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Ceres and Surrounding Areas Information

Ceres and Surrounding Areas InformationCeres is a well-known destination for its fresh fruit, fruit juices and mineral water. Visitors can go on tours to some of the working fruit farms and tours to the Ceres Fruit Growers Packshed - the largest in the southern hemisphere - can also be arranged. Sundried fruit and homemade preserves can also be sampled and bought in the Ceres area. During our cherry picking season, from mid-November to December, visitors can pick there own cherries at Klondyke Cherry Farm.

Ceres is a well-known destination for its fresh fruit, fruit juices and mineral water. Visitors can go on tours to some of the working fruit farms and tours to the Ceres Fruit Growers Packshed - the largest in the southern hemisphere - can also be arranged. Sundried fruit and homemade preserves can also be sampled and bought in the Ceres area. During our cherry picking season, from mid-November to December, visitors can pick there own cherries at Klondyke Cherry Farm.

This beautiful town is all but quiet. Here you can be adventurous, live on the edge, a haven for every outdoor enthusiast. Be wild; be daring, do something different. Being a mere 150km or 90 minutes drive from Cape Town, Ceres is the ideal breakaway destination for holiday weekend break-aways, teambuilding or conferencing. This beautiful town is all but quiet. Here you can be adventurous, live on the edge, a haven for every outdoor enthusiast. Be wild; be daring, do something different. Being a mere 150km or 90 minutes drive from Cape Town, Ceres is the ideal breakaway destination for holiday weekend break-aways, teambuilding or conferencing.

Ceres and Surrounding Areas InformationCape Route 62 is the tourist route in the Western Cape and Eastern Cape, South Africa, that meanders between Cape Town and Oudtshoorn, the Langkloof and Port Elizabeth, offering the shorter, scenic alternative to the N2 highway.

It's an area of magnificent landscapes and towering cliffs, crystal clear streams and an abundance of trees and indigenous flora - all contribute to make Paarl, Wellington, the Breede River Valley,Klein Karoo and Langkloof some of Soutn Arifa's most diverse regions.

The ever changing colours of the majestic mountains, scenic passes, rivers, vineyards and orchards, as well as the multitude of attractions, will offer you an unforgettable adventure - whether this is in the physical sense or simply a kaleidoscope of scenic tranquility.

The easily accesible towns, nestled along the valleys, all offer ample opportunity for discovery. From visits to wineries and game reserves, tribal art, cultural tours, museums and for the more adventurous: hiking trails and mountain climbing, 4x4 routes, canoeing, horse riding, even ostrich riding, fishing and caving ...

Ceres and Surrounding Areas InformationCape Route 62 is an exciting experience, even for the well-travelled. When you are tired after a long day's travel, you can even unwind in one of the region's invigorating hot-springs, revel in luxury or relax in rustic tranquility.

Cape Route 62 prompts associations with the legendary byway, Route 66, connecting the urban and rural communities between Chicago and Los Angeles. In 1926 the inter regional link, Route 66, between Chicago and Los Angeles, was established as one of America's main east-west arteries, providing small towns access to a major national throughfare.

In the same manner Cape Route 62 links Cape Town to Port Elizabeth. This scenic route passes through farming towns such as Calitzdorp, Ladismith, historic Amalienstein, Zoar and the fruit growing and wine producing towns of Barrydale, Montagu, Ashton, Bonnievale, Robertson, McGregor, Rawsonville, Worcester, Ceres, Wolseley, Tulbagh, Wellington and Paarl. It includes the Langkloof with the following towns; Misgund, Louterwater, Krakeel and Kareedouw.

Ceres and Surrounding Areas InformationIronically, the public lobby, for rapid mobility and improved highways, that gave Route 66 it's enormous popularity in earlier decades also signaled its demise beginning in the mid 1950's. Route 66 was replaced by a national highway, which caused a severe decrease in traffic.

This greatly affected the smaller towns' economy along the route, whose survival depended on the vast majority of travellers. With the completion of the N2 highway in 1958, Cape Route 62 suffered the same fate.

Even though the villages on this route have been in hibernation for more than 40 years, they have been beautifully preserved - they are all situated in very wealthy farming communities.

If you are not in too much af a hurry, you should leave the N1 in Paarl and choose the romantic mountain road via Wellington, Tulbagh, Ceres and Prince Alfred's Hamlet. In Worcester you cross the N1, and now the route will go in an eastern direction past Robertson and Ashton through the Klein Karoo. A detour to the nostalgic village of McGregor and the pretty Bonnievale (birth place of the writer and poet Breyten Breytenbach) at the Breede River is recommended.

 

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