Addo Elephant National Park

Addo Elephant National Park

Adults

Young Adult

12‐15

Children

2‐11

Infants

< 2yrs

Rooms

Rooms

Adults

Children

Age<=17

Addo Elephant National Park

Stretching from the karoo region north of the Zuurberg Mountain Range to the coast and islands of Algoa Bay

Now the third largest national park in South Africa, Addo Elephant National Park has expanded to conserve a wide range of biodiversity, landscapes, fauna and flora. Stretching from the semi-arid karoo area in the north around Darlington Dam, over the rugged Zuurberg Mountains, through the Sundays River Valley and south to the coast between Sundays River mouth and Bushman’s river mouth, Addo covers about 180 000 hectares and includes the Bird and St Croix Island groups. The park is about 70km north-east from Port Elizabeth. Port Elizabeth is South Africa's fifth largest city and is located on the Indian Ocean coast half-way between Cape Town and Durban. There are regular flights to Port Elizabeth via Cape Town and Johannesburg.

The Karoo is one of South Africa's thirstiest regions and is plagued by constant droughts. The cruelty of its planes and plateaus is in stark contrast with its role as refuge to wildebeest, zebra and red hartebeest. The underlying bush camouflages watchful predators and less cautious herbivores.
These two diverse worlds are home to one of the word's most renowned cheetahs. Sibella, a wild matriarch, was viciously tortured by wild dogs and savage humans. Her rescuer came in the form of a farmer's wife, who supported her rehabilitation and released her into the wilderness of Samara. Her tale's happy ending includes motherhood, a successful return to the hunt and a vast contribution to the endangered species list: She has yielded 18 cubs and increased the SA cheetah population by two percent single handedly. Sibella represents The Eastern Cape's contrasts perfectly. Where dormant land is held captive by a fragile ecosystem, urban regions echo the Cape's journey towards recovery from apartheid's metaphorical prison. This upward trend has placed The Eastern Cape on a pathway of revitalization, resurgence and transcendence. This makes holidays to The Eastern Cape Game Areas vibrant and profoundly affecting.

Your holiday to The Eastern Cape Game Areas will be accompanied by weather that is decidedly friendly and sedate. The subtropical summers are sandwiched between rainy springs and autumns. The climate is splintered by the jagged terrain.

The variations in altitude and the bisecting escarpment allow those taking holidays to The Eastern Cape Game Areas the freedom to choose their preferred climate in every season. The Karoo is the only location tortured by extreme temperatures in mid summer. Other zones have their own climatological personalities, but all are temperate. 

Photos

Error Message: