Tag Archives: Antarctica

WhaleTales Tourism, Food, and Wine news headlines: 10 March

WhaleTalesTourism, Food, and Wine news headlines

*   Edelweiss Air will offer two return flights per week between Cape Town and Zürich during the Cape’s next summer season, in new-look interior aircraft.  New seat configurations and an in-flight entertainment system with touch screens will be available.

*   Cape Town has the potential to become a tourism link to Antarctica, an opportunity which is not being utilised at all by our tourism authorities, shows research conducted at the University of Western Cape. The 6 hour flight from Cape Town has few seats reserved for tourists, the bulk of the 35000 tourists per year arriving by ship from Argentina.  Tourism facilities are minimal on the island, and the flights are expensive, not favouring the development of tourism currently.   Cruise tourism to Antarctica via Cape Town could also be encouraged.

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WhaleTales Tourism, Food, and Wine news headlines: 22 November

WhaleTalesTourism, Food, and Wine news headlines

*   Selling direct to wine lovers is the way to go delegates at a Wine Vision conference were told earlier this week by an international panel of speakers.  Mike Ratcliffe of Warwick Wine Estate in Stellenbosch shared that 22 % of their wine sales is to members of their Wine Club.

*   Prince Harry’s UK, the USA and the Commonwealth teams have flown to Antarctica, for their trek for charity to the South Pole, having been held up in Cape Town for the last four days due to bad weather.

*   Big Concerts has added a third Carlos Santana concert at the GrandArena at GrandWest on 27 February, in addition to 25 and 26 February in Cape Town, and 1 March in Johannesburg.

*   Bouchard Finlayson won the ‘Coup de Coeur‘ at the first Vinidivio show Continue reading →

Man-eating Orca whales one of many dangers Antarctic expeditions faced to get to South Pole!

I attended a talk by Story Teller Rob Caskie about Ernest Shackleton and the trials and tribulations of his expeditions to attempt to reach the South Pole first, a dream he never managed to achieve, yet he was probably one of the most highly respected explorers of the Antarctic.  The talk was held at the One& Only Cape Town, one of four over two days, and I was invited by the hotel to attend.  Orca whales were just one of many challenges Shackleton’s expedition faced on its journey in the Antarctic.

Caskie is a raconteur of note, speaks loudly, and I could not help but think of Ray McCauley, who looks similar to Caskie.  Caskie also has an almost ‘evangelical’ energy and passion in sharing his information, and holds a stick when he talks, which he uses to illustrate practical details such as the gradient of a mountain, etc.  I asked him about writing a book about his talk, and he almost seemed surprised about the suggestion, having thought about it too but worried that he may not be as good a writer as he is a speaker. Caskie speaks fast, and his information pours out, making it hard to keep up and make notes, especially if one does not know the subject matter.

Broadly speaking, Shackleton’s expedition was the first to get close to the South Pole, but on 9 January 1909 it had to turn around, 97 km from the South Pole, as the food supply was running low, and it would not have made the return journey. His expedition was beaten by those of Roald Amundsen, reaching the South Pole on 14 December 1911, and by that of Robert Scott, on 17 January 1912.  Of the three explorers, Shackleton was the most amazing leader, always putting his own needs and comfort second to those of his team, and in his book ‘South’ he wrote: ‘Leadership has many penalties, and one of them is loneliness’!  They beat the odds in staying alive, in contracting dysentery from contaminated meat, in handling a threatened mutiny, being stuck for 18 months on the ice in the Weddel Sea, losing their ship the ‘Endurance’, which was crushed by the pack ice, camping on ice, living off their animals, having to bear the smell of the penguin guano on Elephant Island, surviving for four months on kelp and seaweed on Elephant Island, overcoming inhospitable glaciers and cliffs to get from the south side to the whaling station on the north side of South Georgia Island, having frostbitten toes amputated, all of which Caskie calls the ‘biggest survival story in modern day history’. Shackleton died of a heart attack on another journey down to the Antarctic.  When asked what should happen to his body, his wife said: “Antarctica always was his mistress – bury him there”.

Caskie does talks about Antarctica, a region he visited for the first time last December, locally and in the UK, as well as about the Anglo-Zulu war history, and guides tours around Rorke’s Drift.  He told me that he is not an extreme sports man, but he has parachuted a number of times, and has solo motorcycled through Africa.  For his talk Caskie wore his trademark outfit – a  branded shirt and shorts, the same outfit which he wore at the Antarctica, at -10°C!  He described how the killer whales would jump out of the water, to snap up a seal, a horse, or even men, according to Shackleton’s book.  We talked about whaling at the table, and he said it was a shame that there was so much whaling at the time, the whale bones being clear to see in the clear ocean.

After the talk we were invited to the Buffet at Reuben’s, which was overseen by their chef Jerome Norton, who was a member of the SA Culinary Team which participated in the Olympics in Germany last month, a feast of salads, roast sirloin and pork belly, lamb curry, chicken, kingklip, and a dessert selection.  I enjoyed chatting to Caskie’s partner Karen over dinner, who has been in the hospitality industry, having met Caskie at Rorke’s Drift.

Rob Caskie Cell 082 4000 470  www.robcaskie.com

Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com Twitter: @Whale Cottage

SA in New York Times top 31 destination list for 2010

South Africa is one of 31 destinations recommended for travel in 2010 by the New York Times on its site www.nytimes.com.  The top five destinations are Sri Lanka, Patagonia Wine Country (San Patricio del Chavar), Seoul, Mysore in India, and Copenhagen. 

“Waiting in the wings”, according to the article, as places to go to in 2010 are countries/cities which include Damascus, Antarctica, Leipzig, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Shanghai, Minorca, Costa Rica, Marrakesh, Bahia in Brazil, Kitzbuehl in Austria, Norway and South Africa.

South Africa made 22nd place on the list, and its selection is motivated by the Soccer World Cup taking place this year,  and Cape Town is highlighted as the best city in the country.  The full text motivating the selection of South Africa on the list follows:

“As host of the 2010 World Cup this summer, South Africa has gotten its game on with a flurry of new stadiums, new hotels and safari lodges.  While soccer is being played across nine cities, much of the action off the field is taking place in Cape Town. Already known for its stunning beaches, mouthwatering cuisine and sophisticated night life, the city is welcoming high-end hotels, including the recently opened One & Only Cape Town and the forthcoming Taj Cape Town (www.tajhotels.com/capetown). Set to open this month, the Taj will have 166 rooms, many with views of Table Mountain. Also scheduled to open in Cape Town this year — but not in time for the World Cup — is the second branch of the nascent Missoni Hotels group (the first property opened in Edinburghlast year, with future outposts planned for Kuwait, Brazil and Oman). Between matches, there’s plenty of time to go on a safari. If money is no object, check out the Ulusaba  (www.ulusaba.virgin.com), a private game reserve that’s part of Richard Branson‘s collection of luxury vacation properties. It has opened the new Cliff Lodge, with private swimming pools and spectacular views of the bush. Prices start at 13,800 South African rand (around $1,878 at 7.35 rand to the dollar) a night for two.”

The full article can be read here.

Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com