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Books > Travel > Travel & holiday guides > Travel with children / family holidays
A comprehensive guide to child-friendly activities in the 4 major centres of South Africa: Cape Town, Durban, Johannesburg and Pretoria. Packed with useful information about more than 260 child-friendly sites and activities Content Includes: - Site name
- Website address, contact details
- Opening hours
- Party venue rating
- Rainy-day rating
- Cost per child rating
- Most appropriate age-group
- Physical address
- GPS marker
- Closest public transport
- Pram/pushchair friendly
- Toddler facilities (changing etc..)
- Nearest hospital, emergency room & details
- Top tips for each site - what to do, take, remember & forget
- Cost options available
- Description of each site and facilities
- Photo of each site & map of site location
- Nearby sites for parents (bakery, coffee bar or teen friendly site)
Blacks Do Caravan tells the story of a young South African family’s caravan journey, and the everlasting memories created along the way included amazing adventures and wonderful experiences. The book aims to inspire South Africans to take time out of their busy schedules and spend that valuable time with their families to discover the beauty of our country.
Fikile’s trip began on 15 September 2014 and during the journey she came to the realisation that South Africa is still a divided nation. Over twenty years into democracy, boundaries still divide us. Fikile aims to break those boundaries created by the past regime and contribute to the unity that is needed for all South Africans to move forward and experience this country equally. What better way to do it than caravanning?
Fikile and her family visited over 60 caravan parks and extended their travels to the Kingdom of Swaziland, which became an eye opening, mind changing trip of a lifetime.
Farm Stall To Farm Stall is a collection of the best farm stalls and markets for food lovers and avid farm stall trawlers in South Africa.
Each farm stall has been individually visited and researched, and ratings are given on the best coffee, tea and local fare. There are also recipes for several of the delectable delights! The book lists accommodation in the area, the nearest town, child and pet friendly ratings, contact details and operating hours for all the farm stalls.
Farm stalls are listed according to the route on which they are found, and the handy quickfinder and overview maps will enable you to plan your stop.
At the back of the book you will find a list of annual markets and festivals as well as what to expect from each, with handy websites and contact details.
The book is an absolute necessity for any food lover who wants good, wholesome food and delicacies as well as meeting the local people and buying quality local products.
Filled with activities and interesting facts about Cape Town, this book covers the city’s six most popular destinations: Table Mountain, Boulders Beach, Cape Point, Robben Island, Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden and the V&A Waterfront.
With vibrant, full-colour illustrations throughout, this guidebook brings each destination to life with child-focused trivia and educational activities, such as puzzles, mazes, crosswords, secret codes and spot-the-difference. It also advises parents and children about what to pack and what to expect at each location.
Make the most of day trips in Cape Town with this fun, activity-packed companion
What with the rising cost of travel, the scary exchange rate, the cost of visas, traffic congestion on the roads to the coast, the environmental cost of air travel and – generally – a lack of time, perhaps we should revisit the concept of holidays. Do we really have to travel halfway across the world or halfway across the country for a holiday to ‘count’? After all, what makes a holiday a holiday anyway? What makes it special? Two days of genuine relaxation within 100km of your home is worth more than a week in a glamorous resort if you’re stressing out about work, are in semi-constant contact with the office, or are trying to figure out how you are going to resuscitate your credit card when you get back. A holiday is a state of mind.
It’s a series of special moments that you will treasure forever. And that’s what’s so great about staycations. No long queuing and interviews for visas, no long queues at the airport, no long flights, and no long, thousand-yard-stare, endless drives through the Karoo. By choosing a staycation, you minimise the boring, long bits of holidays, and maximize the fun, interesting bits that make for treasured memories. And, hey, you save money, save fuel, and pile up carbon credits at the same time. What’s not to love? And you would be amazed at how much there is to do so close to the city – stunning hikes and country stays, big five safaris, awesome golf, amazing adventures, romantic retreats, and genuinely fun family-friendly resorts where your kids can act their age, and so can you.
So, check it out – you’ll find amazing golf staycations, adventure staycations, safari staycations and a range of fabulous one-tank-cations spreading out from the city like the petals of a daisy. North, south, east, west – close to home is best.
After a family day out, Rebecca would record where they had been
and what they had done whilst visiting a landmark, point of
interest or town in Yorkshire/North Lincolnshire. The journal
aspects to 'The Visiting Book' allows users to doodle, colour,
comment and remember their fantastic days out. Rebecca has
illustrated the book to encourage not only people to visit these
places but to also remember them in the most unique way! The
possibilities are endless, this is just the beginning with covering
Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire.
This is a story about two young girls' who have just moved to a
seaside town. They experience a magical adventure with their dog
Flossie, during a particularly dull wet English summer. Returning
from a shopping trip they stumble upon a small antique shop in the
older part of town. Curiosity leads them to enter and discover the
owner is a wizard called Beerfroth. He is enchanted by the children
and they make him laugh, so he gives them a small box as a gift.
They return home to discover it has a secret drawer containing a
ring with magical properties. With the ring the children are able
to visit Rasnaucty Island, a safe haven for threatened animals,
hidden in another dimension governed by the Laird, Archie McBear.
But there's trouble on the island and Beerfroth needs their help.
The mine at Cold Mountain has collapsed and the ice cream bears
have gone on strike. Can the two girls help repair the mine and
restore peace and harmony to the troubled island?
The year is 1973 and changes are afoot in Great Yarmouth and
Brokencliff-on-Sea as the New Year comes in with bang! Return to a
simpler time when family holidays at the seaside were still fun and
electronic devices had never been heard of. The only sound that was
heard was the gentle lapping of the waves, the gulls circling
above, and the trot of the horse's hooves along the promenade and
music from the funfairs.
Paddington Bear has been delighting adults and children alike with
his earnest good intentions and humorous misadventures for over
sixty years and is now a major movie star! Paddington unveils his
adopted home as only Paddington can. From the station itself (the
start of it all) and on through all the major London destinations
(with some surprising detours en route) this is a guide certain to
entertain and enlighten the whole family. With plenty of anecdotes
and stops for refreshments along the way, Paddington's London will
guide visitors and London dwellers alike, young and old, families,
couples, friends and solitary explorers to a London that is rich,
exciting, fascinating and fun.
Eager Traveller was written for the grandchildren of the author in
order that they should see how different life was fifty years ago.
It is the story of a London child, dominated by a stern father, who
spent much of her time in the company of loving relatives. On
leaving school her father sent her into private service where she
was the lowest of the low, and made to take orders from all and
sundry. She enjoyed the travels of the great families and their
families and their servants as they moved about the country
following the huntin', shootin' and fishin' seasons. She married a
farm worker and as there was little money she was unable to travel,
so she became an "Armchair Traveller" until chance and someone's
bad luck took her abroad for the first time at the age of
forty-one. From then on travel came frequently and the greatest
adventure came in 1971 when she took her family behind the Iron
Curtain into Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia. They found kind and
happy people who, although they had known great sufferings, showed
kindness to the "Engleski". A strong psychic thread runs through
the story
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