Public Beaches & Beach Resorts in Kwangwanase

Find accurate info on the best public beaches & beach resorts in Kwangwanase. Get reviews and contact details for each business, including phone number, address, opening hours, promotions and other information.
Showing results: 1 - 1 out of 1

Results from the 'Public Beaches & Beach Resorts' category in Kwangwanase

Kosi Bay, KOSI BAY, 3973

035 592 9561
The Kosi Bay Lodge has been in operation since 1996. It is the biggest Lodge in the area of Kosi Bay. It has location right up against the Wetland Park and adheres to wildlife principals. It is a joint community development which gives employment opportunities to the local community of Kwa-Masambane. We have various grades accommodation, from Luxury tent camp with a huge braai/kitchen sharing facility, to very luxury timber/Thatch Units with extreme privacy and separate joining, beautifully fitted, kitchens. We sell accommodation units to investors and rent it out under specific conditions/rules set by the owners. Private units have own pools. We currently serve more than 80 beds in the Lodge. We are linked to the Nature reserve and approximately three hundred meters from Lake.The Kosi Bay Nature Reserve is situated on the coast in the northern part of KwaZulu Natal and surrounds the Kosi Bay lake system. The system consists of four lakes and a series of inter-connecting channels which drain via a sandy estuary into the Indian ocean. It is home to a variety of birds and wildlife including hippopotamus and crocodile. This is the most pristine lake system on the South African Coast. The 11, 000 hectare Kosi Bay Nature Reserve is a tropical paradise of crystal-clear blue water and marshland, raffia, wild date and palm, mangrove swamp and sycamore fig forest that combine to provide a home for approximately 250 species of bird, among them the fish eagle and palm-nut vulture, white-backed heron and the night heron as well as purple and reed kingfisher. Bushbuck, duiker and monkey inhabit the forested parts whilst hippopotamus and crocodile bask in and around the lakes and fish teem beneath their surfaces. Humpback whales can be seen off the beaches on their northerly migration to calve in Mozambique and in December and January loggerhead and leather-back turtles come onto the beaches to lay their eggs in carefully prepared nests.