Re: Spring 2014 | Page 77

The next destination is Port Elizabeth – South Africa’s third largest city, also known as “The Friendly City”. A popular destination for water sports, this city offers spectacular beaches, historical attractions, wildlife sanctuaries as well as the oldest bowling green in South Africa! Optional tours here include a visit to the Addo Elephant Park, a seventy-five minute drive away from the pier. Once here, we’ll board 4x4 safari vehicles to observe the bountiful wildlife that roams freely in this enormous national park. This park stands as living proof of South Africa’s conservation efforts; when the park opened there were just 11 elephants living in the area – today there are over 450. The Addo elephants are a somewhat smaller species than the traditional African elephant, and are reddish rather than grey in colour. They are highly intelligent creatures that communicate through vocalization, touching with their trunks, and different body postures. If you prefer, you can discover the local townships on a tour that visits undeveloped Missionvale and middleclass Kwadwesi. Your guide will point out a number of landmarks along the way, including the Native Strangers Location, Livingstone Hospital, and Lithuli Square, which is named for the political activist who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1960 for his non-violent opposition to apartheid. Back on board Nautica you have time to reflect on all you have seen, as the ship cruises the Cape of Good Hope, before arriving at Walvis Bay in Namibia. You have two full days here to explore and discover this city on the edge of the desert. Although rimmed by the inhospitable Namib Desert, Walvis Bay boasts a huge natural lagoon that attracts hundreds of thousands of birds, including flaming