Monday, December 17, 2012

Luxury South Africa Tour Huge Reduction

MASSIVE REDUCTION ON THIS AMAZING TOUR. COUPLES CAN SAVE ALMOST $6000.


I have re-negioted rates for this tour and am now able to offer it for $9995 per person twin share. This is a reduction of $2995 per person. No changes to the itinerary, just huge savings. This incredible saving is valid for bookings made an deposited by 31 March 2013.


Roll on September 2013. I can't wait. I'll be escorting a group of lucky people to South Africa to sample some of the finest things the nation has to offer.

We start at the Palace of the Lost City - one of the most amazing resorts I've ever seen. It's heaps of fun. Great accommodation, fine food and wine, wonderful art works everywhere you look, a theatre, casino and a huge wave pool.  It is set in some beautiful countryside and has two fantastic golf courses complete with crocodiles in the water traps. At night the whole thing is like something out of an Indian Jones movie.

The Palace of the Lost City

Another highlight will be Shamwari - a  world famous private game reserve in the Eastern Cape. More great food, wine and scenery, but most importantly this is a "Big Five" reserve, so you have an outstanding opportunity to see lions, elephants, leopards, cape buffaloes and rhinos in their natural environment as well as dozens of species of general game.

Game drives at Shamwari

Cape Town is simply fantastic. The best city in Africa. We'll be staying at the historic Victoria & Alfred Hotel at the Waterfront.  It is the perfect base from which to explore this spectacular city.  Having done that we will visit the winery region and stay at the beautifully located luxury Grand Roche Hotel.


Table Mountain and Cape Town

Our final treat will be The Blue Train from Cape Town to Pretoria. This is one of the most luxurious rail journeys on earth. The stupendous food and fine wines are included on this overnight journey. Our accommodation is in beautiful sleeper cabins.

Accommodation aboard the Blue Train
Blue Train Cuisine

The cost per person is now only AU $9995 per person twin share and includes economy class airfares from Brisbane on South African Airlines. Most meals and touring, professional guides and drivers and any assistance that I can offer.


The view from The Grand Roche Hotel


You can view the details of this amazing tour, which includes so much more than those items I've outlined above, by clicking on the following link. http://ucango.com.au/offers-1/luxury-south-africa

Call me on 1300 UCANGO or drop me an email for further details - peter.emery@ucango.com.au

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Help Save The Rhino

There are people in Asia who believe that ingesting rhino horn will cure erection problems and cancer. This is of course utter garbage. Rhino horn is keratin. Yes, that's the same stuff that your own fingernails are made of. In other words, if your willy's a bit.......ahem........tired, chew your fingernails. It'll have exactly the same effect - none whatsoever, unless of course you have some sort of fingernail fetish. It's not going to cure your cancer either I'm afraid, despite the claims of certain folk who should know better. The President of Vietnam for example says it cured him. It didn't of course, but the silly bugger saying it did increased demand and consigned more African rhinos to a horrible death.

Basically there are two species of African rhino - the black and the white. White rhinos can be divided into two sub-species. The Southern White and the Northern White. The latter are now thought to be extinct. There were recently a few in a remote part of the Democratic Republic of Congo, but despite a courageous effort to save them by the late, great Lawrence Anthony who quite literally put his life on the line to save the animals, the last few Northern White Rhinos on earth were taken by poachers amid the chaos created by corrupt governments and the Lord's Resistance Army. I thoroughly recommend that you read Lawrence Anthony's book The Last Rhinos.

So what's the difference between a black rhino and a white rhino? It's not as obvious as it seems. Both are grey actually, or the colour of whatever dust or mud they've been rolling in. "White" rhino springs from the dutch word weit meaning wide. It refers to the animals mouth which is indeed wide. Black rhino's have a kind of prehensile hooked lip, perfect for curling around the branches and twigs of the low shrubs and trees that form the greater part of it's diet. The white rhino is perfectly adapted to munching on grass. Basically, it is an armoured lawn mower. They hold their head lower and consume grass by the kilo. It's quite easy to tell which animal has passed by when you look at their droppings. White rhino dung is almost exclusively grass, while a close inspection of black rhino dung reveals leaves and twigs all chomped at a forty five degree angle. African dung is fascinating.

 White Rhino


Black Rhino

There are other differences too. Black rhinos are much more aggressive and secretive despite being smaller than their white cousins, although white rhino cows can be very dangerous if they have calves. They are even different in the way they retreat from threats. White rhino cows will run away behind their calves, thus protecting their offspring from threats from behind as they flee across the grassy savannah.  Black rhinos will run away ahead of their calves, clearing a way through the scrubby habitat that they favour.

Everyone knows that the rhino is one of the "Big Five" along with the elephant, the lion, the leopard and the cape buffalo. They were originally so called because they are the most dangerous animals to hunt, but actually you haven't officially seen the Big Five unless you've seen a black rhino. However, since they are not easy to find we'll forgive you for claiming the big five if you've seen a rhino of either kind.

Anyway, if you really want to help to preserve these beautiful animals, please visit Africa. Go and see them for yourself. Not only will you enjoy a life changing adventure and a wonderful holiday, but you will reinforce the fact that a live rhino is far more valuable as a sustainable resource than a dead one with its horn hacked off. 







Sunday, December 9, 2012

Hug A Hyena

I think it's time to shatter a few myths about African travel.

1. It's dangerous.
Wander around the wrong parts of Johannesburg or Nairobi and you could get into trouble, but the same can be said of almost every city on the planet.  Most of your African Safari will be spent in the bush. You are safer there than in your own home, unless you try to hug a hyena or something.

2. I'm likely to be robbed.
Nope. You are more likely to be robbed on a Caribbean holiday, or on a trip to Florence, Rome, Prague, Budapest, Mexico or Thailand.

3. The food will be terrible.




  Impodimo Lodge Cuisine, Madikwe Game Reserve,
 South Africa.

4. The accommodation will be uncomfortable and primitive.

Idube Lodge, Sabi Sands, South Africa.

5. You get closer to the animals at the zoo. 
On safari in Kenya's Masai Mara National Reserve.

Okay, So now you'll have to think of another excuse. Visit Africa. It WILL change your life for the better.