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"For a long time, lodges in South Africa tended to be geared toward the Big Five. Grootbos, on the fynbos slopes near Walker Bay, south of Cape Town, is different. This 6,177acre private reserve is about treasuring the smaller, finer things. With 889 plant species, seven of which are newly discovered, it is first and foremost a rare botanical treasure trove, in which owner Michael Lutzeyer has employed some of the Cape’s leading botanists and entomologists. The lodges are glassy and contemporary, but there’s a constant call outdoors—from the outside showers to tracking elusive aardvark and Cape leopard, or having lantern-lit dinners in a 1,000-year-old milkwood forest, all fairy-tale tangles. I’ve ridden horses across the sands, past ancient sea caves; been on flower safaris, tree-planting expeditions, and whale-watching flights to see the calving Southern right whales that migrate inshore between July and December. Most of the food on the carbon-negative reserve is grown on site, and nothing comes from more than 30 miles away, with many of the staff graduates of the in-house hospitality academy. But the main takeaway of Grootbos is that just stopping and looking—at the interconnectedness and mad beauty of life—is the most mesmerizing thing of all. Doubles from $895. —Jane Broughton"
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"For a long time, lodges in South Africa tended to be geared toward the Big Five. Grootbos, on the fynbos slopes near Walker Bay, south of Cape Town, is different. This 6,177acre private reserve is about treasuring the smaller, finer things. With 889 plant species, seven of which are newly discovered, it is first and foremost a rare botanical treasure trove, in which owner Michael Lutzeyer has employed some of the Cape’s leading botanists and entomologists. The lodges are glassy and contemporary, but there’s a constant call outdoors—from the outside showers to tracking elusive aardvark and Cape leopard, or having lantern-lit dinners in a 1,000-year-old milkwood forest, all fairy-tale tangles. I’ve ridden horses across the sands, past ancient sea caves; been on flower safaris, tree-planting expeditions, and whale-watching flights to see the calving Southern right whales that migrate inshore between July and December. Most of the food on the carbon-negative reserve is grown on site, and nothing comes from more than 30 miles away, with many of the staff graduates of the in-house hospitality academy. But the main takeaway of Grootbos is that just stopping and looking—at the interconnectedness and mad beauty of life—is the most mesmerizing thing of all. Doubles from $895. —Jane Broughton"
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"$$$ | GOLD LIST 2022 READERS' CHOICE AWARDS 2021 For a long time, lodges in South Africa tended to be geared toward the Big Five. Grootbos, on the fynbos slopes near Walker Bay, south of Cape Town, is different. This 6,177-acre private reserve is about treasuring the smaller, finer things. With 889 plant species, seven of which are newly discovered, it is first and foremost a rare botanical treasure trove, in which owner Michael Lutzeyer has employed some of the Cape’s leading botanists and entomologists. The lodges are glassy and contemporary, but there’s a constant call outdoors—from the outside showers to tracking elusive aardvark and Cape leopard, or having lantern-lit dinners in a 1,000-year-old milkwood forest, all fairy-tale tangles. I’ve ridden horses across the sands, past ancient sea caves; been on flower safaris, tree-planting expeditions, and whale-watching flights to see the calving Southern right whales that migrate inshore between July and December. Most of the food on the carbon-negative reserve is grown on site, and nothing comes from more than 30 miles away, with many of the staff graduates of the in-house hospitality academy. But the main takeaway of Grootbos is that just stopping and looking—at the interconnectedness and mad beauty of life—is the most mesmerizing thing of all. Doubles from $895. —Jane Broughton"
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"Private reserve with an excellent wine cellar National Geographic "
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"bovenop een heuvel waar twee oceanen botsen Walker Bay: thuisbasis van witte haaien, walvissen, zeehonden, pinguïns en dolfijnen"
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"Une réserve privée sur les hauteurs de Walker Bay ou, si vous préférez, un petit paradis de fynbos et d'herbes salées sur 1 200 hectares rien que pour vous ! Les frères Lutzeyer, papes sud-africains de l'écologie chic, ont donné corps à leur rêve en créant ce sanctuaire naturel autour d'un maître mot, le respect. Depuis le deck splendide, gorgez-vous de la vue panoramique sur l'océan bleu roi et repérez en saison (juin à mi-décembre environ) les baleines joueuses. Selon votre humeur, équitation, marches libres ou guidées en suivant les sentiers fleuris, excursion en bateau pour aller voir les phoques, descente sur la plage immense, visite des grottes. Hébergement dans des cottages d'un goût exquis enfouis dans la végétation. Une étape exceptionnelle pour se ressourcer et vivre au rythme de la terre. Possibilité d'activités en journée pour les non-résidents."
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"Lodge, reserve naturelle oiseaux..."
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"2018. Eco Réserve. 16 Suiten. Indischer Ozean. Pflanzen, Naturreservat. Best Family Hotel. DZ ab 305€."
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