The Cape is calling — South Africa’s captivating coastal city has emerged from lockdowns

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Wild time — A firm favourite with British travellers, Cape Town is now emerging from two years of Covid-induced restrictions and there are plenty of new attractions for visitors to enjoy. Pictured, Camps Bay just outside the city

When Sir Francis Drake returned home in 1580 after sailing round the world, he declared the Cape Peninsula to be ‘the most stately thing’ he saw on the entire three-year voyage.

It is still a wonder that astonishes visitors with its majestic peaks, flamboyant flora and bright sandy beaches, today enhanced by lush winelands and the vibrancy of South Africa’s Mother City.

A firm favourite with British travellers, Cape Town is now emerging from two years of Covid-induced restrictions. Pre-arrival tests for fully vaccinated travellers have been dropped, but face masks remain mandatory in some situations. Tourism is up and running, but at about 30 percent of pre-pandemic levels. That means no queues and attractive prices – in a week of exploring I regularly took Uber rides (the best way to get around) that cost less than £3 and sipped cocktails in top hotels for a fiver.

Cruise ships are returning and a host of fresh attractions has appeared, from zesty boutique hotels to superb art and culinary experiences. Safety issues are being addressed, with mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis drafting in additional police officers. Staff in hotels and restaurants are genuinely happy to once again be serving international guests the delicious oysters, springbok steaks and fine South African wines we all love.

As it’s mid-winter in the southern hemisphere, this is the time to plan ahead for a trip, and with overnight flights and no jet lag you can get straight into your holiday. Visit in September for the blaze of spring wildflowers, or from November onwards for warm, cloudless days and a party atmosphere.

Electric bikes are transforming the way you can explore the Cape Peninsula. Guided tours are available around the city, through the Stellenbosch wineries and in the West Coast National Park, cycling with ostriches, zebra and giraffes.

African Eagle has a full-day guided Table Mountain and Devil’s Peak tour from £70 including e-bike, cable car and transfers

Particularly scenic is a 13-mile round trip on rough tracks flanking Devil’s Peak which includes the cable car ascent up Table Mountain. Take gloves and expect a work-out – the fat-tyred bikes are powerful but weigh 88 lb.

African Eagle has a full-day guided Table Mountain and Devil’s Peak tour from £70 including e-bike, cable car and transfers.

Cape Sidecar Adventures offers exhilarating tours in a vintage Chinese motorbike with sidecar. Costs from £122 for two hours and two passengers including leathers, helmet and bandana

A trip to the low-lying prison island where Nelson Mandela spent 18 years is a thought-provoking mix of pilgrimage, scenic voyage and discovery. New this year is a guided group walk that offers a longer alternative to the standard bus tour.

On both trips you get to see the cells and meet a former inmate, but this adds an on-the-ground perspective, including time in the limestone quarry where prisoners toiled for eight hours a day. Sightings of African penguins, antelope and tortoises lighten the mood. Walking tours cost £71 including return ferry. Uthando is a highly regarded non-governmental organisation offering philanthropic educational excursions to see community projects at work. The latest is a new pre-school being built entirely from used tyres. The charity accepts donations, too

Soft-opened during lockdown, Pineapple House is a cheerful, nine-room boutique hotel in Sea Point lovingly created by former London residents Rupert and Lesley Sykes. There’s a nostalgic travel theme with leather suitcases, vintage tennis rackets and Slim Aarons photos. A mellow alternative to the mega-hotels on the V&A Waterfront, it’s a short walk from Saunders’ Rocks beach. Doubles from £151, room only.

Close to St George’s Cathedral, the Old Bank Hotel opened in April in a former bank from 1902. The 50 rooms have a subdued, contemporary style with original wood floors, plus there’s a rooftop bar and plant-filled restaurant. Doubles from £95 B&B

Babylonstoren is an Edenic farm, vineyard, restaurant and hotel a 40-minute drive east. In January it opened The Story of Wine, an innovative, family friendly museum packed with entertaining exhibits from aroma tests to a brilliant virtual-reality film of how wine gets bottled. Who knew there were avid collectors of corkscrews, known as helixophiles?

Follow up with a tasting of the estate’s top-class wines made from 13 grape varieties. Admission to the estate costs £1 including entry to the wine museum. Tastings are from £2 for three wines.

Luvo Ntezo is a star sommelier at the One&Only Cape Town resort. He started life in a township and now offers expert tastings and winelands tours. From £38 for a sampling of five wines with cheeseboard

The Oscar-winning documentary My Octopus Teacher, which poignantly describes how a local film-maker bonds with an octopus in the kelp forests fringing the Cape Town coast, has inspired a new appreciation of this valuable habitat that stretches as far as Namibia.

Book a guided snorkelling trip from the beach to learn more, or take a boat tour to frolic in the sea with Cape fur seals.

From £65 including a wetsuit and equipment.

Waterfront Boat Tours has a new 53ft catamaran offering cruises to admire Cape Town from the sea. A 90-minute sunset voyage costs £26 and you can bring your own drinks

Tasting menus can get overwhelming, but not at Siba, a new high-end restaurant at The Table Bay hotel that started life as a pandemic pop-up.

Here, effervescent South African celebrity and TV chef Siba Mtongana introduces her nation’s cuisine in a cavalcade of small dishes, from steamed buns with chimichurri to duck breast and creamy samp.

Go for a leisurely dinner with paired wines, or Sunday lunch featuring nine sharing plates including pesto beef fillet and miso- roasted pumpkin.

A four-course tasting menu costs £48.

Tea is taken seriously at the pink-and-white Mount Nelson Hotel, which opened in 1899 and has two dedicated tea sommeliers.

Afternoon tea in The Lounge features a choice of 40 teas accompanied by a deluge of savouries, scones and cakes, including the Nellie’s celebrated mushroom empanadas. From £22 – book well ahead

Housed in a former grain silo, the brilliantly designed Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa has been wowing visitors for five years now – but there is another art space that is less well known but equally impressive.

A 25-minute drive south, the Norval Foundation showcases African art from the 20th century onwards, in a relaxed setting with a sculpture garden. Its airy restaurant serves local dishes such as Cape Malay bobotie. Perfect for a cultured, stimulating trip.

Admission £9, but under-18s go free. Cape Town is bursting with creativity, evident in bold street murals and shops full of brightly coloured clothes, crafts and art. Spier Arts Trust, which helps source art for the Johannesburg-born Nando’s restaurant chain, is one of many downtown galleries that open late on the first Thursday of the month.

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