Travel WeeklyTravel WeeklyTravel Weekly
  • Aviation
  • Cruise
  • Destinations
Search
  • Aviation
  • Cruise
  • Destinations
  • Appointments
  • Hotels
  • Rail
  • Technology
  • Tourism
  • Travel Advisors
  • Wholesalers
  • Partner Content
  • Events
  • Latest News
  • Subscribe to newsletter
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Women in Travel Awards
  • Travel DAZE
© 2025 The Misfits Media Company Pty Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Becoming a South African adrenaline junkie
Share
Subscribe
Sign In
Travel WeeklyTravel Weekly
Search
  • Aviation
  • Cruise
  • Destinations
  • Hotels
  • Rail
  • Technology
  • Tourism
  • Travel Advisors
  • Wholesalers
  • Partner Content
  • Events
  • Discover
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Women in Travel Awards
  • Travel DAZE
  • The Travel Awards
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • About
  • Contact
  • Editorial Principles
  • Privacy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Advertise With Us
© 2025 The Misfits Media Company Pty Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Travel Weekly > Destinations > Becoming a South African adrenaline junkie
Destinations

Becoming a South African adrenaline junkie

admin
Published on: 28th August 2014 at 2:57 PM
admin
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE

Meet a great white shark at close quarters: 

Are you game to stare down a shark as it comes swimming toward you under water at high speed? While it sounds extreme, many who do the dive report a feeling of peace and serenity when they are in the sharks' domain.  

Shark cage diving operates along the Garden Route drive, with the dives mostly taking place in Hermanus and Gansbaai. And you can rest assured that it is a strictly controlled activity. On a Marine Dynamics trip, a marine biologist onboard will educate divers about distinguishing between a male and female as well as between different species. An expert bait handler places a lure into the water that is smeared with tuna. Two platforms above the cage allow handlers to keep the sharks near to the divers.  

If you want a tamer experience, try a sea safari of the big marine five. It still incorporates sharks but the other four species are somewhat gentler – dolphins, seals, whales and the hardly intimidating penguin.  

""

Run with sardines:

Imagine being one among millions in a movement so immense it can be seen from space. You can when you swim with, or should we say be swamped by, sardines in their annual migration. Between May and July tens of millions flee the cold waters off Cape Point for the warmer waters of the KwaZulu-Natal coast. Proving the metaphor of being packed in like sardines, the shoals travel in clusters that reach up to 15 kilometres in length, three kilometres in width and forty metres depth. 

But that's just the sardines. Imagine the predators that see this as one giant bait ball. Massive squadrons of birds wheel overhead while dolphins, sharks and seals arc through the water for the easiest feast on record. You can snorkel, surface view or scuba dive with an operator like Seal Expeditions during this unrivalled experience. If you're lucky you will see with your own eyes what others have only seen on David Attenborough documentaries, as schools of dolphins cunningly deploy the tactic of herding the sardines from deeper water, trapping the fish at the ocean's surface before closing in for the coup de grace.

""

Kloofing between canyons:

There's no rush quite like the one that comes from climbing cliffs and jumping without a parachute or a bungee cord. When you kloof the biggest adrenalin surge comes from a freefall undertaken in the hope that the water beneath is deep enough to cushion your landing.  

Kloofing is an extreme sport that combines rock-climbing with diving and swimming. It is also definitely as much fun as it sounds. You're guaranteed to get wet on a kloof expedition, so the best time to make the leap of faith is in summer. Kloofers make like the river they are following by using all methods necessary to work their way down or upstream.  

Kloofing began life in the Western Cape however the most thrilling kloof is said to be in Kwa-Zulu Natal at the Mfongosi River, which has a number of rock slides. Unlike other kloofing trails at no point along this river are you forced to either jump or be stuck mid-river. So for the indecisive among us, this is a great option as there's always an exit strategy for those that suddenly come over height phobic.  

SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR FREE
Sign up to receive a subscription to the Travel Weekly daily email newsletter
TAGGED:adrenalinesardinessharkssouth africa
Share

Latest News

Max Parker-Smith (centre) at the Journey Beyond the Tracks, From Adelaide to Perth garden at the 2026 RHS Chelesea Flower Show. Photo: Jonathan Hordle
UPDATED: Journey Beyond’s Indian Pacific-inspired garden wins silver at Chelsea Flower Show
May 20, 2026
HVL Hotels announces Laval Hunter Valley opening.
HVL Hotels announces Laval Hunter Valley opening on Lindeman Estate in Pokolbin
May 20, 2026
Travel Indaba was held in KwaZulu-Natal under the theme “Unlimited Africa: Growing Africa’s Tourism Economy.
Africa’s Travel Indaba delivers major boost for Durban and African tourism trade
May 19, 2026
Le Rooftop at The Peninsula Paris.
Clients visiting Europe? Add a touch of luxury to their trip with these seasonal Peninsula Hotel experiences 
May 19, 2026
//

Travel Weekly is an Australian travel industry publication covering the latest news, trends, and insights across tourism, aviation, hospitality and travel marketing.

About TW

  • About
  • Contact
  • Editorial Principles
  • Privacy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Advertise With Us

Top Categories

  • Aviation
  • Cruise
  • Destinations
  • Hotels
  • Rail
  • Tourism
  • Travel Advisors

Sign Up for Our Newsletter



Travel WeeklyTravel Weekly
Follow US
© 2026 The Misfits Media Company Pty Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up