Cape Point at the end of the day, the old lighthouse on top, two baboons sitting on the cliffs as if they own the place. The Western Cape doesn't really need to introduce itself. Past 50 here covers Cape Town from the City Bowl out to Constantia and Hout Bay, the winelands behind Stellenbosch and Paarl, and the long Garden Route from Mossel Bay through Knysna and Plett.
No hearts to collect, no rapid-fire profile cards, no leaderboard tracking your right-swipes. People write a few sentences about themselves and you read them. If something resonates, you message; if not, you keep looking. It's closer to how introductions used to work. It takes two minutes and zero rand to set up.
The Sea Point promenade is the standby for an easy first walk: flat, breezy, with cafes at both ends. Kirstenbosch suits a slower morning under the proteas. Out of the city, Stellenbosch's Dorp Street has the bookshop-cafe rhythm without the tourist edge of summer, and along the Garden Route, the Knysna Heads viewpoint or a coffee in old Mossel Bay is a fair midpoint for two people meeting from opposite ends.