 Every country in the world displays some diversity, but  South Africa, stretching from the hippos in the Limpopo River to the penguins  waddling on the Cape,  takes some beating. It befits its position at the southern end of the world’s  most epic continent, with more types of terrain than photographers can shake  their zoom lens at. There’s the deserted Kalahari, Namakwa’s springtime symphony  of wildflowers, iconic Table  Mountain and Cape  Point, Kruger National Park’s wildlife-stalked savannah (scene of the famous  lion-buffalo-crocodile battle watched more than 75 million times on YouTube)  and, running through the east of the country and into Lesotho, the Drakensberg.
Every country in the world displays some diversity, but  South Africa, stretching from the hippos in the Limpopo River to the penguins  waddling on the Cape,  takes some beating. It befits its position at the southern end of the world’s  most epic continent, with more types of terrain than photographers can shake  their zoom lens at. There’s the deserted Kalahari, Namakwa’s springtime symphony  of wildflowers, iconic Table  Mountain and Cape  Point, Kruger National Park’s wildlife-stalked savannah (scene of the famous  lion-buffalo-crocodile battle watched more than 75 million times on YouTube)  and, running through the east of the country and into Lesotho, the Drakensberg.KwaZulu-Natal’s iSimangaliso Wetland Park alone has five distinct ecosystems, attracting both zebras and dolphins.
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