When the coastal crowds descend on the beaches and the cities hum with holiday chaos, there’s a quieter kind of summer waiting high above sea level.
PhilippN / Wikimedia Commons
South Africa’s mountain ranges, from the jagged peaks of the Drakensberg to the red sandstone slopes of the Cederberg, offer a different way to soak up the season. Here, the air is cooler, the nights clearer, and the pace slower. It’s a place to swap sunscreen and surfboards for wide-brimmed hats, hiking trails, and the sound of cicadas echoing through the valleys.
The Drakensberg
In the heart of KwaZulu-Natal, the Drakensberg (or “uKhahlamba” — the Barrier of Spears) stretches for hundreds of kilometres, offering waterfalls, ancient rock art, and endless opportunities to explore. Summer here is lush. Green slopes roll into misty peaks, and the rivers run full from afternoon thunderstorms.
It’s the perfect time for long hikes through Royal Natal National Park, where trails lead to the dramatic Amphitheatre cliffs and the Tugela Falls, one of the world’s tallest waterfalls. For a slower pace, the Champagne Valley offers cozy guest lodges and craft breweries with mountain views. Evenings often end around a firepit, thunder rumbling in the distance and lightning flashing across the peaks — nature’s own show before the stars come out.
The Cederberg
A few hours north of Cape Town, the Cederberg mountains offer a completely different kind of summer beauty. Here, the landscape feels ancient. Twisted rock formations glow orange at sunset, and the smell of rooibos and wild herbs drifts through the dry air. Days are warm and golden, ideal for early morning hikes to spots like the Wolfberg Arch or the Maltese Cross, and afternoons spent cooling off in natural rock pools.
This is also rooibos country, and a visit to a local tea farm offers a glimpse into the region’s heritage. The small town of Clanwilliam makes the perfect base, equal parts rustic charm and adventure gateway. As night falls, the skies put on a show of their own: few places in the country have stars this bright or air this still.
The Eastern Cape Highlands
Far less visited but deeply rewarding, the Eastern Cape Highlands — stretching through towns like Rhodes and Lady Grey — feel almost frozen in time. In summer, the mountain passes are lined with wildflowers, and cool streams thread through quiet valleys. It’s an ideal escape for those craving stillness, with fly-fishing spots, horseback trails, and long, lazy afternoons reading on the veranda of a stone cottage.
If you time your trip right, you might catch one of the local summer festivals, small community gatherings that celebrate art, music, and mountain living in the most authentic way. There’s a raw simplicity to this region that feels worlds away from the polished tourism of coastal towns.
Summer in the skies
Whether you’re chasing waterfalls, ancient rock art, or just the deep exhale that comes from being surrounded by peaks, summer in the mountains is a lesson in slowing down. The altitude cools the air, but it also clears the mind and there’s something grounding about standing on rock that’s millions of years old, listening to the wind rush through grass instead of traffic.
It’s not just about hiking or adventure. It’s about rediscovering silence, savoring slow mornings with coffee and mist, and watching storms roll in from miles away. The mountains remind us that summer doesn’t have to mean heatwaves and hustle, it can also mean stillness, clarity, and space to breathe.
As the sun sets behind the ridges and the sky turns violet, it’s easy to understand why the mountains have long been considered sacred spaces — places of retreat and renewal. So this year, when the cities sizzle and the beaches burst with bodies, consider heading upward. The view and the peace are worth the climb.
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