Northern Cape

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    Upington Kalahari Gateway Gravel Ride

    Upington is the urban hub of the Green Kalahari — a prosperous river town of 100,000 people built entirely on the improbable fertility of the Orange River in the Northern Cape desert. The N14 between Upington and Augrabies follows the river through the most productive date palm and grape region in South Africa, and the 50km gravel and tar road ride from Upington to Keimoes is a revelation: flat, scenic, and lined with river islands (the Orange River here divides around dozens of tree-covered sand islands), date palm plantations, vineyards and the constant presence of the river itself.

    Keimoes

    Keimoes is the midpoint destination — a small town famous for its date palm plantations, the island chapel of the Keimoes Mission (accessible by a small footbridge to a river island in the Orange), and the extraordinary contrast between the lush riverine vegetation and the bare Kalahari dunes visible on the horizon. The Orange River Cellars near Keimoes is one of the largest wine cooperatives in the world and an interesting mid-ride stop.

    Spitskop Nature Reserve

    The Spitskop Nature Reserve just outside Upington provides a different kind of riding — a 12km circuit through a small game reserve around the dramatic granite koppie that gives it its name, with gemsbok, kudu and springbok visible from the gravel reserve roads. Good birdwatching throughout. An ideal warm-up or cool-down ride before or after the longer river journey.

    Getting There

    Upington is accessible by domestic flight (from Johannesburg, 1h20) or by N14 from Cape Town (860km) or N12/N14 from Johannesburg (800km). GPS: -28.4478, 21.2561. Upington Tourism: +27 54 332 6064.

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    Upington 15km Orange River Loop

    Upington sits on the banks of the Orange River in the Green Kalahari — the stretch of riverine land along the Orange that is improbably lush against the surrounding desert, supporting vineyards, date palms, fig trees and a riverside culture entirely at odds with the extreme Kalahari landscape just kilometres away. The 15km Orange River Loop is an accessible, flat introduction to the area — a gentle riverside ride through Upington’s leafy waterfront, past the famous Kalahari-Oranje Wine Cooperative and the sprawling Orange River Cellars, before returning to town along the opposite bank.

    What to Expect

    This is easy, family-friendly riding on riverside paths and low-traffic roads — no technical skill required, minimal elevation change, plenty of shade from the riverside trees. The Orange River riparian belt is extraordinarily rich in birdlife, and the contrast between the lush green riverbanks and the red Kalahari sand beyond them creates a visual distinctiveness that is uniquely Northern Cape.

    The Kalahari-Oranje Wine Estate produces some of South Africa’s most unique wines — the extreme heat and alkaline desert soils produce wines with a character found nowhere else. A post-ride tasting is an essential part of the Upington cycling experience. Le Must Restaurant on the riverbank is consistently rated as one of the finest dining experiences in the Northern Cape.

    Getting There

    Upington is 120km east of Augrabies Falls on the N14, and the base city for all Green Kalahari cycling. GPS for waterfront start: -28.4478, 21.2561. Upington Tourism: +27 54 332 6064.

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    Kimberley Diamond Fields Gravel Loop

    The Diamond Fields Gravel Loop extends the Kimberley riding experience from the city’s heritage streets into the broader Karoo landscape that surrounds it — flat, accessible gravel road cycling through terrain that carries an extraordinary density of historical significance for a landscape that appears, on the surface, to be simply empty plains.

    The Route

    The 60km loop heads south and west from Kimberley on low-traffic gravel farm roads, passing the Magersfontein Battlefield — where on the night of 10-11 December 1899, General Methuen’s British column marching to relieve the Siege of Kimberley was ambushed by Koos de la Rey’s Boer commandos in one of the costliest British defeats of the Anglo-Boer War. The battlefield is a sobering and atmospheric stop on a gravel ride through this landscape. From Magersfontein, the loop continues toward the Modder River and back north, passing the remarkable Kamfers Dam on the return — a shallow pan just north of Kimberley that is home to one of the largest inland flamingo breeding colonies in Africa, with tens of thousands of lesser and greater flamingoes resident throughout the year.

    Getting There

    Start from Kimberley CBD — GPS: -28.7281, 24.7499. Download a Wikiloc or Komoot GPX track for the route before departing. Kimberley Tourism: +27 53 830 4117.

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    Namaqua National Park MTB Routes

    200km+ of park roads and 4×4 tracks through the Succulent Karoo biodiversity hotspot — the Namaqua National Park hosts the most spectacular wildflower display in the Southern Hemisphere during August-September, with over 1,000 endemic plant species. No formal MTB trails but all public roads are rideable — from the Skilpad flower loop to the epic 188km Caracal Eco-Route.

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    Prieska River Ride

    Prieska is a small Orange River town with a copper mining heritage and a riverside landscape of date palms, fig trees and the characteristic Green Kalahari riparian vegetation that lines the Orange wherever it flows through the desert. The 35km riverside loop follows the Orange on low-traffic gravel roads through the most accessible cycling terrain in the area — flat throughout, with river views and Griqua heritage landmarks along the route. The Orange River Cellars cooperative in the Prieska area contributes to the broader Northern Cape wine route that follows the Orange from Upington to Prieska and beyond. A quiet, unhurried base for riders exploring the central Northern Cape interior.

    Getting There

    Prieska is on the N10 and R357, approximately 200km southeast of Upington. GPS: -29.6667, 22.7500. Tourism: +27 53 353 0022.

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    Sutherland Starry Night Gravel Ride

    Sutherland is South Africa’s coldest town (temperatures as low as -15°C have been recorded) and one of the world’s premier astronomical sites — the combination of high altitude (1,500m), clear air, minimal light pollution and exceptional atmospheric stability that makes the Roggeveld Plateau ideal for observing the night sky also creates an extraordinary cycling landscape: high, open, windswept Karoo plateau terrain with horizons that extend to the edge of the world and night skies that stop riders mid-ride.

    SALT — the Southern African Large Telescope

    The Southern African Large Telescope is one of the largest single optical telescopes in the Southern Hemisphere — a collaborative international facility operated by a consortium including South Africa, the United States, Germany, Poland and India. Guided tours of the SALT facility (and the other telescope installations on the Sutherland hill) run daily. Evening stargazing experiences — using the auxiliary telescopes to observe planets, star clusters and nebulae — can be booked through Sutherland Tourism and provide the perfect bookend to a day’s gravel riding on the plateau.

    The Riding

    The Roggeveld Plateau gravel roads offer wide-open, high-altitude cycling through semi-desert Karoo fynbos — a landscape of extraordinary silence and space. The plateau is exposed and demanding in wind and cold (winter mornings regularly produce ice on the roads and frost in the Karoo shrubs) but the reward is riding that feels genuinely remote and expansive. The informal SALT Circuit provides a gentler 10km option for less experienced riders or as a sunset ride before an evening stargazing tour.

    Getting There

    Sutherland is 380km from Cape Town via the N1 to Matjiesfontein and R354 north. GPS: -32.3955, 20.6728. Sutherland Tourism: +27 23 571 1265. The road to Sutherland from Matjiesfontein is partly gravel — suitable for standard vehicles.

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    Calvinia Hantam Gravel Rides

    Calvinia is one of the Northern Cape’s most charming small towns — a Victorian-era Karoo settlement in the Hantam (a Khoi word meaning ‘place of the red hartebeest’) surrounded by flat semi-desert plains and the distant Bokkeveld escarpment. In August and September, the Hantam Karoo around Calvinia flowers — not as spectacularly as the coastal Namaqualand, but with its own beautiful palette of orange daisies, yellow katstertjies and pale succulents across the plains.

    The Riding

    Two informal gravel routes are mapped from Calvinia: the 20km Outride for casual riders and morning explorations, and the 50km Hantam Loop for those wanting a fuller day in the plateau landscape. Both routes use low-traffic gravel farm roads across the Hantam Karoo — flat to gently rolling, always expansive, occasionally dramatic near the Bokkeveld escarpment where the plateau drops away to the Olifants River valley far below. The riding is quiet, unhurried and meditative — the Hantam is not busy, not rushed, and not performing for anyone.

    Calvinia is 60km south of Nieuwoudtville — one of the Northern Cape’s great wildflower destinations (see separate Nieuwoudtville Waterfall Loop listing) — making the two towns a natural pairing for a multi-day Hantam cycling weekend.

    Getting There

    Calvinia is on the R27 and N14, 460km from Cape Town. GPS: -31.4681, 19.7720. Calvinia Tourism: +27 27 341 8100.

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    Nieuwoudtville Waterfall Loop

    Nieuwoudtville is called the bulb capital of the world with justification — the Hantam National Botanical Garden, a 6,000-hectare protected area just outside town, contains the largest concentration of endemic geophyte bulb plants anywhere on earth: an estimated 300+ species of endemic bulbs including Lachenalia, Babiana, Sparaxis, Moraea and the extraordinary Bulbinella that turns the Bokkeveld plateau orange in August. For cyclists who time their visit to August-September, the combination of wildflower display and plateau gravel riding is one of the Northern Cape’s most rewarding multi-day experiences.

    The Route

    The 25km Waterfall Loop follows gravel farm roads from the Nieuwoudtville Hotel through plateau farmland and wildflower terrain to the Nieuwoudtville Falls — a seasonal cascade that runs from the escarpment edge after the winter rains, best viewed from July through September. The Bokkeveld plateau provides open, gently undulating terrain with the escarpment drop providing dramatic views toward the Olifants River valley far below. The Hantam National Botanical Garden can be explored informally on the bike — ride slowly through the garden management roads when the bulbs are in season for a cycling experience that exists nowhere else in the world.

    Getting There

    Nieuwoudtville is on the R363, 390km from Cape Town via the N7 north and R363 east. GPS: -31.3731, 19.1166. Tourism: +27 27 218 1336.