14 June 2026 · 6 min read
A weekend in Greyton: village walks, the Saturday market and a wood-fired soak

Greyton rewards people who slow down. The village sits about 90 minutes from Cape Town, tucked into the Overberg where the road gives up its hurry and the mountains take over. You come for a weekend that asks nothing of you: a market and a walk while the light is good, then a wood-fired tub coming up to heat as the evening settles in. The whole trick is to do less, and to do it well, with the soak waiting at the end of each day like a reward you have actually earned.
Saturday morning: the market and a wander through the oaks
Start your Saturday at the morning market, where the village gathers over coffee, sourdough, farm cheese and whatever the season has handed the growers. It is the kind of market you graze rather than shop, so go hungry and leave with more than you planned. Afterwards, walk the oak-lined streets at your own pace. Greyton wears its galleries and small studios lightly, so let yourself drift between them, pause at a stoep that catches the sun and read the chalkboards outside the little shops. There is no schedule worth keeping here, which is precisely the point. By the time the morning tips into afternoon, you will have seen most of the village and met half of it too and you will be ready to point the car back toward your cottage for an early soak.

Where to stay: farm cottages with a tub of your own
A few minutes out of the village, the farm cottages at Bokrivier give you the quiet you came for and a private hot tub to end each day in. Tolbos Cottage at Bokrivier is a six-sleeper with a private wood-fired hot tub and an indoor fireplace, which makes it a sound bet for a winter weekend when the soak and the fire do their work in tandem. Western Cottage at Bokrivier is also a six-sleeper, set on a scenic farm with its own private hot tub, while Clover Cottage at Bokrivier sleeps eight and adds a heated pool to the private tub, so the bigger group or the family with children has room to spread out. If mountain views are what you are after, Barton Cottage at Bokrivier is a relaxed farm cottage with a wood-fired hot tub and the kind of outlook that makes you forget to check your phone. Every one of these tubs is wood-fired, so factor in the lovely, unhurried business of lighting it and letting it climb.
Sunday: a longer walk before the soak
Give Sunday over to a walk. Greyton is the trailhead for the Greyton to McGregor hiking trail, a serious mountain crossing for those who plan it properly, but you do not need to commit to the whole thing to feel its pull. Easy fynbos walks fan out from the edge of the village, taking you into the proteas and restios with the river never far off. Families with younger walkers can pair a gentle outing with a visit to the EARS donkey sanctuary nearby, which is an easy, kind-hearted hour and a reliable hit with children. Whatever you choose, the rhythm holds: move while the day is bright, then come home with that good ache in your legs and light the tub. A soak after a fynbos walk, with the cold coming down off the mountains and the water holding its heat, is the simplest pleasure this corner of the Overberg offers and easily the best reason to stay one more night.

Making the weekend work
Greyton suits the unplanned weekend, but a little forethought goes a long way. Aim to arrive Friday afternoon so you can get the tub lit and settle in before dark, and book ahead for the market weekend, when the village fills up. Pack layers, because the Overberg evenings turn cool fast and the contrast between a frosty stoep and a hot tub is half the joy. Bring real groceries too: the cottages are made for a slow braai and a long breakfast, and the nearest shops are in the village rather than around the corner. Mostly, give yourself permission to do nothing in particular. The market, the walks and the wood-fired soak are enough to fill two days completely and you will drive back to Cape Town wondering why you do not do this more often. To see what else the region holds, browse the rest of our Overberg stays and plan the next one before you have even unpacked.