Here is our flight path south on Monday night and into Tuesday morning. We were directly over Tunis (capital of Tunisia) after crossing the Mediterranean Sea. Later on we were at 39,000 ft (the plane’s cruising altitude) over Kinshasa (Democratic Republic of the Congo) and Windhoek (Namibia).
We landed at Cape Town International at 7.30 am local time (it’s an Airbus A350-900) and were bused into the terminal.
The shark tank dive billboard 😱 is from the pedestrian underpass to the rental car companies at the airport.
There is a shark cage diving tour operating out of Cape Town. You definitely should try it out swimming with the sharks.
Wahoo!
https://sharkcagediving.co.za/dive-and-view/
That’s a no for me– but my nephew was supposed to go shark cage diving to celebrate his 30th birthday, just last week. I will see him soon and ask him all about it, and let you know. The sharks used to be easy to spot in the big bay called False Bay by Cape Town, but in recent years one has a better chance of finding them further up along the coast. One theory is that orcas in False Bay hunting sea lion there have scared the sharks away.