Accommodation Ceres | Accommodation in Ceres

 

South Africa Accommodation - Africaninvitation.com

South Africa - Home | Specialized Venues | Quick Search | Advertising

Eastern Cape | Free State | Gauteng | Kwazulu-Natal | Limpopo | Mpumalanga | Northern Cape | North West | Western Cape

 

Ceres Accommodation

Currently viewing in Ceres.
Click here to change town

Here is what is available in Ceres:
2  B&B in Ceres
3  Self-Catering in Ceres
1  Guest Houses in Ceres

 

 

Ceres Accommodation: Nearby towns with accommodation:

Stellenbosch Accommodation | Franschhoek Accommodation | Robertson Accommodation
Worcester Accommodation | Tulbagh Accommodation | Paarl Accommodation

Ceres is a town in the Western Cape Province of South Africa. It was named after the Roman goddess Ceres and has around 63,000 inhabitants. The name is fitting, as the valley in which the town is situated is extremely fertile and is a major producer of South Africa's deciduous fruit. It is the administrative centre of the Witzenberg Local Municipality. It is situated in the Warmbokkeveld (Afrikaans: "warm antelope field") Valley about 170 km north-east of Cape Town, which is climatically warmer than the surrounding highlands, which is known as the
Kouebokkeveld ("cold antelope field").

Ceres experiences a typical Mediterranean climate tempered by its altitude. The town experiences warmer temperatures in summer, due to its inland location with infrequent rainfall, however winters are cool to quite cold and wet, with frequent snowfalls on the surrounding higher-lying ground, rarely falling on the valley floor itself. Total annual precipitation averages 1088mm, with average temperatures ranging from a February maximum of 29,9°C to a July minimum of 2,4°C.

Ceres is well-known for fruit juices exported worldwide bearing the town's name.
It is also famous locally for winter snow and cherries: Cape Town residents flock to the town during winter to ski or simply play in the powder — something of a rarity for the otherwise mild climate they are used to — whilst in summer, people come to pick cherries from "Klondyke" farm.

South Africa is one of the most stable parts of the world in seismic terms but on the 29th of September 1969 a massive shock shook the district without warning.
The epicentre of the quake was on a major local structure called the Worcester fault, which had clearly been geologically active in the distant past but had not moved in over three hundred years of recorded history. Ceres was affected badly. Many old Cape Dutch buildings were damaged.


Website Hosting by Choice Hosting