Cape Town, South Africa
Windswept vines & mountain silhouettes
The next chapter of my sabbatical unfolded far from Europe, reached after a two day stopover in Doha and marked by the moment Cape Town’s mountains rose from the sea. South Africa may not be the safest country, yet Cape Town felt surprisingly welcoming when approached with common sense, especially in the well trod paths of its tourist districts. I arrived with a sense of curiosity, ready to understand a place shaped by beauty, complexity, and centuries of movement.
Some stories revealed themselves slowly, tucked into the marvellous colonial architecture that still lines the city. These buildings, elegant and weathered, whisper of the era when Cape Town became the garden of the sea, a vital stop for ships travelling between Europe and Asia. What began as a refreshment station grew into a crossroads of cultures, ambitions, and contradictions, a history both fascinating and sobering, written into stone façades and shaded courtyards.
Beyond the city, the landscape opened into something almost mythic. At Cape Point, where the Atlantic and Indian Oceans meet in restless conversation, the cliffs felt ancient enough to hold the world together. The Cape of Good Hope, rugged and windswept, carried the weight of every sailor who once rounded it with hope, fear, or both. Standing there, the horizon felt impossibly wide.
Not all discoveries were dramatic; some were simply joyful. In Franschhoek, the Wine Tram turned vineyard hopping into a kind of gentle adventure, gliding through valleys and past sunlit slopes. Wine tasting became less of an activity and more of a rhythm, slow, social, and wonderfully indulgent. It was a reminder that travel is as much about pleasure as it is about perspective.
Cape Town may not offer the effortless ease of some destinations, but it rewards those who arrive with openness. In its mountains and markets, its layered histories and ocean winds, it invites you to look closer, to learn, to savour. For travellers who seek both beauty and depth, it offers more than enough.
Sights
View on Table Mountain from City Center
Table Mountain - at night
Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation
Castle of Good Hope
Cape Town City Hall
Nelson Mandela statue - Cape Town City Hall
Relief on Mutual Building in Cape Town
Statue on Church Square in Cape Twon
Iziko Slave Lodge
Parliament of South Africa
Tuynhuys - the Cape Town office of The Presidency
The VOC Vegetable Garden
Truth Coffee Roasting
Christmas decoration on St. George Mall
Street market on St. George Mall
Bo-Kaap in Cape Town
Bo-Kaap in Cape Town
The Gin Bar
Ramen Bodega
MOCAA - museum of modern art
MOCAA - inside
Gallery in MOCAA
Art in MOCAA
Clocktower in V&A Waterfront
Statue in V&A Waterfront
Two Oceans Aquarium
Fish in Two Oceans Aquarium
Fish in Two Oceans Aquarium
Shark tank in Two Oceans Aquarium
Frame in V&A Waterfront
Lift up to Table Mountain
View on Cape Town from Table Mountain
View on Twelve Apostels from Table Mountain
Rock Hyrax on Table Mountain
Clifton Beach and Twelve Apostels
View over Hout Bay
Seals on Duiker Island
Seals on Duiker Island
Cape of Good Hope
Cape Point
Cape Point - meeting of Atlantic and Indian Ocean
African penguins on Boulders Beach
Eastern Food Bazaar
Food & Drinks
Gin-tonic at The Gin Bar
Cold-brew coffee at Truth Coffee
Pastry in Truth Coffee
Braai in V&A Waterfront
Beer at Kapstadt Brauhaus in V&A Waterfront
Wine Tasting at Rickety Ridge in Franschhoek
Wine Tasting in Franschhoek
Franschhoek Wine Tram
Franschhoek Wine Tram
View over La Bri Vineyard
Holden Manz Vineyard
Wine tasting at Holden Manz Vineyard