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Safari Lodges and Accommodation in South Africa

Accommodation at Hartford House, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

HARTFORD HOUSE
  • Luxurious country lodge
  • Near the Drakensberg’s Giants Castle
  • Magnificent stud farm
  • Trout and bass fishing

 

This jewelled buckle of the Natal Midlands lies in the heart of thoroughbred country, amidst the sun-drenched valleys of Giants Castle.

Hartford is one of the country's most beautiful houses and most magnificent stud farms, offering sumptuously appointed luxury suites and bedrooms with underfloor heating.


HARTFORD HOUSE - NATAL MIDLANDS:
Hartfort an emotional heartland......leave the world behind.
Dine at the table of thoroughbred lore, recount the memories of royal visits and indulge in a feast of the region's finest cuisine and selection of great wines.

The festival of spring and summer are heralded by a profusion of daffodils, flowering cherries and ancient roses, whilst the magnificence of autumn and winter are celebrated in perfect days with roaring log fires in the evenings.

Witness the preparation of champions or the stallions of the Sheikhs of Dubai.

Wander through the 2 833-hectare (7 000-acre) game conservancy, or cast a line in the tranquil estate waters, offering both trout and bass fishing.

Enjoy delicious meals in the award-winning restaurant and breakfasts and lunches on the veranda.

Teas, scones and cakes are served in the splendour of nature’s most beautiful garden. Enjoy horse riding – expansive bridle paths and tracks, tennis, swimming in the sparkling pool and relaxing at the pavilion and sauna.

ACCOMMODATION:
Renowned for its eleven incomparably styled luxury suites and a choice of underfloor heating, heated towl rails, Jacuzzi spa baths and fireplaces. All suites have recently been uniquely redocrated with a fusion of colour, style and texture. They are all equipped with a telephone, TV (with M-Net and Satellite Channels) and a mini-bar

MANOR SUITE: SUITE 1
Once the accommodation of the last Prime Minister of the Colony of Natal, this is the main superior suite in the Manor. Exquisite entrance hall, large bedroom with fireplace, dressing room, two bathrooms - one with a marble bath, the other with a shower.

Views of Hartford's inspirational gardens from the bedroom and bathroom bay windows.

COURTYARD SUITE: SUITE 3
This suite is situated next to the main suite in the Manor and offers a double bed with bathroom en-suite - no shower. Double doors lead out onto a courtyard.

MANOR SUITE: SUITE 4
Twin bedded, large luxurious suite with fireplace situated in the Manor - newly decorated. En-suite spacious bathroom, with bath and shower. Often booked months in advance - some people's favourite. Overlooking the rose garden.

VERANDAH DOUBLE SUITES: SUITES 5 & 8
Large luxury bedrooms with king size beds, with lounge area and generous open plan mosaiced bathroom. Corner bath and shower - under floor heating. Recently decorated with wonderful ambience and own unique character. Views of the rose garden.

VERANDAH TWIN SUITES: SUITES 6 & 7
Large luxury newly decorated bedrooms with 2 three-quarter beds, coupled with spacious open plan bathroom and under floor heating throughout. Fun-lovers have a preference for the Verandah suites.

GARDEN SUITES: SUITES 9 & 10
These suites are beautifully situated in award-winning gardens. Recently redecorated with silks from India it has a colonial feel. Lounge area with fireplace and under floor heating. En-suite bathroom with jacuzzi spa baths and separate toilet. This is real style.

POOL SUITES: SUITES 11 & 12
Secluded in the gardens in close proximity to the swimming pool, sauna and wellness house. Views of the trout fishing dam.

Large superior bedroom with king size bed, Moroccan caprets and Indian silks. Lounge area with fireplace and en-suite bathroom with jacuzzi spa baths with stone floors and decorated with mosaics. Often sought for special occasions.

TWO NEW SUITES:
UMBULELO SUITE: SUITE 13
EZULWINE SUITE: SUITE 14

These suites have been perfectly placed on the most picturesque trout dam, they have been naturally built in adobe and stone with growing roof and thatch. Both uniquely decorated, and each comprises entrance hall, en-suite bathroom, fireplace, underfloor heating, wooden deck and private pool. Views of trout dam and surrounding farmlands.

ESTATE FACILITIES AND PURSUITS:


- We are fully serviced
- Our Award-winning Restaurant serves sumptuous breakfasts, lunches and dinner either overlooking the magnificent gardens or in the candle lit Dining Hall. Traditional Zulu dancers and singers perform on selected evenings
- Room service available 16 hours a day
- Laundry and valet service
- All major credt cards are accepted
- Fully equipped mini-conference facility
- The historic Chapel provides for weddings, baptisms and memorial services
- Personalised accompanied tours in the surrounding moutain, game and nature reserves by Hartford's resident guide
- Trout and Bass fishing and Fisherman's Clubhouse on the lakeside
- Tennis
- Swimming pool
- New Wellness House offers a range of massages, therapeutic treatments and sauna. Overlooks the pool
- Historic gardens and pre-arranged garden seminars
- Walks on the extensive Game Conservancy, several rare wild animal and bird species inhabit the estate.
- Horse riding on expansive bridle paths and race tracks
- Aircraft and helicopter landing facilities
- Airpot transfers (Durban International and Oribi Airport, Pietermaritzburg)
IN THE VICINITY:
- Mountain Game and Nature Reserves
- Zulu and Anglo-Boer War Battlefields
- Excellent Bushman paintings and artifacts
- Midlands Meander; South Africa's favourite Arts and Crafts, Pubs and Restaurants route
- Golf and Squash
- Picturesque drives and picnicking in the uKhlahlamba-drakensberg World Heritage Park
- The world renowned Drakensberg Boys Choir
- Close proximity to major schools and Colleges; Hilton; Michaelhouse, Treverton, Weston, Clifton, Kings, St Anne's, Cowan house etc
- Day trip to the Artist's capital of South Africa, Clarens, and the Golden Gate national park
- Easy access from major cities and airports (just 4 hours from johannesburg and 90 minutes from Durban)

The History of Hartford House

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MIDLANDS MEANDER:
Arts and craft - the essence of the Midlands Meander

An experience to change your life...and your lifestyle...Welcome, or welcome back, to the Midlands Meander. The famous Midlands Meander in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, is a unique mix of more than 160 places to eat, drink, sleep, shop, play and generally have fun. Started many years ago as a voluntary collection of crafters, who wondered if they could attract visitors to leave the beaten track and explore their studios and galleries, the Midlands Meander has grown into an eclectic and fascinating mix of arts and crafts, world-class restaurants and homely comforts, with a wide range of sporting, environmental and historical pursuits thrown in too. Physical, culinary or cerebral, there is no limit to the experiences you'll find here.

The many facets of the Midlands Meander are so varied that there is little chance of boredom. Each route through this lovely land offers new mysteries to explore, new places to discover.

From the silvery vastness of the waters of the Midmar Dam to tiny crystal streams, from the imposing bulk of the Drakensberg mountains to the green of the indigenous forests, from quiet country towns to patchwork fields, where cattle graze or bales of hay are bundled in white plastic covers like huge cheeses, this is a land of many faces, all beautiful.

And the seasons change the features of the Midlands throughout the year, so there are many more faces to the places that keep calling you back for more. Cool mists melt away to reveal shimmering midday sun; thunderstorms crackle over the berg and then bluster away into soft summer showers that refresh thick pastures. Golden and burgundy leaves dazzle in autumn and settle into thick toffee-coloured drifts that rustle at your feet. And in winter, the icy chill of a true winter experience unlike any African season comes calling, often blanketing the distant hills with white, and occasionally throwing a silky snow cover over the fields and valleys too.

The Midlands Meander, the first route of its kind in the country, has opened up the wonders and beauty of the interior of KwaZulu-Natal to visitors from distant cities, distant countries. Many return again and again, finding new delights each time they visit, many making friends, and some, perhaps the luckiest, finally staying, unable to tear themselves away.

So put away your watch, switch off the cellphone. Pack a bag or two, leaving space for inevitable new acquisitions, and escape. There is a life away from the fast lane of the highway, the boardroom, the committee meetings, the tunnels of the malls.

Experience the wonder of the Midlands Meander. Discover the people, the beauty, the tastes, and above all, the time. You'll discover a new way of life, a new set of priorities. And you'll experience the country at its best.

GOLDEN GATE NATIONAL PARK:
Nestled in the rolling foothills of the Maluti Mountains of the north-eastern Free State lies the Golden Gate Highlands National Park. This is true highlands habitat, home to a variety of mammals - black wildebeest, eland, blesbok, oribi, springbok and Burchell's zebra - and birds, including the rare bearded vulture (lammergeier) and the equally rare bald ibis, which breed in the ledges of the sandstone cliff.

The park derives its name from the brilliant shades of gold cast by the sun on the park's sandstone cliffs, especially the imposing Brandwag rock. Generaalskop, the highest point in the park, reveals a breathtaking tapestry of red, yellow and purple hues as its warm shades merge with the cool mountain shadows towards evening.

Places of interest include:
- the Van Reenen family graveyard
- the impressive Brandwag buttress rock formation
- a bird hide at the Langtoon Dam
- Interesting lookout points and viewpoints - Zuluhoek lookout point, Generaalskop viewpoint, the third highest point in the park; Oribi basin and Drakensberg view.

DRAKENSBERG/UKHAHLAMBA DRAKENSBERG PARK:
Recognised by the ancient mystics of our land as breathing new life into the human spirit, the inescapable allure of this 200- kilometre- long wonderland owes much to its intense relationship with people...the million-plus years of Stone Age occupation in particular. This culminated in the tragic disappearance, during the late 19th century, of the San hunter-gatherers colloquially referred to as Bushmen. Migrating chiefdoms from the Great Lakes of Central Africa had in the 13th century been humbled by the sheer magnitude of this uKhahlamba - Barrier of Spears - destined to become the western extreme of their Zulu Kingdom. The ox-wagons of Boer settlers negotiated its precipitous passes in 1837 on the Great Trek from British dominion in the Cape Colony to a 'Promised Land'. The name Drakensberg was coined forty years later when a Boer father and son reported seeing a dragon - a giant lizard with wings and a tail - flying high above the cloud-shrouded mountain peaks.

The inscription in late 2000 of uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park as a World Heritage Site brought long-overdue recognition of its universal value to mankind. Meeting the criteria for both Natural and Cultural listings, the site can now officially boast 'superlative natural phenomena and beauty, unique richness of biological diversity, the conservation of all-important endemic and threatened species plus masterpieces of human creative genius in the form of 35 000 'San rock art images'. Many people have known this for a long time!

From the massive basalt cliffs of its northern reaches to the soaring sandstone buttresses in the south, the Berg - as it's popularly known - offers a myriad delights to anyone of any age who needs to 'get away from it all'. Peace and quiet is the catchphrase amid this unsurpassed grandeur where the world's second- highest waterfall tumbles down a series of breathtaking cascades.

Best known of all the Berg sectors is arguably the northernmost Royal Natal and adjacent summit area its regal prefix bestowed after the 1947 visit of Britain's King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. Blessed with some of the most spectacular scenery in all of Africa, Royal Natal's backdrop is the world-famous, much photographed and painted Amphitheatre - a crescent of 1 000m sheer basalt cliffs. This massive wall stretches 4 kilometres between the Sentinel (3 165m) and Eastern Buttress (3 047m), with a number of domes rising from its relatively flat summit plateau. In 1836, the French missionaries Arbousset and Daumas named the largest of these domes Mont-aux-Sources - a literal description of this source of five rivers. Of these, the Thukela plummets 948m in five clear leaps, making it the world's second highest waterfall. The Thukela Falls' upper reaches occasionally freeze in winter to create dazzling columns of ice. And just to confound weather experts it is not unheard of for the Berg to turn on a White Christmas in the middle of our sub-tropical summer! Royal Natal is ideal for hiking, with a superb network of graded walks catering for all levels of fitness and agility. And while the summit of Mont-aux-Sources can be reached by walking from the summit plateau and scaling a 100-rung chain ladder, if this seems like child's play you're always invited to join the annual Mont-aux- Sources Challenge, when men and women of iron turn the mountain into a cross-country steeple-chase of epic proportions!

Accommodation caters for all tastes and budgets... from luxury resorts and hotels with ultra-modern conference facilities to guest- houses, B&B establishments, caravan parks and cabins. Out in 'the wild', huts and listed caves await weary hikers.Thousands of trails are marked across the Berg - from short ambles through indigenous fern forests to more strenuous day-long traversing of river and hillside to full-on adventuring in the face of nature. Although accidents are rare, planned walks of more than a few hours require prior completion of the Mountain Rescue Register. Part of each entry fee to a KZN Wildlife protected area goes towards the invaluable emergency service provided by volunteers of the Mountain Club of South Africa.

You may not want to venture further than one of the four stunningly- situated golf courses, however, or your artistic talents may be so inspired that days spent blissfully capturing the surrounding magic on canvas are more than satisfying. Horse trails and scenic self-drives offer respite for aching feet without missing the unforgettable experience of, say, watching rare birds of prey settling down to dine at a 'Vulture Restaurant'. Or you could cast a line in one of the trout streams and more than likely catch your own lunch...

For treasured memories of a lifetime it's not entirely necessary, then, to be a rugged mountaineer or abseiler - although these daredevils quite obviously do derive an enormous buzz from the Berg's natural challenges. Either way, it's a guarantee you'll return to the world 'down there' richly rewarded and rejuvenated. So welcome to the Berg... breathing new life into the human spirit!

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