Cape Peninsula and Table Mountain guided sightseeing tourBoulders Beach visit, see Table Mountain
Funicular railway to Cape Point
Cape Point Ostrich Farm visit
Farewell African feast
Details: Cape Peninsula and Table Mountain guided sightseeing tour
Rising above Cape Town is the distinctive Table Mountain, whose flat top often serves as a base for the city’s hang-gliding and abseiling residents. Keep an eye out for the squirrel-like rock dassies basking in the sun -- despite their fur and small size, their foot structure and dental configuration mark them as the closest living relative to the African elephant. Just off the coast is Duiker, or Seal, Island, home to about 7,000 fuzzy cape fur seals. Watch them pose for pictures and laze about in the sunshine before you head farther south to Cape Point, where a funicular whisks you to the top of dramatic cliff-top promontory where the Atlantic and Indian Oceans are said to meet. Shipwrecks along the coast remind visitors of the treacherous navigation despite the lighthouses beaming into the ocean.
Details: Boulders Beach visit
Boulders Beach is home to a land-based breeding colony of the rare African penguin.
Details: Funicular railway to Cape Point
The Flying Dutchman Funicular takes passengers uphill from the car park of the Cape Point Nature Reserve (a Natural World Heritage Site) to the old lighthouse sited at 249m overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. The views from the lighthouse are spectacular and the air, coming off the Antarctic, is among the purest in the world. The funicular is believed to be the only commercial one of its kind in Africa and is named after a local legend of a ghost ship. The short three-minute trip passes through 585m of dense fynbos and over rocks to the upper lighthouse.
Details: Cape Point Ostrich Farm visit
There may be no stranger spectacle than an ostrich race, and you’ll have front-row seats. Watch “cowboys” balance on the gangly birds by gripping their stumpy wings and urging them on, full speed ahead. The ostriches, once farmed for their now-unfashionable feathers, stand over six feet tall yet have brains no larger than those of chickens.