Experience Namibia!

13 Day Experience Namibia Accommodated Guided Trip

From

$4116 USD

pp

Safari summary


About this tour

Tour type Custom, tailor-made, private
Main focus Game drives
Activity level Easy activity
Best months All months
Countries
Parks

Itinerary

Day 1

Day 1: Windhoek – Kalahari We leave Windhoek mid morning to allow us enough time to get to our accommodation before sunset . This usually includes a few stops along the way like Rehoboth, traditional home of the Baster people and on to Kalkrand where you will turn off the main road. Once we arrive you can prepare for an afternoon sundowner  drive on open view game vehicle with your guide.

Day 2

Day 2: Kalahari – Fish River Canyon After a big breakfast you will traverse the gravel roads towards the Fish River canyon. This is believed to be the second largest canyon in the world and the largest in Africa. Its immensity is simply breathtaking. In the afternoon you will enjoy a walk along the ridge of the canyon while exploring some of the fauna and flora that have adapted to this environment. Going down into the canyon is not possible as it takes too long, but enjoying the amazing vistas from the edge will more than make up for it.

Day 3

Day 3: Fish River Canyon – Luderitz You will return north and drive towards the coastal town of Luderitz. This was the first German settlement in Namibia. Before getting to Luderitz you will pass the small village of Aus and on your way you might also be lucky enough to spot the wild horses of the Namib. When there is enough time after you have arrived in Luderitz, you will pass Diaz point where the Portuguese explorer Bartholomew Diaz landed in 1488. The rest of the time will be spent exploring this surprisingly fascinating town.

Day 4

Day 4: Luderitz Today you will explore around the town of Luderitz with its interesting architecture and Rocky bays.  You will also visit the fascinating Ghost Town of Kolmanskoppe. Life started here in the 1920’s during the diamond rush and was abandoned when bigger and better diamonds were found elsewhere. The area remained abandoned however and the desert sand has started to take over the buildings giving it a truly eerie feel.

Day 5

Day 5: Luderitz – Sossusvlei Today will be a long drive along the edge of the Namib Desert. You will see the Tiras and Nubiob mountains as you traverse this desert landscape. We plan to arrive at our destination in the late. You’ll have an early night in anticipation for the early wake up the next day to see the magnificent dunes around Sossusvlei.

Day 6

Day 6: Sossusvlei A very early start this morning for our Sossusvlei guided excursion. We aim to leave our lodge well before sunrise to ensure that we are one of the first to enter the national park. From Sesriem, we drive further into the desert area, where the early morning light provides excellent opportunities for photography. Once we arrive in the 4x4 carpark, we can then explore this area on foot, with a walk around Dead Vlei and Sossusvlei, and for the adventurous, a hike up Big Daddy, the tallest dune in the region, offering breathtaking views of the sand sea that is the Namib Desert. By midday, we make our way back towards Sesriem with a stop at Sesriem Canyon, a small but important landmark for both the human and animal residents of the area. We then make our way back towards our accommodation where we have time to rest and relax before dinner.

Day 7

Day 7: Sossusvlei – Swakopmund Our drive today takes us through to Swakopmund via the Gaub and Kuiseb passes. Our first official stop is Solitaire, a small but important outpost for tourists and locals alike, and a popular place to stop and enjoy some more unusual photographic opportunities. From Solitaire, we continue through the ever changing desert landscapes before arriving in Walvis Bay, the main harbor in Namibia. Here we have the opportunity to visit the Walvis Bay Lagoon, a RAMSAR listed wetland site, famous as the feeding ground for many bird species including the Greater & Lesser Flamingos, as well as the endemic Damara Tern amongst others making it an ornithologist paradise. From Walvis Bay it’s just a short drive to Swakopmund where we will spend the next two nights.

Day 8

Day 8: Swakopmund Today is a free day, and the chance to explore at your own pace. For some, this will mean joining a boat cruise in Walvis Bay, where you have a good chance to see some seals and dolphins, for others, this will mean a morning of sandboarding before exploring the dunes on a quad bike, or enjoying an scenic flight before skydiving, and for others, it might be something a little more calm as a leisurely breakfast, a visit to the aquarium before an afternoon scenic flight along the Skeleton Coast. Swakopmund is the adventure capital of Namibia and there is certainly something to satisfy everyone. The town itself, an unusual mix of German and Namibian culture offers a relaxed and walkable town centre to enjoy at our own pace., There are good restaurants in both towns, with seafood of course being a specialty. **Activities in Swakopmund are not included.

Day 9

Day 9: Swakopmund – Damaraland We start our day early as our drive takes us north east into Damaraland. In terms of route, we have two options today, either up to Cape Cross to visit the largest breeding colony of Cape Fur Seals, before continuing on along the Skeleton Coast. Alternatively, for those of us more interested in the Namibian people, from Henties Bay we head inland, across the gravel plains for the Namib and north from Uis, with the chance to meet the local people, the Himba, Damara and Herero that call these areas home. EIther way, if time allows, in the afternoon we will visit Twyfelfontein (literally translated means ‘doubtful spring’), a UNESCO World Heritage site that is home to over 2500 rock etchings, making it one of the worlds largest collections of rock petroglyphs.

Day 10

Day 10: Damaraland We start the morning with a big breakfast before heading out on an excursion along the ephemeral rivers to explore this remarkable area and search for some animals including the elusive and amazing desert adapted elephants. These animals have amazingly found a way to become accustomed to this semi arid area, and this opportunity to find free roaming desert elephant is a unique one, with these incredible creatures only being found in Namibia and Mali. In addition to the desert elephants, this unique environment offers breathtaking landscapes and with a local guide, we will have the have some incredible landscape photographic opportunities. A chance to relax this afternoon by the pool.

Day 11

Etosha

Day 11: Damaraland – Etosha After breakfast, we say goodbye to Damaraland and head north east for Etosha National Park, one of Southern Africa’s premier game parks and wildlife enthusiasts paradise. We enter the park via the Andersson’s gate, on the southern boundary of Etosha and spend the next 3 days exploring. The park itself covers 22,270 kms², and gets its name from the salt pan that makes up approx 23% of the park. Once a massive lake, the Etosha Pan is now mostly dry, with the exception of good rainfall years when the pan fills up enough to become a breeding ground for flamingos that migrate between Walvis Bay and Sua Pan in Botswana. The park itself is home to some 114 mammal species including the big 4 (lion, leopard, rhino & elephant) as well as 340 bird species, 110 reptile species, 16 amphibian species and, surprisingly, one species of fish. This afternoon we enjoy a game drive from the park gate, stopping at some popular (animal) waterholes, before arriving late afternoon at our lodge. Tonight we can relax by the floodlit waterhole, an excellent chance to view those creatures that prefer to be active during the cool of the night.

Day 12

Etosha

Day 12: Etosha This day will be devoted to exploring the park and maximising our chances for amazing wildlife sightings. We start with an early morning game drive. The lodge gates open at sunrise, and the aim is to be the first vehicle into the park as this will maximise our chances of spotting predators either lazing on the roads or making their final attempts at a hunt. From there, we drive from waterhole to waterhole (especially in the winter months), as they support a rich diversity of animals. These waterholes are one of the most unique aspects of Etosha National Park, and a major attraction for wildlife photographers and animal behaviour experts as the different species of animals, both predator and prey alike, can often be captured (on camera) drinking at the same waterhole. Depending on our route, we will return to lodge for breakfast, and to relax by the lodge waterhole and pool during the hottest part of the day, before continuing our game drives late afternoon to try our luck some more.

Day 13

Etosha

Day 13: Etosha – Windhoek This day signals the end of our journey. After an early morning breakfast and a final game drive out of the park, we head back towards Windhoek mid morning. If time allows we will stop in the small town of Okahandja at one of Namibia’s largest wood carving markets, a chance to support small local business and collect some last minute souvenirs, before continuing on to Windhoek where we will be dropped at our accommodation and say goodbye to our guide.

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