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		<title>Safari: Kruger National Park &#8211; South Africa, Africa</title>
		<link>http://localtraveller.wordpress.com/2009/03/02/safari-kruger-national-park-south-africa-africa/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Mar 2009 11:07:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kerryoki4</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Africa Safari Vacations]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Holidays to Africa tailormade Cedarberg African Travel bespoke luxury travel South Africa Botswana Zambia Tanzania Uganda Indian Ocean Islands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Luxury African Safaris]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Luxury African Safaris &#38; Holidays to South Africa tailormade by Cedarberg African Travel By: Luke Henry Avoiding tourist traps Travelling in South Africa with a car is challenging at the best of times. But when trying to avoid tourist traps and beaten paths, it takes the degree of difficulty up a notch. Add budget traveller [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=localtraveller.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4807054&amp;post=7&amp;subd=localtraveller&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.cedarberg-travel.com/south-africa" target="_blank">Luxury African Safaris &amp; Holidays to South Africa</a> tailormade by <a href="http://www.cedarberg-travel.com/" target="_blank">Cedarberg African Travel</a></p>
<p><span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse:separate;color:#000000;font-family:arial;font-size:12px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;letter-spacing:normal;line-height:16px;orphans:2;text-indent:0;text-transform:none;white-space:normal;widows:2;word-spacing:0;">By:<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span><a href="http://www.bootsnall.com/articles/07-03/safari-kruger-national-park-south-africa-africa.html" target="_blank"><strong>Luke Henry</strong></a></span></p>
<p><span class="Apple-style-span" style="border-collapse:separate;color:#000000;font-family:arial;font-size:12px;font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:normal;letter-spacing:normal;line-height:16px;orphans:2;text-indent:0;text-transform:none;white-space:normal;widows:2;word-spacing:0;"></p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Avoiding tourist traps<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span></strong><br />
Travelling in<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span><a href="http://www.southafricalogue.com/">South Africa</a><span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span>with a car is challenging at the best of times. But when trying to avoid tourist traps and beaten paths, it takes the degree of difficulty up a notch. Add budget traveller and safety conscious person in a strange country and the difficulty degree soars &#8211; you’re out of lifelines.</p>
<p><strong>You&#8217;re in the Driver&#8217;s Seat</strong><br />
The satisfaction of driving through a vast desert or coastal road is magnified greatly by the fact that you’re the one in the driver’s seat, it’s your elbow out the window. You&#8217;re also paying the border crossing fees, bribing the police and filling the vehicle with fuel. The best bonus of our own car is that Kruger is in reach.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">We hire our car in Johannesburg from the only car company that will let us do so without a credit card or an armed robber motif. It is about a two and a half hour drive from South Africa’s capital to Kruger Park if you go the direct route, or just under four if you drive by the seat of your pants. If you are one of those people who imagine Kruger and similar parks like a big zoo, you are right.</p>
<div class="thumbnail-frame" style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:#e9ecce;text-align:center;min-width:180px;float:right;display:table;border-width:0;margin:0 0 6px 12px;padding:4px;"><img style="border:1px solid #656f12;outline-width:0;background-color:transparent;margin:0;padding:0;" title="We're Twins" src="/articles/files/images/mar07kruger1.thumbnail.JPG" border="0" alt="We're Twins" width="300" height="199" /></p>
<div class="thumbnail-caption" style="outline-width:0;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;font-size:.9em;font-family:arial,'Trebuchet MS',verdana;clear:both;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">We&#8217;re Twins</div>
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<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kruger_National_Park">Kruger National Park</a><span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span>is big, as big as Wales. If you were to walk around its circumference, it would take six days, you could build<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span><a href="http://www.londonlogue.com/">London</a><span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span>zoo inside over 14,000 times and still have room for a snooker table. It’s big.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">We stay the night in Nelspruit and get an early start for our safari. The park has 11 entrances. Considering the park&#8217;s size and interior speed limit of forty, choosing the right entrance can be important. That is probably more for the prepared ones; we use the first one we come across.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">We enter Malelane Gate, off the N4 from Nelspruit. It costs 240 rand (32.66 U.S dollars) for two days for two,<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span><a href="http://www.bootsnall.com/camping/">camping</a><span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span>permit included. It is recommended that accommodations be booked six months ahead, even for a camp spot, but the man at the gate says there is no need. It&#8217;s like crossing a border post &#8211; forms to fill out, money to pay, lines to attach yourself to. Once you cross, you’re in another world.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Another World</strong><br />
There is a map of the park at the entrance giving details on current animal sightings. Black pins indicate buffalo, grey elephant, red lions, yellow leopards and orange rhino. These five animals are the most precious to sight, together they make up the big five &#8211; a term I was to hear frequently in this new world.</p>
<div class="thumbnail-frame" style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:#e9ecce;text-align:center;min-width:180px;float:right;display:table;border-width:0;margin:0 0 6px 12px;padding:4px;"><img style="border:1px solid #656f12;outline-width:0;background-color:transparent;margin:0;padding:0;" title="My Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner" src="/articles/files/images/mar07kruger2.thumbnail.JPG" border="0" alt="My Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner" width="199" height="300" /></p>
<div class="thumbnail-caption" style="outline-width:0;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;font-size:.9em;font-family:arial,'Trebuchet MS',verdana;clear:both;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">My Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner</div>
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<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">Kruger is one of the best places to see animals in their own environment. Yes, there are roads weaving through the park passing rest areas, camping spots and the occasional fuel pump. Apart from that, it’s an animal lover’s paradise. Cars are limited to forty kilometres an hour in 90 percent of the park, which makes it safe for the animals and easier for you to spot them.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">The animal is king, it has right of way. If confronted by a grouchy rhino looking like he has never lost a game of British bulldog or red rover, you let him pass, oh yes. We spend the first day looking for the big five, anything that crosses our path. Not knowing much about how to spot an animal, but well versed in national geographic specials, we guess the animals congregate around water. So we gather around water.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>On the Lookout</strong><br />
I spot alligator twigs, found floating wherever alligators are expected. (I picked up a useful bit of information from the brochure we received upon entry to the park). If you see fresh animal droppings, you can assume wildlife was nearby recently. So we follow the poo trails &#8211; a game &#8211; which animal, how long ago, what speed and direction is the animal going. After a while you get good at it, to the point of winding down your window to get a good smell for freshness. Steam calls for a celebration!</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">We slowly crisscross the park, seeing different animals and their droppings. Monkeys play for us, a hornbill bird does its best impression of a toucan. We find a few zebras willing to pose for a picture. No sign of the big five, though, so we stop at one of the rest areas &#8211; the only places you are allowed out of your car.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Rest Areas</strong><br />
The rest areas consist of a kiosk, a picnic place and sometimes, accommodation. A three-meter high fence runs around the circumference of the grounds to keep the most dangerous animals at bay. I feel like I have traded places with the animals at the zoo. We sit under a picnic shelter, I sense we are being watched. I look up and realise we are sitting under a colony of bats nestled in the beams. We retreat quickly, fearing guano more than staring mammals.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">You can buy souvenirs, snacks and postcards in the kiosk. A common snack throughout South Africa is<em>biltong,</em><span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span>African version of jerky. Earlier in our travels we came across an ice cream parlour that sold assorted<em>biltong</em>, but it was arranged next to the candy, giving the impression you can have gummy-bear-impala-choc-mint ice cream. It’s an acquired taste.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">The kiosk also sells elephant<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span><em>biltong</em>. In a reserve dedicated to the preservation of the animal kingdom, enticing nature enthusiasts to not only observe these magnificent beasts, but also try them with lashings of chilli salt, seems morbid. Elephant biltong is made from elephants that die naturally in the park, the proceeds benefit the reserve.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">Kruger has about 36 tonnes of ivory in storage at a secret location, valued at approximately three million dollars that can&#8217;t be sold due to a ban of ivory trade implemented in 1989. Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Zambia want to open the ivory trade, use the proceeds for elephant conservation. Some think this would encourage poaching and do more harm than good. Either way, the<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span><em>biltong</em><span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span>turned out to be a good omen, if a little chewy.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Elephant Herd</strong><br />
Elephants are impressive in the wild. We see a small herd crossing a patch of open savannah, including two young ones. We watch from the car, using binoculars because we are a hundred metres away. After fifteen minutes, they leave our view. They make no sound, being stealthy. The bottoms of their feet are sensitive, they can walk without breaking loose twigs, when necessary. The fact that they don’t make vibrations that echo across the wilds doesn’t stop us from feeling like we are in Jurassic Park.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">We are heading slowly, to Lower-Sabie, our chosen rest stop for the night. We turn a bend and see a herd blocking our path. We shut the engine and watch &#8211; in fascination and awe. The elephants pay no attention to us, they continue feeding, stripping branches of leaves and enjoying the afternoon cool. There are no young, we feel safe.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">One big male finds the leaves on the tree near our car superior to the other eight billion in the park! (I now know how the cabdriver in Godzilla felt when the big lizard looked through his window). With less than two metres separating us from the elephant, we realize how potentially dangerous these animals can be. Yet we don&#8217;t sense danger, we do resist making any sudden movements. It takes half an hour before the herd ambles on.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">Considering the 20-kilometer speed limit, we almost miss curfew. Even though the ranger told us we didn&#8217;t have to book in advance, he said we needed to be at the gate by 6:00 p.m. No unauthorised cars are allowed on the road at night, gates are locked. When we reach the reception desk, we aren’t so sure of an accommodation. The couple ahead of us are berated for almost missing curfew. We&#8217;re next. We also almost missed curfew and we don’t have a booking. Our hosts are not happy, but I am confident we won’t be sent back into the wild.</p>
<div class="thumbnail-frame" style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:#e9ecce;text-align:center;min-width:180px;float:right;display:table;border-width:0;margin:0 0 6px 12px;padding:4px;"><img style="border:1px solid #656f12;outline-width:0;background-color:transparent;margin:0;padding:0;" title="Hello" src="/articles/files/images/mar07kruger.thumbnail.JPG" border="0" alt="Hello" width="199" height="300" /></p>
<div class="thumbnail-caption" style="outline-width:0;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;font-size:.9em;font-family:arial,'Trebuchet MS',verdana;clear:both;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">Hello</div>
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<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Back on the Road</strong><br />
We set off at 6:00 a,m,, when the gates open. We realise there is almost no chance of spotting animals until the sun comes up. We park at a nearby waterhole and wait. The dim predawn light constricts our view. As we wait for the sun to come up, a shadow emerges in the middle of the water hole &#8211; a silhouette of one of the most deadly animals in Africa, the mighty and fearsome hippo. It is responsible for many deaths in Africa each year and has the cutest little ears!</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">Having already seen a hippo, we are hopeful. The surrounding flora, though, is knee high, helping camouflage our elusive five animals. Not long into our drive, we encounter our first giraffe. Having only ever seen a giraffe portrayed in cartoons, or in enclosures at the zoo, I had assumed them to be ungainly, long necked donkeys. Commonly thought of as the nerd of the savannah, I am struck by the giraffe’s elegance.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Giraffes</strong><br />
We drive slowly around a bend and see three adult giraffes and a baby. The baby is intrigued by the car, the adults are not phased. The pack is crossing the road, when they reach the other side, they graze the tops of trees for foliage, then lope off, camouflaging themselves surprisingly well considering their height. As we watch them glide into the wilderness, a car pulls up alongside ours, heading in the opposite direction. The people ask if we are interested in seeing some lions. There are a few three kilometres ahead.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>King of the Jungle</strong><br />
We go towards the king of the jungle, scanning the low grass for any sign of movement, taking every precaution so we won’t miss our chance. We spot the cars, about four of them pulled over, the occupants staring intently, their fingers poised and ready on their cameras. We pull up behind the last car, scan for the big cats. There&#8217;s a male lion and two lionesses, in the middle of mating. Due to the high grass, our vision is obscured. Then they stand up to stretch and yawn, the lion version of the post-coital cigarette.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">Occasionally, persons grow tired of the scene, start the engine and head off. Cars inch forward to get a better view. An hour and two rolls of film later, we find ourselves at the front of the cue, the best seats in the house. Twenty or so cars are clambering for a position. News travels fast in the wild.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Hippopotamus</strong><span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span><br />
After sitting in the car for six hours, we search for a rest area with a view, have a picnic lunch. The rest area looks over a small lake. Soon two hippos appear in the water. They start baring their teeth and fighting. Their mouths are as big as a Jacuzzi, they weigh around 3.5 tonnes, fully equipped with 28-inch teeth, four sturdy legs, some with a grumpy persona as an optional extra. They are fearsome. This sighting beats the best dinner and show cabarets. Their grunts echo through the valley as they thrash about for territory. By the time the show ends, a small tour group and guide have joined us at the lookout.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Buffalo</strong><br />
We push on, zigzag the rest of the afternoon, catching numerous zebras, impala and kudu for a photo shoot. As we near the sun setting and our curfew, we point our car towards Bergendaal rest camp. We reflect, enjoy the magnificent hues of the African sun washing the landscape to a golden shine.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">What do we see but a buffalo through bare trees, the third of the big five. He isn’t alone either; there is a small herd of them, looking at us as if we are a display in Ripley’s Believe It Or Not. We aren’t interesting enough, back to the captivating dry grass they go. Not wanting to miss our curfew, we don&#8217;t linger with our new bovine friends.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>We Move On &#8211; To The Rhinoceros</strong><br />
The road is straight, we are driving into the sun, the landscape is featureless apart from the occasional tree. By the time we see the rhino, we are less than a hundred metres away. He stands in the middle of the road, not impressed with our four-wheeled threat. I turn off the engine, watch him eye us. Lucky for us, rhinos have poor eyesight. We are close enough to see the potential damage he could do, and though we are getting late for curfew, he intimidates us more than any receptionist can. Soon we bore him, he ambles away.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Next &#8211; Hyenas</strong><br />
We make it to the rest area in time to sign in with no trouble. They don’t even raise an eyebrow that we have no booking. We camp close to the fence, kept company by a few hyenas for some of the night. We exit the grounds the following morning and within a few kilometres, we have our first success of the day &#8211; hyena, turns out he&#8217;s guarding a mother and her cub. With the windows wound up and our faces suctioned to the glass, we hear the hyena’s famous laugh, up close &#8211; wheezy and menacing, easy to see why Disney has cast them as bad guys in more than one feature.</p>
<div class="thumbnail-frame" style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:#e9ecce;text-align:center;min-width:180px;float:right;display:table;border-width:0;margin:0 0 6px 12px;padding:4px;"><img style="border:1px solid #656f12;outline-width:0;background-color:transparent;margin:0;padding:0;" title="What Are Looking At?" src="/articles/files/images/mar07kruger3.thumbnail.JPG" border="0" alt="What Are Looking At?" width="300" height="199" /></p>
<div class="thumbnail-caption" style="outline-width:0;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;font-size:.9em;font-family:arial,'Trebuchet MS',verdana;clear:both;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">What Are You Looking At?</div>
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<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;"><strong>Finally&#8230;</strong><br />
Reluctantly, we move on. Our goal is to spot a leopard (pardon the pun), the last of the big five. We hear there is one with three cubs. We hightail it to the scene, find two other cars waiting for the show. We settle in for the wait. Apparently, there are three cubs in a small rock cave, mother is nowhere to be found. Yesterday, though, four leopards were seen playing together out in the open. After three hours of gazing, without catching any sign of life, the day&#8217;s heat diminishing the chances of appearance, we go to the closest rest stop.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">We see elephants and a dictionary of different impala species. We soak up the landscape for the last time. We allow extra time for a stop at the leopard cave &#8211; one last chance of spotting the spotted. We spend more time eying the rocks &#8211; nothing, a small disappointment after two days.</p>
<p style="outline-width:0;font-size:100%;vertical-align:baseline;background-color:transparent;display:block;position:relative;border-width:0;margin:0 0 14px;padding:0;">The wild is an enchanting place, no wonder it is such an inspiration for films and characters. At times in Kruger, you can relate to &#8220;The Lion King&#8221;, &#8220;Madagascar&#8221;. You may even think David Attenborough will pop up, do the voiceover. As they say in this neck of the woods, &#8220;It’s lekker bro.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>South Africa &#8211; A country like no other!</title>
		<link>http://localtraveller.wordpress.com/2008/10/16/south-africa-a-country-like-no-other/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Oct 2008 13:47:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kerryoki4</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[africa holidays]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Cedarberg  Travel &#124; African Safari Trips and Tours Overview The sheer beauty of South Africa&#8217;s landscape, the unsurpassed flora and fauna and the diversity of its people and culture is bewitching. South Africa truly is a country like no other in Africa. Its no wonder that so many of our clients tell us that their [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=localtraveller.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4807054&amp;post=5&amp;subd=localtraveller&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Cedarberg  Travel | <a href="http://www.cedarberg-travel.com" target="_blank">African Safari Trips and Tours</a></p>
<p>Overview</p>
<p>The sheer beauty of South Africa&#8217;s landscape, the unsurpassed flora and fauna  and the diversity of its people and culture is bewitching. South Africa truly is  a country like no other in Africa. Its no wonder that so many of our clients  tell us that their trip has been their best holiday ever!</p>
<p>Though the image of vast open African plains scattered with baobab and fever  trees fits the north of the country, South Africa offers the visitor a unique  diversity of captivating landscapes from the wetlands of Maputaland, to the  soaring mountains and vineyards of the Cape, to the white sandy beaches of the  Indian Ocean.</p>
<p>Why visit South Africa?</p>
<p><strong>Climate</strong><br />
Even the climate differs from the African norm.  The eastern regions have hot, humid summers with afternoon thunderstorms which  clear the air then dry, sunny winters &#8211; ideal for game viewing and touring. In  contrast, the Cape has hot, dry summers, (at the time of our winters), and cool,  sometimes wet, winters. So, unlike most countries, you can be sure of having  excellent holiday weather at any time of the year.</p>
<p><strong>Wildlife</strong><br />
This scenic and climatic diversity leads  naturally to a variety of wildlife, from the big game in the Kruger and adjacent  private game reserves to the winning herds of bontebok and Cape mountain zebra  to be found in the Cape. Land is being returned to its natural bushveld state  and the wildlife protected. South Africa is the best place to see the Big Five,  with large concentrations of elephant, lion, leopard, buffalo and both the rare  white and the black rhino.</p>
<p><strong>Cultural Diversity</strong><br />
Now, more than ever before, South  Africa is also ready and able to share its cultural diversity with you.  Thought-provoking cultural tours in both urban and rural areas enable our  visitors to meet South Africans from all walks of life. Local people have a  growing appreciation of their cultural treasures such as the ancient rock art of  the San (Bushmen) people, the healing mystery of the sangomas and the messages  of the Zulu beadwork, and they are eager to share their stories with you.</p>
<p><strong>Food and Wine<br />
</strong>The quality of South African restaurants is  generally very high, with cuisine ranging from Portuguese to Indian, Thai to  French. Typical South African cuisine exemplifies its rich multi-cultural  diversity: Cape Malay cookery is a distinctive, aromatic cuisine, the  culmination of centuries-old blending of Malay and Dutch influences. In  KwaZulu-Natal, Indian labourers introduced their culinary tradition in the 19th  century. Increasingly, traditional African fare is available to sample,  alongside dishes of western origin. South Africa is blessed with abundant  seafood; from the Cape crayfish (lobster) of the West Coast to the enormous  prawns of Maputaland and the succulent oysters of Knysna. Eating in an open-air  seafood restaurant on the beach is hard to beat.</p>
<p><strong>Accommodation<br />
</strong>The drama of the landscape and brilliance  of the colours is matched by an equally rich choice of places to stay. South  Africas lodges and hotels are unrivalled in the region and some of our retreats  and game lodges contend with the finest of the world. These are places where you  can witness nature in the raw and return to a touch, or indeed the full-blown  caress, of luxury!</p>
<h3>Reasons to visit South Africa</h3>
<p><img class="country-reason-image" src="/uploads/cedarberg//TN_ELEGANT DINING.JPG" alt="Luxury Trains of South Africa - Rovos Rail" /></p>
<h4 class="country-reason-title">Luxury Trains of South Africa &#8211; Rovos Rail</h4>
<p class="country-reason-description">A train journey must be one of the most  relaxing and evocative ways of crossing the vast landscape of Southern Africa.  Combine the elegance of the glory days of train travel with modern comforts,  superb cuisine and fine wines… There is nothing which quite matches the magic of  a hiss of steam as a vintage engine pulls into the station . . . There can be no  grander way to experience the delights of steam than on Rovos Rail. Nowadays  diesel locomotives are used as well but wherever possible, original steam  locomotives draw elegantly restored sleeper coaches plus a sumptuous dining car  and period observation car. Each air-conditioned suite sleeps two. Pullman  Suites have a sofa which converts to a bed in the evening; Deluxe suites have a  lounge area and en suite shower room. Royal suites have full en suite bathrooms  with Victorian bath and shower. Choose between the ever-popular two day journey  between Pretoria and Cape Town (covering 1600km) with off-train excursions in  both Kimberley and Matjiesfontein or the 56 hour ‘safari train’ between Pretoria  and Durban taking in Mkhaya Game Reserve and the Kruger National Park on the  northbound route, and Mkhaya and Hluhluwe Game Reserves on the southbound route.  These are leisurely, civilized journeys, in which you enjoy fine cuisine and  wines. Other occasional trips include Cape Town to Dar es Salaam (14 days);  Pretoria to Swakopmund (7 days); an African Collage route through South Africa  (9 days); and a Golf Safari (9 days).</p>
<h4 class="country-reason-title">Luxury Trains of South Africa &#8211; The Blue  Train</h4>
<p class="country-reason-description">The Blue Train is a legendary train which  has been synonymous with luxury hospitality since 1946. The famous 27 hour  overnight journey between Cape Town and Pretoria provides a delightful interlude  in a busy sightseeing &amp; safari schedule! It’s particularly known for its  superb cuisine, attentive butler service and immaculate mahogany and marble  fittings. Each air-conditioned suite has an en suite bathroom and television  with movie channels, telephone and a writing desk. The deluxe twin bed suite has  a shower en suite and the deluxe double bed suite has a three-quarter bath en  suite. Larger luxury suites offer a private digital entertainment centre and an  en suite bath.</p>
<p><br class="clear_both" /><img class="country-reason-image" src="/uploads/cedarberg//TN_KZN_ZIMBALI_GOLF COUSE.JPG" alt="Golf in South Africa" /></p>
<h4 class="country-reason-title">Golf in South Africa</h4>
<p class="country-reason-description">South Africa has some of the finest golf  courses in the world, including Sun City and the Fancourt, setting for the  President’s Cup. Many others compare favourably with the best in Europe whilst  taking full advantage of their spectacular African settings. Most of our clients  combine golf with some time enjoying our varied country and wildlife. Choose  between a self-drive holiday or a private escorted tour with a keen golfing  guide, either option planned to your particular requirements. We can book  appropriate tee-off times, caddies or buggies, arrange pro-golf lessons or a  round with the resident Pro.</p>
<h4>Adventure Activities in South Africa</h4>
<p>For all of you who want a holiday in the sun but don&#8217;t just want to lie on  the beach, South Africa with its abundant sunshine and romantic natural beauty  is the answer. There are a range of adventurous options available Cape Town –  abseiling off Table Mountain, quad biking, ocean kayaking Hermanus &#8211; white shark  diving Garden Route – Treetop canopy zipline, ocean canoeing, Cango Caves  adventure tours Northern Cape – river adventures on the Orange river Cedarberg –  adventurous hiking white water rafting on the Doring river in season (June to  September) Limpopo – horse-riding safaris in the Waterberg and at Mashatu</p>
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		<title>African Travel Calendar</title>
		<link>http://localtraveller.wordpress.com/2008/09/18/african-travel-calendar/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Sep 2008 07:59:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kerryoki4</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[africa]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Cedarberg African Travel January Great time to visit Cape Town and the Western Cape as it’s high summer: pleasantly hot days and low rainfall make it ideal for an evening round the braai. In coastal Maputaland the sea is warm but you may experience afternoon thunderstorms and it’s the crossover period between the nesting and [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=localtraveller.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4807054&amp;post=3&amp;subd=localtraveller&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="world-overview-title">
<h5><a href="http://www.cedarberg-travel.com">Cedarberg African Travel</a></h5>
</div>
<div id="main-content">
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">January</span> </strong><br />
Great time to visit  Cape Town and the Western Cape as it’s high summer: pleasantly hot days and low  rainfall make it ideal for an evening round the braai. In coastal Maputaland the  sea is warm but you may experience afternoon thunderstorms and it’s the  crossover period between the nesting and hatching seasons of the leatherback and  loggerhead turtles. It’s probably a month or so too late to go whale watching at  False and Walker Bays.</p>
<p>Still very hot in Namibia although December is slightly warmer. The rainy  season officially starts a little earlier, but in many parts the rain really  arrives now.</p>
<p>Excellent time for safari in Kenya, with the dry, hot weather concentrating  the game. Not so clear cut in Tanzania as the short rains may still be making  their presence felt, and the rains may be heavy in the south of the country.</p>
<p>It’s cyclone season in Mauritius, Madagascar (especially the east coast) and,  to a lesser extent, the coast of Mozambique.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">February</span></strong><br />
The Sunday evening  concerts in Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens are in full swing (December through  to March). The turtle season comes to and end in coastal Maputaland as the last  of the fragile hatchlings cuts through its egg and runs for the safety of the  sea. Although only one or two in a thousand will survive, this population is one  of the few in the world that is increasing in numbers. It’s still pretty hot up  in the Greater Kruger Park, especially the north. There’s also a high  probability of afternoon rains and the denser vegetation makes the game harder  to spot. But the bush looks magnificent and lush, birdlife is more abundant and  animals give birth to their young during the summer months. Very hot up in the  Cedarberg region – definitely not the best time to plan a walking trip  there.</p>
<p>In Botswana water levels in the Okavango Delta are still low, although the  rainy season is still in the ascendant (water levels in the Delta are dictated  by rainfall many months earlier in Angola).</p>
<p>In Zambia it’s still hot and wet, with many of the lodges being closed  between December and March. However, Vic Falls is still very much accessible and  flow levels over the Falls should be on the rise.</p>
<p>It’s peak cyclone season in Madagascar, Mauritius and  Mozambique.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">March<br />
</span></strong>The  summer in South Africa draws to an end though it’s still warm – perfect for  slightly more active holidays such as our Hiking Tours. It is usually still dry  in Cape Town – the rain often starts to fall in late April. Conversely in the  Kruger area it should be the last of the wettest months; it’s the same story up  in Madikwe.</p>
<p>At Victoria Falls white water rafting is often unavailable from mid March to  early June because of dangerously high water levels, but the precise timing  varies from year to year.</p>
<p>Kenya still an excellent option at this time. Most of Tanzania should still  be dry, but it’s likely to be wet in the south of the country.</p>
<p>In Namibia it’s still hot and likely to still be experiencing the typical  pattern afternoon thunderstorms. If travelling to areas like Sossusvlei you need  to tolerate the heat well, but you could be fortunate and witness the desert in  bloom after the rains.</p>
<p>March sees the start of the two best periods for  diving in the Seychelles; from March to May and then from September to  November.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">April<br />
</span></strong>In South  Africa the days are getting cooler but this is a great time for an active  holiday.  April often sees the onset of wetter weather in Cape Town and the  Western Cape, but the warm ocean, low rainfall and comfortable temperatures  attract many to costal Maputaland.</p>
<p>Be aware that the long rains usually arrive around the beginning of April in  the most popular destinations East Africa: many camps and lodges will be closed  in Kenya and Tanzania during April and May. In Uganda it’s bang in the middle of  the rainy season that typically extends from March to May: trekking through the  forests in search of primates will be less comfortable but paradoxically  locating the primates is easier as the groups are less active.</p>
<p>The cyclone season should now be over in Mauritius, Madagascar and  Mozambique; it’s the end of the prime big game fishing season in Mauritius.  Diving is good now in the Seychelles with good visibility and calm seas – this  pattern continues through to May and repeats in October and November.</p>
<p>The lodges in Zambia are starting to open up at the beginning of the “Green  Season” which normally operates now, in May and again in November.  At Vic Falls  April and May see peak flows – dramatic but the large amounts of spray may limit  visibility.</p>
<p>In the Seychelles, conditions for swimming, snorkelling and  diving are superb. It&#8217;s one of the two calmer periods between the trade winds.  Birders will note that this is the start of the breeding season.</p>
<p><span style="color:#ff8c00;"><strong>May</strong><br />
</span>This is a great time for our  Cedarberg Hiking Tour or our Cedarberg Rock Art Tour as the scorching hot summer  days are replaced by warm sunny winter days from May to September. In Cape Town  winter has arrived, sometimes marked by windy, wet weather. It’s the beginning  of high season for shark diving in and around Gansbaai, continuing through to  September. May could be a canny time to visit one of the superb lodges in the  private game reserves bordering the Kruger National Park as it’s fairly quiet,  is generally dry by this stage, the temperatures have moderated nicely and many  of the lodges go onto their low season rate (dictated by this not being peak  holiday season and the less favourable weather in the Western Cape).</p>
<p>This is the beginning of the dry (precipitation-wise) winter season in the  Okavango Delta in Botswana with sunny, cool to warm days and quite cold evening  and night time temperatures. Peak season in the Delta starts in June but rates  in May are often more affordable.</p>
<p>A great time to visit Namibia as it’s before the busy peak season, the rains  should have ceased and the night time temperatures are not as cold as they’ll  become in mid winter.</p>
<p>Near to the equator, Kenya and the Seychelles in  particular, this is the start of the stronger south-easterly trade winds which  are good for windsurfing, surfing and kite-surfing.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">June</span></strong><br />
We generally advise caution if planning  to travel the Garden Route between now and August. Whilst there are plenty of  amusements and distractions in Cape Town if the weather is poor you may find  that on the Garden Route there are fewer alternatives as the focus is more  exclusively on being outdoors. Beginning of the prime season to visit Greater  Kruger Park or Madikwe: dry winter weather and waterholes drying out and  concentrating the game.</p>
<p>Flow levels over Vic Falls are still high. By August the spray has usually  subsided substantially, giving better visibility.</p>
<p>From now through until August is a great time for surfing in Mauritius,  though the temperatures are relatively cool now.</p>
<p>In Tanzania, the migration is heading north through the western corridor of  the Serengeti. Beach lodges in Zanzibar that have closed for the rainy season  (not all of them do) reopen. June and July and December through to February are  the driest periods in East Africa, so possibly the most pleasant time for  activities such as gorilla tracking in Uganda.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">July</span></strong><br />
Between May and July each year, huge  shoals of sardines move into the coastal waters of southern KwaZulu Natal in  what is known to locals as The Sardine Run &#8211; the marine equivalent of the annual  migration of the wildebeest in the Masai Mara. This is a perfect time and  destination for an affordable family holiday, with a great combination of bush,  berg and beach.</p>
<p>July and August are typically the driest months in the Seychelles.</p>
<p>The Okavango Delta is in full flood and this is peak season – you need to  plan early to get availability. Also peak season in Namibia with similar  constraints on availability. Mornings and evenings can be very  cold.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">August</span></strong><br />
Spring Wild  Flowers are usually in bloom in the Cedarberg &amp; Namaqualand in August and  early September. The Clanwilliam Wild Flower show is in late August/early  September.</p>
<p>The Okavango Delta is in peak flood from July to August and this also  probably the best time for game viewing in all of Southern Africa.</p>
<p>The migration should have arrived in Kenya’s Masai Mara and the multitudes of  wildebeest, zebra and friends tend to stick around until they start their return  journey to the southern Serengeti in November. Now and in September is peak  season in Kenya – both in terms of demand and pricing.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">September</span></strong><br />
The Royal Reed dance is the most  spectacular event in Zululand, when between five and 10,000 young Zulu maidens,  carrying reeds to honour the monarch, congregate at King Goodwill&#8217;s home in  Nongoma for ritual dancing and singing. This is also peak season for whale  watching at Hermanus and surrounding area as southern right whales come in to  Walker Bay to calve. Though the season lasts from July to December, September  and October are frequently the best months.</p>
<p>Traditionally September until November is a great time to visit Mauritius or  Madagascar. In Mauritius it’s warm but not excessively hot and humidity is not  at its peak. The eastern rainforests of Madagascar experience high rainfall at  other times of the year, so these drier months are popular with visitors.</p>
<p>The Great Fish River Canyon in Namibia is usually closed to walkers from mid  September through to May because of the heat and the risk of flash floods.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">October<br />
</span></strong>One of the nicest  months of the year in many parts of South Africa &#8211; it’s Spring and the fynbos is  spectacular in the nature reserves and Botanical Gardens.</p>
<p>The end of peak season in Botswana, and often marks the end of the dry winter  period. A month later you’re into the more affordable green season, but the risk  of rain is significantly higher.</p>
<p>The best time for diving in East Africa is generally reckoned to start now  and extend until April. After around April time the long rains wash sediment out  into the Indian Ocean, reducing visibility for diving.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">November<br />
</span></strong>Leatherbacks Turtles, weighing almost  a ton, lumber ashore in Northern Maputaland and start to lay eggs in holes they  dig in the sand. This is the start of the rainy season up in the Greater Kruger  Park, but rain is usually restricted to afternoon thunderstorms and November/  December sees the arrival of many migrant birds.</p>
<p>It’s now green season for most of the Zambian lodges, before the anticipated  onset of the rains in December which sees most of them close until April.</p>
<p>One of the best months for seeing the Desert Adapted Elephant in Namibia’s  Damaraland. late in the month.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#ff8c00;">December<br />
</span></strong>Peak holiday season  in the Cape, with the sunniest weather and events to celebrate the outdoor  lifestyle &#8211; plus the heady southern hemisphere treat of Christmas on the beach!  The Northern Cape is very hot (up to 40ºC in the shade). The Cape is dry but the  Indian Ocean coast and islands have rainfall and short thunderstorms. These are  the last few weeks in which you are likely to see whales in False and Walker  Bays.</p>
<p>The Christmas period brings peak pricing to many lodges and hotels throughout  southern and eastern Africa; early planning is especially important if planning  a visit at this time.</p></div>
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		<title>Hello world!</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Sep 2008 11:34:25 +0000</pubDate>
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