Rishi and I spent September 21 through 28 in and around Cape
Town, South Africa, a trip that showed us why the Mother City, as it’s known to
South Africans, frequently appears on lists of the world’s most beautiful
places. We got a great taste of what the area has to offer — too much for a single blog entry — so I've broken this into parts:
Part 1 — Flowers and Views (this entry)
Part 2 — District Six, Townships, and Robben Island
Part 3 — Ancient Rock Art
Part 4 — Whales and Wine
U.S. friends, if you are thinking of visiting Southern Africa, I highly recommend including some time in the Cape Town area on your itinerary. Maybe we can rendezvous with you because I certainly wouldn't mind going there again.
Part 1 — Flowers and Views (this entry)
Part 2 — District Six, Townships, and Robben Island
Part 3 — Ancient Rock Art
Part 4 — Whales and Wine
U.S. friends, if you are thinking of visiting Southern Africa, I highly recommend including some time in the Cape Town area on your itinerary. Maybe we can rendezvous with you because I certainly wouldn't mind going there again.
The view of Cape Town from the Robben Island ferry, with Table Mountain at the left and Signal hill at the right, is lovely, even on a cloudy day. |
Source: http://www.bcb.uwc.ac.za/inforeep/capeproject.htm |
During the trip, I learned that plants originating in the Western Cape include birds of paradise, gerbera daisies, gladiolus, calla lilies, clivia, pelargonium, and protea, not to mention a huge array of ericas (heathers), succulents, and ice plants. We knew we were a little late for the peak of the flowers and also didn’t travel quite as far north as Namaqualand, the area which is supposed to be literally blanketed with flowers in August. Nonetheless, we enjoyed beautiful scenery and definitely saw lots of flowers as our pictures attest.
This collage highlights a few examples of the many plants originating in the Cape Floristic Kingdom. King protea (lower right), the largest of the genus protea, is South Africa's national flower. |
Paternoster's beautiful beach with whitewashed homes. |
Citrusdal sits at the foot of the Cedarburg mountains, which provide a beautiful backdrop to the orange-tree filled valley. |
Sunday saw us driving northward again, en route to
Clanwilliam, a small agricultural town, and then over a pass through the
mountains to a spot called Sevilla, where we spent the afternoon walking along
a trail that accesses rock paintings created by San bushmen, the area’s
original inhabitants. See http://rjabroad.blogspot.com/2014/10/ancient-rock-art-in-south-africa.html.
Monday it was on to Cape Town, about a two hour drive south. We
arrived at our hotel at midday, and the first priority was taking the cable
car up Table Mountain. The weather was partly cloudy and cool, but as the forecast
for the next few days called for worsening clouds and rain, we knew this
might be our best chance to see Table Mountain without the blanket of clouds,
known as the table cloth, which frequently comes in from the sea and cloaks the
mountain.
The cable car ride to the top of Table Mountain is special in its own right, but the views from atop the mountain are the real draw, even on a cloudy day. |
We spent a full day Tuesday touring historic sites from South Africa’s
apartheid era. See http://rjabroad.blogspot.com/2014/10/cape-town-and-environs-part-2-district.html.
Over our last two days in Cape Town, we continued our exploration of the natural beauty of the Cape Peninsula. We spent one day driving along the Atlantic coast, headed south on the peninsula that looks like a hooked finger extending south from Cape Town. At the end of the peninsula is the Cape Point Nature Preserve.
Wildflowers in the Cape Point Nature Reserve. |
Finally, on our last day in Cape Town, we capped off our stay there with a visit to the world renowned
Rishi with wildflowers at Kirstenbosch. |
This bird, a Cape Francolin I think, also seems to be admiring the wildflowers. |
Photos from the Kirstenbosch protea garden show a selection of the many protea types we saw there. |
Kirstenbosch has a large collection of cycads, a plant type that dates back to the Jurassic era and is little changed since that time. |
Egyptian geese at Kirstenbosch. |
For the blog on our last two days in the area, visiting the Whale Coast and Franschhoek, see http://rjabroad.blogspot.com/2014/10/cape-town-and-environs-part-4-whales.html.