellness centres where you can fill in the time between morning and evening game drives with a massage, facial or some other indulgent treatment.

Note: If you are planning to travel to the Kruger National Park or Lowveld please be aware that this is a malaria region. Consult your doctor or travel clinic for advice and refer to our article on malaria.

Check out some amazing video footage of a battle between lions and a herd of buffalo in Kruger National Park - Battle in Kruger Park.


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Bull elephant taking a sunset dustbath Bull elephant taking a sunset dustbath
© South African Tourism


© South African Tourism

Baobab sunset Baobab sunset
© South African Tourism

Hiking the Olifants Trail in Kruger Park Hiking the Olifants Trail in Kruger Park
© South African Tourism

ABSEILING

 
Abseiling on White Mountain - KZN Midlands
©South African Tourism

It was only towards the end of the last century that abseiling, also called rappelling, became an activity in its own right. Till then it was just the method climbers used to get off a mountain, cavers used to descend into the bowels of the earth and fire-fighters used for all sorts of macho purposes. But it's fun, so it's available as an activity in its own right.

In case you have no idea what abseiling is all about, it's the art of lowering yourself safely down a rope. You wear a climbing harness, and are clipped onto the rope with some manner of descending device (there are lots of different ones, and they all have technical names, which you'll either know already or not understand, anyway).

Abseiling Kaaimans Gorge
©Kelvin Saunders - Eden Adventures

You then walk backwards down the cliff face (or dam wall or enemy headquarters, or whatever) supported by the rope, slowly lowering yourself down, enjoying the scenery en route. Most commercial abseils are belayed, which means they're almost idiot-proof. If you were to just let go in panic, the trip leader could safely lower you down remotely, either from above or below. It's also quite likely that there'll be a decent section of overhang, so you get to spend some time just hanging out, admiring the view. For something a tad more extreme - rapp jumping is abseiling with the climbing ropes attached at your back instead of your tummy, so you go down face first - usually running. Not for the faint of heart. One of our most spectacular abseils is on Table Mountain. The actual abseil is only about 100m high but you're hanging out about a kilometre above the city - which is great if you want to check out the scenery, but a tad scary if you're really not good with heights.

Table Mountain abseil
©South African Tourism

Also with fantastic views and close to Cape Town is a combination abseiling/kloofing trip along the Steenbras River Gorge, where you get to jump into deep pools and abseil down a waterfall. You could abseil down another pretty waterfall on the beautiful Kaaimans River, which is a landmark near the Garden Route town of Wilderness. There are three abseil routes on the spectacular western head at Knysna - including a really high, very exposed site hanging right out over the crashing waves - a pretty abseil at Oribi Gorge, on the KZN South Coast, a nice scenic one next to Howick Falls, near Pietermaritzburg, one over Sabie Falls, near the town of Sabie and another at Hazyview, both of which are in Mpumalanga, and another fun abseil at Hartebeespoort Dam in North West Province, near Johannesburg. For an urban adventure of note, you can rapp jump off skyscrapers in Johannesburg. There are also fun abseils in Swaziland and at Vic Falls, on the border of Zimbabwe and Zambia. The small country of Lesotho, which lies entirely within South Africa's borders, has the highest commercial abseil in the world. It's 204m high. Try that if you dare.

To book Kloofing and Abseiling tours along the Garden Route contact:

Chris & Louise Leggatt at Eden Adventures
Mobile: 083 628 8547
Tel & Fax: +27 44 877 0179
Email: tours@eden.co.za