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Archaeological Treasures Await: Travel Through Time in South Africa

As the festive season arrives and South Africa comes alive with travel, sunshine and celebration, there’s no better time to reconnect with the country’s extraordinary past. Between beach days and family getaways, why not add a little time travel to your itinerary? This summer provides an opportunity to trade shopping malls for ancient caves, and festive lights for the glow of discovery. Across South Africa, archaeological treasures await – offering journeys not only across landscapes, but across millennia.

South Africa holds some of humanity’s deepest roots. Within its borders lies the Cradle of Humankind, a UNESCO World Heritage Site where our earliest ancestors were uncovered. Pair that with dinosaur plains, San (the indigenous and the oldest surviving cultures of the Southern African region) rock art, and the ruins of lost kingdoms, and a journey across the country becomes a passage through the ages.

Just northwest of Johannesburg in Gauteng, explorers will find the Cradle of Humankind home to the largest concentration of hominin fossils on Earth. Within its limestone caves, iconic discoveries such as Mrs Ples and the near-complete Little Foot skeleton have helped rewrite our understanding of human evolution. A visit to the Sterkfontein Caves or the interactive Maropeng Visitor Centre places travellers at the very heart of humanity’s origins.

South Africa’s timeline stretches back far beyond humanity. In the Free State, the new Kgodumodumo Dinosaur Interpretation Centre brings the age of dinosaurs vividly to life. On the West Coast, the Fossil Park preserves the remains of creatures that roamed five million years ago, including sabre-tooth cats, giant bears, three-toed horses, and four-tusked elephants. These sites remind us that the continent’s story begins long before our own.

Along the Southern Cape, the Blombos Cave has revealed ochre carvings, bone tools and evidence of symbolic thought dating back 100,000 years – some of the earliest traces of human creativity. Nearby, the Pinnacle Point Site Complex at Mossel Bay tells another chapter: evidence of people harvesting shellfish, crafting tools and using ochre pigments over 160,000 years ago. At the Klasies River Caves, fossils and artefacts point to early Homo sapiens living and innovating along the coast 125,000 years ago. Together, these caves show how thought, art and imagination first took shape.

The story continues on cliff faces and sandstone walls. In the uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Mountains, more than 40,000 San paintings record not only daily life but also spiritual connections with the natural world. In the Cederberg, the Bushman’s Kloof Wilderness Reserve protects over 130 sites, some dating back 10,000 years. These works are more than art – they are windows into the beliefs and lives of the earliest inhabitants.

South Africa’s heritage is also carved into stone. In MpumalangaAdam’s Calendar – a 75,000-year-old stone circle aligned with solstices – remains one of the most intriguing and debated sites in the world. In the Northern Cape, the Nooitgedacht Glacial Pavements preserve 290-million-year-old ice-age striations later used by humans to etch petroglyphs of circles and spirals. Across the hills of Johannesburg, the Melville Koppies reveal stone-walled ruins and Iron Age furnaces linked to vast networks of early settlements.

South Africa’s archaeological wonders are not only prehistoric, they also include the legacies of advanced societies. Within Kruger National Park, the stone city of Thulamela speaks of a community engaged in long-distance trade. Meanwhile, the sprawling Kweneng Ruins recall a 14th-century Tswana capital, once home to tens of thousands of people. Further north, the Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape, another UNESCO World Heritage Site, showcases the remains of a kingdom that thrived between the 11th and 13th centuries, trading gold, ivory and glass beads across Africa and beyond.

Taken together, these sites form one of the richest tapestries of human and natural history anywhere on Earth. South Africa awaits inviting travellers to step into its caves, walk its valleys and stand among its ruins – find your joy, not as passive observers, but as participants in a story that belongs to us all. To journey here is to walk through time itself.

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About us

Actually, Home Food and Travel offers a lot more than just reviews of accommodation, restaurants, spas and adventure activities.  We also visit great destinations, receive advice from interior designers and stop to smell the roses and taste the coffee.

Our team of journalists are seasoned travels and love visiting the myriad of exciting places around South Africa.  Whether it is off the beaten track or in the heart of the top attractions of the country, we’ll be there,

Home Food and Travel advice on finding the right accommodation

So what is the right accommodation?  Well more often than not, it’s your travel budget that dictates the type of accommodation that you choose. 

Expensive is not always better.  Our team at Home Food and Travel will tell you that they have camped in areas with limited ablutions and had a wonderful holiday.  They have also spent a night in a five star hotel only to be disappointed because their expectations exceeded the experience.

The reason for your travels will also affect your choice.  A business trip requires different amenities to a beach holiday. 

Our articles, reviews and experiences can certainly help you make your decision.

Restaurants with a good mix of service, food and ambiance

To my mind a great restaurant offers three things – excellent service, great food and a wonderful ambiance.  Of these, service is the most important. 

No matter that the food is delicious and the setting delightful, poor service can ruin the occasion.  However, great service combined with mediocre meal and a plane jane restaurant can still be a pleasant night out.

We’ve eaten in restaurants that are really dirty but with incredible food and couldn’t help but give a rave review.  We’ve also hardly noticed what we ate because the setting was just amazing.

However, the best restaurants come with the best of service, food and ambiance.

Spas are the ultimate relaxation aid

How do you know when you have had a great spa experience?  The answer, of course, is when you doze off on the treatment table. 

Well that’s our theory anyway.  It also doesn’t take a grand location with enormous facilities for a spa to be really good

A small, personal spa that is owner run can result in the best massage you have ever experienced.  However, the grand spas in five star hotels offer unsurpassed facilities in an environment that just makes the stress in your shoulders and neck melt away before you even finish checking in.

Adventure!

You don’t have to be an adrenaline junky to enjoy an exciting experience.  In fact, what are commonly termed adventure activities usually have incredibly high safety standards and unblemished safety records.

Ziplining, bungy jumping and shark cage diving are all very safe.  It’s just that our mind tells us we are craaazzzzyyyy to be doing this.

On the road to great places of accommodation, restaurants, spas and adventure activities

If you’re driving, be safe and make use of all the wonderful farm stalls that populate South Africa’s open roads.

If you overhear somebody asking a lot of questions or see someone taking photos of empty bedrooms chances are it’s one of our Home Food and Travel team members.

We’re out looking or those great places of accommodation, restaurants, spas and adventure activities.

See you on the road!

 

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