Glenmore Sands - Port Edward

Glenmore Sands Beach Resort enjoys magnificent sea views from most of the units and can be found 7km north of Port Edward.

Glenmore Sands Beach Resort offers accommodation in Glenmore Beach in a choice of cosy apartments and studios that can accommodate between 2 to 6 people, and the staff will do their best to make sure guests feel welcome and at home.

The holiday apartments are furnished with double beds, Queen-size beds and single beds. The bathrooms are fitted with a shower, toilet and basin. Each of the units has an open-plan living area and the kitchens are equipped with microwaves, some have ovens, 4 plate hob and tea and coffee facilities. The lounges offer comfortable seating, TVs, and Wi-Fi is available.

On offer is a games room with entertainment for young and old with TV games, pool table, table tennis, and more. In the garden near the swimming pool, is a jungle gym for the smaller children.

The well-maintained gardens are home to a colony of Dassies who are protected in this area as well as Vervet Monkeys who visit regularly. Great attention is paid to security and the resort has overnight watchmen and 16 CCTV cameras to ensure guests are secure. Apart from the swimming pool there is access to the netted beach to cool down.

The resort boasts abundant birdlife with resident Fish Eagles often seen perched on their vantage point high in the branches of the dead trees along the Tongazi River. They are seen most often early in the morning or on cloudy days.

Glenmore beach with its flat sands and rocky outcrops always proves to be good for rod and dive fishing. Situated on the renowned Wild Coast with its many shipwrecks, interested visitors can collect pieces of porcelain or trader beads from these vessels which are still washed up onto the shore.

During the winter months, particularly from May to October, the Bottle Nose and Common Dolphins can be seen following the annual migration northwards of the sardines. The Hump Back and Southern Right Whales come past for a much longer period as they head north early in the cooler months to the warm waters and around November they travel south again with their calves returning back to the cold southern waters.

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