Mossel Bay
The rather industrialised town of Mossel Bay, about
250 miles (400km) east of Cape Town, is traditionally regarded as
the gateway to the Garden Route and is famed for being the spot
where the first European set foot in South Africa. The Portuguese
explorer, Bartholomew Dias, came ashore here seeking water after
battling a fearsome storm at sea in 1488. The town now commemorates
this event with the Bartholomew Dias Museum complex in Market
Street, which houses a Maritime Museum and a life-sized replica of
the caravel in which Dias sailed. Mossel Bay has some good beaches
and all the trappings of a seaside holiday town, with cruises
available from the small harbour to view seals, whales and
dolphins, and shark cage-diving adventures. The nearby village of
Albertinia sports the only Aloe factory in South Africa, and
visitors can call in to sample medicinal and skincare products made
from this indigenous plant.
Telephone:
Website: www.mosselbay.net
Transport:
Opening times:
Wilderness
The village of Wilderness, set on the Touws River
estuary, is fast developing with a plethora of luxury holiday homes
lining the cliffs and hills along the long sandy beach and river.
It is, however, a pretty spot surrounded by a chain of fresh-water
lakes, and encompassing the Wilderness National Park with about
nine miles (15km) of inland waterways. There are some wonderful
hiking trails and canoe trips offered through the Park wardens, and
numerous accommodation facilities are available.
Telephone:
Website:
Transport:
Opening times:
Resorts: Knysna | Plettenberg Bay






