
South Africa Coastal Journey
Where Two Oceans Meet, Every Coast Tells a Different Story.
Wild Coast thunderswells to Cape Point's dual-ocean collision — 14 departures, 2025.
Choose Your CoastSouthern Right Whale Season
About 10,000 Southern Right Whales inhabit the southern hemisphere — Walker Bay is their nursery. From late June through November, mothers and calves breach, spout, and tail-slap within metres of shore. Hermanus is the land-based whale watching capital of the world.
- Boat excursions: 7:00 am · 9:00 am · 11:00 am · 2:00 pm · 4:00 pm
- Walker Bay Marine Protected Area — no disturbance guarantee
- Whale Crier tradition: kelp horn signals every sighting
- Average tour duration: 2 hours (sea conditions permitting)

Every departure capped at 12 travelers
Ready to trace the full shoreline?
Select your season, choose your coast. Every departure is capped at 12 travelers.
Choose Your CoastEvery stop, a different ocean.
From the thundering Indian Ocean swells of the Wild Coast to the cold Atlantic clarity of Cape Point — 2,500 kilometres of coastline, curated into one journey.
Eastern Cape
Wild Coast
Undisturbed. Unlit. Unforgettable.
Undulating green hills topped with Xhosa rondavel huts, brilliant blue seascapes, and majestic rocky cliffs. The Eastern Cape's Wild Coast runs along a rugged shore of untouched shorelines, shipwrecks, and traditional culture. No roads reach most of it — that's the point.
- Coffee Bay & Hole in the Wall
- Bulungula river mouth kayaking
- Xhosa cultural homestays
- Shipwreck trail hiking

KwaZulu-Natal
Durban
Three cultures, one plate.
The Golden Mile heats up December through March — surfers at North Beach, bunny chow vendors on the promenade, and peri-peri prawn smoke drifting from Mozambican-influenced kitchens. Zulu, European, and Indian heritage collide in a culinary scene found nowhere else on the continent.
- Bunny chow at Glenwood Bakery
- Peri-peri prawns, Wilson's Wharf
- Victoria Street Spice Market
- Bay of Plenty surf break
Walker Bay, Western Cape
Hermanus
The whales come every year. Do you?
Hermanus is the land-based whale watching capital of the world. From July through November, Southern Right Whales breach, spout, and tail-slap in Walker Bay's sheltered waters. A local Whale Crier walks the clifftops blowing a kelp horn to signal every sighting.
- Whale watching from New Harbour cliffs
- Boat excursions (7am–4pm daily)
- Whale Festival, October 3–5, 2025
- Fernkloof Nature Reserve fynbos walks
Simon's Town, Cape Peninsula
Boulders Beach
African penguin colony, 3,000 strong.
A sheltered cove near Simon's Town is home to one of the world's most accessible African penguin colonies. Board-walk trails bring you within metres of nesting pairs. The water is Antarctic-cold and brilliantly clear — the Atlantic at its most theatrical.
- African penguin colony at Boulders
- Snorkelling in the cove
- Simon's Town Victorian waterfront
- False Bay whale sightings (June–Nov)

Cape of Good Hope
Cape Point
Two oceans. One visible seam.
Cape Point is where the Indian and Atlantic oceans meet — a visible seam of cold and warm current. The Cape Point Nature Reserve covers 19,000 acres and 25 miles of coastline, home to over 1,100 fynbos species. Chapman's Peak Drive curves above it all, 114 metres over the water.
- Cape of Good Hope clifftop walk
- Fynbos trails (1,100+ species)
- Kalk Bay harbour & Brass Bell
- Chapman's Peak Drive at golden hour
5 coastal chapters · 14 departures · 2025
Ready to trace the full shoreline?
Select your season, choose your coast. Every departure is capped at 12 travelers.
Choose Your CoastNot a tour. A reckoning with a coastline.
The South African coastline is 3,000 kilometres of ecological drama — two oceans, six floral kingdoms, whale nurseries, and a food culture built by three civilisations. Most tours give you a bus window. We give you the salt wind.
Maximum 12 Travelers
Every departure is capped at twelve. Not a busload — a dinner table. You'll know everyone's name by the second morning.
Local Guides, Not Tour Scripts
Every guide lives on the coast they show you. The fisherman in Kalk Bay is someone's uncle. The Xhosa elder in Coffee Bay is a friend, not a fixture.
Seasonal Precision
We run four departure windows matched to the coastline's best moments — whale calving, wildflower bloom, summer swell, and spring fynbos. Never the wrong month.
Access Others Can't Buy
Sunrise at Cape Point before the gates open. A private boat into Boulders' penguin cove. The Hermanus Whale Crier's personal morning walk. We've spent years building these relationships.
The moments they didn't photograph.
"We'd been talking about this trip for thirty years. When the Whale Crier blew his kelp horn and we looked up and saw a mother and calf breaching fifty metres off the cliff, Margaret started crying. So did I. That's the kind of thing you can't plan — but Coastline put us in exactly the right place at exactly the right moment."
"We read Paul Theroux before we left and thought we knew what to expect. We didn't. The Wild Coast is something else entirely — no roads, rondavel huts on every hill, and a silence that makes you realise how loud your ordinary life is. Then Durban hit us like a wall of spice and surf. The bunny chow was everything."
"Four of us from university — we'd been promising ourselves this trip since 1998. The West Coast wildflowers were the kind of thing you think only exists in photographs. Then our guide took us off the main track to a spot where the orange daisies ran all the way to the cliff edge and dropped into the sea. That's when we stopped talking."

Choose your season.
Each departure is timed to the coastline's best moment. All groups capped at 12. Select a date to hold your spot — no payment required today.
All prices per person, double occupancy. Single supplement available. · Includes all accommodation, guiding, and listed experiences.