Ask most people when to plan a bush trip, and they’ll tell you summer, when the days are long and the bushveld is green. They aren’t wrong. But spend one winter up here on the Soutpansberg, and you may never go back to crowded summer holidays again.
Winter in the mountains is a quieter, clearer, more comfortable kind of beautiful. Here’s why the cold season is, in our view, the best time to visit Sigurwana.
Summer in Limpopo can be hot. Winter is not. From about May through August the days settle into a rhythm that’s hard to beat: cold, still mornings that burn off into mild, sunny afternoons, with almost no humidity and barely a cloud in the sky.
That makes a real difference when you actually want to be outside. A guided walk through the ancient yellowwood forest is a pleasure rather than a sweat. A morning drive in the open Land Cruiser is crisp and bright instead of baking. And the long middle of the day, too hot to do much in summer, becomes the perfect time to sit on your deckchair with a book and enjoy the peace and quiet.
Sigurwana sits inside the Western Soutpansberg Nature Reserve, a protected wilderness of more than 11,000 hectares, of which our reserve makes up nearly half. This isn’t a Big Five circus, and we’re honest about that. It’s leopard country, samango monkey country, the kind of place where you track kudu, bushbuck, zebra and giraffe on foot and learn to read the bush rather than tick a list from a vehicle.
Winter helps. As the bush thins out, animals become easier to spot. The cooler air also keeps game active later into the morning. For birders, the resident species and raptors, including the crowned eagle, are around all year, and the bare trees make them far easier to see.
There’s a reason winter and fire belong together. After the sun drops behind the mountains and the temperature follows it down, the boma fire is already going.
This is when Sigurwana is at its cosiest. Dinner might be a slow potjie cooked over the coals and served under a sky full of stars, with a glass of something warming in hand. Our new lounge and library has a fireplace, a shelf of good books and a bit of art to lose an evening in. Mornings start the same way, with a coffee and a delicious breakfast while the mist lifts off the valley.
If you’ve never seen a proper dark sky, winter on the Soutpansberg will fix that. The dry winter air is far clearer than the summer haze, and with no town, no streetlights and no light pollution for miles, the night sky here is genuinely overwhelming. The Milky Way stretches from one horizon to the other. You’ll see more stars than you remembered existed.
A few things worth knowing before you come in the cold months:
It’s malaria-free, all year round. The Soutpansberg is a malaria-free region, so there are no tablets, no precautions and nothing to organise on that front. Just come.
Pack for both ends of the day. Winter days are mild and sunny, but mornings and nights get genuinely cold up here. Bring warm layers, a proper jacket, a beanie and closed shoes for early drives and walks, alongside lighter clothes for the middle of the day.
The rock pool is bracing. Our spring-fed natural rock pool is glorious, but in winter the water is cold. We’ll leave that one to the brave.
Winter doesn’t get the attention summer does, and we’re almost glad. It means clearer skies, easier wildlife, warmer fires and a mountain that feels like it belongs only to you.
If that sounds like the break you’ve been needing, we’d love to host you. Get in touch to plan your winter escape to Sigurwana, close to heaven, on top of the Soutpansberg.
Sigurwana Lodge ® 2020
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