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The Darwin Trail
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Written by Administrator   
Monday, 27 July 2009 11:20

Darwin TrailYou will now be able to follow the route that Charles Darwin took when he visited Cape Town aboard the HMS Beagle.

In 1836 Charles Darwin spent 18 days in and around Cape Town.  In 2009, the year that we are celebrating his Bicentennial, the importance of his visit to the Cape aboard the HMS Beagle is being reassessed.  The actual route he followed has been plotted and forms what is now designated as the Darwin Trail.

The HMS Beagle anchored in Simon’s Bay on 31 May 1836 and the small settlement did not impress Darwin.  ‘The little town of Simon’s Bay offers but a cheerless aspect to the stranger’ he recorded in his diary.  On 1 May he set off through Constantia to Wynberg, Claremont, Observatory to Cape Town.

Side one of the Darwin Trail takes you along this route with information on what Darwin saw and observed.  There are also some suggestions on what he mught add to his itinerary if he were visiting the Cape today.

His trip into the hinterland is recorded on side two.  You can follow the path he took, accompanied by an English speaking Khoi groom.  They travelled to Paarl to visit the granite outcropping – Paarl rock.  From there they journeyed along the Burg River to Franschhoek.  They crossed Franschhoek Pass and over-nighted at the Toll House on the Eastern side of the pass.  There was another stop over at Houwhoek before journeying back over the Sir Lowry Cole’s Pass, across the Cape Flats and back to the city.    

The Darwin Trail provides a wonderful journey through some amazing landscapes and to a range of significant sites and sights.  It also provides an opportunity for re-assessing what Darwin’s visit contributed to his work and ultimately to his major contribution to modern science. 

The printed Darwin Trail will be available from Cape Town Tourism from end August 2009 as well as on this website.