User:Linalan/sandbox

 A Whale Of A Heritage Route  lies to the southeast of Cape Town’s city centre and on the West shore of [| False Bay], in South Africa. It is an initiative to package and market as a niche destination approximately 500 historical attractions and associated businesses and events with [| Southern Right Whale] watching as an additional feature in season (May to November). The [| whale watching log] feeds South African Tourism’s Whale Desk and thus keeps the destination on the International Whale Watching/ Spotting Radar.

Route Description
The historical section of the Route, arranged into ambles, rambles and trails, starts in Strandfontein and includes the coastal towns of Muizenberg, St James, Kalk Bay, Fish Hoek, Glencairn and Simon’s Town, ending at the Cape Point Lighthouse, site of the most powerful light on the South African Coast (10 million candlepower).

Attractions
Historical attractions range in date from early stone age through to the 1950s and include farmsteads, two pre-fabricated whalermen's houses (1898), an original milestone, the smallest Mosque in South Africa (c 1898) and the remains of a Water Mill (c 1820).