| The Overberg,
an area approximately 100 km wide and 200 km long, is home
to 175 000 residents. Major towns in the area include Caledon,
which boasts its own casino, Bredasdorp with its large population
of scientists and professional people who work for the Denel
Corporation, Swellendam, which is the historical heart of
the Overberg, and coastal resorts such as Hermanus and Struisbaai.
A good infrastructure of tarred roads, medical facilities
and schools is complemented by a full range of leisure offerings
such as golf, tennis, squash, bowls, cycling and running.
Tourism has become a flourishing industry and over the years,
a number of Overberg guest houses have received national
recognition for excellence. Nature parks in the area include
the Bontebok National Park near Swellendam on the banks of
the Breede River, the 18 000 hectare L’Agulhas National
Park and the De Hoop Nature and Marine Reserve.
Well known throughout the world for its beautiful beaches
and excellent angling, the Overberg has also found fame as
the region that includes the southernmost tip of Africa,
namely at L’Agulhas, where the Atlantic and Indian
Oceans meet. It is also the site of South Africa’s
second oldest lighthouse, and a favourite spot for people
across the globe to watch the Southern Right Whales calve.
Officially recognized as the Cape’s Floral Kingdom,
the Overberg with its unique fynbos vegetation is the only
complete kingdom of this nature to be found in a single country.
Yet, despite being the smallest such entity in the world,
comprising just 0, 06% of the earth’s surface, it is
the richest of the world’s six plant kingdoms.
This
natural paradise includes 8 700 species, of which 68% are
endemic. Almost 75% of the plants listed in the South African
Red Data Book are to be found here, of which 1 700 are endangered.
There are also more than 300 species or 21 000 of migrant
and resident wetland birds in the area, an amount equal to
40% of South Africa’s bird population. It is home,
too, to the country’s national bird, the Blue Crane
and its national flower, the Protea.
The Overberg region borders the Cape Peninsula and is therefore
close to Cape Town and its International Airport, which is
considered by many to be the finest in Africa. People have
lived here in harmony for many generations and embrace the
peace and common destiny that defines the new South Africa.
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