Robben Island
South Africa's most widely known tourist attraction is
probably Robben Island, seven miles (11km) from Cape Town in the
centre of Table Bay. For nearly 400 years this tiny rocky island
outcrop was utilised as a place of banishment, exile, isolation and
imprisonment for numerous categories of people ostracised by
society, ranging from political protestors to lepers. During the
years of Apartheid, Robben Island became synonymous with
institutional brutality as numerous freedom fighters, including the
island's most famous resident Nelson Mandela, were imprisoned here
for more than a quarter of a century. The island is now a museum,
symbolising liberation and the triumph of the human spirit. Regular
island tours are conducted, lasting three and a half hours. The
tours, which are guided by former prisoners, include a visit to the
maximum-security prison on the island where an estimated 3,000
freedom fighters were incarcerated between 1962 and
1991.
Chapman's Peak
Chapman's Peak Drive is one of the most spectacular
coastal roads in South Africa, linking the seaside community of
Hout Bay to the Noordhoek Valley along the Atlantic Coast, with
breathtaking views from along the narrow, winding road blasted into
the cliffs. Constructed in 1915, the six-mile (9km) route took
about seven years to complete and was built as a shorter,
alternative route between Cape Town central and the South
Peninsula. Many visitors use this scenic route to reach Cape Point
Nature Reserve situated at the tip of the Peninsula.
Simonstown and Boulders Beach
A recommended day excursion from the city includes a
trip through the southern suburbs and along the scenically
beautiful False Bay coastline via Muizenberg to Simonstown, South
Africa's principal naval base. Simonstown lies about 25 miles
(40km) from the city and is a quaint town built around a naval
dockyard, with well-preserved Victorian buildings, museums,
sidewalk cafes and local legends to learn about. One such legend is
about a dog called 'Just Nuisance' who 'joined' the British navy,
becoming their mascot, when Simonstown was a British base. A short
distance from the town is Boulder's beach, famous for its protected
colony of African Penguins (formerly Jackass Penguin) that can be
viewed from the boardwalks.
Cape Point
Most visitors to Cape Town are keen to make a day trip
40 miles (65km) from the city to the Cape of Good Hope Nature
Reserve, not only to take in its floral diversity in what at first
sight appears to be a bleak landscape, but to stand at the top of
the towering promontory at the most southerly point of the Cape
Peninsula (not of Africa, visitors must go further afield to Cape
Agulhus for this).






