Addo Elephant Park
The most popular game reserve in the Port Elizabeth
area is the Addo Elephant Park, just a 45-minute drive from the
city. There are currently more than 300 elephants in residence in
the park, which was recently enlarged. Addo was proclaimed in 1931
in an effort to save the remaining 11 elephants indigenous to the
area. The elephants are drawn to watering holes at certain times
and sightings are virtually guaranteed all year round. There are
other animals in the park too, including black rhino, buffalo,
zebra, warthog and several types of buck. Guided game drives are
available or visitors can do a self-drive tour using the map issued
at the entrance. Serviced accommodation is available and there is a
restaurant and picnic site at the Park.
Shamwari Game Reserve
The multi-award winning private game reserve of
Shamwari lies less than an hour's drive from Port Elizabeth and has
been responsible for re-introducing numerous species into the
Eastern Cape plains, including all of the Big Five - lion,
elephant, rhino, leopard and buffalo. The reserve offers luxury
accommodation, but also hosts visitors on day trips from the city.
Day tours include a visit to an African art and culture village to
sample Xhosa culture and traditionally brewed beer, and a visit to
the Born Free centre for abused animals.
Grahamstown
The historic settler town of Grahamstown, 78 miles
(125km) northeast of Port Elizabeth, is presided over, from the top
of Gunfire Hill, by the 1820 Settler's National Monument, an arts
and theatre complex which forms the focus of the town's annual
internationally recognised Arts Festival held in July. Grahamstown
was founded in 1815 as a garrison to drive the Xhosa eastwards
across the Fish River frontier, giving rise to a century of
frontier war. The town has an English colonial flavour, and is home
to the renowned Rhodes University and some top private boarding
schools. There are several museums, including the JLB Smith
Institute of Ichthyology where two stuffed specimens of the
coelacanth are on display. The town also boasts the only Victorian
camera obscura in the southern hemisphere.
Jeffrey's Bay
A short drive to the west of Port Elizabeth is the
surfing Mecca of Jeffrey's Bay (known colloquially as 'J-Bay'). The
seaside town plays host to the world Billabong Professional surfing
contest every July, and is famed for its 'supertubes', South
Africa's perfect wave. The town is bustling, with several stores
selling branded surfing gear, and several flashy cafes and
restaurants. The long stretches of sandy beach around the town are
also renowned for their shells.






