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Despite its huge historical importance and cosmopolitan cultural diversity,
Cape Town wears its international city tag like a schoolboy in a blazer
bought with 'growing room'. The aptly named City Bowl, between Table Bay and
the imposing, 1,000-metre-high slab of Table Mountain, is compact, but the
Mother City somehow manages to squeeze entire cultures and communities into
a small surface area.
The Bo-Kaap ('Upper Cape') - or the Malay Quarter - is a case in point.
Populated by descendants of the city's 17th- and 18th-century Muslim slaves,
this cobblestoned neighbourhood has a quaint vibe and small-town charm -
despite being smack-bang in the City Centre. Pop into the Bo-Kaap Museum (71
Wale Street, +27214813939,style="color: #000099">
) for a glimpse into this uniquely Capetonian community. This diversity spreads throughout the city. Standing in the green forests on the slopes of Table Mountain, it's hard to believe you're only a few miles from the heart of the city. And as you stroll down St George's Mall, dodging a briefcase-wielding businessman while surrounded by the sounds of marimba drums, gum-boot dancers and the occasional manic street preacher, you won't know whether Cape Town is a place at work or at play. The city boasts the unfairly abundant natural beauty of a provincial
town, combined with the smooth sophistication of a First World metropolis.
The award-winning Camps Bay and Clifton beaches, the gorgeous Kirstenbosch
Botanical Gardens (Rhodes Drive, +27217998800, |