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South African National Parks Week is around the corner

This yearly initiative by SANParks, which allows free access to certain national parks, is mere days away.

SANParks, in partnership with Total Energies Marketing South Africa and FNB, announced that the 17th annual South African National Parks Week will kick off in less than a week.

The free access week will run from September 12 to 18.

SANParks’ general manager of media, PR and stakeholder relations, Reynold Thakhuli, said, “The SA National Parks Week is aimed at linking the SANParks system to communities and to showcase the best of our country’s national parks. During the week, all South African citizens are allowed to enter most national parks for free for a day visit.

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“The week is meant to cultivate a sense of pride in South Africa’s natural, cultural and historical heritage, protected by the national parks system, which is the basis for the established theme, ‘Know Your National Parks’. It’s important for South Africans to visit and know the importance of national parks.”

This year, SANParks will open the week in the Augrabies Falls National Park. The feature element of this campaign is the free access granted to all South African day visitors carrying their official identity documents. Young persons under the age of 16 will be allowed free access without proof of identity.

The free access will not include accommodation and commercial activities such as guided safaris in vehicles or guided walks, or suchlike, and the Kruger, Addo Elephant, Augrabies, Agulhas, Table Mountain and |Ai-|Ais/Richtersveld Transfrontier Park will only have free access until Friday September 16.

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Namaqua National Park, Boulders Penguin Colony and the Cableway in Table Mountain National Park are not included in the free access.
Thakhuli said, “Every year, SANParks aims to increase the number of citizens that are granted free access to national parks during this time. Since we started the programme in 2006, some 619 252 South Africans have been afforded the opportunity to enter national parks, and we want to see these numbers grow, especially after the last two years, during which travelling around the world was halted.”

SANParks encourages all South Africans and especially the youth to diarise these dates and plan a visit to a national park nearby. “The survival of the South African national parks system and our natural and cultural heritage lies in the people of South Africa,” concluded Thakhuli.

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