Garden Route National Park Operations Amid Ongoing Severe Weather
The Garden Route region continues to experience heavy rainfall, although wind conditions have subsided compared to yesterday, 11 May 2026. Damage asse...
This annual campaign under the established theme “Know Your National Parks” allows locals with valid identity documents an opportunity to spend a day at a national park of their choice free of charge. It should be noted that this free access does not include accommodation and any commercial activities such as guided game drives, horse trails, etc.
Next week is the ideal opportunity for locals to come and enjoy the sights and sounds of this Big Five park – the third largest national park in the country. Visitors will be able to go on a self-drive through the Park, enjoying the more than 600 tusked residents, hundreds of bird species, while those lucky enough may even catch a glimpse of some of Addo”s latest inhabitants – three lion cubs and so much more. Jack”s picnic site is situated in the middle of the park – the ideal stop-off for a quick picnic or even a good old South African braai – as we also celebrate heritage month this month. Visits to the interpretive centre, underground viewing hide and bird hide at the Main Camp are also a must.
Don”t forget to stop at the PPC Discovery Trail on your way out of Main Camp into the main game viewing area. It is a short walk through the valley thicket where visitors can learn more about the plants and animals of the region. The first loop is suitable for visually-impaired and wheelchair-bound visitors. There are also a number of more serious walking trails in the park”s Zuurberg and Woody Cape sections.
As part of SA National Parks Week, the park”s People and Conservation Department will facilitate visits to the Park for a number of surrounding community and school groups, offering them a chance to experience what they usually would not have been able to.
The objective of the campaign is to cultivate a culture of pride in all South Africans in their relationship with the country”s natural, cultural and historical heritage. When people start to take pride in the national parks, then SANParks believes that they will start to understand the importance of conservation.
The idea of a national parks focus week is a world-wide campaign and was conceived in South Africa in 2006, after realising that a vast majority of South Africans were not accessing the national parks. The annual South African National Parks Week has been made possible with support from First National Bank (FNB), who”s been on board since inception eight years ago. They were joined as a sponsor this year by Total South Africa.
SANParks encourages all South Africans and especially educators and school groups to diarise these dates and plan a visit to Addo Elephant National Park. The survival of the South African national parks system and our natural and cultural heritage lies in the people of South Africa.
South African National Parks (SANParks) Frontier Region Communications
Media queries:
Fayroush Ludick
Regional Manager: Communications, South African National Parks
Cell: 082 888 0201
Email: [email protected]