South Africa
- Apr 2
- 2 min read
From wide savannahs and open plains to the cold Atlantic coastline shaped by wind and kelp, South Africa is defined by scale and contrast. Safari days focus on animal movement across varied terrain, while Cape Town and its surrounds bring the journey to the coast — through ocean experiences, food culture, inland mountains, and nearby winelands.

Kruger National Park
Few wildlife destinations on Earth can match Kruger for sheer variety and scale. We work with guiding teams whose knowledge goes well beyond animal identification — into ecology, behaviour, and the relationships between species. The difference between a mediocre game drive and an extraordinary one almost always comes down to the guide.

Ocean Exploration with Marine Biologist Cape Town
Cape Town's coastline is more alive than it first appears. Beneath the Atlantic, cold currents have shaped a vast underwater forest of kelp — dense, cathedral-like, and home to Cape fur seals, reef sharks, and marine life that rarely makes it onto an itinerary. At Boulders Beach, African penguins nest among the granite rocks at the water's edge. Further along the peninsula, Cape Point rises from the sea in sheer sandstone cliffs where two oceans meet.

The Constantia Wine Jeep Trail Cape Winelands
A private off-piste drive through the historic Constantia Winelands — three estates, back roads that rarely open to visitors, and time with some of the most interesting people making wine in the Cape today, including one of the region's youngest female winemakers. A long afternoon, worth taking slowly.

Through the Artist's Lens Cape Town
Cape Town reveals itself differently through the people shaping it. In Bo-Kaap, where painted houses climb the slopes of Signal Hill, and in the neighbourhoods still marked by the legacy of District Six, street art becomes a lens into history, identity, and contemporary life. We explore these areas with local creatives who know the stories behind the walls.




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