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About Cape
Point
At the tip of the Cape Peninsula 60 km south-west of
Cape Town, lies Cape Point, a nature reserve within
the Table Mountain National Park; a declared Natural
World Heritage Site.
Encompassing 7 750 hectares of rich and varied flora
and fauna; abounding with buck, baboons and Cape
Mountain Zebra as well as over 250 species of birds,
Cape Point is a nature enthusiast paradise.
Rugged rocks and sheer cliffs towering more than 200
metres above the sea and cutting deep into the ocean
provide a spectacular background for the Parks’ rich
bio-diversity.
Cape Point falls within the southern section of
Table Mountain National Park. The natural vegetation
of the area, fynbos, comprises the smallest but
richest of the world's six floral kingdoms.
The scenic beauty of Cape Point is not its sole
allure; it is also an international icon of great
historical interest with many a visitor drawn to the
area because of its rich maritime history. Named the
‘Cape of Storms’ by Bartolomeu Dias in 1488; the
‘Point’ was treated with respect by sailors for
centuries. By day, it was a navigational landmark
and by night, and in fog, it was a menace beset by
violent storms and dangerous rocks that over the
centuries littered shipwrecks around the coastline.
In 1859 the first lighthouse was completed; it still
stands at 249 metres above sea-level on the highest
section of the peak and is now used as the
centralised monitoring point for all the lighthouses
on the coast of South Africa.
Access to this historical building is by an
exhilarating ride in the wheelchair accessible
Flying Dutchman funicular that transfers visitors
from the lower station at 127 metres above sea
level, to the upper station at 286 metres above sea
level.
Table
Mountain National Park
The park forms part of the Cape Floral Region, a
World Heritage Site. It includes the majestic Table
Mountain chain, which stretches from Signal Hill to
Cape Point, and the coastlines of the Cape
Peninsula.
This narrow stretch of land, dotted with beautiful
valleys, bays and beaches, contains a mix of
extraordinarily diverse and unique fauna and flora. |