Table Mountain

Table Mountain is not Flat

Surrounding the familiar ‘flat’ plateau of Table Mountain, featured in so many photographs of Cape Town are numerous cliff faces, ledges and clefts, with severe climbs and drops that can prove extremely dangerous and for someone who is not familiar with the territory.

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Read more: Table Mountain definition and facts:

For our description of Table Mountain hikes we define the area surrounded by the City, Sea Point, Camps Bay, Hout Bay and the Southern Suburbs as defined in the definitive hiking maps produced by Slingsby Maps. The routes described are hiking paths from various points at the base of the Mountain, to the Upper Cable Station. It is also possible to take the cableway to the summit and explore the ‘flat’ Central and Western Table overlooking the City and Peninsula, as well as the immediately adjacent valleys.

Table Mountain National Park is 221 square kilometers (85000 sq miles), covering the area between the City Centre of Cape Town and Cape Point in the Cape of Good Hope. It is a 60 km road trip and 80 km following mountain hiking paths. Only a small portion of this is generally recognized at the iconic ‘flat table’ of Table Mountain.

  • 1084 metres at it’s highest point, Maclear’s Beacon
  • 1067 metres at the Upper Cable Station.
  • The plateau at the top is approximately 3 km long, divided into the Western and Eastern Tables, separated by Platteklip Gorge.
  • It is less than 2km wide at the widest point. The ‘table’ faces north and the 3 km plateau is orientated east to west.
  • There are over 250 km of paths between the highest point and the surrounding access points, most of the paths have no consistent signage.

Classic routes to the Upper Cable Station