Gravel Road, Farm Track

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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.