| Search
Places to stay in
South Africa

Click for Interactive map
Search
Eastern Cape Cities and Towns 
|
Grahamstown Information Guide
To most South Africans, Grahamstown, just off the N2 between
Port Elizabeth and Port Alfred, is the home of Rhodes University,
and the host of one of the country’s longest running and major
arts festivals - the National Arts Festival.
Regarded as the heart of the tourist route known as 'Frontier Country',
Grahamstown, along with towns like Alicedale, Sidbury, Riebeeck
East, Hogsback and Alice, is part of one of the most diverse ecological
regions in South Africa, with thousands of hectares devoted to nature
and game conservation, and a history seeped in forts, conflict and
strife.
Grahamstown lies at the intersection of four very different climatic
zones and its unpredictable weather is part of the excitement of
the annual arts festival, which takes place in the middle of winter
and sees thousands of people bundled in coats, gloves and scarves,
descend on the city, whose broad tree-lined streets, gorgeous historical
buildings, museums and plethora of churches - responsible for its
‘City of Saints’ label - are a throw-back to the time
when Grahamstown was the second largest city in the Cape.
|
 |
The Grahamstown Arts Festival, which during apartheid was a hive
of political and protest theatre that never closed its doors to
any race, colour, sex or creed, and imposes no censorship or artistic
restraint on works presented at the festival, continues as a platform
for experimentation.
The Fringe still serves as a great place to spot talent as theatre
is not subject to a selection committee, as is the main festival.
Grahamstown maintains its small-town Victorian charm, its over 100
schools and university earning it a reputation as an academic city.
grahamstown is also a bird watchers delight. The Thomas Baines Nature
Reserve, which lies just outside the city, and the Great Fish River
Reserve, about 35 kilometres away, both provide a wide variety of
bird life.
The Oldenburgia hiking trail, Grahamstown’s own hiking trail,
is a two-day circular trail starting and ending in the city, and
there are another two shorter walking trails in town - the Dassie
Krantz and Gowie Kloof.
|

|
|