Chalets Accommodation Near Hout Bay Leopard
10 Chalets in Hout Bay Leopard. Enter dates to see full pricing and availability:
Hoogeland's Wood Cabins
Chalets, Self Catering in Penhill, Cape Town
Our units are designed to give you a different scenery and you will experience the 'farm life'. Our units are...
R990
Hout Bay Beach Cottage
Cottages, Guest Houses, Chalets, Holiday Homes, Self Catering, Villas in Hout Bay, Cape Town
Free-standing holiday cottage in perfect location, 100 meters from the beach. Excellent security. Three bedrooms,...
R2,950
Placid Pines Garden Cottage
Cottages, Chalets, Self Catering in Hout Bay, Cape Town
Placid Pines Garden Cottage is situated in a quiet fishing suburb called Hout Bay.
The unit consists of a large...
R800
Zonnekus Holiday Resort
Camps, Chalets, Self Catering, Caravan Parks, Resorts in Philadelphia
We offer affordable and fun-filled days for your whole family. The resort offers plenty of accommodation options...
R290
ZenCapeTown Forest Retreat
Cottages, Chalets, Holiday Homes, Self Catering, Bungalows in Hout Bay, Cape Town
Welcome to ZenCapeTown Forest Retreat!
This Cabin-in-the-woods style self-catering holiday home is truly a rare...
R1,950
*All distances listed are as the crow flies, and not actual travel distances.
Nearby Attractions & Landmarks
Table Mountain, Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens, Groot Constantia, Orange Kloof, Duiker Island, World of Birds, Cape Point Vineyards Estate, Hout Bay Market, Kalk Bay Theatre, Long Beach Kommetjie
Hout Bay Leopard Reviews
More info about Hout Bay Leopard
As you drive out of Hout Bay and begin the trip over Chapman’s Peak towards Cape Point, you may catch a glimpse of a green-tinged statue perched on a large granite boulder just off shore. On closer inspection you will see that it’s a bronze sculpting of a seated leopard looking out towards Hout Bay beach and you may ask: who placed it there and why?
Ivan Mitford-Barberton was a renowned artist born in the Eastern Cape and who lived much of his later years in Cape Town. He was responsible for a number of statues in and around the city and specialised in bronze and stone sculpting, his subject matter mostly animal figures, human statues and busts. He also taught at the highly acclaimed Michaelis School of Art in Cape Town. In 1963, Mitford-Barberton agreed to cast a statue of a leopard in honour of the animal who had by this time been lost to... Show more