Fish Hoek is situated in a bay at the end of a broad, low
valley, between two and three kilometres wide, which runs from east to west across the Cape Peninsula from Fish Hoek on the False Bay side to
Noordhoek and
Kommetjie on the
Atlantic side. When sea levels were higher than they are today, the valley used to be a sea passage that separated the Cape Peninsula into northern and southern islands. The valley is generally sandy and the bedrock is
Cape granite. In places this is deeply weathered and in the past the rotted granite was mined for pockets of the mineral
kaolinite, which is used to make ceramic goods such as hand basins and bath tubs. The valley is famous for 12,000-year-old
paleolithic skeletons discovered in a cave (now called
Peers' Cave) by Bertie Peers and his father in 1927.
Bertie Peers was a lover and explorer of the great outdoors, a fine amateur scientist and a dedicated naturalist but his enthusiasm eventually cost him his life, when he was fatally struck by a
puff adder. It is approximately 40 kilometres by road from Fish Hoek to Cape Town. Fish Hoek is connected to the city by two road routes: Main Road along the False Bay coast, and
Ou Kaapse Weg which passes over the Steenberg mountains. Fish Hoek has a railway station which is served by
Metrorail's Southern Line service, with journey times of about an hour to Cape Town and 15 minutes to Simon's Town.
Climate Fish Hoek has a mild
mediterranean climate and is spared over hot summer days by the south-easterly wind known locally as "the
Cape Doctor". The mountains nearby are famous for large numbers of complex
caves in
sandstones of the
Table Mountain Group. Caves are usually found in
limestones and it is not common to find complex cave systems in pure sandstone. ==Parks and recreation==