Thursday, 26 May 2011

A weekend in Knysna

Seeing that I wrote about my cheetah encounters, I figured I might as well mention my elephant encounter as well.  But then I realised I might as well say something about my entire Knysna trip, where it all happened. My friend and I went to Knysna for a weekend to see what the town has to offer besides oysters.

First stop was a restaurant called The Firefly Eating House. I won't go into too much detail but if you're ever in Knysna, give it a visit (you can read my review if you click on the link). Then off to check into our accommodation.

The hot chocolate - sugar, cream, chocolate lolly and hot milk. Mix it up!
We stayed at Under Milkwood, a self-catering lodge near the Knysna Heads. We had a four-sleeper wooden cabin, fully equipped and very cosy.
We chose to share the twin room instead of each having a bedroom
The next morning we had to be up early for breakfast at Ile de Pain on Thesen Island - about 10 minutes from where we were staying.

Breakfast was mmmmm!  We ordered a cream cheese, salmon, capers and egg croissant and coffee. Heavenly.

Nisha and I at Ile de Pain
Check out all the breads and pastries..mmm
After breakfast it was off to Tenikwa Wildcat and Wildlife Sanctuary in Plett where we had some time the wild ones, and you can read about that and see pics here and here.

When we were done it was too early for lunch so we stopped on the way back to Knysna at a roadside rendezvous called The Heath. It's a farmstall, cafe, eagle sanctuary, play area, furniture store and nursery all on one site. Our 15-minute stop turned into an hour of browsing all the handmade soaps, jewellery, decorated pebbles, bags and endless amounts of other fun stuff.




I bought some message pebbles.

This fudge is goooood

I wonder who lives there. He probably never 'leaves'. GET IT? Hahaha
For lunch we went to a place called 34 Degrees South (but the name just says 34 South) at the Waterfront. This place has everything you can possibly think of ordering. Ok, not everything, but pretty close. As all their banners say, they're 'Not exactly a restaurant, not exactly a deli, not exactly a bar....' I'm not sure what exactly they are but either way, they filled the gap in my tummy. My friend had fish and chips and I ordered sushi with a side order of fries and extra mayo.




The rest of the day we relaxed and waited for our lagoon cruise for dinner. It was supposed to be a drinks and oysters cruise but we don't drink or eat oysters so we just chilled and waited for the dinner part. It's weird that we didn't do that much but both of us were super tired. We tried to take a nap before the cruise but it wasn't long before we had to rise and shine and head to the waterfront again.

I think it's called a paddle cruiser

That's Knysna Heads in the background...and me in the middle


 Next day.. yes...breakfast again. This time at East Head Cafe. I love this place. It's right at the tip of the Eastern Head (duh) which is opposite the other Knysna Head. I took lots of pics of this cafe because I think it's an awesome spot for breakfast and lunch and the decor is simple but fantastic!


Outside seating


Simple, elegant interior - ok, ignore the bottles in corner


My omelette
After breakfast we headed for the Knysna Elephant Park. You can read about my experience here or just have a look at these pics. They pretty much tell you what we did.


He's so cute!

Feeding the ellies before our ride


That was the last of our activities before we had to make our way back home. But first we stopped at the Garden of Eden for a stroll in the forest and then further on we took a bit of a detour to Noetzie. We were told there are all sorts of castles there. We got there, after walking down millions of stairs (which we had to climb again on the way back). It wasn't quite what I expected. They weren't really castles, they were just houses and some B&Bs that are made to look like castles. The beach was beautiful though.



It was a good trip. I've been to Knysna before but really didn't do much while I was there (the weather wasn't great). But next time I'm there I'll definitely visit the restaurants again and maybe go back to Tenikwa for a 'walk with cheetahs while they go for their morning/evening stroll'. It's 400 bucks - a bit steep, but when will I ever get to take a cheetah for a walk?

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

The view from Table Mountain

It was really misty (not sure if I can call it foggy?) in Cape Town last week. I had to go to a launch on Table Mountain. The weather seemed miserable and I was a bit reluctant to go.

When the cable car reached the top, I can tell you my breath was literally taken away. OK, maybe that was because the air was cold and I was out of breath...but still. Even though the weather in the city was crappy, it was peaceful and beautiful above the clouds. Check it out:




Cheetah interaction

Been a while since I've blogged. That's because I now have to blog for work as well, and it takes up quite a bit of time.  So what have I been up to... quite a bit, and unfortunately I can't blog about them chronologically because I don't have time to think of their dates.

I hooked up with some cheetahs... twice! First was at the Tenikwa Wild Cat and Wildlife Sanctuary (Plett) and second at Cheetah Outreach at Spier (Stellenbosch). The Plett one involved a range of cats from caracals to cheetahs. They also have a leopard but he looks kinda scary. You can walk around in the various cats' enclosures and they roam around freely while you wet your pants. Kidding. It's not that scary. It's very exciting. The only enclosure we didn't go into was the leopard's den. He's a sneaky one.

The Spier visit was something I won in a Facebook competition. It included a cheetah interaction for me and a friend. Here we got to touch the cheetah...but he was lazy and not fazed by our presence.

Here are some pics.


Serval

The leopard

Cheetahs ignoring me

Meerkat showing off
Spier cheetah encounter

"I'll just take a nap while you 'interact' "



For more about the Tenikwa experience, click here