Port Elizabeth

Port Elizabeth

Port Elizabeth offers visitors a choice of stunning beaches, interesting museums and memorials, award-winning wildlife destinations, cultural and historical nuggets, and some of the friendliest folk in the country.

Port Elizabeth offers visitors a choice of stunning beaches, interesting museums and memorials, award-winning wildlife destinations, cultural and historical nuggets, and some of the friendliest folk in the country.

Port Elizabeth is also known as the Windy City, Ibhayi (‘the bay’ in isiXhosa) or the Friendly City – is a coastal hub in the Eastern Cape where locals proudly proclaim that everything lies within 15 minutes’ drive of the airport.

It is one of the largest cities in South Africa, and lies 770km east of Cape Town, where it forms part of the Nelson Mandela Bay Metro, which links the city with the inland industrial towns of Uitenhage and Despatch.

Algoa Bay, the coastal strip of Nelson Mandela Bay, incorporates a 40km stretch of beaches, with protected areas for swimming at Kings Beach, Hobie Beach, Humewood Beach (which has world-class Blue Flag-status), Pollock Beach and Denville Beach.

Port Elizabeth

Fishing, surfing, scuba diving, snorkelling and sailing are enjoyed at less-populated spots such as Wildside, Sardinia Bay, Blue Horizon Bay, Bluewater Bay, Beachview and Schoenmakerskop.

Historical and cultural icons worth visiting in Port Elizabeth include the Red Location Museum, a museum in New Brighton township that portrays ‘both the horrors of institutionalized racism and the heroic efforts of the anti-apartheid movement.

The South African Air Force Museum; the Donkin Reserve, proclaimed by city founder Sir Rufane Donkin, where birds, benches, walking paths, an opera house, a lighthouse and a memorial may be seen.

The Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Art Museum and Prince Alfred’s Guard Memorial, both located in St George’s Park – the oldest park in Port Elizabeth and home to the St George’s cricket oval.

Port Elizabeth is also home to Route 67 – a collection of 67 art pieces celebrating the years Nelson Mandela devoted to public life.

It is a mix of visual arts, urban design and heritage, showcasing old Victorian churches; terraced cottages on Donkin Street – where massive silver pipes catch the famous winds of Port Elizabeth and make music; a lighthouse that once guided ships into Algoa Bay; and a large pyramid built by Donkin in memory of his wife.

There is also a large metal cut-out of Nelson Mandela symbolically leading South Africans to vote in the country’s first democratic election.

While in the Windy City, you cannot pass the opportunity to visit the city’s multipurpose, multi-tiered Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium, an impressive legacy of the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

Nelson Mandela Bay prides itself on offering the Big Seven of the animal kingdom. In addition to the Big Five – lion, rhino, buffalo, leopard and elephant – visitors to the nearby 180 000ha Addo Elephant National Park can see the great white shark and southern right whale in the bay waters off the park.

The city is a outdoor-lover’s paradise, so don’t miss out on boat cruises; diving opportunities; a visit to the Seaview Predator Park; an excursion to Bayworld (which incorporates an oceanarium, museum and snake park).

Enjoy a trip to the lush forests of the Kragga Kamma Game Park, where white rhino, buffalo, cheetah, giraffe, zebra, nyala, bontebok, lechwe and other animals roams freely.

Port Elizabeth

Topping the fun stakes is the Boardwalk Casino and Entertainment Complex, where shops, eateries, an amphitheatre and casino keep patrons entertained for hours.

Also worth a visit is a 52m tower with 204 steps leading to the top, known as the Campanile Memorial, a monument that stands sentinel over the Port Elizabeth harbour. It was built in 1923 to honour the arrival of 1820 British Settlers.

Another memento of Settler influence is No 7 Castle Hill, built in 1830. This is one of the oldest surviving Settler cottages in the city and encapsulates domestic life of 19th-century middle class, complete with cobbled courtyard and an operational well.

Best Time to Visit Port Elizabeth

Port Elizabeth is good to visit anytime of the year. The temperatures during summer (November to March) range from 16 to 27 degrees Celsius, while winters (May to August) have a temperature of ranging from a minimum of 8 degree to a maximum of 23 degree Celsius.

Spring (September and October) and autumn (April and May) experience an average temperature ranging between 24 degrees to a minimum of 11 degrees Celsius. Because of the very little variation in climatic conditions, it is a year round holiday destination.

Port Elizabeth

The peak season in Port Elizabeth falls around the holiday season in summer. Christmas and New Years could get a little too crowded as the locals also have holidays around this time and prefer to come down to Port Elizabeth to relax and have a nice time and enjoy the beaches.

Port Elizabeth is a popular holiday destination for children and young people mainly as the activities organized in the city are more focused on kids and at the same time younger people and couples can enjoy the various water sports and the exciting night life of Port Elizabeth.

Prices could rise in December and January because of the holidaying tourists. If you want to escape the peak season rush then avoid visiting around holidays, and you will be able to have a quieter time and have fewer tourists on the beaches. Winters are also pleasant, mild, sunny and a good time to visit.

Tourists come down to Port Elizabeth at this time also, especially from countries experiencing very warm summers during this time.

Port Elizabeth’s most important festival is the Nelson Mandela Bay Splash Festival which is held in the month of April. Water sports competitions, live shows and performances and fireworks are the main features of this festival.

Kirkwood Wildlife Festival is another event hosted just a short distance away from Port Elizabeth displaying a exceptional blend of wildlife, art, drama and live performances.

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