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Nelson Mandela Bay (Port-Elizabeth)
Mangaung, the new name for 'PE', as Port-Elizabeth was known locally, is becoming less unremarkable, and the luxurious Game Reserves like Shamwari and Kariega are becoming house hold names in luxury Game Reserves
Mangaung, or 'PE', as Port-Elizabeth was/is known locally, is becoming less unremarkable, and the luxurious Game Reserves like Shamwari and Kariega are becoming house hold names in luxury Game Reserves.

With Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality (Port-Elizabeth) rapidly developing, Nelson Mandela Bay (Port-Elizabeth) is and more becoming a natural end of the Garden Route

Also the City Hall and Market Square are worth a visit, containing a replica of the Dias Cross, originally placed by the Portuguese navigator Bartholomew Dias.

There are several other interesting buildings, including a memorial to Prester John, the Campanile Clock Tower and the Donkin Lighthouse, while the old part of town, above the city center, has some attractive Victorian houses.

The Museum, Oceanarium and Snake Park are also on the seafront at Humewood. The King George IV Art Gallery & Fine Arts Hall has an excellent collection of 19th- and 20th-century art and Castle Hill Museum, in the city's oldest house, has a fine collection of Cape furniture.

Settler's Park Nature Reserve at How Avenue abounds with indigenous flora and St George's Park has open-air exhibitions and craft fairs, as well as theatrical productions. South of the city are good beaches, such as King's Beach and Humewood Beach. The latter features the Apple Express, one of the few remaining narrow-gauge steam trains, which runs on occasion from Humewood to Thornhill.

West of Port Elizabeth
The Eastern Cape portion of the Garden Route (see also Western Cape) notably includes the Tsitsikamma Coastal National Park, the remnant of a once-massive indigenous forest, home to immense native trees such as yellowwoods.

Jeffreys Bay is a world-renowned surfer's paradise. Heading north, miles and miles of sandy beaches run all the way up the coast. The Alexandria State Forest is a reserve that runs along the coast and contains a hiking trail along the beach. East from here is Dias Cross, the location of one of Bartholemew Dias' stone crosses and a desolate paradise for beach lovers.

Inland, the Karoo is a vast and beautiful upland area with spectacular sunsets: drier, hotter and colder than the coasts. The novelist Olive Schreiner made the area famous and her house at Cradock has been restored.

The Mountain Zebra National Park is worth a visit, on the northern slopes of the Bankberg range. The Addo Elephant National Park, 72km (45 miles) north of Port Elizabeth, was created in 1931 to protect the last of the eastern Cape elephants.

Recently massively expanded, it offers an excellent range of game, including black rhino, buffalo and antelope and more than 170 bird species. There are also several private reserves nearby, including the excellent Shamwari and Kwandwe, both of which have very upmarket accommodation and 'Big Five' (elephant, lion, leopard, rhino and buffalo) game viewing.

The town of Graaff-Reinet, situated in the heart of the Karoo Nature Reserve at the foot of the Sneeuberg Mountains, is one of the finest surviving Cape-Dutch towns in South Africa, with many attractive 18th- and 19th-century buildings, as well as parks and museums.

Just 5km (3 miles) outside the town, it is possible for visitors to drive into the Valley of Desolation along a twisting single-track road that eventually climbs into the mountains.

From the viewpoints, it is possible to look down over Graaff-Reinet across towering red and ochre outcrops of rock. The nearby town of Nieu Bethesda is worth a visit for the Owl House, a remarkable sculpture garden by eccentric artist Helen Martins, subject of a play by Athol Fugard.

Settler Country
East of Port Elizabeth, Kenton-on-Sea and Port Alfred are pretty little holiday towns, the latter on the mouth of the Kowie River - canoeing trips can be undertaken from Port Alfred to Bathurst, home of The Pig and Whistle, the oldest pub in South Africa (1831).

A short distance inland, Victorian Grahamstown is home to one of South Africa's best universities and hosts a giant annual arts festival each July.

The town has many fine buildings, amongst which the most interesting are the Cathedral of St Michael and St George, situated in the triangular Church Square, the 1820 Settlers Monument (after the first British to settle the area), Fort Selwyn, and rows of shops and houses on Church Square, Artificers' Square, Hill Street and MacDonald Street.

The town also has several excellent museums, including the Albany Museum, History Museum, Natural Sciences Museum and the International Library of African Music. Local development projects...



Gorah Elephant Park

The first private concession in a National Park, is a premier lodge set in the heart of the malaria-free Addo Elephant National Park,. The Gorah House - Restored to it's 19th century colonial splendour and period furnished, the main house reflects a noble opulence and delivers the meticulous service and attention to detail that characterises Hunter's properties.

Bushmans Sands Country Estate

We invite you to join this historic partnership to see Alicedale transformed into a thriving example of sustainable tourism development unlike any other in South Africa.

Situated in the Bushman s River Canyon in the Eastern Cape, Alicedale is 50 kilometres from Grahamstown and 100 kilometers from Port Elizabeth.

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