Armagh Country Lodge
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Travel Blogs from Storms River
Tsitsikamma National Park
Sorry for the delay in updates! We keep a journal and then type it up when we can but have been having too much fun! However now we have an ipad we will just update daily/weekly straight to the blog!
Anyway we arrived in Storms River and stayed in a hostel called Tsitsikamma backpackers. it is a 4* backpackers and was really nice although, again, very quiet! We got there quite late and went out to the only restaurant In ...
HIKE!
... I got up there but was worth it and brought a smile to my face so that's all that matters!!! Saw a crazy man taking a mental picture on one of the bridges on the Way back and he offered to take one of me, so stupidly I gave a random man my camera and he ran off onto another bridge with it!! And I'm thinking it'll be ok, it'll be ok....so he took a pic of me but the zoom wasn't working, my camera is doomed, just hope it holds out til Thailand as they r cheaper ...
Sunshine and the beautiful sea!!!
... blogs! Don't know what's for dinner but not that hungry as I have been munching on **** all day!!! Showered after went back to camp, was so warm and nice!!! Put loads and loads of clothes on!!! Sleep right next to the sea tonight,lovely...just need to wrap up warm!!!! And have no hiking boots, just my pumps so hopefully borrow some, but Stephan says I'll be fine....we'll see! Have felt a bit quiet since my premenstrual ness but we had such a ...
Hiking
... Otter Trail which is one of South Africa's most acclaimed hikes. (5 days and 4 nights).... Also passed on the 5 night, 60 KM Tsitsikamna Trail Hike and the 2 night Dolphin Trail Hike.
We did hike the very challenging 1 kilometer trail to the suspension bridge. Something that only a reasonably fit early morning "Mall Walker" should ...
Deepest, darkest Africa
... the turbulent history of the town and also boasts one of the best taxidermy collections in South Africa, a little bizarre in such a town. This guy devoted his life to collecting tens of thousands of samples, many of them now housed in none other than one of my personal favourites, the Museum of Natural History in London. Happily, the safaris have not done anything to my secret love and guilty pleasure of taxidermy. Pfew!
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