Africa – Week 2 – Garden Route and Cape Town

On Tuesday we started week 2 in Knysna. Its a beautiful town on the Garden Route set on a lagoon with 2 “heads” guarding it from the Indian Ocean.


The Garden Route (Afrikaans: Tuinroete) is a stretch of the south-eastern coast of South Africawhich extends from Mossel Bay in the Western Cape to the Storms River in the Eastern Cape. The name comes from the verdant and ecologically diverse vegetation encountered here and the numerous lagoons and lakes dotted along the coast. It includes towns such as Knysna,Plettenberg Bay and Nature’s Valley; with George, the Garden Route’s largest city and main administrative centre.


We stayed in an inn at the top of the mountain overlooking town, Falcons View Manor.

Knysna at Dusk

Falcons View Manor’s history has a strong connection to the Thesen family, who played an integral role in the development of Knysna as a timber town. The Thesen family home, Hill House, has become Falcons View Manor, an official heritage building. And while the hotel retains its original charm, the rooms in the Manor House have recently been refurbished to satisfy contemporary tastes.

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The Heads

We did some shopping after touring the Heads and Thesen Island and headed out out for our 4 hour trek to Gansbaii (HANS-bye), the Great White Shark capital of the world. We had just been informed by our gregarious host Renee of the White Shark Guest House that our dive (Thursday the 28th) had been cancelled due to wind and waves.

So we had a nice meal in town and headed out earlier the next day to get extra time on Cape Town with the hope of returning Sunday for a dive when the weather cleared.

We drove from Gansbaai directly to Cape Point National Park along the ocean. Between St. James and Kalk Bay we ran into almost an hour delay to construction that had been going on for a couple of years now.

After we got through we stopped at the Salty Dog restaurant in Simons Town, a fish and chips place. We were starved so it worked. Onto Cape Point, now racing a rain front due to our construction delay.

With the weather Cape Point was less than spectacular. The highest point actually is a lighthouse not the Cape of Good Hope itself. We learned that the Cape of Good Hope is not where the Atlantic and Indian Oceans meet but instead the most southern point in Africa. The 2 oceans meet at Cape Agulhas though this is a point of debate among South Africans.

This was Thursday. Friday, my birthday, was grand. We “ubered” down to the waterfront and did as most tourists do at some point, shop. The dollar was worth over 14 Rand so prices were great. I got handmade wooden sunglasses, a beautiful hand painted ostrich egg and some Cohibas as birthday swag.

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We rode the Cape Wheel and got some great shots from this vista. We has lunch at a Belgian restaurant (Den Anker) where everything was cooked in beer (go figure)!

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The Cape Wheel

On Sunday we toured the Stellenbosch and Franshoek wine regions with our friends. A great synopsis in on the video below!!!

On our final full day (Sunday May 1), we split up as I really wanted to do the shark dive and Lisa wanted to go to Table Mountain. The weather was perfect for both as you can see!!

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View from Table Mountain of Cape Town
Shark Alley
Some of the shark action

Monday morning prior to going home (Cape Town >> Johannesburg >> London >> Dulles >>Greenville) we said our good byes to the Sittlingers our friends who we missed terribly and commit to seeing more than once every 15 years!

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Lisa and Mary overlooking Camps Bay Beach

Africa 2016 – Before We Leave

More photos and videos on Facebook and Flickr!

April 19

Well, checking in last night took an hour (until midnight!!).

Checked in for Washington–>London–>Johannesburg. Lisa doesn’t have frequent traveler status so she has two choices. Pay $135 a leg to pre-select or select at checkin 24 hours out. So, you checkin for both flights but they want to charge $135 for seat selections on the connecting flights as it was more than 24 hours for London–>Johannesburg. This is after I called 5 hours earlier and explicitly asked this question and was told “no problem.” After 45 minutes and 2 supervisors they waived the fee.

Apparently all international carriers have adopted this policy as another way to make money but it’s the worst customer experience in the world.


April 18

Today is the last work day this month and after today I only have 8 more before “retirement”. I say that in quotes as you never know what the future will bring.

Have to stay up late tonight to check in (24hrs before my 1020 PM departure tomorrow from Dulles) and get a British Air seat assignment for the Heathrow–>Joburg leg. Even at outrageous British Airways Club World prices they charge $135 to get a seat more than 24 hours before checkin. “WTF”. Since I have status on AA I was able to get a seat assignment for myself and now I have to stay up so Lisa and I can sit together on this 11 hour flight. For a $7,000 ticket, this is ludicrous (speed).


April 17

Packing complete 48 hours out. Had to “test pack” for weight on Airlink, SAAs regional carrier from Johannesburg to Skukuza (gateway to Kruger and Sabi Sands, the private reserve where we will be. 20kg each checked and 2 x 8 kg hand carry. Sounds easy until you get to my camera gear 🙂

S Mack Peters ( a less wild cat) is also ready to get rid of us as shown by the photo below. He realizes he can be packed and we are still under the 40kg limit.

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There had been a lot of planning on this trip as the 10 days after our safari ends I planned mostly myself with help of our Cape Town friends Mary und Karlheinz as well as booking.com and AirBnB.  I even purchased South African maps on microSD for our Garmin (US$99, don’t know how they stay in business) so we could navigate the Garden Route in our rental car without worrying about wireless data.

And of course making sure we had all the necessary accoutrements for our fun excursion with the Great Whites in Gansbaai.