With its jaw-dropping location at the base of the one of the world’s most spectacular mountains, it's no surprise that most visitors to South Africa include Cape Town in their itinerary.
With limited holiday time most people choose to spend about 4 or 5 nights in Cape Town and combine this with another destination. Whether it’s a few days on Safari in the Kruger Park, a getaway Package to Victoria Falls or a Garden Route Tour. If you can’t find exactly what you are looking to do then
contact us to tailormake an itinerary for you.



With a jaw dropping location at the base of one of the world’s most spectacular mountains, miles of Atlantic Coast and acres of verdant winelands, it’s possible to fall for Cape Town for its looks alone. Indeed, some accuse Cape Town of being skin deep, vacuous, full of pleasures seekers sipping cocktails and surfing waves. In fact, they say Cape Town isn’t African at all. More of a pocket California. But that’s part of the appeal.
In the hedonistic heat of summer, Cape Town is South Africa’s party capital: it has the bars, the restaurants, the beaches, the beautiful people, the backdrop. And the locals – we pinch ourselves daily that this film set paradise is ours everyday. We believe as tourists you’ll pinch yourselves at an exchange rate that makes excess so affordable. And with a Western European time zone at that.
A dozen or so years into South Africa’s democracy, Cape Town is thriving, building and booming. There are boutique hotels, cottages and apartments to rival any in the world, and a growing design scene. Not that it doesn’t have its problems. Apartheid is gone but inequality takes much longer to unravel. The township residents are still in their townships, the whites are still in their beachside pads. There is both optimism and edginess , and safety is something to be sensible about. One thing is for sure - the city is changing fast. Take Cape Town’s Africanness, mix in its otherness, shake or stir, and enjoy the unique cocktail for what it is.