After another night at the Peech hotel, we hopped on South Africa Airlines' Boeing 737 to Cape Town the next morning. The flight took about 2 hours. The landscape we saw from above were mostly flat planes until about 15 minutes before landing did we begin to see some very beautiful hills. I was surprised to see how big Cape Town actually is. The seaside city is enveloped by huge mountains on all sides, and both the city and the mountains seem to keep going endlessly.
Once the plane landed, we discovered that one of our checked bag (mine) was missing. All of my clothes for this trip were in that bag. We called American Express to find out what their travel insurance policies are regarding missing bags (we bought this trip with an AMEX card). Apparently, the bag has to have gone missing for more than 48 hours, and the airline must give you a notarized letter confirming your loss before you can go claim up to 30,000 THB with them. I found this rather pointless.
The first thing we did in Cape Town was to check out the Victoria Peer, which has a lot of restaurant's and retail stores to lure us in. We headed straight to a good chain seafood restaurant called Cape Town Fishmarket. I had a lot of oysters which were very good. Oysters here are slightly larger, sweeter, than those you'd find in the US but not nearly as salty. I personally prefer US oysters, but these were not bad at all.


I also had Crayfish, which is similar to lobster. The meat is not as tough and may be sweeter, but the seasoning was so salty it ruined the whole thing for me.
Next, we checked in to our hotel on number Four Rosmead. It is a six-room guesthouse, very carefully decorated and staged. Chic is the word I would describe this place. It seemed like every corner is made to be perfect to sit down and chill (and of course for photograph).
The two days we had in Cape Town were spent mainly on sight-seeing and shopping. We drove along a very scenic route to the Cape of Good Hope (I understand the cape marks where the Atlantic and Indian oceans meet). On the way, we found a huge white sand beach where people bring their dogs to play. I must have seen at least thirty dogs there. My mom found this craft store called "Dolce & Banana" and spent a lot of time (and money).


The view at the cape was breathe-taking. There were a few baboons (some were HUGE) hanging out on the side of the road near the cape.
On the return trip, we stopped to see some really cute penguins (I believe the South African penguins are the smallest of all penguins in the world). They were all nursing their babies. Very cute!
Overall, our experience at Cape Town has been very pleasant. My sister said that this is her favorite place in the world.
One thing I did not like about Cape Town was the food. All the restaurants we went to served extremely salty food. Also, sushi seems to be very popular here--there are tons of sushi places. However, their variety of fish is very limited. You could only get the very basic selections of salmon, tuna, shrimp, eel. I didn't even see yellowtail there. To make matters worse, when we went to a very popular Japanese place called Wakame, and they were out of salmon. However, if you come here, you should definitely try their local cape salmon which has a light pink color. It's very good.
















