Showing posts with label namibia tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label namibia tours. Show all posts

Africa For Sissies

 
 Image:  Etosha Game Drive

Many of you may not have heard this phrase, but if you work in the travel industry and start working with lots of travel agents selling Africa travel, you often here Namibia being refered to as "Africa for Sissies."

This is one of those blog posts I know that I had to write one day.  I have mixed feelings about the phrase.  Let me explain.

There are many aspects of Namibia that are unique in an African sense.  I am not talking just about measurable things, I am talking about things like how clean it is, how good the infrastructure is, communications, road conditions, general travel safety and even the how friendly the people are and so on. It's not usually defined. It's a stereotype.

I like the phrase because it implies that Namibia is wonderful! I agree. Done some cliche Safari stuff and want to see a different side to Africa...Namibia. Want less hassles with bribes and lost bookings...no guarantees, but Namibia stacks up well. Windhoek is getting worse, but if you want less crime, the country side is fantastic. Namibia is clean by African standards, and perhaps by any standards (you tell me? I haven't been out of Africa much.) Certainly, I would rather bring up my kids here than in South Africa (just one aspect to which I have given a lot of thought...though I may one day take my family to Kenya, if I can wangle it...but that's a different story.) In short, yes, there is some truth to the phrase that Namibia is Africa for Sissies.

What I don't like is the wording. "Sissies??????" This country has lots to keep you on a buzz. There is danger, there is excitement, there is high profile game, there are fantastic places, there are lots of things to do and see.

There are elephants and rhinos and even lions in the deserts, areas that you can walk around in on foot. There are interesting hills and mountains to climb and explore. Go to Sossusvlei and spend a day walking deep into the dunes, far from the crowd and you can start to get the draining feel of real dehydration in one day. Want even more excitement? Sandboarding or Quad biking. Skydive in Swakopmund...one of the most active skydiving clubs south of the equator. Despite the aridity, you can even do river rafting on both the northern border and southern border.

In conclusion, if you want an African country that is well organized, clean and beautiful, easy to travel around and easy to organize, well, Namibia isn't perfect, but it's certainly a good option. Because of this ease, it is a great country to travel around on your own, though there are clearly risks to driving yourself on gravel roads.

But if you are a seasoned Africa traveler, don't dismiss this country. It is amazing. It is beautiful. And it has it's share of adventure on offer.

If you walk in to a travel agent to book an African experience, and you want more than a 12 day game drive after game drive, don't let them put you off with the "Africa for sissies" attitude towards Namibia. It's a great place with adventure to be had!

Some links if you would like to visit Namibia:

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Etosha

My recent trip and some travel advice for Etosha

My recent Etosha trip

A couple weeks ago I had the great pleasure of taking two astronomers up to Etosha. The goal was for them to record (photograph) an occultation of Pluto. We spent four nights there and had the chance to do a few morning game drives in Etosha.

The first morning we managed to see a couple Elephant bulls along with lots of plains game. No lions of the first day. Due to the huge rains that Namibia had had this year, there was a lot of water in the pans and so wildlife was really spread out. It really is my favorite time to go to Etosha, because you never know what you will find where, and the birding gets good. But to take people on their first Safari at a time like that is difficult. The truth of tour guiding is that no matter what your guests say, there is this unwritten (or is it written??) rule that says you MUST FIND LIONS.

The trip wasn't about Etosha at all, and we only did morning drives. The afternoons they would sleep, and then most of the night was spent with the telescope, preparing for the night when the occultation of Pluto would occur.

We has some nice drives and saw nice birds, including a couple sightings of Blue Cranes and an African Spoonbill. It was fun.

On our last day the worry was far more about weather. The whole thing (the occultation) boils down to a couple of minutes of critical, when the star passes behind Pluto. If clouds got in the way then, it would be all for nothing.

We did a last game drive on our final morning. It was rather quiet. It's always a tricky one. We had spent all our time on the same side of the park, and so you run out of new places to try. The guests were enjoying it a lot, so I wasn't to stressed. On our way out we decided to revisit one waterhole, and finally got a few lions lying near the road under some bushes. There was a man and female that probably had just finished a spree of mating as well as a couple males lying a little way off from the pair.

It was a nice ending to our game drives, but we still had weather to worry about. They had traveled half way around the world just to see this event, and these types of events don't happen that often. So there was a lot of pressure and not much we could do about it.

The afternoon rolled around and the weather looked fine. No problem. I was relaxing. The astronomers probably less so. But the sky was clear.

Then as the evening started coming in, a little cloud was lifting in the north. As the evening carried on, the cloud built and built. It was going to be a race. Marc, one of the astronomers had his camera taking short time laps photographs of the sky at short intervals, giving an interesting account of the night's weather.

It was getting stressful. I left to go to bed as I had the drive to Windhoek the next day. I slept a while, then woke up worried about the weather. I went out again and just waited until the actual event started. They were in luck, just a little window of clear sky showed in the region of Pluto and the occultation!

I didn't realize how close it had been until we watched Marc's pictures of the evenings sky the next day. It was amazing. This cloud just closed right in, just leaving that spot open. Just after the event they wanted one last go at taking some data, and when they tried, they got nothing...the clouds had closed in. It was amazing, the really just squeezed it in!

It was a wonderful trip and the type of thing that I would love to do in the future again. It was especially nice to have done it at Etosha, a place that has been special to me for years.

Advice for travelers to Etosha

I was asked (by Mary Winstone) for some travel advice for Etosha, which is something I have wanted to do for some time. So here goes.
General Information
Etosha is Namibia's premier wildlife or Safari destination. The park is just a little over a hundred years old. Etosha is managed by Namibia's Ministry of Environment and Tourism and the restcamps in the park are run by Namibia Wildlife Resorts, and organization tied to the parks.

At a little over 22 000 square kilometers, Etosha is a big place! The park is rather diverse, with a huge salt pan taking up a good part of the park, a variety of Broadleaved, Mopani, and Acacia woodland, grassy and dwarf shrub plains and saline pans. The park is mostly flat. Very flat. A few places, like Halali, have isolated hills around them. The park only really gets hilly on the far western side.

Despite it's size, Etosha has only a relatively small area open to the public. Don't let that worry you to much, as it's still a really big area, and you can spend many days in Etosha and still not see it all. It also means that the long drive from the east to west (or visa versa) should be taken as a whole day...more on that later.

Accomodation
Where should you stay? That really is a question of budget, but I will try to give you some idea of what there is. Let me break it into three sections: In the park, at the Anderson's Gate and at the Von Lindquist Gate.
  • In the Park
    In the only option is to stay at one of the Namibian Wildlife Resort's Etosha Resorts. There are three main ones, and all of them are large places with different types of accommodation in them. You can camp, or stay in the rather nice bungalows. Meals are provided at restaurants in buffet style. There have been recent efforts to upgrade the rooms and it is rather nice.
    The three main rest camps include Okaukuejo on the western side of the tourist area, Halali half way, and Namutoni on the eastern side of the park.
    Advantages...You are in the park, you can do night drives, each camp has a waterhole that can be viewed at night and at both Halali and Okaukuejo the waterholes can be very interesting, with Black Rhino, Elephants and lions making frequent appearances. I even saw a leopard at Halali last year.
    The parks rest camps (or resorts) are cheaper than the fancy lodges, but with the upgrades over the last few years, they are far from cheep. Camping is the cheapest way to do Etosha now.
    The resorts are the only place that you can do night drives in the park. I can't comment to much on the quality of the night drives as I haven't done them and I have only had a couple of guests on my trips do them, with mixed reports as to how good the trips were.
    NWR isn't exactly government, but it is a little bit like government, and as such the resorts management isn't top class. But they are okay and I always enjoy staying in the resorts. If you stay at Halali, ask the watchmen to show you the Scops and White-faced Owls roosting in the trees. I usually give them a couple bucks for it.

    There is also a new development (Onkoshi) in the park on the eastern side.
  • Central/South area, Anderson's GateThe best lodge in this area is the Ongava Lodge, run by Wilderness Safaris. They have their own private game reserve right next to Etosha and have plenty to see there. They have a good population of White Rhino, an animal infrequently seen in Etosha itself. At Ongava there is the tented camp, which was my favorite place to stay. I was last there in 2003, but I believe its still good. What I loved about the tented camp was the close proximity one has with wildlife there. On the flip side, there is also the very luxury rooms at Ongava, that are perhaps the nicest accommodation around the park. There are a number of other options on this side, but I would recommend either Ongava or Okaukuejo.
  • East Von Lindquist GateThere are a number of options on this side. Right at the Gate is Mokuti Lodge, run by Kempinski, which I stayed at in the trip mentioned above. It is a large, hotel like lodge. I found the rooms a little crowded. I feel like they need to throw in so much 'stuff' to make it a five star lodge that they loose a bit of practicality. That said, however, I feel it's a great place, conveniently located, and we found the staff friendly and willing to help us with all sorts of unusual requests. There is a snake park at the lodge. I don't think it's that great, mainly focusing on all the big stuff, and not interesting in terms of small snakes and lizards, and with very little info. But I guess not everyone is as interested in reptiles as I am.

    On the other side of the road is the Onguma Lodge, which is really a couple lodges together. I have never stayed there and it's all rather new. From what I hear, it is a great place. I would certainly say that it's the place I am most interested in visiting around Etosha.

    Another wonderful lodge outside Etosha's eastern side is Mushara.

    A few years back I did a number of tours through there and always enjoyed staying there. I feel like the management can be a little cold and 'hotelier' like, but if you like it fancy, they are good with that. They have some good wine and a nice setting. It is a little far from the gate, but not so much that it's a big problem.
For any other options outside the park, one starts to get quiet far from the gates. If you are looking at doing it cheaply, being in the park is certainly the best option...though still rather pricey.

There are lodges on the western side of the park, but the access through there is restricted to tour operators only and only really worth it if you are also traveling to the far north-west of Namibia. For game viewing the main area is perfectly fine.

For more information and bookings visit the Cardboard Box website. They are an excellent resource for traveling to Namibia, not just for information but for bookings, tours and even advice on things like insurance and safety.
DIY gamedrives in Etosha
You can go with a tour company, but Etosha is fine to do on your own. You can still do game drives with the lodges or resorts and probably if you are doing it on your own, I would suggest mixing it up a bit. Namibia can be a LOT of driving. Trust me, it's probably more than you think. And the distances in the park are deceiving, because you never drive fast in the park and so it can be tiring.

That said, the other side of it is that doing a game drive on your own is magic. It's special. I love doing game drives with my family not so much for what we see, but just for being out there. Of course, if you haven't done game drives that much, what you see in important, but the experience itself is still magic.

In Etosha it's all about water. It can be a little bit boring in a way, though, to just cruse waterhole to waterhole. But in the dry season, most of the animals move to waterholes. In the rainy season this changes and you really don't know what you will see where. If you plan to visit Etosha in the rainy season (especially January to April) it is best to focus as much on birds and behavior as trying to find the high profile animals. Late dry season is the best for finding animals at the waterholes (September/October or even early November if the rains haven't broken.)

Look everywhere. Often people miss a rhino that is just in the bush a little from the road. Make sure you look into the bush.

Use the EARLY mornings. Your first hour is the best time to see Rhinos or Lions at the waterholes. Later, as the day warms up, you may see streams of wildlife at waterholes with up to five or six species of larger mammals present at the same time. Elephants basically drink any time. Giraffes often like to drink in the late afternoon, and it is really cool to watch that.

Always make sure you plan your time well in Etosha. Try to look in the sightings books to find out where interesting animals have been seen. Figure out your time to drive between places and add plenty of buffer. Don't speed in the park. It's bad for wildlife, and it's bad for those who planned better.
More Information
If you are coming to Namibia there are many tour companies and travel agents that you can work through. The Cardboard Box (mentioned above) provides really good assistance for travelling to Namibia.

Google Earth is always interesting to look at, both before and after your visit to Namibia.

Bring a good camera. Small compact cameras are nice to carry, but make sure that you have a decent zoom. Anything less than a 300 makes taking wildlife photos hard.

Binoculars really make the experience so much better and if you can afford it, I recommenced a really good pair. I use Swarovski 10 x 42 binoculars (At AmazonSwarovski EL Binocular 10x42)
and love them, but any of the good brands produce amazing binoculars, including Carl Zeiss, Leica, Nikon and of course Swarovski. Of course top range optics may be out of the question for you. I would still emphasizes getting a good pair. Don't get the compacts for Etosha. You want binoculars that you can see in poor light, especially if you are spending time at the waterholes at night.

It's nice to have a good field guide for mammals while you do game drives. I use "The Field Guide to Mammals of Southern Africa" by Chris and Tilde Stuart, published by Struik



If you are into birds, then Sasols birds of southern Africa is good.



You will find these books in most book stores. In Etosha you can by the parks map with a lot of the wildlife and birds on it.

Well, I think that's enough to get one started. Any questions, please shout. I know that a couple of the blog's regular readers know a bit about Etosha and I may have missed stuff. Please feel free to add or even make corrections in the comments.
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The Guiding Light - thumbs up for birding Namibia

I am always interested in guides and their view. Guides get around. Guides get to enjoy each place a number of times with different people, which gives you a completely different feel for a place each time. You can imagine the difference between taking a group through a park, where game drives shouldn't take to long and evenings are spent enjoyably chatting over a good red wine compared to a bird mad trip with a young frantic birding couple. The place itself feels different because of the people you take there. And guiding gives you a degree of authority on an area, and that is why people pay you to take them there over and over.

I came across a Josh Engel's blog today, "The Guiding Light". The first thing I read is "ADVENTURES IN GUIDING. LEADING BIRDING TRIPS AROUND THE WORLD," the subtitle. Then on to the post, and it says "Namibia is my favorite country in which I guide." Go Josh. The post is about a recent trip that he guided through Namibia and Botswana for Tropic Birds, a leading birding tour company.

Namibia is really something special and the birding community is starting to notice it. As a destination with more than 600 birds in a dry country, it is a rather remarkable birding spot. The deserts give unique birds and the birds themselves are interesting, just because they are there. Then there are other habitats including small sections of riverine woodland in the Caprivi and of course, my current hang out, the coastal wetlands that give us beautiful flamingos and interesting migratory waders. There are certainly countries with more birds in Africa, some a lot more, but Namibia is indeed a wonderful country to visit as a birder, or, like Josh, as a birding guide.
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Kuiseb River Foods

It is with interest that I heard that the Kuiseb river has flooded.

The Kuiseb River flows south of Walvis Bay and cuts off the Namib Sand Sea (the huge dune field) from moving further north. This river is very important for the water supply in the towns of Walvis Bay and Swakopmund, as they drill into the river bed for water. So ironically, when the river floods we have water problems.

The kuisebs flooding is of interest to me for various reasons. First, if you live in dry places, it's just cool when a river flows.

Secondly, it is going to have an impact on the urgency with which the plans for a desalination plant get pushed. I am concerned that proper EIA evaluations get cut short. I am all for desalination, as it is probably the only sustainable way for us to get water at the central coastal area in Namibia.

Lastly, I am perhaps most interested because I hope to be taking people to the Kuiseb river on tour this year, and it's just going to mean more birds and more wildlife in the river.

Read about it in the Namibian
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Safari Wise Birding

I have received an offer from Safari Wise to work together with them doing birding tours. I will mainly be doing birding in the Swakopmund and Walvis Bay area on full and half day excursions.

Safari Wise has long been an established tour operator and they have done nature and birding tours for many years.

At the moment they are still completing the brochures and web update for the day tours.

If you are interested in doing some birding while in Swakopmund, please get hold of Safari Wise through their website.

Frantic Naturalist will be placed on hold for the time being.
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Recent tour completed

I have just come back from my most recent tour. This was my last camping tour. I will no longer be doing camping trips from now on. I am trying to focus on the tours that I aim to do with Frantic Naturalist.

Some sightings from this last trip include: Three Black-Rhino in the Palmwag concession, one old elephant bull there as well. Then a female lion, appearing to be on her own at the waterhole at the Hobatere camp. From there we drove through western Etosha and had a cracker day, with two lions, two cheetah (brief sighting,) Hyena (I thought it was brown...just getting excited, but the guests, who had the benefit of a better view, said it was Spotted,) two black-rhinos in the day time, and some elephants all in the one drive. This is amazing for that area. We carried on to have some good sightings in the park, though we had one day where the weather wasn't good for Etosha game viewing.

In a couple of days time I leave my family once again to go to Sossusvlei Mountain Lodge where I once worked, and doing Astronomy for the guests each night for about 10 days. Should give me some time to play with my camera.
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Photography

Sesriem/Sossusvlei scenery
I have recently bought myself a Canon 400D in order to get cracking at photography. I don't have any great stuff yet, just a tripod and the box standard 18-55mm lens that it comes with. But I am enjoying playing around and wading my way through tutorials and experimenting while on tour. So, slowly but surely you can expect to see more photos on my blog and web site.

I will, of course, be focusing on nature photography. I don't have a long lens yet, that will have to come later.

A good photographic book at Amazon:

Namibia Booklet (Booklets)
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Some tips for your Africa Tour

If you are planning to visit Africa on a nature type tour anytime in the future, you may wish to follow some of these tips. This list is by no means complete and there are many others (government sites, your travel agent, your doctor) who can, and should, also give you some advice.

1. Choose your experience carefully. This, you may think, goes with saying. Well, consider how many nights you want to spend where. When will you need a bit of a rest. Travel can be long and rough. Also consider where you want to spend time to really take in the experience. Don't be shy to spend three nights in a place. Much rather do only three or four locations, enjoying each very well. This doesn't leave room for poorly chosen places, so choose well.

2. Buy a field guide to birds before you go. You don't like birds? Well, I am convinced that after a little while in Africa you will go home birding. It is so nice to have a little knowledge before hand. I always study up locations I will visit and prepare for what birds I may see there. It makes the whole experience a lot more fun for me. If you really don't like birds, then use mammals rather. But regardless, I think that a little homework about a place makes the experience richer. Good bird field guides would include Sasols Birds of Southern Africa for (you guessed it, southern Africa) and Field Guide to the Birds of East Africa (Terry Stevenson and John Fanshawe.)

3. Take binoculars. You don't need to be a hot shot birder to need binos. It helps so much with game viewing. Wild animals are shy on the whole and often hidden away a little in the bush. If you really want to enjoy wildlife, take a good pair.

4. You are going to expect me to say the same for a camera, but I'm going to say just the opposite. Take a simple point and shoot, and don't try to photograph wildlife at all. Just take a picture of where you were and personal memory shots and leave the hassle of lugging around a heavy camera. Of course this is not for everyone. Some wouldn't consider traveling without there camera...it can even be their reason for travel. But it can be liberating to be free of it.

5. Go to places where the guides really know their stuff. I can't think of anything worse than spending a lot of money traveling somewhere for a nature experience and then not getting a good guide. If you have traveled in Namibia and have either had a good or a bad experience with guides, please let me know.

6. Mix it up. I have found that their are many people these days that go to a luxury lodge half way through, and then spend some of the trip camping. When I worked at a top end lodge, it was getting difficult to guess at the demographics of our guests. It's a new trend in Africa. People mix up the accommodation to maximize the experience. I have especially found this with South Africans who are doing a couple Africa trips a year.

I hope some of you find this helpful. For more questions, let me know by email, or leave a comment on the blog.
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Recent freelance namibia tour

I have just come back from my latest tour. It was my first accommodated tour as a freelance guide. I was very happy to do an accommodated tour as I don't really plan to do camping trips with Frantic Naturalist.

The tour was very different from normal trips as we first went to a farm. The guests I had were a really amazing family. The family had once owned a farm in Namibia, and so the whole reason for the trip was to visit the farm for it's hundred year celebration.

On the farm we ate a lot of meat...a Namibian pastime. I'm not such a big meat eater, but it was actually interesting for me to get to see real Namibian farm life.

We returned to Windhoek from the farm. Then we headed north to Aloe Grove Safari Lodge in the Ojiwarongo region. Nice setting. I didn't enjoy the area, as they had cats (lion, leopard and cheetah) orphans in holding pens. They do a game drive to, but it feels very farm like.

Then we headed up north to Ndhovu Safari Lodge in the Caprivi. This lodge is very close to Mahangu Game Reserve where they do game drives. I love the area. The Caprivi is so different from the rest of Namibia, with large rivers (Ndhovu is on the Kavango river which becomes the Okavango later,) and more birds.

I found the lodge nice for a cheaper place. Great view over the river and some good birds in the area (I will post birds separately.) I did find that the owner, manager didn't really know his stuff to well with birds or with wildlife in general.

Then we headed to Botswana where I left the guests in Kasani before returning home. I had hoped to try for Souzas Shrike on my return, but I couldn't find it. I will have another go some time!
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Finished Second Tour

Well, I have just finished my second tour. Don't want to get carried away in the details, but here are the basics:

Birding was just great. Just hit the near-endemics very easily. Didn't see Hartlaub's Franklin, although I was in Hobateres' camp sight, were a little walking in the morning should have produced one. But it wasn't a birding tour, and on camping trips, birding really is tough - usually at the best birding times we are braking or putting up camp, cooking and so on. Certainly camping is great for getting to certain places, but it would be much nicer with a support team, leaving time for the guides to focus on guiding.

In Palmwag we a saw a Parabuthus villosus. This is a scorpion which I am very familiar with. One of the ones you occasionally see in day time, and it is one of the really big ones, making it easy to find without UV lights. What was amazing was how different the color was to the ones I got to know further in the south! Amazing. In Palmwag it appeared almost a Coca Cola Black (Black with a hint of red to it.) We know it as a scorpion with much more yellow. Just goes to show that the color has nothing to do with the potency of the venom.

Otherwise, a very exciting sighting of lions (two females, four cubs) in the Palmwag consession. I consider myself very lucky to have seen that. Missed Rhinos (they are hard to find) and elephants (buggers weren't around that area.)

In the north I saw a White-bellied Sunbird in our camp at Opuwo. It's just amazing how the birding changes in the far north - a real hint of Caprivi type area.

In Etosha we really didn't have much luck. I was starting to have a cronic toothache (Which is why I have been on the internet since three this morning.) I think it didn't help my guiding and sightings. But I also think the wind was a little problematic. The first day nothing much in the morning. We did get into the park a little late, but not to bad. Afternoon some lions at Goas.

Next morning we were first out the gate (me, happy guide,) and the sightings were great for a while. Great guest spotting produced six lion cubs by the road and two black rhinos. Then more lions at Goas (this time the mating pair from the night before and a couple other males.) Then the wind got up and things started to get quiet. I was really trying for Cheetah (it's the one thing that I haven't seen, anywhere, for ages - I think the last ones I saw may have been in South Africa, or the one I saw in Etosha in 2003? Not sure, but since I have had such luck with leopards, I really wanted to see cheetah. The open plains were quiet. Some Elephants and then lunch. Afternoon was quiet and I tried to squeeze to much in anyway. The mating lions finally mating (normal guest reaction...lions mating behaviors just strick a cord with some of our sterio types...enough of that for this blog....)

Morning was dead. I knew that there had been some Blue Cranes at Salvadora and I always think that I should see a cheetah in that area one day. No Cranes or cheetahs. Even springbok seemed less common.

Dropped off the guests in Windhoek, and then headed home to Swakopmund in the night. On our way out of Windhoek, in the twilight...a dog?? What..?? A CHEETAH was in the road? Amazing. I hope it got a fright and got away from the road. The traffic was fast, and the cheetah would have got run over if it didn't get out of the road. It was one a split second view, and such a surprise to see it where we did. But no doubting it, it was a cheetah.

So, great tour in the end. The guests enjoyed it, we saw many interesting things even if we had some very quiet times in Etosha, and I saw my Cheetah?!!?
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New Namibia Tour, so far

I am on tour at the moment and just passing through Swakopmund. The tour that I am doing took us through Namib Naukluft lodge for two nights, and now in Swakopmund for two nights. From here we will be going up north through the Palmwag area, Opuwo, Hobatere and to Halali before returning to Windhoek.

We have seen some interesting things so far on this tour. At Elim dune (near Sesriem) we saw two Secretary Birds. We went down to Sossusvlei and on our return, just after sunset, we managed to find a Black Spitting Cobra. These snakes are usually really hard to find, so it was a real treat. We got a good view of it on the road.

In Walvis Bay for lunch we spent some time at the lagoon. We didn't see anything special, but it is clear that the migrant waders are starting to trickle in. There are also more flamingos around.
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Frantic Naturalist Website

I have just finished a total re-do of my website. I have really stripped it down to basics to make it do what it should do, give you what you need to know to travel with us.

So have a look at the website and let me know. I would love some feedback and tips to make it work better.

The company is kicking off now, and we have our first couple of inquiries. I will make sure that we always grow slowly, and offer something unique to the travel market in Namibia.

The last few weeks have been far more about packing, moving, and writing the website than anything else. I will soon be getting out and about more and so my blogs will start to be more interesting again.
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Ten reasons to visit Namibia

Are you planning a holiday somewhere far from home, and don't really know where you want to go? Let me give you a few reasons to visit Namibia.

1. Namibia is beautiful. It is seriously beautiful. If you have ever seen photos of Sossusvlei and the dune field in this area, it is simply one of the most fantastic places in the world. The dunes are red. At sunset they are almost brick red. And in the mornings with the contrasting shadows, really great. The whole western part of Namibia changes color throughout the day, landscapes vary very much one from another, and it is all vast, vast landscapes!

2. Africa for sissies? Yes, Namibia is one of the most 'travel friendly' places to visit in Africa. Things, especially by African standards, work well. There is good accommodation throughout the country. You can travel by road (some tar, but mainly well maintained gravel roads,) or you can fly from lodge to lodge.

3. Interesting wildlife. Namibia has such a diversity of wildlife; there are a number of wildlife areas boasting the general High Profile wildlife (lions, elephants, rhinos - black & white; there are desert elephants (behaviorally distinct from the elephants in the less arid areas;) and great game parks - Etosha being the biggest attraction.

4. There is still some 'wild' left in Namibia. There are the remote areas in the north-west and Kaudom in the north-east.

5. Good birding. With some 650 bird species recorded in Namibia, it is a great birding country. Consider the fact that it is only not arid in the far north and north east! Many birds are coastal, and then there is Etosha National Park again. Etosha is really a special park in many ways, but it's size (about 23,000 square kilometers,) means that there is a lot of conservation area looking after birds! Birding ranges from the Woodland areas of the north east, where there are a number of species that are not easily found elsewhere in southern Africa. In these woodland areas the bird species numbers are fantastic. Because of the only rivers that are found in Namibia, occurring up in the Caprivi region, these areas are the only parts of Namibia where great specials like the Pel's Fishing Owl can be found. Further south there is the rocky interior of the country, sandwiched between the Namib on the west and the Kalahari on the east. Here we find real specials like the Monterios' Hornbill and White-tailed Shrike.
Then there is the Namib. The Namib is a hyper arid desert, and not an immediately obvious place for birds. But the eastern side of the desert has quite a high diversity, and deeper in there are the two specials: Endemic Dune Lark in the dunes, and Near Endemic Grey's Lark on the gravel plains.
And finally there is the coastal area, where long stretches without fresh water mean that the few that exist are great rare bird magnets as well as important bird areas.

5. The people are friendly. One of the common comments that we hear from people who are traveling to Namibia is that they were sorry that they didn't meet many people (Namibia has very few - under 2 million in about 820,0000 square kilometers,) but that they feel that Namibia's are very, very friendly. It think that it is true, and makes a lodge stay so much more pleasant and real.

6. Something different culturally: Namibia has somewhat of an unusual cultural mix, with Germans, South Africans and a variety of African people groups in the mix.

7. Space. Do you live in a cramped, polluted place? You could hardly do better than to come to Namibia. There is really something of a spiritual recharge to being in a arid, vast country!

8. Astronomy. If you like to peer into the night sky, or if you like to study the stars, galaxy's, nebula and so on, Namibia has many nights of beautiful clear sky's, as well as having various lodges that offer astronomy as a guest activity.

9. Desert Ecology. A lot is known about the Namib, especially through DRFN (Desert Research Foundation of Namibia.) This desert is so diverse and so it can be a very interesting and stimulating experience to visit.

10. The best beer in southern Africa, made according to the old German tradition.

And many more....
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