Sani Pass Day Tours

Join Sani Pass Tours on an inspiring and awesome day tour up the Sani Pass to the Mountain Kingdom of Lesotho at the top of the Southern Drakensberg Mountains, sometimes referred to as ‘Kingdom in the Sky’. The Sani Pass is the only entry point from Kwazulu Natal into Lesotho and Underberg is the beautiful village at the foot of the Sani Pass. Just over 200km [2h30 driving time] from Durban in South Africa.

When you join the Sani Pass Day Tours into Lesotho, you leave the picturesque town of Underberg, driving along hilly, green landscape to the foot of the mighty Southern Drakensberg Mountains. We travel in 4X4 vehicles for 2h30 hours, up the Sani Pass which starts at 1544m and rises 1332 vertical meters to summit at 2876m. The zig-zagging gravel mountain pass with steep slopes, was constructed around 1950, and it never fails to thrill. The road is a steep gravel road with gradients up to 1:3, which can be difficult to drive in bad weather and may be covered with snow and ice in winter. By South African law only 4×4 vehicles are allowed on the road. As you curve through hairpin bends up to the summit you will have extraordinary views down into the valleys. You are in for a fun and heart-racing trip!

Sani Pass Day Tour up Sani Pass

Stopping at breath taking view sites along the Sani Pass and the two border posts i.e. The South African Border Control and Lesotho Border Control. [Need a valid passport]. Once at the Top of the Sani Pass enjoy lunch at a local Basotho venue – available on the day of your tour.

Your adventure is only beginning. After lunch you visit a Basotho village or the Sani Top Church and interact with the local Basotho folk who are independent but friendly inhabitants who live a harsh existence in this rugged land. There will be ample opportunity to take photographs of the iconic Lesotho conical straw hat and maybe get a beautiful and decorative woven bowl made by the women there. Your experienced mountain guide will fascinate you with stories of Lesotho and its incredible people – the hardy mountainous Basotho folk.

The Basotho Pony can be seen and is an integral part of life for the local population and can be traced back from that of the Cape horse, which formed the foundation stock. The first horses appeared in Lesotho around 1825, captured from the Zulu and later from the Boers. Traditional beer and homemade bread offered on request.

You wind down the Sani Pass after this cultural experience and arrive back in Underberg between 15h30-16h00 depending on the wildlife spotted along the way.

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