SA Blog’s handy guide to Cape Town International.
Vital information:
Though very busy in its own right, Cape Town’s airport remains secondary to the much bigger and busier Johannesburg International (JNB), where many inter-continental flights end. Visitors from abroad often find themselves changing from international to domestic terminals at JNB (sometimes in a breathless hurry) en route to their final destinations at the Cape. Quite a few overseas flights simply don’t land here.
As with every airport, the international terminal is much nicer. It’s both roomier and less crowded than its domestic counterpart; an air of calm generally prevails; and the coffee approaches drinkability.
CPT International Airlines:
The domestic terminal, by contrast, is a perpetual circus of people suffering bouts of dyspepsia, caused by either (a) rancid coffee, drunk at the terminal’s single miserable cafe, or (b) double tots of whisky, consumed in flight during the holding pattern.
CPT Domestic Airlines:
The government-run company that manages this and SA’s other major airports, ACSA, does not provide floor plans for any of them, which is not terribly helpful. (Click here for the unimpressive CPT website.) The airport is so simple, however, that you don’t need a map: just walk with your luggage out the sliding-glass doors, where you’ll find the familiar lanes of tourist buses, taxis and drop-off/pick-up traffic.
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Catalan,
Yep, we do know about Macs in this part of the world… You’ll find a few internet cafes with wireless access and may even find restaurants close to UCT with hotspots.
Catalan, wifi access is fairly good in Cape Town (by African standards), and Macs are fairly good at finding it. If you have a new Mac with a wifi card, your computer will tell you when you’re in a hotspot, and then you can browse with Safari/IE/Firefox as normal: no technical experience necessary! The trick is to find the hotspot. If you can’t a good place in Rondebosch,a great, free hotspot that’s easily accessible by train or minibus taxi is the lounge of the Cape Sun Hotel on Strand Street, downtown Cape Town. Decent coffee, too. Pay the hotel a visit here:
http://www.southernsun.com/Sunrise/Hotels/CDA/HTL_Selectbox_Index/1,1279,,00.html
(Scroll down to “Southern Sun Cape Sun”.)
-Ed.
I want to take my Mac lap top to Cape Town - going on Friday - from the States. I have a wireless card. How easy/difficult is it to find wireless access? If I have an ethernet cord, will that work? What do you advise for a girl with an iBook and not a lot of tech expertise? I’ll be staying near UCT - is that an advantage?