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Please note:
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All rates quoted (except for the Family Room) are per person per night sharing, and include a comprehensive breakfast. A 50% supplement is applicable for a single person.
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The Family Room rate applies to the room as a unit, irrespective of the number of occupants (max 4), and includes the comprehensive breakfast.
Whale Watching The Southern Right Whales, once one of the most ruthlessly hunted of all species of whales, have been saved from extinction. From June to December every year, hundreds return to mate and calve in the shallow water of Walker Bay, recognised by the World Wildlife Fund as the world's most spectacular vantage point for whale-watching.
These animals, 8 to 10 times the size of a bull elephant, are slow swimmers, reaching only 9 km/h at top speed. However, they are surprisingly agile and tend to show off in spectacular ways - often as close as 50 metres from the shore.
Great White Shark Diving The great white shark is the world’s largest known predatory fish, reaching lengths of about 6 metres (20 ft) and weighing 2,250 kilograms (5,000 lb).
Due to a number of geographical reasons, Dyer Island – 12km off-shore from the coastal village, Gansbaai, 20 minutes’ drive from Hermanus – has become known as one of only two unique areas in the world where the chances to view the great white shark, rises exceptionally high.
Here we find one of the densest known populations, where much research on the shark is conducted and some of the world’s best documentaries on these fascinating creatures have been filmed. The island supports a colony of 40,000 Cape Fur Seals - the reason the Great Whites stay here. Other wildlife species such as Cape Gannets, Cape Cormorants, Jackass penguins, whales and dolphins are also likely to be sighted.
Great White Shark cage diving is strictly regulated by the authorities and conducted in an ethical way in accordance with international standards. Click here to book a shark diving tour!
Golf courses Over the years the Hermanus Golf Club has become one of the most popular golf courses in South Africa, reputed to be one of the finest and most beautiful 24 holes of golf. The course is set in magnificent scenery with views of the sea and a backdrop of the mountains - close enough to the coast to be termed a links course, but with a very definite parklands feel to it. Wildlife and natural Cape flora are attractive features and the many trees provide the beauty for ideal golfing terrain.
A 15min drive away is the acclaimed Arabella Golf Estate, voted the number two golf course in South Africa and the top golf course in the Western Cape. It is also featured in Golf Digest’s USA’s Top 60 courses outside of America in 2007. The Arabella Golf Club has been the annual home to the Nelson Mandela Invitational charity golf tournament from 2003, hosting the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Samuel L Jackson, Ronan Keating, Ernie Els, Retief Goosen, Tim Clark, Lee Westwood and Sam Torrance.
Mountain Hikes and bird watching In a climate moderated by the sea, the coastal mountains of the Cape have one of the richest floras in the world. There is no other place on earth where so many different species can be seen growing in such close proximity.
‘Fynbos’ (literally “fine leaf”) is the term given to this collection of plants that covers an area of less than 90 000 square kilometres (the size of Portugal) and hosts 8 600 plant species. Roughly 70% are endemic to the area - that is, they are found nowhere else in the world. To put this in perspective, the British Isles, three and a half times larger, have only 1 500 plants and less than 20 of those are endemic.
So special is the Cape Floral Kingdom that it has been designated as one of the earth's six plant kingdoms and is in quite a league of its own. It contains 526 of the world's 740 erica species, 96 out of the world's 160 gladiolus species, 69 proteas out of 112, and over 600 heaths, with just 26 in the rest of the world. Many of these are threatened with extinction.
Hermanus has its own nature reserve at Fernkloof, with a 60 km network of graded trails which can be explored on foot, on horseback, mountain-bike or in a 4x4. These provide the opportunity for people of all fitness levels to go out and enjoy some exercise and fresh air.
The fynbos environment has a complement of animals. Grey rhebok, Cape grysbok, klipspringer, baboon, mongoose and dassie are present in small numbers. Although not as rich in bird-life as other areas in South Africa, 92 bird species have been recorded. Species most likely to be seen include the Cape Sugar Bird, Sunbirds and the Rock Thrush. Raptors include the Jackal Buzzard and Black Eagle.
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