Ralf Roggeveen
Charter Member
Casting aside distracting thoughts of Heidi, feather boas, ostrich meat and ketchup we continue along the South African coast:

This is about as far south as we're going to get and it's remarkable that Cape Town is only about 34 degrees S, which means there's still another 46 degrees of Southern Ocean till you reach Antarctica. Even the tip of South America doesn't reach 60 degrees S - though there are penguins here in South Africa.
Coming back over Port Elizabeth:

At some stage during this flight we will cross the invisible 'border' between the Indian Ocean (which reaches Australia and Burma) and the Atlantic (that laps the shores of Greenland, Morocco and Brazil)...

Map of the exit from Port Elizabeth, flying out over the Indian Ocean, turning round and going over Cape Recife towards Western Cape Province and the Atlantic.
Port Elizabeth is, as mentioned before, on Algoa Bay, with St Francis Bay beyond to the west.

Then, after Plettenberg Bay we will overfly Knysna, then George (visited earlier in the DC-3), before continuing inland in a straight line to Cape Town and the far side of the continent.
It's a pity that we'll arrive at one of the most scenic cities in the world in the dark, but there should be spectacular views later when we fly on to Kimberley in broad daylight...

Someone else flying about in the African night, he's going from Bloemfontein International (as FABL is now) to George:


This is about as far south as we're going to get and it's remarkable that Cape Town is only about 34 degrees S, which means there's still another 46 degrees of Southern Ocean till you reach Antarctica. Even the tip of South America doesn't reach 60 degrees S - though there are penguins here in South Africa.
Coming back over Port Elizabeth:

At some stage during this flight we will cross the invisible 'border' between the Indian Ocean (which reaches Australia and Burma) and the Atlantic (that laps the shores of Greenland, Morocco and Brazil)...

Map of the exit from Port Elizabeth, flying out over the Indian Ocean, turning round and going over Cape Recife towards Western Cape Province and the Atlantic.
Port Elizabeth is, as mentioned before, on Algoa Bay, with St Francis Bay beyond to the west.

Then, after Plettenberg Bay we will overfly Knysna, then George (visited earlier in the DC-3), before continuing inland in a straight line to Cape Town and the far side of the continent.
It's a pity that we'll arrive at one of the most scenic cities in the world in the dark, but there should be spectacular views later when we fly on to Kimberley in broad daylight...

Someone else flying about in the African night, he's going from Bloemfontein International (as FABL is now) to George:
