Hardly a week goes by in Cape Town without some event or celebration happening somewhere in the city and its immediate surroundings, from outdoor arts performances in January to Carols by Candlelight in the Company's Gardens in time for Christmas.
Although the weather is not a huge influence when choosing dates to visit Cape Town, it can get pretty cold and wet in winter. One of the Cape's most characteristic climactic phenomena is the famous Cape Doctor, a southeasterly wind that buffets the Cape and lays Table Mountain's famous 'tablecloth' (a layer of cloud that covers the City Bowl). It can be a welcome breeze in summer, but it can also be a wild gale, particularly in spring. When it really blows you know you're clinging to a peninsula at the southern end of Africa, and there's nothing between you and Antarctica.
In winter, between June and August, temperatures range from 7°C to 18°C with pleasant, sunny days scattered between the gloomy ones. From September to November the weather is unpredictable, with anything from bright warm days to howling southeasterly storms and winds of up to 120kph. December to March can be very hot, although the average maximum temperature is only 26°C and the Cape doctor generally keeps things bearable. From March to April, and to a lesser extent in May, the weather remains good and the wind is at its most gentle.
podcast by Kondile Unathi, January 2008
Two miles' worth of clubs, music stores and boutique hotels: saunter down Cape Town's most cosmopolitan street. Read the full article ›
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