6 May 2026 · 5 min read
Stargazing hot tub stays in the Karoo

There is a particular kind of quiet in the Central Karoo, the sort that makes you lower your voice without meaning to. The skies are enormous and, once the sun is down, properly dark. There is little here to compete with the stars: no city glow on the horizon, no traffic, just the cooling earth and the slow turn of the night overhead. It is the right kind of place to be sitting still in warm water with your head tipped back. A wood-fired soak under the Milky Way is the whole argument for coming this far inland, and the Karoo makes the case better than almost anywhere else in the country.
Prince Albert, below the Swartberg
Prince Albert sits at the foot of the Swartberg, a small town with a long main street and the mountains rising behind it. Karoo View Cottages looks out over the plain from the edge of the village, with a wood-fired hot tub, a heated pool and a fireplace for the cold nights, which the Karoo does deliver. It is pet-friendly, so the dog comes too. If you want a smaller footprint on the same property, Kanon Cottage at Karoo View sleeps four and shares the wood-fired hot tub and heated pool. Either way you are a short stroll from the town's restaurants, and a short drive from a sky that earns its reputation.

Gecko Rock, a private reserve near Touws River
Further west, the Gecko Rock private reserve sits in open country near Touws River, the kind of remote that makes the dark even darker. Montana Vista is the one for a group: it sleeps eight, with a braai for the long Karoo evenings when dinner happens slowly and nobody is in a hurry. The reserve is yours to wander by day, and by night there is almost nothing between you and the stars. It is a proper escape, far from the noise and it rewards the drive. Plan your supplies before you arrive, because the nearest shops are not close.
When the soak depends on the grid
A hot tub under the stars is only as reliable as the power keeping the night running, and out here load-shedding is a real consideration. Two of the Gecko Rock stays plan for it. Southern Nights sleeps eight and has backup power alongside its wood-fired hot tub, so the lights and the soak carry on regardless of the grid. Sugar Bush does the same for a group of six, again with backup power and a wood-fired tub. The wood-fired part matters here: the fire heats the water whatever the electricity is doing, which is exactly the resilience you want when you are this far from town and this committed to a long evening outside.

Soaking under a Karoo sky, the practical bits
A wood-fired tub takes time to come up to temperature, so light it well before you want to climb in, ideally as the sun drops. Bring layers: Karoo days can be warm and the nights turn genuinely cold, which is part of the appeal of warm water under a clear sky. Let your eyes adjust for twenty minutes without your phone and the faint band of the Milky Way comes through. Winter brings the sharpest, steadiest skies, though it also brings the cold, so a fireplace, like the one at Karoo View Cottages, earns its keep. Keep the outside lights off while you soak. The dark is the point.