Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More

Safari Vehicles

Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the rainy season mud, treacherous in sandy soil. The typical safari vehicle starts out as a Toyota Land Cruiser which is a rough, tough pickup truck, rear wheel drive that can convert to 4 wheel drive. On older versions you have to get out of the truck and manually lock the front hubs when you shift to 4wd.  There is an African industry that converts this workhorse into a…
More

Chobe Riverfront

The Chobe River forms part of the border between Namibia and Botswana as it meanders in twists and turns until it flows into the Zambezi. Our lodge is on the Namibian waterfront across from Botswana's renowned Chobe National Park. There is no road on the Namibian side (well, there is, but it's a very rough dirt track, two ruts, for more than 30 miles at max 12 mph), so to get here, we exited Namibia, crossed into Botswana, drove 20 miles on good road through the national park to another border crossing to go back into Namibia. Fortunately, our driver, Travis, does this often, so he walked us through the…
More

Nkasa Rupala

To see photo updates, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 While driving through a Namibian town, I saw a young boy, maybe 9 years old, with a little homemade car attached to a long stick so he could push it along while walking upright. I remember seeing the exact same thing in Morocco in 2019 at the opposite end of this huge continent, thousands of miles and hundreds of cultures away. Game drives in safari parks are a rough affair. Everywhere the bumpy ride is referred to as an "African massage". An ad hoc network of tracks generally consisting of two ruts through the bush, never maintained, made worse by traffic during the…
More

Along the Kavango River

The Kavango River starts in Angola then becomes the border between Angola and Namibia until it turns south, crosses Namibia's Caprivi Strip and flows into Botswana where, unlike most rivers, that flow to the sea, it ends up dribbling out in the desert forming the Okavango Delta, one of the planet's most fantastic wildlife habitats.  This morning, Abel took us across the bridge to the other, eastern, side of the river for a game drive. Near the entrance of the park are ruins of buildings, an old South African military base from the war of independence when South West Africa was liberated from apartheid South Africa and became the independent…
More

Khwe San

Today, we visited one of the many "living museums" of Namibia, model villages set up by the cultural ministry to preserve traditional knowledge and practices. Not unlike Colonial Williamsburg here in the US. The one we visited is for the Khwe tribe of the San people.  The San are the original inhabitants of this region and have been here at least 100,000 years. Geneticists have traced their DNA that far back (go ask ChatGPT, I'm not going to attempt to explain that, especially since it's over my head), farther than any other people on earth. For that time they have lived in balance with nature, very egalitarian, no permanent settlements,…
More

Elephants!

To see Maria's photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 After we recovered from our night in the Dream Cruiser, Abel took us on our last game drive in the eastern end of Etosha National Park. We saw giraffes and various deer at different water holes and then came upon one that had a fairly large (we thought....more later) family of elephants that were absolutely trashing the waterhole, stirring up mud from the bottom, until, when they got out, they were all a very elegant dark grey. Yesterday, we (Abel) drove for seven hours through flat, mostly boring countryside. We passed through a small industrial city, stopped for gas in a small commercial…
More

Onguma Dream Cruiser

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 Last night we had a unique experience. We spent the night on a high platform next to a waterhole out in the bush. The Dream Cruiser is a Toyota Land Cruiser fitted out with a large platform 8 feet in the air. You go through a door into the truck bed where you find a full bathroom with shower. Then a climb up a very step stairway to the open air platform that's about 8 feet wide and 12 feet long. Half is an open deck with a small table, a set of shelves and a couple of beanbag chairs. The other half is…
More

Sunday Morning Hiding at the Waterhole

We spent this morning in a hide right next to a waterhole. It's a permanent structure with seven seats looking out open windows at ground level. To get to the hide we walked down a narrow hallway from the parking lot, fences made of sticks on either side so the animals can't see us approaching. We were the only two people, plus a guide who gave us high powered binoculars and who explained things, though mostly we were quietly watching.  Throughout the morning various animals arrived for a drink. It was slow in the beginning, just a few birds. There was a mixed flock of waxwings and finches, small birds…
More

Etosha National Park

To see photos, click here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/znAZZNkwfxyEn3fz6 We were going to get up at 5:30 yesterday morning so we could get breakfast when the restaurant opened at 6:00 to be on the road at sunrise when the park gates open. So at 7:00 am Maria awoke with a start to discover the alarm didn't go off (an old travel alarm clock which has now been retired in favor of our phones which won't get their planned overnight rest)! Abel was outside our door in the truck already. So instead of a leisurely start, we scrambled into our clothes, stopped in the restaurant to put together peanut butter sandwiches from the breakfast…
More

Back in Namibia!

After two overnight flights in a row (Boston to London, then to Johannesburg) we meet Berv, our guide for our Southern Africa tour in 2022. He happened to be in the airport at the same time so we contacted him and arranged to meet him for the few minutes our paths crossed. We like Berv a lot and it was a special treat to see him in person again 3 years (almost to the day) later. After a last 2 hour local flight, we landed in Namibia where we stood in line for over an hour to get through immigration. Borders are bad enough, serving only to separate people from…
More