 
	   
	Table Mountain and the Cape Peninsula
Condition: SECONDHAND
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Table Mountain National park extends from Cape Town's trademark table-top mountain all the way to Cape Point, where craggy cliffs drop spectacularly into a boiling sea. The Park's slogan, 'accessible to all, forever', reflects an intention as well as a claim; for Table Mountain and its surrounds are central to the life of every Capetonian. The round trip begins at the front face and continues to the Atlantic seaboard, Chapman's Peak and surrounds, Cape Point, False Bay and the Constantia valley, ending with Kirstenbosch and Devil's Peak. Captured from accessible vantage points, the images are a tribute to a beloved landmark that is inseparable from day-to-day city life. African mythology recognises Table Mountain as Um lindi Wemingizimu - the Watcher of the South - previously one of four giants created to guard the corners of the earth. Perhaps that accounts for a magnetic presence that exceeds its physical proportions and keeps mere mortals entranced.
Author: Christiaan Diedericks
  Format: Book, 128 pages, 240mm x 240mm, 898 g
  
  Published: 2005, Penguin Random House South Africa, South Africa
  Genre: Photography
  
Table Mountain National park extends from Cape Town's trademark table-top mountain all the way to Cape Point, where craggy cliffs drop spectacularly into a boiling sea. The Park's slogan, 'accessible to all, forever', reflects an intention as well as a claim; for Table Mountain and its surrounds are central to the life of every Capetonian. The round trip begins at the front face and continues to the Atlantic seaboard, Chapman's Peak and surrounds, Cape Point, False Bay and the Constantia valley, ending with Kirstenbosch and Devil's Peak. Captured from accessible vantage points, the images are a tribute to a beloved landmark that is inseparable from day-to-day city life. African mythology recognises Table Mountain as Um lindi Wemingizimu - the Watcher of the South - previously one of four giants created to guard the corners of the earth. Perhaps that accounts for a magnetic presence that exceeds its physical proportions and keeps mere mortals entranced.
 
         
       
    