- De Post Huys. The original garrison building, one of the oldest surviving structures from settlement days. Built as a lookout post and signal station in 1673.
- Rhodes Cottage. The cottage in which Cecil Rhodes died in 1902, maintained as a memorial museum. Contains many of his possessions and photographs.
- The Natale Labia Museum contains fine furniture and works of art.
04 November 2014
MUIZENBERG
01 November 2014
SOUTH DEVON
30 October 2014
ADELAIDE
The South Australian capital of Adelaide is a most attractive city, and unusual in that it was carefully planned from its beginning in 1836. Surrounded by parkland, bisected by the River Torrens, and with an orderly grid of central city streets, Adelaide was the vision of surveyor Colonel William Light. The city's one million residents enjoy a Mediterranean-style climate and a relatively peaceful lifestyle. The inner city of Adelaide is best explored on foot; it is compact, well laid out and flat. The balmy climate and excellent local food and wine have given rise to an abundance of streetside restaurants and cafés.
Adelaide O'bahn. This card shows 'O'Bahn' track that buses go on and off of to travel faster
The South Australian capital was founded by free settlers and Adelaide prides itself on its convict-less history. Surrounded by the gentle Adelaide Hills and the gulf, this is perhaps the nation's most attractive capital. Adelaide has a multicultural population of of just over a million and the city has gained a reputation as an important centre for the arts.
25 October 2014
SLEA HEAD
The Dingle Peninsula, stretching westwards for 30 miles from the low-lying country near Tralee, is the most northerly of the hilly promontories of County Kerry. It offers some of Ireland’s most beautiful scenery. Some parts of the peninsula – especially the more remote areas – are still Gaelic speaking, so many road signs are written only in Irish.
21 October 2014
NEWFOUNDLAND
A World of Difference
Off in the northwest Atlantic Ocean, Newfoundland is both geographically and culturally a place between the Old and New Worlds. Here you'll find a fantastic natural environment. More than a dozen species of whales, millions of nesting seabirds and the wild ocean itself beckon. On land are scores of parks, the world's largest caribou herd and friendly, open people who speak a dialect that not's quite Devon, not quite Cork, but definitely familiar.
18 October 2014
DRAKENSBERG
Giant's Castle has one of of southern Africa's richest stores of Bushman rock art and Main Caves boasts more than 500 paintings in a single, large shelter.
11 October 2014
WASHINGTON D.C.
Washington, D.C. has dozens of world-class museums and galleries to visit, and many of them are free. The permanent collections of the Smithsonian Museums are second to none, and the temporary exhibits there and elsewhere around Washington bring in spectacular art and artifacts.Many of the architectural landmarks in Washington, D.C. commemorate important chapters in American history. Monuments and memorials like the breathtaking Jefferson and Lincoln Memorials, the unprecedented Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and the inspiring Marine Corps War Memorial.
Official Visitors Guide: Washington DC
Postcrossing Postcard: US-1326343
10 October 2014
NOVA SCOTIA
Along its 4,625-mile-long coastline is almost every conceivable geographical marine feature - beaches, lagoons, salt marshes, harbours, inlets, coves, estuaries, bays, basins, channels, straits, passages, capes, points, heads, sandbars, mud flats, and sand-dunes.
06 October 2014
HOUT BAY
- Hout Bay Museum Depicts the story of the bay and its environs, as well as the development of the fishing industry.
- Hout Bay Harbour A unique seafood 'emporium', encompassing a fresh fish and Cape rock lobster market.
- Chapman's Peak One of the world's most spectacular scenic drives, the road is an engineering feat. Cut into the cliffs around the peak, the 10 km drive begins at Hout Bay, and traverses Chapman's Peak Mountain, its cliffs falling sheer to the sea.
03 October 2014
STRATFORD-UPON-AVON
- Shakespeare's Birthplace, where the dramatist was born, in 1564, and grew up;
- Hall's Croft was the home Shakespeare's elder daughter, Susana, and her husband, Dr. John Hall;
- Nash's House, home of Thomas Nash, husband of Shakespeare's granddaughter. Next door was New Place, where Shakespeare died. Only the foundations remain, with an Elizabethan-style knot garden.
- Anne Hathaway's Cottage, where Shakespeare's wife lived as a child;
- Arden's House, the childhood home of Shakespeare's mother.