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- Dzień 47
- piątek, 10 stycznia 2020 09:59
- ⛅ 25 °C
- Wysokość: 4 534 ft
ZimbabweNgamo Dam19°30’30” S 29°43’48” E
Antelope Park - Day 2

I slept quite well, but woke up feeling very stiff and sore. The rib that I 'popped' on the truck the previous day was very sore and all my chest muscles hurt from when I used the rope swing into the pool in the Chimanimani mountains two days previously. I also now had a big section of one of my teeth missing. The wear and tear of this trip was taking its toll on my body. I felt for the first time that the discomforts of this trip were outweighing the enjoyments. If someone had offered me an instant teletransportation home, I might well have taken it at that point. I felt a bit like I'd had enough of the rigours of the trip. However, as I wrote this down, park attendants walked four large elephants right by our tents which assuaged these negative feelings a little. I was genuinely concerned about whether I could manage a horse ride in my physical condition.
As it turned out, the timings were changed and we did what was called an 'Elephant Interaction' which involved us going out in a safari vehicle to meet four large elephants, one male and three females. It was a really special experience to get up close to these huge, gentle giants. I was able to stand with them and hold their tusks and stroke their bristly trunks. You could feel the non-verbal communication using touch and sound with them. I was able to look deep into their pale orange-yellow eyes. We were then able to take food pellets and place them in their trunk which they held out and twisted up to nimbly and sensitively take the pellets from my hands and place them in their mouth. The whole experience was deeply moving to get this close to such large animals. After about 30 minutes we returned to the safari vehicles and back to the campsite.
I then rested at the campsite and prepared for my first ever horse ride at mid-day. We walked up to the stables and I began to feel a bit nervous about getting on the large horses that were circling in the paddock. I was given a red helmet which made me look like a bit like a polo player according to my fellow travellers, Lauren, Kim and Monica, also doing the horse ride. I was given a placid horse called 'Flame' as it was my first ride on a horse. I was taken over to concrete steps where I was helped onto the horse and given some basic instructions on how to use the reins to direct the horse and how to pull the reins to stop. I was also told how to kick the horses side with my heels to get him to walk forwards. My fellow travellers also got on their horses and we walked out of the stables, following our guide, and out into the park. I really enjoyed the experience of riding my horse and soon settled in to the rhythm of his steps. I could feel the connection with this large animal as I communicated my intentions through the reins and with my hands and voice. It was a simply wonderful experience and I immediately knew I would want to ride horses again in the future. I had that strange feeling that I had ridden horses before in a another life - the same feeling I get when I go on wooden sailing ships - maybe it's an ancestral menory or maybe I have ridden horses in another incarnation? We soon saw a herd of impala who remained quite close to us as they are not as afraid when we are riding another animal. We carried on through the scrubland and saw vultures in a nearby tree. We then came across two giraffes feeding on an acacia tree and again were able to get very close and take photos. We also saw a male and female lion in a nearby enclosure. We rode down the hill where we passed several wildebeest including young infant wildebeest. We saw another large vulture take flight from a tree before coming across several zebra. I slowly became more confident of directing my horse. He often bent down to eat the grass and I kept having to pull his head up with the reins. I really enjoyed this ongoing communication with my horse. We continued on down the hill and, all too soon, we were riding back into the stable. I got off the horse and back onto the step and led the horse to stand nearby. I patted Flame on the neck and thanked him for taking me through the park without incident.
We returned to the campsite and had some lunch and a drink in the campsite bar and cafe and waited for our third wildlife experience in a day at 4.30pm which was a walk with the elephants we had spent time with in the morning. We took the safari vehicle out into the park to meet the four elephants again. We spent some time reacquainting ourselves with the elephants by standing with them, patting their trunks and taking photos. We then walked alongside them as they walked along in a rough line. I walked near the elephants and they would sometimes acknowledge my by directing their trunk over to my hand. It was a wonderful experience to walk so close to them and pat their sides. I was reminded of my childhood love of the Disney film, The Jungle Book. My favourite song in the film was the march of the elephants, and here I was all these years later, marching with elephants in Africa. We spent an idyllic half an hour walking with these giant, sensitive and intelligent beasts. There was a wonderful moment when two of the elephants walked closely either side of me and I felt the small tail of one of the elephants gently brushing my head. We stopped at a large water trough where the elephants sucked up water with their trunks and poured it into their mouth. We then walked on to some iron railing enclosures where the elephants ate acacia branches waiting for them. We were able to feed some more pellets into their upturned trunks and then it was time to say our goodbyes and return to the campsite.
It had been a day of special experiences close up with animals and I felt very fortunate to have had the opportunity to experience it. I started the day feeling very low physically with my sore body and broken tooth, and my mood was then transformed in a positive direction by my close connection with wild elephants and horses. Animals really are the best therapy and always will be for me. I wondered whether and how I could spend more time with animals I'm the future. We all retired to the bar for drinks and dinner and reminisced on our special experiences of the day.
The moths circled the lights in the bar, the crickets chipped loudly, the lights reflected on the river below and the full moon rose high into the starry sky. I climbed into my tent and settled down to sleep with images of elephants pouring through my mind, reliving experiences with them that I would never forget. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 48
- sobota, 11 stycznia 2020 11:33
- ☁️ 23 °C
- Wysokość: 4 541 ft
ZimbabweSenka19°29’42” S 29°43’48” E
Antelope Park - Day 3

I was able to 'sleep in' until 7am and arose with the gentle patter of light rain on my tent. I had some light breakfast from the truck and heard that wildebeest had been grazing around our tents during the night which explained the chewing sound I'd heard by my tent during the night.
I had a slight migraine headache and so rested in my tent until the next close animal encounter with lions who have been bred in the park to one day hopefully be released back into the wild. We boarded the safari vehicle again and headed out to the lion's enclosure. We set up our cameras by a wire fence with a large pile of chicken in front of us for the lions to feed on. When we were all prepared three large male lions were released and raced towards us to feed on the pile of chicken. It was a heart stopping moment to have the sense of what it would be like to have three large lions running towards you for the kill. The lions guarded their prize ferociously and ticked into the meat lustily. It was a great privilege to see such a scene so close with only a thin wire fence between us. The lions looked muscular and powerful with large heavy paws and short thick set hind legs. They looked like evolutionary perfection.
Then we moved over to the next enclosure and repeated the experience with three younger male lions. I took my photos and video and then sat watching them feed for several minutes to try and connect more deeply with the animals.
I then went back to the first enclosure and sat the the large dominant male lions. They guarded their 'prey' ferociously and suddenly the dominant male lion, Arosha, made a charge for us at the fence and roared loudly. One couldn't help buy jump with fright at thos primal, electric, and sudden motion of thr lion. I remained close to the fence as Arosha prowled and dug into the earth to mark his territory. Arosha then lay down by fence and seemed to become calmer, with one final shocking snarl. I moved closer to the fance as most of my fellow travellers moved away. I instinctively made a deep humming sound which the lion seemed to respond to. Arosha then looked directly into my eyes, and I had one of the deepest moments of connection with another living being that I have ever experienced in my life. My heart seemed to open wide and we looked at each other for a long time. The lion seemed relaxed and at ease in my presence. It was like a dream experience but this was as real as anything could possibly feel. All my fellow travellers had already boarded the safari vehicle and I knew it was time to leave. As I walked away from this magnificent animal, I knew that my life had changed in some fundamental way in that moment of connection with Arosha, but I didn't yet know in what way. I had just seen the eternal fire of creation in that lion's eyes and knew that he and his wild kin must be preserved so that light of creation is never extinguished. I returned to the camp in the vehicle feeling highly emotionally charged and in a sort of wild reverie. When we returned I walked down to the river to write, and try to process what had just happened. I knew deeply that I couldn't be same again after that moment.
I spent the afternoon resting at the camp, having some lunch and passion fruit juice in the cafe, and observing the wildlife by the river as I walked over a wooden bridge with geckos skitting away in front of me. We had an early dinner cooked by our fellow travellers ahead of our planned night safari with some the the lions lions who are released from their enclosures to learn how to hunt in the park so that they can be released into the wild in the future.
We boarded our safari vehicle at around 5.30pm and headed out into the park. Unfortunately, the very dark skies ahead looked ominous with lightning flashing in the distance. A rainbow appeared in the grey-brown clouds to our right. The lions were released from their enclosure by the two park rangers who accompanied us and ran up towards the back of our vehicle. They were two adult females with one of them being the better hunter according to our guides. They were lithe, muscled and impressive looking animals. They followed our vehicle for a while, but then struck out ahead to look for prey to hunt. It was lovely to watch them interact with each other and roll around in the brush together.
Sadly and inevitably, it began to rain and we considered whether to go on which we did. We came across some wildebeest and antelope which the lions attempted to pursue. They also found some rotten meat to scavenge which their powerful immune systems are adapted to withstand. The darkness descended and we followed the lions through the night. Then the rain began to hammer down hard and we all started to get a real soaking in the open topped vehicle. Eventually, and to our disappointment, we had to give up on the night safari and take the lions back to their enclosure. We transferred to a covered vehicle and returned to the campsite, wet, bedraggled and more than a little demoralised. A few of us tried to dry ourselves by the camp fire before returning to our tents for some well needed sleep. The guides for the night safari offered to take us out again in the morning as compensation from our abandoned night safari. I thought it unlikely that I could muster the energy to get early enough to do it. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 49
- niedziela, 12 stycznia 2020 05:27
- ☁️ 22 °C
- Wysokość: 4 662 ft
ZimbabweGweru District19°34’31” S 29°43’48” E
Antelope Park to Bulawayo

I woke up around 5.30am but didn't feel that I would make it for the early morning safari. I thought I had lost the top to my water bottle on the safari vehicle the night before and decided to go and look for it on the vehicle before it departed on the morning safari. I hadn't showered, had breakfast or packed away my tent and so didn't think I'd have time to go on the safari before our truck departed at 9am. However my fellow traveller, Lauren, encouraged me to get on the safari vehicle and do the safari and worry about packing my things later. This helped me decide to go and I ran back to my tent to quickly get my camera, rucksack and water to do the safari. We then set off with four fellow travellers into the park. This time four lions were released from their enclosure, two young males and two young females. They closely followed the vehicle and it was wonderful to watch them play and interact with each other. They moved around the vehicle and went in front from time to time. At certain points we spotted impala and wildebeest. The lions made some runs to hunt the animals but their inexperience showed as the animals were easily able to keep their distance from the young lions. Although, the guides told us that one of the young females had previously made successful kills. The lions also came across some rotting meat from dead animals and started to eat and gnaw at the bones. Lions are often scavengers and have very powerful immune systems which means they can eat rotten meat without coming to harm. We were blessed to have nearly two hours watching these magnificent young animals lithely pad their way through the scrubland and around our vehicle. It was another wonderful close up animal encounter in this park.
We didn't get back to the campsite until 8.50am and I was anxious about getting my things packed to leave at 9am, but our tour leader, Jemma, was very understanding and allowed me time to pack, pay my bills, eat some pancake and get on the truck. The driver, Often, also kindly packed away my tent while I payed for my activities in the park.
We then set off for our next destination in Bulawayo. The journey was fairly quick and uneventful and we arrived at a very nice campsite, Burkes' Paradise Backpackers Hostel and Campsite, with attractive grassy campground by a pool. I felt quite tired but there was no time for rest as we collectively cleaned the contents of our truck and it was my turn to do the cook group with two fellow travellers, Ri and Kim. Despite my initial anxieties that none of us had cooked samosas before,we managed to cook them and the meal went down well with our fellow travellers. We relaxed in the communal room after dinner and were given a debrief of our exciting walk with white rhinos the following day and the overnight train to Victoria Falls thr following evening. The pace of this journey is quite something. Things we did the very same morning, such as the safari with lions, feel like they happened weeks ago.
I retired to my bed feeling somewhat exhausted from the day's activities and prepared fro another busy day tomorrow. The air was warm and the ubiquitous African crickets were chirping as I endeavoured to find sleep and dreams of lions running through the bush. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 50
- poniedziałek, 13 stycznia 2020 06:07
- ⛅ 18 °C
- Wysokość: 4 485 ft
ZimbabweMatobo Dam20°22’18” S 28°31’0” E
Motopo National Park

I got up for yet another early start at 5.30am. The sky was clear blue and the sun was rising on a pink horizon.We had welcome beans on toast for breakfast and I packed a bag to take on the overnight train later in the day.
We boarded our covered safari vehicle with our guide, Andy, whi was an interesting character and his daughter, who was very knowledgeable. We headed out through a wealthy residential area towards Motobo National park. Along the way, Andy and his daughter stopped to pick up a beautiful green chameleon which we were able to handle, its sharp tiny claws clasping my hand as I held it up. They also stopped to pick up a small leopard tortoise from the road. They were both very keen to give us lots of information about the local wildlife. We passed through the gates of the park and immediately into the most stunning countryside with spectacular granite outcrops and tree filled scrubland. As we turned every corner we were presented with another incredible view. We turned down a small road looking for wild rhino. Andy stopped a fee times to assess the rhino tracks and was clearly a very skilled tracker. At a certain point we stopped where Andy had previously scouted a wild rhino the previous day. We walked through beautiful scrubland with great views of the surrounding rock outcrops. Along the way Andy and his daughter showed us different aspects of the local nature such as frog spawn in creamy lather that drops the spawn into the water when they're ready to become tadpoles. Andy also showed us where rhinos had wallowed I'm a waterhole the precious day. Andy said that he was determined to find us wild rhino and sure enough after about hour's walking he pulled out his binoculars and spotted four wild rhinos among trees on the distance. He led us in to approach the wild rhino. Within seconds we were within about 20 metres of four wild rhinos, three adults and one infant. We watched them and took photos. They were aware of our presence and one rhino was a bit skittish and came towards us momentarily, but then they seemed to relax in our presence. We were then able to walk around and get even closer to them within about 8 metres. It was almost unbelievable to get this close to such a wild animal. We were even able to have our photos taken with the rhinos behind us. It was such a privilege to spend over half an hour in close proximity to the rhinos. They became so relaxed with our presence that theu even laid down to sleep. All too soon ot was time to leave the wild rhinos and return to the safari vehicle. On the way back the clouds thickened and we all got soaked in a heavy diownpour. Andy ran on ahead to pick up the vehicle and then came and picked us up from the roadside, sheltering under a tree. We continued on through the wondrous scenery to a small covered hexagonal concrete building with a thatched roof for some lunch Andy and his daughter prepared a wonderful and tasty lunch for us which included one of the best bean salads I've ever tasted. Andy talked a lot about his views on the political situation in Zimbabwe and his occasional annoyance at outsiders telling him how he and his colleagues should conserve wildlife in the park. His daughter had previously talked to us at the park gates of the complexities of local people being moved out of the park when it was created, the extreme poverty that drives poaching of rhinos in the park, the huge prices fetched in China and the far east for rhino horm, how the park staff have to tranquilise and cut off the rhinos horns to prevent them from being poached and how there is a 'shoot to kill' policy for anyone caught trying to poach rhino in the park. Andy's views were strident. He clearly heals a passion for and a great knowledge of the wildlife in the park, but also believes that controlled hunting is an important way to make income for conservation which I would disagree with..
After lunch, we boarded our vehicle again and headed for Nswatugi cave where there are ancient cave paintings made by the San people. We parked and climbed up a trail which took us over a very large granite outcrop and up into a large cleft in the granite Up on the smooth granite walls were dozens of paintings in red ochre of many types of animal and figures in strange poses. A line of figures seemed to be sitting cross legged above what appeared to be an image of a lion that used the natural rock to partially delineate its features. Another group of figures seemed to seated in a circle around an indecipherable central object.. Therr were also several images of abstract dots and ladder shapes. These images are thought to have been created by many generations of nomadic hunters over thousands of years and the whole rock surface was packed with images. Andy informed us that a burial of a woman was found near the apex of the cleft during excavations. This was a very impressive series of cable paintings and apparently there are hundreds of such sites across the park, some of them being harder to reach but even more impressive than the one we saw.
As we left the cave paintings, Andy suggested that we climb to the top of this great granite outcrop for the views over the surrounding countryside. The 360 degree views were indeed breathtaking and we spent some time at the tio taking photos. We then returned to our vehicle and headed for the Cecil Rhodes memorial which was the next place on our itinerary. We parked up and walked up another beautiful granite outcrop to the high point which had amazing views over the surrounding countryside. At the top there were huge rounded granite boulders naturally arranged in almost a circle. It felt like a special place and according to Andy's daughter was originally called Malindidzimu by the local people which means 'Place of the Kindred Spirits' and this felt like such an ancestral place. Cecil Rhodes' grave was drilled into the rock right in the centre which felt like a colonial arrogance to match that of the man himself. Hundreds of tame rainbow lizards skitted across the sun baked rock surface. Apparently, there were also elephant shrews jumping around which I didn't see. We spent some time surveying the magnificent views when another heavy rain shower drove us back to the vehicle.
We drove back out through the park stopping for wildlife along the way. We saw small antelope with specialised hooves for climbing in the sheer, rocky terrain of the park. We also saw some delightful small ringed mongoose.
We returned to our campsite, Burkes' Paradise, and had to get our packed belongings quickly to get back on the vehicle to drive to the train station to catch an overnight train to Victoria Falls. We also ordered pizzas for the train and by the time they arrived we only had 5 minutes to catch the 7.30pm train. We had to chase all the way up one platform and back down another to get on the train. There then ensued long negotiations in the sleeping compartments we had booked with local people who had sat in them. It was stressful situation for our tour leader, Jemma. Eventually, we all had a sleeping space and I could eat some of my pizza for which I had little appetite. The train seemed to be about 60 years old and was absolutely filthy. I tried to settle down to an uncomfortable night sleeping in my clothes with occasional trips to a dirty metal toilet where you could see through the hole to the tracks below. The caeriage door was also flapping dangerously open throughout the night. The stars were out in the night sky as the train slowly passed by the dark silhouettes of the African countryside but the scene brought me little cheer on this occasion.
Film - The Conservationists Cry Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 51
- wtorek, 14 stycznia 2020 15:23
- 🌧 27 °C
- Wysokość: 2 920 ft
ZimbabweDevil's Cataract17°55’30” S 25°50’54” E
Arrival at Victoria Falls

I was already exhausted when I got on the overnight train to Victoria Falls and after getting very little sleep on the train with it bouncing along the tracks, and noisy shouting from people on the many platforms we stopped at, I was in a worse state by the morning. This was an 'authentic' African experience I could definitely have done without. I got up at around 6am, ate some cold pizza from the previous night and drank some of my fast diminishing water. I had been suffering with a headache since the previous night and couldn't wait to get to Victoria Falls but the train was painfully slow and seemed to stop every few minutes. I mused that it would have been far better to have driven in the truck to the falls.
After a few hours in the very slow train I started to wake up and cheer up. We passed through the Victoria National Park and saw warthogs close by and elephants in the distance before arriving at the station where we walked to our campsite called Victoria Falls Rest Camp. We were pleased to have brunch cooked for us by Often and then had a debrief of the many available activities at Victoria Falls by a lovely local woman called Joy. After this, Joy kindly showed me to a local dentist where I made an appointment to get my broken tooth checked to see if it would last until I returned home to England. I then got my possessions together and walked down to the entrance to Victoria Falls, paid my $30 dollars entry along with my fellow travellers Vincent and Kristin and entered the park. The various views of the falls are numbered and each view became more spectacular as I worked my way along. Enormous quantities of water courses down the river Zambezi and flew off the edge of the falls into a giant dark chasm below. This caused clouds of spray to rise up from the chasm and literally soak us all to the skin. We caught up with more of our fellow travellers, Lauren, Brian and Tigger - we all laughed at how wet we were getting as we worked our way along the falls. The views continued to be awe inspiring all the way along and it was almost incomprehensible how long the falks are and how much water must be continually pouring over them. We saw what they call 'Devil's Piool' on the other side where we would be diving into a pool right on the edge of the falls the following day and peering over the edge. We walked back along the falls by a drier path and saw antelope and a group of warthogs with many young piglets to remind us that we are in a wildlife park. Elephants can also be seen walking down the town's high street to drink in the river.. Walked on over to the other end of the falls where there were more stunning views back up the falls. Here you could get above the river and see it pour over the edge and down into a giant narrow gorge that is over 100 metres deep in places. Lauren and I stayed on to continue looking and taking photos of the falls and were rewarded when the sun came out and we were able to take photos of the rainbow that appeared in the mists of spray created by the falls awesome energy and power. We also walked back down the falls to see again the wonderful views of river tumbling headlong into the giant gorge. We stayed eight up until closing time at 6pm and reluctantly left. On our way out we saw two tame antelope pass close in front of us which was special to see.
On our way out of the Victoria Falls Lauren spotted a sign for the.Lookout Cafe which had been recommended to us by Joy earlier. We walked about 400 metres down a dirt track and eventually found the cafe/restaurant which was beautifully constructed and designed with high vaulted wooden ceilings and decorative lanterns. We were met by a very friendly waiter who showed us to seats with an astonishing view over the river gorge below the falls. We had cocktails and a wonderful dinner while watching the sun go down in the far distance and swifts circle in the sky overhead. The sky slowly darkened and we could see lightning flashes in the distance as stars began to appear in the sky above us. Great 60s Motown music played on the sound system and the whole scene was pretty idyllic.finishing off another wonderful day in the glories that Africa has to offer. We decided to walk back to our campsite using a phone torch to guide our way back down the dirt path. However, as we left we were stopped by a member of staff whi told us that it was dangerous to walk there at night as animals from the park such as elephants and buffalo could be roaming there. We checked with the reustaurant waiter who confirmed it was dangerous. We felt a lot like naive tourists and gratefully accepted the offered lift back to the campsite in a car.
We helped each other put our tents up in the dark, and I got a shower and retired to my tent to write and get an early night ahead of a 5am start to visit the 'Devil's Pool' and swim up to the very edge of the mighty Victoria Falls - Lauren and I couldn't decide earlier who was more daunted by the prospect. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 52
- środa, 15 stycznia 2020 10:09
- ☁️ 22 °C
- Wysokość: 2 897 ft
ZambiaEastern Cataract17°55’36” S 25°51’50” E
Victoria Falls Day 2

I had another very early start at 5am to get ready for an adrenaline filled morning with a swim to the 'Devil's Pool' which is right on the edge of the Victoria Falls with a 100 metre drop below you. We all congregated at the camp reception for 5.45am and got a taxi to the Zambian border where we walked through the border post and across the Victoria Falls bridge to the Zambian immigration. As we walked it started to rain and we all got a bit of a soaking - the rain continues to follow us everywhere we go. After quite a long walk we got to where a taxi could take us to the starting point for our Devil's Pool experience. We were given a debrief of what we would be doing including saying we would need to be strong swimmers which I am not. We paid and were given life jackets before boarding a small motor launch. We were soon speeding across the river Zambezi and towards a small river island on the edge of the falls called Livingstone Island. We disembarked and were given towels, got changed into our swimwear and put our things in a locked box. A few of our mobile phones were were put in a dry bag to take photos of us all in the pool. We the gave our preferences for the breakfast we would receive after going in the pool.
All too soon, having passed and read a sign that we accepted the risk of injury or even death, we were walking hand in hand for safety out onto the rocks by the edge of the falls. Immediately I could feel the strong current of the river around my lower legs. We then had to swim out to points in the river crossing the strong current. This was quite frightening as I battled against the current with a poor attempt at front crawl to get to the guide waiting on the other side. There were two ropes across the river before the edge of the falls to save ourselves if we didn't make it over to the guide, but I didn't fancy having to rely on catching a rope to save myself. Our group of myself and fellow travellers Lauren, the two Brians, Tigger and Kim all managed to swim across bit most of us found it pretty challenging. Then we had to swim across the current downstream, another scary experience, where we crawled along.rocks under the water until we could climb out over rocks to where 'Devil's Pool' was right on the edge of falls where the water poured over into the abyss. Some of our fellow travellers, Ian, Vincent, Kristin and Ri, had gone in the boat ahead of us and were already in the pool where they, one by one, went to the edge, had photos taken, formed a group on one of the ledges and then climbed out. Watching the others increased our own trepidation especially as they were being gently bitten by large fish while they were in the water. It was then our turn. One by one we climbed down into the pool and held onto rocks. Then one by one we swam out to the two guides on the edge of the falls. We all lined up on the ledge for a group photo on the edge of the falls. Then one by one we crossed the current to be dangled over the edge of the falls. When it was my turn, I pushed off the rock into the fast flowing current and was caught by the guides who then took my ankles as I laid out on a rock ledge right on the edge of the falls. My life was temporarily in their hands as if they let go I would be swept over the edge by the current to my certain death. I then took up 'superman' poses as if flying off the edge of the falls while one of the guides took photos and videos of my. I couldn't believe it as o watched this guide walk out confidently on the ledge right where the water tumbled down 100 metres as if he was taking a Sumday stroll. I felt quite exhilarated as I dangled on the edge of the falls, but then a little queasy as I looked down over the falls below me. I then had to swim back to my fellow travellers who were clinging to rocks and grasped me. We were all very happy that we'd managed to do 'Devil's Pool' but still had the anxiety of the long swim back through the strong river currents. The anxiety wasn't misplaced . We clambered back over the rocks and waded out into the river over rocks. Then we had to swim against the current to a large rock on the surface with a guide waiting. I was getting tired and am hopeless at the front crawl so only just made it having swallowed a fair amount of river water. Then we had to swim downstream across a strong current to the guide. Everyone struggled as soon as they his the strong current and I was no exception. I got swept downstream by the current and only just managed to swim back up to the guide. Then we had to swim further across the current. I had to rely on the rope to save me from being swept further downstream and I hauled myself along the rope to the guide. We then reached the edge of Livingstone island and held hands again as we clambered over the rocks and water. It was a big relief to get to the other side. We then walked across the island and took some photos of the view across the Zambia side of the falls. It felt cold outside the relatively warm river water. We then were treated to a nice breakfast of croissants, salad and very welcome warm, sugary tea. We got changed back into our clothes, retrieved our things and returned to the boat for the ride back to our starting point. This bog adventure had come to a satisfying conclusion
We were then driven back to the border in a taxi.
I then visited the Zambian side of the Victoria Falls. With my fellow traveller, Kim, and her mother, Monica, who was waiting for Kim at the falls. We paid our $20 entry fee and walked to the falls. Monica had organised for a guide to show us the falls. The guide was very informative and showed us the East side of the falls where we were above the river Zambezi and could see it flowing down to the edge of the falls. As we walked along the viewing points of the Eastern falls, I was immediately impressed by how much water was now coming over the previously reported dry falls and the incredible long view down this longest side of the falls. The waters thundered down to the bottom of the falls creating a maelstrom of foam and spray as the river continued wildly on its course. As we made our way west across the falls the views became even more spectacular and widescreen. We crossed a high bridge across a gorge and continued on to an immense view looking down through to the Zimbabwe falls and all the way back towards the Eastern falls. Far below the waters raged from both directions and through an immense gorge to continue their way to the sea. The guide informed us that there had been 8 sequential falls previous to the current one which itself was 200 million years old. These giant cleats in the rock had been caused by volcanic action over great epochs of time. I left Kim and the guide at this point to spend time at the falls on my own and really soak up the atmosphere and the river water spray. I found my favourite spot with views back up to the Zimbabwe falls and down to the great gorge and more deeply connected with this great natural wonder of the world that is known by the native peoples as Mosi-oa-Tunya or 'The Smoke That Thunders'.
After several hours at the falls, I returned to the border with Zimbabwe, passed through immigration and crossed the Victoria Bridge where I viewed the great gorge through which the Zambezi exits having tumbled so far, from the other side. It was a long walk back to the town where I had lunch. On returning to the campsite, I found a warthog happily feeding on his knees near our tents - this truly is a wild place. I then visited the dentist about my broken molar. We agreed that the tooth should last until I returned to England at the end of February as long as I was careful about not biting on anything hard with it. I also learned that it was an old filling that had come off rather than a new break which was good news of sorts. I was grateful to Joy, the organiser of our activities, for taking me to find the dentist and generally looking after me. As I no longer needed further dental treatment, I was able to book onto doing a canoeing trip on the Zambezi the following day which should be rich in wildlife encounters including the possibility of seeing hippos and crocodiles but hopefully.not too close up. I went.for a meal with Lauren where other fellow travellers joined us and then returned to complete writing my travel blog and get an early night ahead of another busy day in Victoria Falls. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 53
- czwartek, 16 stycznia 2020 21:12
- ⛅ 21 °C
- Wysokość: 2 992 ft
ZimbabweDevil's Cataract17°55’29” S 25°50’18” E
Victoria Falls Day 3

We were picked up at the campsite reception at 7.20am by three guides in a safari vehicle with four inflatable canoes for our canoeing trip on the Zambezi river. We drove out into the national park and started with an hour's safari drive near the river where we saw quite a few wild animals including a kudu, impala, zebr and a, bushbuck. We came very close to seeing the elusive leopard that we've been hoping to see for the entire journey. We arrived by a safari vehicle where the driver said they had just seen a leopard by the road. However, it had disappeared and we didn't manage to see it.
We drove on through the trees and scrubland and eventually turned right into a beautiful area of trees by the river. The guides had prepared a nice breakfast for us and got our canoes ready. The lead guide gave us a debrief about how to stay safe on the river and what to do if we came into contact with hippos or crocodiles. If I didn't know before, I now knew that we would be paddling on a very wild river. We then put on our life-jackets and boarded our boats in pairs. I sat in the back of our canoe with Lauren in the front and it would be my responsibility to steer the boat which I wasn't sure if I was up to. We paddled along by the river bank and it took a while to get going as we got used to paddling together and the wind kept blowing us into the bank. We eventually managed to get paddling in a neat line out into the river. The lead guide was careful to paddle us away from the groups of hippos that we could see out in the river. We also saw a crocodile basking on a river island at the centre of the river and the lead guide regularly slapped the water with his paddle to scare away any crocodiles that might be nearby. We then stopped by a river island and the lead guide advised us how to paddle through an area of rough water with swirling water and where to go to avoid contact with hippos. We set off into the rough water and it was quite a challenge to paddle through as the river currents had become much stronger with the rising waters on the river. The guide was pleased that we all paddled through and we stopped on the river bank to rest and have a drink of water. I got out of the boat and walked up onto the rocky river bank. I looked out across the wide Zambezi river and soaked the evocative atmosphere of this legendary African river.
We then continued on down the river past more hippos. Our paddling rhythm improved along with my steering and I was able to begin relaxing and enjoy the wonderful views across the river. All too soon we returned to river bank where the safari vehicle was waiting for us at the end of our trip. We saw a small crocodile basking in the sun up close on a river island just before we paddled our canoes into the bank. We disembarked and ate the lunch provided by our guides. I had one more chance to look out across the beautiful river before we got back on the safari vehicle and drove out of the national park and back to our campsite. It had been a wonderful opportunity to spend time on this beautiful river above the great falls famously explored in the late 19th century by Dr. David Livingstone.
I then rested and prepared for my planned helicopter flight over the Victoria falls. However, the heavens opened about half an hour before the flight. The transport still arrived to take us to the airport for the flight and despite my protestations that it was going to be raining for the flight we were still checked in for the flight at the airport before the flight was inevitably cancelled. It was frustrating to have wasted the time preparing for a flight that I knew wasn't going to happen. I had the opportunity to rebook the flight the following day if the weather was better.
In the evening I met some of our new travellers who were joining our trip, two young Swiss men, Oscar and Simon, and an older couple from Liverpool, Phil and Bro, who were also 'died in the wool' Liverpool FC fans. As a fellow fan myself we were already on good terms. All the people joining our truck seemed very nice which boded well for a continuing positive group atmosphere for the trip to Cape Town ahead of us.
We had dinner in the restaurant on the campsite and had some enjoyable banter with our fellow travellers. I said my goodbyes to the young American, Kim, who would be leaving our trip tomorrow.
I retired bed in the wet and humid night and thought of our planned white water rafting trio the following day with some trepidation. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 54
- piątek, 17 stycznia 2020 14:47
- ☁️ 26 °C
- Wysokość: 2 995 ft
ZimbabweNaboronga17°57’54” S 25°48’42” E
Victoria Falls Day 4

The activities at Victoria Falls kept coming thick and fast - I made another early start for my first experience of white water rafting. After a light breakfast, seven of us Oasis Overland travellers (Scott, Lauren, Vincent, Ian, Kristin, Tigger, Brian) boarded a large safari vehicle along with about 12 other tourists and travellers. We drove to the Lookout Cafe where we were given a thorough safety debriefing and signed the usual legal disclaimer forms. We headed out into the national park for several kilometres and parked up at buildings high huge Zambezi river gorge. We were given our helmets, paddles, and life jackets and then had a long, steep and slippery trek all the way down to the bottom of the gorge. The seven of us Oasis Overlanders all boarded the same big white water inflatable raft. We set out onto the water, with incredible views of the tree filled, almost vertical, hundred metre high gorge. We were on a huge bend in the gorge. The guide gave us all some quick tuition paddling the boat, how to hang on to the raft by holding onto the side rope, and what to do of we went for the 'short' swim - one person goes overboard and needs pulling back on - or the long swim - the whole boat goes over and everyone needs to climb back on. I was feeling a mixture of excitement and apprehension as I had never done this before and wasn't sure how difficult it would be to stay on the boat. We then set off down the river gorge with two other boats and several kayaker guides who rode each rapid first and then waited at the end of the rapids to pick up any people who got flipped out of their boat. Our guide explained that we would be shooting rapids numbered 11-24 so we would be shooting 13 rapids - unlucky for some! We hit the first rapid which was a grade 2 rapid (grade 0 = easy - grade 5 = very hard). We rode through the wild water and river waves pushing us up and down and buffeting us from side to side. We kept paddling and made it through with the guide shouting instructions about when to paddle and when to stop paddling. I felt a wonderful exhilaration riding the rapids and feeling the warm river water surging over me. The river gorge sides seemed impossibly high and the view was just astonishing. We then approached a more scary grade 4 rapids. These rapids really tested our metal as we received a strong wave from the side which sent us all sideways and nearly tipped thr boat over. We made it through and the adrenaline fuelled sense of exhilaration was even stronger. The pointed out a small crocodile basking on a rock by the river as we paddled past in calmer waters. We passed a couple more smaller rapids and then approached a grade 5 rapid called the 'Washing Machine'. There was a hole in the waters that we had to avoid to prevent the boat capsiziog. If the guide shouted 'get down's we had to hunker down and hold the. side rope for fear life. Once again our boat was tossed around by the surging and swelling river waves, but we were now paddling better as a team through the rapids and we made it through without too much danger. Next we had two grade 4 rapids in close succession called 'Terminator 1 and 2'. This was the most challenging rapids we experienced. The river waves we faced were enormous. The front of the boat went low down into the water and then smashed up high into the waves. We then got a big impact on the left hand side by a wave which nearly knocked a few people out the boat. The guide kept turning the boat around during the rapids to get us to wave to another guide on the bank who was taking a video of all of us rafting. We next approached grade 2 rapid. The first boat through managed to capsize and all the occupants were tossed out and had to pull themselves back into the boat after it had been righted. We had long stretches of calm water where we could paddle gently and admire the spectacular gorge scenery. We passed some lovely yellow sand river beaches where you could camp on a 5 day trip down the Zambezi gorges. Some people voluntarily jumped into the river for a swim at the calmer points on the river. We continued to ride the rapids all the way to rapid number 24. I absolutely loved my first experience of white water rafting and being in such an ancient and awe inspiring place as the Zambezi river gorges leading away from the falls. We saw another larger crocodile basking with its jaws open on a rock just before we paddled our boats into the river bank for the long, steep, rocky and exhausting climb back up to the the top of the river gorge. We were served lunch and drinks at the top, before reboarding our safari vehicle and returning through the national park and back to our campsite.
It was time for the next stage of my last adventurous day at Victoria Falls. I walked up to see Joy at the Backpackers who organised all our activities for Victoria Falls to see if it would be possible to re-book my helicopter flight that got cancelled the previous day. Joy said that there had been no flights earlier that day due to the bad weather but that they had just re-started flights and managed to book me on the next flight. I was picked up at the campsite reception and driven to the airport for the flight. We picked up two Dutch men along the way who I would be sharing the flight with. However, the storm clouds were gathering again and it looked like it would inevitably rain again soon. We arrived at the airport and went through the checking in procedures and safety briefing. It was going to be touch and go as to whether the flight would go ahead. The helicopter landed and, to my relief, we were ushered out to the helicopter. My light weight was to my advantage compared to the large Dutch men as I was invited to sit in the front seat for better weight distribution. I therefore had an all around view for the flight and could even see through a window on the floor of the helicopter. We put on our flight helmets and seat belts and the pilot gently manoeuvred the helicopter into the air. I had never been in a helicopter before and it was a majestic feeling to rise up into the air and head towards the Victoria Falls. I could the great Zambezi river gorge stretching out across the national park which was filled with trees as far as the eye could see. We approached the falls which was shining with the white water coming over the falls even though rain was approaching. The falls seemed impossibly long and the gorge strangely narrow following a great cleft in the bedrock was created by volcanic activity over 200 million years ago. The helicopter made several passes over the falls so that I could see them from every angle. I could see the water coming over the edge of the falls right along their length and see the great swirls of mist rising above the great gorge. I could look down on Livingstone island and see the Devil's Pool that we swam out to - it looked even more of a terrifying drop from above. It was a truly mesmerising sight and a wonderful way to take in the sheer magnitude of this wonder of nature. After what seemed like a lot longer than the actual 15 minute flight we returned over the national park and back to the airport. The pilot pointed out elephants wandering and giraffe feeding on trees as we flew back and it was amazing to see these animals from the air. The pilot slowly landed the helicopter and I ducked under the rotating blades and returned to the airport buildings exhilarated by what I'd seen during the flight. We were driven back to our campsites and I took in the experiences of the day.
I then showered and rested before going our for a group meal with my fellow travellers where I indulged in some celebratory cocktails (strawberry mojitos).. We then moved on to a late bar at a backpackers hostel where, after dancing a bit to the music, I finally ran out of all energy and returned to the campsite to get some well needed sleep before another busy day travelling to Chobe Wildife park in Botswana. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 55
- sobota, 18 stycznia 2020 15:26
- ⛅ 31 °C
- Wysokość: 3 087 ft
BotswanaKasane17°48’22” S 25°8’47” E
Chobe National Park, Botswana

I got up for last time in Victoria Falls, packed up my very wet, muddy, insect infested tent, had a light breakfast and boarded the truck to head for Botswana. It had been nice to be in one place for a few days but I was happy to be 'on the road again', as the famous song goes. It did not take long before we were at the Botswana border. We had an easy and efficient passage through immigration, but had to disinfect all our shoes on a dirty mat in a tray that seemed to leave the shoes dirtier than when we started.
We stopped in a shopping centre where I bought a new t-shirt in a clothes shop. While I was waiting a long time for the credit card machine to make a connection to process my card transaction (a common problem in East Africa), the woman serving me complained about how the town has a problem with elephants, lions and other wild animals coming into the town. Running away from lions in the high street is a very different kind of issue to deal than we have to deal with in Europe. I had a baked potato with curried vegetables for lunch and boarded the truck. Again, it was a short journey to our next campsite, Chobe Safari Lodge, which, like the previous town is ensconced in the Chobe wildlife park right on the banks of the Chobe river that flows into the great Zambezi river. We had a wonderful, sandy spot to camp on and I pitched my tent overlooking the river, a little way from sign saying 'Beware of the Crocodiles'. I got out my binoculars and could already see buffalo and antelope feeding in the long grass on a large river island in the distance. Then I focussed on a large male hippo surfacing in the river. A short walk up to the nearby bar offered superb views of the river through reeds. The camp we were in was literally teeming with wildlife. As I walked up to a very plush bar, restaurant and pool at the top end of the campsite, I passed a family of wild warthogs very close by. The camp was also filled with tame birds of various bright colours. Insects and beetles also abounded. There was one enormous flying black beetle the size of a bat - it looked like it would be too big and heavy to possibly fly. On the way back to my tent I saw banded mongoose nearby.
We met at the campsite reception at 3.15pm for our planned wildlife boat cruise on the Chobe river. After a short bus ride we boarded the double decked boat and most of us went up to the upper deck. The boat backed out of the docking point and started to slowly make it's way down the river. The scene was beautiful looking out over the wide river and the sun soaked grasslands of the park bordered by tree lined forest. We soon began to see groups of hippos in the water, with some occasionally making impossibly large yawns with their huge toothed jaws. We saw crocodiles lazily basking in the sun on the river bank with their mouths open to try and cool themselves. We then saw many hippos out on the land feeding on the lush green grasses. We were passing a huge river island favoured by the animals because lions and other cats can't swim out to it so they are safe. We saw buffalo and antelope grazing on the island. We rounded a wide bend in the river and saw dozens of hippos, some with very young infants. We were able to sail up very close to some of them and watch them munching through the grasses with their huge jaws and lower teeth. There were also many egret, herons, storks and other species of birds in the grasses. We were surrounded by animals in this lush, wet garden of Eden. As we continued on we could see large numbers of elephants in what appeared to be a large water hole near the river. As we got closer, we could see dozens more elephant families with very small baby elephants running excitedly down to the water hole and drinking lustily from the waters. It was wonderful to watch the youngsters rolling and playing in the mud around the water hole. All in all we counted over 60 elephants in this huge evening congregation. It was such a privilege to witness this timeless scene. We began to return down the river and continued to see groups of hippos on land and in the water, crocodiles, buffalo, and a large, skittish herd of impala. The sun began to reach down towards the horizon and the light began to go golden. We sat relaxing on the upper deck, drinking our drinks and drinking in the wonderful vistas all around us. I reflected that I had now done every kind of safari - walking, vehicle, horse and boat safari. This safari had been a really special one - I never expected to see such a carnival of life all around us - the density of life in the Chobe park was astonishing.
We eventually returned to the dock seeing more hippos in the water along the way. We disembarked and rushed down to the campsite bar to witness an amazing sunset which turned from bright oranges to the deepest reds and auburns. This was the classic African sunset I had been hoping and waiting to see and was a perfect end to a remarkable day. We had our camp meal as the sky darkened into a galaxy of bright stars. I spent some time in the bar/restaurant area of the campsite before retiring to my tent to sleep. There was a loud symphony of animals and insect calls all around. I could here the snorts and rumbles of hippo groups very nearby. I eventually put in my ear plugs and went to sleep. almost reluctant to leave the festival of life calling all around me. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 56
- niedziela, 19 stycznia 2020 08:53
- ⛅ 24 °C
- Wysokość: 3 077 ft
BotswanaTutume19°44’54” S 26°4’18” E
Journey to Elephant Sands

I woke up to a chorus of bird song and hippos calling out on the nearby river. A myriad of animals, insects and birds were stirring with the imminent sunrise. I got up in the twilight and got a shower in a black beetle filled shower. As I left the shower I was faced with a large troop of baboons with a big, intimidating male in front of me. Fortunately, he moved aside as I walked forward to my tent. We had a light breakfast as another family of warthogs skirted us waiting to eat any scraps we left behind. It was time to leave this magical realm of life and head out onto the road for our next destination. We travelled through a huge wildlife park filled with low trees and grasses for as far as the eye could see. We passed dozens of elephants, some very large males with long white tusks, near the road and sometimes stopped the truck to view them more closely. It was special to see them feeding in the grasses by the trees. We stopped to watch a group of four large giraffe lolloping over to trees with their graceful gait and stretch up their long necks to feed on the high leaves. We also passed a group of five large Ostrich as well as occasional antelope. I reflected that I would never tire of seeing these animals in the wild and would always feel the same thrill of anticipation and discovery when in wild Africa.
We travelled on and at a certain point the countryside changed dramatically to tree-less grasslands which a fellow traveller informed me was the edge of the Kalahari desert. We eventually turned off the road onto the aptly named 'Elephant Sands' which was a campsite situated in sandy scrubland with a water hole, often visited by elephants and other animals, at its centre. After pitching my tent on the sand I watched the busy bird life with two horn bills jumping up and down to a cleft in a tree where you could hear the chicks calling for more food. The designated cook group made us a tasty lunch of tuna, apple, walnut and raisin salad. We then rested in the shade of the bar out of the blazing hot sunshine and talked of politics and other various topics before eating a dinner of curry and rice facing a beautiful reddening sunset on the horizon. Sadly, the hoped for elephants never arrived at the watering hole, but we considered that we had already been very fortunate with our animal sightings on our journey and could therefore tolerate this minor disappointment. The red dusk settled into darkness and the sky filled with southern hemisphere stars as I slowly fell to sleep. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 57
- poniedziałek, 20 stycznia 2020 10:03
- ⛅ 27 °C
- Wysokość: 3 012 ft
BotswanaTutume20°15’0” S 24°48’54” E
Journey to the Okavango Delta

I slept well until 3am but then woke up with things on my mind that I ran over and over until I had to get up in the cool of the early morning at 5.30am. I was greeted with a high crescent moon, a reddening sky and a beautiful morning as I went into the shower where elephants have been known to put their trunks in for water during the day season. We had a breakfast of fruit and eggy bread before setting off on the next leg of our journey. We ploughed through miles of low scrubland on a bumpy road seeing occasional elephants feeding near the road.
After a couple of hours we stopped off in a small to buy food for my cook group and buy some lunch which involved my first trip to the renowned 'Nandos' chicken restaurant. I had decided to start eating some meat and break my vegan diet in order to improve my protein intake which is something I had given myself permission to do prior to the trip.
We soon arrived at the nearby hotel and campsite, 'Sedia Riverside Hotel', which had a sandy campground and a nice, if expensive, restaurant and a very nice long pool. We rested by the pool in the afternoon and had a well needed dip in the pool as the heat was almost unbearable. It was the kind of blistering hot weather where you needed to stay in the shade. We had a meal cooked by the cook group in the evening and all got nearly nights ahead of another early start in the morning. The crickets and seemingly infinite multitudes of insects chirped loudly as I crawled off to sleep in the hot and humid night. Czytaj więcej

I am planning on traveling with oasis overland and discovered your blog while doing some pre-travel research myself! Your diaries are truly interesting and helped me get a closer insight to overland travels. Looking at these photos and reading your stories makes me wait for my travel date to arrive real fast too! Good luck on the rest of your journey!
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- Dzień 58
- wtorek, 21 stycznia 2020 09:25
- ☁️ 25 °C
- Wysokość: 3 084 ft
BotswanaNgamiland East19°44’36” S 23°28’36” E
Okavango Delta - Day 1

We had a very early start at 5am after I woke up at 3am and couldn't go back to sleep. We packed all the things from the truck we would need for our wild camp in the Okavango Delta including all our tents, cooking utensils and food for our cook group which I was helping to cook along with fellow travellers, Lauren and Grant.
The safari vehicles we would be using for the trip arrived at 6.30am. We loaded the vehicles with our equipment and set off for the Okavango Delta park which has 18,000 square kilometres of wetlands which varies in size with the seasons and the amount of rain in fat off Angola. We all got wind blasted as the vehicle had no front screen to shield is from the wind on the main road. To our relief, we turned off the road and drove through scrubland into the park for a land safari up until we reached the waters of the Okavango Delta. We didn't see any animals and were happy to arrive at a point by the water where there were a large number of canoes, guides from the local village and a fee groups of tourists waiting to be boated into the Delta. We offloaded all our gear and, with the help of our male and female local guides, we loaded the canoes for our trip. Then it was our turn to climb into the two man canoe. I shared me canoe with Lauren and we positioned ourselves with Lauren in the front and myself further back. Our local guide and boatman was a young man called Nathan. He propelled the boat with a long polenta bit like the boats in Venice and had a very accomplished technique, no doubt practiced since childhood. We set out on a beautiful waterway edge with long grasses and many lilies and lily pads floating on the water. We passed a group of hippos on the open water to the right. We entered narrower waterways again edged with high grasses and covered with water lilies. There was a huge density of bird life to see along the way including, open billed storks, darters (large cormorants), egrets, Jesus birds (that walk on water lilies) and a very large heron. The feeling of moving peacefully through the water was wonderful. The waterways had a very evocative and timeless atmosphere. Time seemed to temporarily stand still as I trailed my fingers in the warm waters that we were pushed through by Nathan. After an hour or so of deeply calming and relaxing boating we arrived at the shore of our bush camp on an island in the waterways. I was disappointed that we couldn't have continued on the waterways filled with life for longer as I could have done that for hours. But with the fierce and hot sun it was probably sensible that we rested in the shade. We put up our tents on the island and then had several hours to rest until we began a walking safari through the bush at 4.30pm. We had nice pasta salad lunch cooked by the cook group. We also had a cooling dip in a shallow area of the waterways safe from crocodiles. This was a wonderful experience to kneel in the warm copper coloured waters to our necks, with small fish in the water beneath us, large snails floating by on the surface, and a riot of birdlife passing overhead including a kite. The sun was very intense and I had to reluctantly retreat when my shoulders started to burn in the water. I watched fellow traveller, Brian, from Englamd try to steer one of the canoes and falllimg nto the water rather dramatically backwards.. spent the rest of the afternoon relaxing and playing some football with fellow travellers, Oscar and Simon, recent arrivals from Switzerland, and one of the local guides. I was curious about a bird which had a distinctive descending call and one of the local guides informed me that it was the woodland kingfisher.
The afternoon sun remained very hot as we boarded the canoes to take a short trip across the waterway to where the bush walk would begin. We disembarked from the canoes and soon cam across a large hippo feeding in the grasses near a small lake and then returning to the safety of thewaters. We then walked by a small lake that had a large congregation of hippos some of whom yawned widely as a sign of aggression in the reddening evening sun. We walked on through bush and open grasslands. The scene again seemed timeless and evocative. After some time walking through the scrubland, we saw about six or seven giraffe walking in the distance, also surrounded by a large herd of zebra and some buffalo feeding in the grasses. We watched them for some time through binoculars. A couple of giraffes walked across closer to us. Nathan also gave us a lot of his knowledge about the local plants and animals, their uses and behaviours respectively. For example one cactus like plant could be used for making rope and was growing next to a forty year old termite mound which he told us about. We watched the many animals in this area for quite a while before moving across the scrubland plain and over to an area where we managed to get close to a small herd of zebra who moved together and muzzled each other affectionately. There were other walking groups here which took away from the experience somewhat. We then began to walk back to where we started and passed thr bones and skin of a long dead large male giraffe. We also passed termite mounds that had been dug out by the nocturnal aardvark to a depth of some three to four metres. We also saw the small mounds created by the mole rat. Apparently, it is seen as bad luck locally to see a mole rat. We returned to the lake with the hippos still moving around each other and making their low rumbling calls. We walked back to the canoes for a cooling trip back across the waterway as the sun began to set and turn the light to a golden yellow reflecting beautifully in the water. The day lilies were slowly closing their petals. As we disembarked from the canoes near our camp, a camp fire had been lit and the red flames of the fire were echoed in the red flaming sky as the sun sank beneath the horizon.
It was time for us to cook thr meal for the group. It was quite testing cooking sausages and mash with fried onion, cabbage and gravy. The heat and smoke of the cooking fire combined with the heat of the evening was quite overwhelming. The rest of our fellow travellers sat down by a campfire below the camp were wonderfully entertained with traditional singing and dancing from the local guides. The sounds were very evocative of an older Africa where the sounds of people singing (and it seems that all the local people still sing and dance together naturally and easily) combine seamlessly with the sounds of the frogs and insects in the nearby waterways. After thr well received dinner we emulated the local singers by singing different Beatles songs while we cleared up the dishes. We returned to sit around the camp fire and were wowed by the night sky blazing with infinite stars. The milky way rising above the horizon could be seen clearly defined with shooting stars flashimg through the cleat sky. We mused about how planets out there contained life like the panoply of living beings that surrounded us in the fertile Delta. I retired to my tent with the outside fly sheet rolled up so I could see the stars and feel any breeze to break the stifling heat. I went off to sleep as the frogs and insects created the most fantastic din outside - they seemed as infinite in their multitudes as the stars in our galaxy shining above. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 59
- środa, 22 stycznia 2020 02:47
- 🌙 23 °C
- Wysokość: 3 107 ft
BotswanaNgamiland East19°43’54” S 23°28’42” E
Okavanga Delta - Day 2

I woke up early again for the second bush walk we had planned in the morning. Lions had been heard roaring in the distance. As I walked down to the campfire which had been kept burning and its red glow was now echoing a sunrise of the deepest reds and oranges. Hundreds of birds filled the sky with their morning flights. Egrets shone bright white in the sunlight. We could see a hippo feeding on the lush grasses on the other side of the waterway along with several buffalo. We then walked down to the waiting canoes for our bush walk before breakfast. We crossed the waterway in the welcome cool and refreshing morning air. We walked past the hippos in the lake that shone as they yawned and vied for position in yellow early morning sun. We walked through the cooler bush and scrubland. We saw a few antelope ? specialised for life in the often waterlogged delta. We also saw buffalo running in the distance. As we continued on our walk we came across a large herd of seven or eight giraffe all congregating close together and eyeing us warily before loping off into the trees. This was another wonderful encounter with these gentle and stately wild animals. We returned to the lake to view the hippos for the last time before reboarding our canoes to return to the camp. We had some breakfast looking out across waterway and then packed up all our gear back onto the canoes. We got back into the canoes for our return through the delta's majestic waterways. This time I swapped places with Lauren and sat in the front of the canoe. I trailed my hands in the water as we swept past the grasses and the lilies with open billed storks taking easily into the air as we approached them. A malachite kingfisher flew across the front of the boat in a bright flash of fluorescent blue. We met some tourists coming in the opposite direction which created a temporary waterway traffic jam. I watched the one of the local female guides expertly and lithely paddle the canoe in front of us. Again, this evoked a sense of an earlier and wilder Africa. We saw the darters and the Jesus birds in abundance and saw vultures circling in the sky in the distance. I began to experience the relaxing hypnosis of this timeless place. The rhythm of the boat through the water made for a joyous experience. My only regret was that I couldn't spend more time on the water in this place of natural wonders.
All too soon we were disembarking from the canoes, loading our gear onto the safari vehicles and bouncing along the rough, riven park tracks back to the Sedia hotel. Once again we got wind blasted on the main road.
I had some lunch with Lauren at the hotel which caused some hilarity when Lauren was talking to me with a mouth full of ice cream and I couldn't understand a single word. There was then just enough time for a quick dip in the pool and a shower before heading to the local airport on the truck for our flight over the Delta. The heat of the day was almost unbearablle and I had to drink continuously to avoid dehydration. We checked in at the small local airport and passed through the security procedures. There were eight of us on the flight (Grant, Jemma, Lauren, Monica, English Brian, Irish Beian, Monica and myself). As we took the airport bus out onto the tarmac we had the choice of two small six seater propeller planes. Four of us got onto each plane. Lauren, Monica, English Brian and myself got onto one of the planes. The young male pilot went through a quick debrief for the flight and we were soon taxiing out onto the runway. We trundled down the runway behind the other plane before picking up speed and rising slowly up into the sky. It took a while to adjust to the wind buffering this small plane up and down. We soon reached our cruising height of only 500 feet to get as close a view of the Delta animals as possible. There was a beautiful vista below us of green trees stretching out to the horizon on both sides, interspersed with deep copper coloured, reflective waterways and small lakes. Before long we began to see antelope and buffalo. We saw many hippos huddled together in the waterways and many out of the water feeding on the grasses. I saw a waterhog and two giraffe pass quickly by below the plane. Lauren and I shouted out thr animals we saw and pointed to where we saw them. Then we began to see large, light grey elephants amidst the trees below. Then we saw a small group of about five rhinos far to the left. The pilot turned the plane so that we could get a close up of the dark grey coloured rhinos on the right hand side. As we approached the rhino we saw lots of elephants including a large heard. It was amazing to look down on all these animals and have a perspective of the density of large mammal life in this vast Delta of waterways drawn out like veins across the sun baked and sandy landscape. We continued to see many hippos, crocodiles and other mammals as we passed over the waterways. We also saw more giraffe. The other plane with our fellow travellers came alongside us at one point and then flew above us to come down on our left hand side. As we returned back through the Delta we passed over the camp where we had canoed the previous day. I could see a walking party heading out to the lake with the hippos. We also flew over the staging post filled with canoes where we began our canoe trip on the waterways. It was really special to get an aerial perspective of our canoe journey the previous day. We then returned to the airport after a 45 minute flight and landed with a tyre squeak and a small bounce in the cross winds. It had been an exhilarating experience to fly through the wind turbulence in this small plane and to witness such an abundance of mammal life below us. We all excitedly recounted what we had seen on the flight as we returned to the airport on the airport bus. We then got taxis back to the Sedia Hotel. A few of us ordered food in the hotel restaurant. The evening remained extremely hot and I guzzled down fruit juices and mineral water to try and quench my unquenchable thirst. Lauren joined us for her meal later in the evening and we chatted while she ate her dinner before retiring to our tents to try and get some sleep in the oppressive heat of the night. It took me a while to get to sleep in my tent with its rolled up sides to try and maximise its coolness and try and capture any breeze. I then woke up in the early hours with things on my mind and couldn't get back to sleep. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 60
- czwartek, 23 stycznia 2020 17:05
- ⛅ 31 °C
- Wysokość: 3 261 ft
NamibiaShaoha Island18°6’42” S 21°35’24” E
Journey to Namibia

I got up early at 5am as I had been awake since 3am and couldn't get back to sleep with my mind running over something that was pre-occupyimg me. I got a shower and joined my fellow travellers for breakfast. We were soon heading off in the truck and stopped at a nearby shopping area to spend the rest of our Botswana puna before we reached Namibia. I was feeling tired and low in mood with my night thoughts and feelings still pre-occupying me.
We drove on over rough roads and sun baked bush and scrubland filled with small, hardy trees. The sandy soil was noticeably drier and presaged our passage to the desert landscapes of Namibia. We stopped by the roadside for lunch in the shade of a tree to protect us from the blazing sunshine. We then drove to the border with Namibia and had an easy and efficient passage through immigration.
We then drove into the Bwabwata National Park and saw warthog, impala, kudu and zebra by the road as we passed through the tree filled park.
It wasn't long before we arrived out our destination, Rainbow Camp which was a scenic campsite right next to the Okavango river which eventually fills the Delta and then dries into the ground without ever reaching the sea. There was a nice bar area and swimming pool with wonderful views over the river and river islands. We soon saw two hippos frolicking in the water by a nearby island.
As we arrived we were offered a two hour sunset cruise on the river which many of us decided to do. We set off on a covered river cruise boat with chairs up the river in the yellow late afternoon sunlight. We sailed up to some lovely waterfalls and rapids and moored on a beautiful, sandy, small river island where we could get a better view of the falls. We then headed downstream with wonderful views over the river and found a small group of hippos bathing contentedly in the waters. We were able to draw up very close to them and film them surfacing and yawning. Their skin shone in the bright evening sunlight as they eyed us warily. Further downstream we came across a hippo feeding on the grasses above the river but she quickly returned to the safety of the river water with a big splash as we approached. We saw a crocodile slide past the boat with only ripples in the water and his or her eyelids showing. We passed fishermen in dug out canoes and I considered how they were quite brave to fish on the river with so many potentially dangerous hippos around. We came across more hippos further downstream and again were able to get very close to them. There was a big thunder storm approaching which made for some dramatic photos of the clouds reflecting in the river water. All too soon it was time to head back to the campsite and we were also racing the darkening skies behind us to arrive at the campsite before the rain arrived. There were nice views of the setting sun as we returned and we passed more hippos on the water surface and then dipping down below the water as we passed. We docked back at the campsite and I raced back to the camp ground to quickly put up my tent before the approaching storm arrived. I joined my fellow travellers for dinner and wolfed it down so as not to get caught in the potential rain storm. However, as it turned out, the storm rumbled around the campsite with big blue flashes of lightning without actually raining on us. The evening sky darkened into black and the frogs struck up a chorus. I watched the lightning flashing darkness beyond the river for some minutes before retiring to my tent for an early night ahead of a very early 4.30am start the next morning. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 61
- piątek, 24 stycznia 2020 13:57
- ⛅ 33 °C
- Wysokość: 3 681 ft
NamibiaHalali Airport19°2’24” S 16°28’12” E
Journey to Etosha National Park

I had the same issue as the previous night when I woke up in the early hours and the wheels of my mind started turning keeping me awake until i got up at 4am, packed away my tent, and waited for Jemma to arrive to unlock the truck so we could get our breakfast. I remained pre-occupied with the difficult emotions and thoughts of the previous day as we set off early at 6am as the dawn light began to give the river a morning glow. As we joined the main road, a stunning orange sun began to rise over the straight road behind us. At the same time a double rainbow appeared in the dark storm clouds ahead of us. It was another of those breathtaking scenes that Africa so often provides.
After a few hour's driving, we stopped at a shopping mall to buy lunch and exchange some money which was an interminable process in Namibia. We ploughed on through mile after mile of tree filled scrubland. After some time we turned off the main highway onto a long, dusty country road, passing through tree filled plains now interspersed with palm trees. We passed a school, seemingly in the middle of nowhere, where an exuberant group of teenage girls, then another group of boys waved and whooped at us on the truck.
We carried on through miles of scrubland dried and heated by a merciless sun. After travelling through the day we finally reached the 20000 square kilometre Etosha National park, renowned for its concentrations of animals around its huge salt pan and water holes.. it didn't take long after we entered through the gates of the park before we were seeing lots of animals. We saw wildebeest and zebra feeding on grasses in the distance. We saw several giraffe feeding in the trees. Herds of impala fed near the salt pan. Then, excitingly, we saw a large male lion resting under a tree that we watched for a while. We saw two red hartebeest standing erect and vigilant and later a herd of oryx. Suddenly, we stopped by a small corpse of trees and saw a female adult cheetah with three cubs lying relaxedly in the grass. We watched this wonderful scene for a long time as two of the cubs rose to join their mother. The mother eventually got up to walk languidly and purposefully across the grasses towards a herd of zebra. The other cub did not join them and only realised with some anxiety that it had been left behind and started to make a loud bird like call to try and alert its mother.. However, its mother was now far away across the plain. The poor cheetah cub grew more anxious by the minute and we had to leave without knowing the outcome of this wildlife drama. We drove on and saw another lion resting under a tree. We also saw kudu, a hyena, a vulture on a tree with outstretched wings, springbok, and the gloriously named glorious bastard bird which is a very large bird standing erect in the grasses. It had been a wonderful experience to see so many animals in this huge nature reserve.
We then arrived at our campsite, Halali Camp, within the park which had stony camping grounds and basic, but good, facilities. It also had a waterhole lit up with light to view the animals that visit it. We walked straight up to the waterhole and were rewarded by seeing a herd of elephants, including a young elephant, just leaving the waterhole and heading back out into the bush. We put up our tents, had dinner, and then headed back to the waterhole later in the evening. We were further rewarded by seeing an adult female rhinoceros with its young infant standing protected behind. The mother stood statuesque under the yellow lights for several minutes before slowly walking to the water to take a drink with her young infant following behind. A small herd of impala also fed around the waterhole and several of the male impala sized each other up by loudly locking horns. The rhino slowly walked away from the waterhole with her infant following behind. There was a majestic stillness to the whole scene. The waterhole at night created an evocative atmosphere with crickets chirping, birds flying over the water, and giant moths flying around the lights.
We returned to the campsite to pitch our tents and to eat some well needed dinner. After dinner, I returned to the waterhole to experience the deeply peaceful atmosphere once again, but only saw the impala readying themselves for sleep this. I had been joined at the waterhole by Lauren and English Brian and as we walked back to our tents we saw the great arc of the milky way over the clear night sky, ablaze with stars, and the Southern Cross constellation rising above the tree tops. I was very tired after a long day and fell asleep quickly after I returned to my tent.
Wildebeest, zebra, impala, giraffe, red hartebeest, lions, oryx, warthog, cheetah, rhino, eland, kudu, glorious bastard, hyena, springbok, Thompson's gazelle, vulture, honey badger, Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 62
- sobota, 25 stycznia 2020 06:24
- ⛅ 22 °C
- Wysokość: 3 599 ft
NamibiaOshikoto18°55’48” S 16°29’18” E
Etosha National Park - Day 2

I woke up early again and got up at 4.30am. After packing away my tent and eating some breakfast, I rushed up to the waterhole again to see if there were any animals there. There were only a few birds skimming the water for a drink but the early morning atmosphere was still calming and very enjoyable. Again, Lauren and English Brian joined me for a few minutes before we had to board our truck for a morning safari drive through the Etosha park. There was a beautiful sunrise as we were leaving the campsite with a large orange sun inching into the sky. I decided to go and sit in an area of the truck called 'the beach' which is an opening in the top of the truck over the front cab where you can kneel and have 360 degree views of the surrounding landscape. This was the first time I had tried sitting on the Beach and it wouldn't be the last as I really enjoyed the clear views of the surrounding countryside and wildlife. As we slowly trundled along white dusty roads we began to see animals. We saw herds of impala, a few eland and some oryx wandering between the sparse trees. Giraffe were also seen. Thousands of butterflies rose from the road verges before us and often filled the truck with flitting life. We saw a falcon fly elegantly into a tree and a lilac crested roller flash multi-colours through the sky. We saw a tiny duiker antelope and kudu. We then drove out towards the huge salt pan, dried lake. Many ostrich strutted around this area, flapping their wings to display to the females. We drove out onto the salt pan which stretched beyond the horizon with cracked, salty crust but damp wetter mud underneath.
As we continued along the edge of the salt pan we saw large herds of springbok, zebra and wildebeest. We arrived at our next campsite, Okaukuejo, at around mid-day and Often the driver let us know that there were animals at the waterhole by the campsite so we immediately went there past the plush chalets of the large and upmarket campsite. We were greeted with a stunning and timeless view of many different animals coming down to the waterhole. There was a herd of wildebeest sniffing and snorting as they drank the waters. Hundreds of zebra walled around the waterhole and drunk the water in stripy lines of threes and fours before departing and being replaced by more zebra. Several oryx walled deep into the water to drink. Springbok also added their delicate, thin legged presence to the scene. This was the quintessential experience of the animal filled waterhole in Africa that i had hoped for and it was one the highlights of the entire trip. The animals began to leave the waterhole in numbers and we left to put up our tents, eat some lunch and cool off from the intense heat with a swim in the campsite swimming pool. At 4pm we set off for an evening game drive on Chui the truck through the Etosha park. There were less of us on this trip and we took some alcohol to drink. I drank some red wine which allowed me to open up more to the landscapes and animals before us. We saw lots of animals in the park again. We saw large herds of zebra by the road, rolling extravagantly in the dust and living their lives as they have done for millennia. We saw herds of impala and springbok and red hartebeest. We saw a jackal running quickly through the low scrubland, ostrich, a falcon, and a vulture. We saw a lone hyena lopimg it's way through bushes. At one point we turned down a road towards the vast salt pan. As we passed the herds of zebra and springbok, with the wine relaxing me into this epic scene, I had an epiphany of sorts, where I deeply felt the spirit of Africa in this ancient place with the endless cycle of life, death and rebirth playing out over millions of years. As we returned towards the campsite, our special experience was capped off by seeing a young male lion close to the road with two of his make companions further on in the distance.
We returned to the campsite and went over the waterhole to view the sunset with a big orange sun dipping below pink and auburn clouds. We then rushed back for some dinner of burgers and fried potatoes. Lauren and I then headed back over to the waterhole as the stars began to appear in the night sky. Lauren and I have always been very fortunate when we view wildlife together, and this night was no exception. A female black rhino and her young infant were arriving at the waterhole just as we were arriving. We watched the mother gently lap water with her infant also taking a drink. After a few minutes the mother and her baby walked back up the hill and into the night. We waited and whispered conversation by the waterhole until the mother and baby returned again for another drink, sniffed the air as if to try to smell the humans watching on the other side of the waterhole and somewhat nervously retreated back in the darkness. We heard lions roaring in the distance which always makes the hairs stand up on the back of your neck. We waited late into the evening with the tantalising hope of the lions we heard in the distance visiting the waterhole. We didn't see the lions, but we were rewarded with seeing a different lone black rhino (all the rhino we saw in Etosha National Park were black rhino) come down to drink. As I watched it through my binoculars, I suddenly saw a hyena behind the rhino also making it's way down the bank to drink. We then had the amazing scene of a wild rhino drinking at the edge of the water with a hyena also lapping the water noisily only a few metres away from the rhino. They didn't seem to be bothered by each other at all and both eventually left and went their separate ways in the darkness. We waited and talked until 11.15pm until tiredness overwhelmed us and we returned to our tents. I watched the milky way in the clear sky and the flashes of lightning in the far distance before retiring to my tent and taking a long time to fall asleep with thoughts on my mind and lions roaring in the distance.
Animal list - Impala, eland, oryx, giraffe, falcon, lilac crested roller, duiker, kudu, ostrich, honey badger
Game drive evening- zebra, impala, springbok, red hartebeest, jackal, goshawk, wildebeest, vulture, ostrich, hyena, ground squirrel, lion x3 Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 63
- niedziela, 26 stycznia 2020 03:54
- ☁️ 22 °C
- Wysokość: 3 602 ft
NamibiaOshana19°9’42” S 15°58’52” E
Etosha National Park - Day 3

I had to get up very early at 5am for a 6.30am game drive through the Etosha park, and the wine and late night had taken their toll on me and left me feeling very tired. I showered. packed up my tent, had breakfast and boarded the truck for another safari. The morning was cool and pleasant as the sun rose between bright orange edged clouds. We were hardly out of the campsite and one of the white sroned roads, when we came across a large pride of female lions with many cubs crossing the road ahead of us. We watched them walk and then lay down in the grass. Then on the other side of the truck we saw a pregnant female lion lying close to the road and occasionally looking up at the truck. She took up a classic 'sphinx' like pose and looked majestic in the early morning light. She began calling to her lioness companions across the road with that evocative low rumbling roar and was replied to in turn by the rest of her pride. It was wonderful to witness this low rumbling roar up close for the first time. A little further down the road, we saw two impressive male lions with big, thick, dark brown manes, walking together across the open plain to small stream where they drank together, heads down, for some time. They looked regal and magnificent in the yellow light of the early morning sun.
There were lots of animals out in the cool morning with zebra, wildebeest and springbok all on view. We saw two ostrich walking away through the grasslands. We visited several waterholes bit only one was populated with many zebra, wildebeest and oryx. We next came across a female jackal with two cubs running quickly by thr roadside and sniffing out morsels to eat. They found some meat which looked like the remains of a snake which they ate with a look of satisfaction and contentment on their thin jawed faces. The mother then quickly ran off with one of cubs who had been curiously investigating the sound of a nearby bird. The other cub seemed to wait behind and hid beneath some undergrowth.
We saw the capercaillie like bird again which may be the koha?. It took off noisily and clucked loudly when disturbed by the truck. We then came across a large black rhino heading directly for us as we parked on the roadside. He came within a few metres of the truck, stood still for a few seconds, and then suddenly mock charged the truck which was a genuinely frightening moment which made me instinctively step backwards even though I was on the 'beach' at the top of the truck and perfectly safe. After the mock charge, the rhino quickly backed away and ran around the back of the truck. It was quite something to experience what a rhino charge would be like for the first time. Further along the road we saw another black rhino a bit further away. It was time for our safari to end and as we returned to pass our campsite and leave the Etiosha Park through the nearby south gates, we all agreed that it had been an amazing final game drive in the park.
We travelled on through miles of brush and scrubland towards our next destination in Namibia. The sun became very hot again as we stopped to buy lunch and food for our cook group. We travelled on in baking heat and I started to feel very exhausted from a string of nights where I had gone to sleep quite late and got into an unfortunate pattern of waking up at 3am without being able to go back to sleep. Everything I tried to do started to go wrong and my rucksack fell of a ledge on the truck and my water bottle spilled all over the floor. I clearly needed to stop everything and get some rest. We stopped at a traditional village for a tourist tour, but I decided to rest on the truck instead which was a good decision. We then drove on to our campsite for the night, Cheetah Park (see next blog).
Animal list - Lions - pride and female, two males, walking female. Jackal - mother and two cubs. Koha? - pheasant like bird. Rhino charge. Second rhino. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 63
- niedziela, 26 stycznia 2020 16:36
- ⛅ 33 °C
- Wysokość: 4 245 ft
NamibiaKhorixas Constituency19°36’24” S 15°4’12” E
Cheetah Park

We arrived at the Cheetah Park campsite in the late afternoon in burning heat. This was a park with a number of cheetahs. A few of the cheetahs had been hand reared and were tame around people. We immediately saw one of these cheetahs laid by the gate of an adjoining house. We were given a quick debrief on how to behave around the cheetahs and were then ushered through the gates along with a group of Russian tourists. The cheetah by the gate actually led us to the back garden where we would spend time with th cheetahs. - he had clearly done this many times before. It was humbling to walk alongside such a lithe, elegant and self possessed predator. Once in the garden, two other cheetahs joined us, and we sat on the ground as they came up to lick us on the arms and legs. Their tongues were rough like sandpaper as they licked my arm and leg. They purred with pleasure just like house cats. We were able to take lots of photos and videos of these magnificent animals up close. I had a special moment of connection with one of the cheetahs when he came up behind me to lick my arm and then lifted his head to lick my neck and face. I was left with a pungent smell of cheetah one my arm. The cheetah's keeper then brought in some meat for the cheetahs which they fed on lustily, chewing hard and breaking any bones with their tough bite. After this special experience we left the garden and boarded the back of a vehicle to drive to another area of the park where there were wilder cheetahs which followed our vehicles so that we could film them walking beside the truck. At one point we stopped while the keeper threw food to the cheetahs which they fought over until all the three cheetahs had been given their fill of meat. It was again wonderful to watch and photograph these animals at such close hand. We then returned to the campsite to find a lovely camping area in the wild bush to pitch our tents. I had a busy evening helping to cook thr dinner with Lauren and Grant. Our egg fried rice with vegetables went down well with our fellow travellers. There was a stunning thin crescent moon where you could see the darker side of it because of the light still reflecting from the Earth. Above lay a large, bright Venus. The stars filled the sky on the clear sky and I watched them through the mesh of the tent as I slowly fell asleep in the cooling night air. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 64
- poniedziałek, 27 stycznia 2020 15:12
- ☀️ 33 °C
- Wysokość: 3 399 ft
NamibiaErongo21°50’18” S 15°12’30” E
Journey to Spitzkoppe

It had cooled nicely under the starry night. I woke up in my current unwanted pattern at around 3.30an and lay awake watching the stars until I got up to shower and breakfast at 5.30am. The horizon had reddened beautifully for thr forthcoming sunrise. We set off from Cheetah Park to head further south into Namibia. We drove along stony rough roads that made for a bouncy and challenging journey. We stopped off in a small village for provisions. There were some local women street sellers in the topless dressing that is traditional in this area. Tribal name?They also wore bead necklaces and bracelets. We passed on into increasingly dry and arid landscape. The trees grew less and smaller and the areas of yellow sands grew bigger. We were now entering the Namib desert. We moved out of the flat plains and into a more mountainous area with impressive ochre coloured rock formations. The mountains also rose in a dusky red from the yellow sands. This was more the classic image of the Namibian deserts. We drove through scattered houses that had a ramshackle appearance of various poles shackled together. One house had strange mannequin figures outside and there were pieces of wood stacked in small square columns. The women dressed unusually with head scarves that had a long thin top to them.
The rock formations got more spectacular and the mountains got higher as we approached Spitzkoppe. They were formed out of a rounded, pinkish orange granite with large boulders balancing on their tops and sides. We turned off into a large campsite with spectacular views of the mountains behind. There were no facilities on our camping spot so this would be a more wild bush camp. We climbed up the rounded rocks behind the site which led up to a large rock arch where we stood and took photos. This was an atmospheric place with an austere but beautiful rocky desert lanscape all around. We sat amidst the rock formations before returning to the truck for dinner. We played cards on the truck before dinner which added some fun to the late afternoon and kept us out of the intense sun for a while. I pitched my tent without its waterproof outer cover to help stay cool in the night and watch the stars. I had to peg down the inner tent as there was quite a strong desert wind blowing.
The sun began to sink towards the horizon as the early evening approached and we wanted to walk up to a high point on the big rounded rock formation behind the camp. However, it was quite a challenge to get up there as the rough granite sides were quite steep. Lauren and I walked around to the back of the formation and managed to find a route up to the top but it still required some difficult climbs through rock crevices. We met some of our fellow travellers at the top who had jumped across a rock crevice and found a way up from the front of the formation. The view from the top had breathtaking views over the surrounding mountains and rock formations. The large orange sun slowly descended to a gap in distant mountains and created one of the most atmospheric and beautiful sunsets I have ever seen. The sun slowly disappeared behind the mountain and the sky reddened dramatically. We decided to pick our way back down through the rocks before it became too dark. Some of our fellow travellers tried to come down thr same side of the formation later and got a bit lost so we had to help direct them down the right way. I got some lovely photos of the reddening skies at the bottom. We then had a wonderful dinner cooked by our driver, Often, and tour leader, Jemma. There was a beautiful thin crescent moon and Venus shining bright nearby in the darkening night sky.
People retired to their tents early. However, Lauren and I decided to take photos of the stars and milky way in the clear night sky. We got some wonderful photos and it was lovely to spend time under a nightsky with no light pollution and so filled with stars. We could see the Southern Cross constellation rising. At around 10.30pm a large 4x4 vehicle drove past us and then returned and drove into our campsitr directly heading for our fellow traveller, Vincent, who was camping out of his tent to sleep under the stars. We had to literally run and jump in front of thr vehicle with our head torches on in order to stop Vincent getting run over. It turned out that the vehicle contained young Chinese tourists who wanted to visit the rock arch in the middle of the night. We advised them not to try and negotiate the tricky and steep formations in the dark with only phone torches. However, they ignored us and walked around the formations getting lost and talking noisily waking up our fellow travellers in the process.
We continued to watch the stars and take photos until I became too tired and returned to my tent to sleep at about 11.30pm. I slowly fell asleep in the warm night air looking at the stars through the netting of my inner tent. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 65
- wtorek, 28 stycznia 2020 07:52
- ⛅ 23 °C
- Wysokość: 3 189 ft
NamibiaKlein Spitzkuppe21°54’27” S 15°3’48” E
Journey to Swakopmund

I slept reasonably well until 5am but woke up feeling tired after my late night star watching. I got up and walked out to a nearby rock to take photos of the pre-dawn mountains that had a deep red hue. I packed up my tent and had some light breakfast before climbing the rock formation behind the camp to take photos of a beautiful sunrise which turned the granite rock from deep red, to orange and then to yellow.
All too soon it was time to get on the truck and.leave for our next destination. We headed towards the Namibian coast past dramatic and desolate, flat, sandy plains. The weather grew dramatically colder as we approached the coast with its cold seas welling up from the Antarctic and creating Namibia's unusual climate. We drove into the mists created by the cold sea air meeting thr hot desert air. We all began to put jackets and warm layers on as the cold wind blew through the trucks open sides.
We reached the coast with sand stretching for hundreds of miles and big rolling waves crashing onto the shore. We drove to where there is a huge Cape fur seal colony called the Cape Cross seal colony. We walked out to get very close to the thousands of seals with many young pups. A wooden walkway allowed you to walk along the top of this enormous colony. It was special to watch the behaviour of all these seals, fighting for space, calling loudly, walking to and from the sea and suckling their young. There was a very pungent, fishy smell coming from the colony which took a while to get used to. It was humbling to witness such a mass of mammal life in one place. My only disappointment was that we didn't have more time to spend with this remarkable scene of nature in all its abundance.
We drove on to eat some fresh fish and chips at a restaurant in a nearby town which was very tasty and enjoyable which sated my hunger well. Next we drove along the coastline and stopped to see one of the many shipwrecks along this notoriously dangerous coast for shipping.
We then passed miles of unbroken sandy coastline with big rolling waves, and stretching inland to miles of desert sands. We arrived at a more industrial mining area which led to the modern looking town of Swakopmund to our destination hostel/hotel, Amanpuri. We unpacked in a very nice dorm room and decided on our activities for the next couple of days from the debrief we received at the hostel. Everyone on the trip went for a nice meal at a local restaurant with some enjoyable local music from a male group at the end of the meal. I retired early to bed to hopefully catch up on my sleep on a comfortable bed. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 66
- środa, 29 stycznia 2020 09:14
- ⛅ 18 °C
- Wysokość: 49 ft
NamibiaSwakop22°41’24” S 14°31’60” E
Swakopmund - Day 2

I slept much better in a proper bed and got up at 6.30am to do a 'desert tour' of the Namibian sand dunes. I had a nice cooked breakfast at the hostel before meeting our guide for the morning wildlife tour, Buzz, with my fellow travellers Irish Brian, Oscar, Simon, Monica and Annette.. Buzz was a young man who had studied wildlife since childhood and had a vast knowledge of the local African wildlife. He proved to be an excellent guide. As we headed out to the sand dunes beyond the edge of town, Buzz pointed out approximately 200,000
cormorants flying out to sea in a long line miles long to search for fish.
We turned off the main road into a reserved area of the national park. We passed an area of horse bones that were buried during the first world war when Namibia was a colony of Germany. There was no food for the horses because of a drought and an attempt to bring food and water to the horses by rail failed because the sand dunes covered the rail line. The horses became I'll with human transmit table flu and were shot and buried by local people as a result. The wind had then uncovered their bones from the sand. We drove on and passed a turn bird and wild gerbil tracks. Buzz explained how many of Namibia's animal species are endemic and unique to Namibia. He talked about the delicate lychen fields in the desert that build up over many years and are easily damaged - wheel tracks over 40 years old can still be seen through the lychen. The area is now more heavily protected. Then Buzz saw the tracks of a Peringuey's adder and managed to locate. It was a small (Buzz explained that animals are small in the desert to need less food and water) but beautiful snake and was quite angry to be disturbed. It had a very poisonous bite that could make one seriously unwell. The adder feeds by dangling its tail like an insect to attract lizards before striking at over 300 kilometres per hour. We watched it and took photographs for several minutes before allowing it to return to its original baskimg position. Buzz then tracked an adder which had buried itself to the point of invisibility with only the top of its head showing in the sand. Next Buzz found a beautiful Namaqua chameleon which changed from a dark blue to white before our eyes in order to regulate its temperature. Buzz fed it small insects so that we could see it catch them with its elongated tongue. It also had the chameleons strange independently rotating eyes. It was a fascinating creature to watch up close. Buzz talked about the older large sand dunes that move several metres each year with the wind and threaten to block the path of a nearby river that has run dry with a drought lasting for the past seven years. The sand dunes have been bleached yellow by the sun. This contrasted with lower, newer dunes made from sea sands that have oxidized to a deep red colour. The combination of these sands made for interesting changes in tone and colour in the dunes. As we drove on through the dunes, Buzz noticed a movement of sand down a sand dune bank and put his hand in the sand below to pull out a small shovel snouted lizard. This lizard had a mark on his tail where he had lost it and it had regrown. It was a dominant male which was evidenced by having all, except one of, his fingers and toes. Males fight for the right to mate with the females and bite off each other's toes in the process. This then restricts their speed of movement as they rely on their specialised toes to propel themselves at high speed through the sand. Again, we watched the lizard for several minutes before he was allowed to scurry away and dig himself back into the sand to protect himself from the hot desert sun. He also captured a beetle that had grooves on it's back where the water from the sea mists that come in over the desert collect at its tail and are transported by the wind over its back and into its mouth. It is also the only species of this beetle without wings to help conserve its water. It is 60 per cent water and is the best thing to eat if a person is stranded in the desert. We drove on to where Buzz located the burrow of a nocturnal, web footed gecko. Buzz carefully dug it out of its burrow in the sand. He explained that the sand remains at a fairly constant and cooler temperature at about 16cm below the sand surface. The gecko was a strange looking creature with coloured translucent skin and large eyes. It had to be kept in the shade so as not to damage its nocturnal adapted eyes. Buzz also showed us some of the desert plant life such as the dollar plant with round hydro-phobic leaves that drip water down to the roots. The plant also grows small fruit that dry, unravel and blow like wagon wheels across the sand dunes. Buzz poured water on a dry fruit to show how desert rains cause the fruit to transform back into its original shape when it gets wet and will then germinate. It was amazing to see the fruit reconstituting itself before our eyes when water was added. He also showed us the nara? bush which is part of the cucumber/squash family and grows small, spherical, melon like fruit which is bitter to eat. As we continued. Buzz lent out his hand from the vehicle window where a small bird, a chat, came and fed from his hand. Buzz had previously rescued this bird with a broken wing so they had a close relationship. Buzz tried to find the elusive scorpion tracks, but was unable to find a scorpion on this occasion. He said that scorpions are like the leopards of the insect world because they are nocturnal and hard to find in the daytime. They floresce when a torch is shone on them at night and are therefore easier to locate then. Our desert tour was then brought to a close and we returned to the hostel. It had been a fascinating experience of the unique Namibian wildlife and I learned a lot from Buzz's extensive knowledge and passion for wildlife.
I went for lunch at a lovely cafe with Irish Brian and we had a nice conversation about our experiences on the journey so far and how such a trip opens one up to new experiences, personal changes and previously buried emotions. I had experienced another epiphany of sorts on the return from the desert tour, where I deeply felt the spirit and density of life all around me in Namibia. After lunch we walked to the sea with it's big waves rolling in and hundreds of miles of unbroken beach. Another example of the immensity of nature all around us. We walked back up to the town to do some shopping and then returned to the hostel where I wrote up my experiences of the day. I went out for a meal in the evening and ate sushi for the first time in a sushi restaurant and really enjoyed it. The night air was very cool and I needed a jacket to stay warm. I enjoyed the cool ocean air after all the heat we have experienced in Botswana and Namibia. When I got back to hostel. I retired early to my dorm room to get an early night before an early start the following day. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 67
- czwartek, 30 stycznia 2020 09:32
- ☁️ 18 °C
- Wysokość: Poziom morza
NamibiaPelican Point22°52’12” S 14°27’0” E
Swakopmund - Day 3

I got up at 5.30am for our early sea kayaking trip. After a warm shower and cooked breakfast, we were picked up by a taxi and 7am and driven for around half an hour along the coast into a town with large container port. We were dropped off by a cafe and were met by our guide. Leon, with a 4x4 vehicle with three kayaks on top. Leon then drove us out of the very nice bay resort by the sea and along the coast. He was very informative about the local wildlife and stopped the vehicle to show us the greater and lesser flamingos feeding along the water's edge. This was the closest I had come to flamingos on the journey and it great to watch them feed and take flight by running along the water. They seem like larger birds when you're close to them. We saw many large pelicans in the water which were Leon's favourite bird. We also saw avocets feeding that migrate from as far away as Siberia. We travelled along the coast for another 30 minutes and entered a more industrial area with large sea lakes processing salt through a process of evaporation. Flamingos fed in the lakes that were early in the salination process and not too salty. We then turned off the road and onto a long area of sand. We stopped to view several jackals who lived in that area and prosper by scavenging dead birds and seal pups. Leon said that they've also learned how to hunt and kill live flamingos. After another 10 minute drive we neared the shore by an old German lighthouse and started to pass large numbers of fur seals and many pups by the shoreline. Apparently, an elephant seal was a lone visitor from Antarctica, but we didn't see it this time.
We parked by the shoreline in between two large seal colonies and prepared the kayaks and ourselves to go out on the sea water. I shared a kayak with Lauren and English Brian paddled the other kayak. We followed Leon out towards one of the seal colonies. Very soon we were paddling among large numbers of seals both in the water and on the shore. They were very curious about us and playful with us, swimming up close to our kayak and sniffing thr air. They seemed to enjoy following our kayak as we paddled. We paddled close to shore to view the large number of seals and the many small black seal pups on the shore and swimming in the shallows as they lack buoyancy when young and can't swim in deeper water. We then paddled across the water to another seal colony. After paddling along the shore we paddled out to slightly deeper water where the seals swam around our kayaks, sometimes leaping acrobatically in the air near the kayak and splashing us in the process. On Leon's advice I put my paddle in the water and several of the seals curiously investigated it and even chewed it. It was such a wonderful experience to see these animals twist and turn in the water around us, raise their head to sniff us, and be so playful with us. The guide then returned to the shore to prepare us drinks. Lauren and I also returned so that we could swap places and I could go in the front of the kayak. When we paddled back out to the seals, I really enjoyed having the unhindered view at the front of the boat. The seals had seemed to gain in confidence to approach the boat and came very close and chewed my paddle for longer. We watched the seals swimming and leaping all around us for some time. It was a wonderful experience to be this close to so many seals for so long. We didn't want to leave this amazing scene but eventually we knew that we had to return to the shore and have a hot drink before changing. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 68
- piątek, 31 stycznia 2020 07:24
- ⛅ 21 °C
- Wysokość: 2 592 ft
NamibiaParadysrivier23°18’6” S 15°46’30” E
Journey to Sossusvlei

It was time for the road again after our enjoyable stay in Swakopmund. After a good cooked breakfast, we prepared and lunch for the road and then headed off down a very cool coastal road towards the desert landscapes of our next camp. We travelled through flat, open desert sands for many miles as the sun began to appear from the morning mists of the coastal road. We headed inland and mountains began to rise up from the desert. The geology was very interesting. We travelled through a mountain range of slate like rock. We rose above a dried river valley with baboons and an oryx down in the valley, still able to gain enough moisture from the trees and plants growing on the valley bottom. The stratified yellow rock had been folded up at an angle by immense geological forces. We passed down into wide desert valleys with mountains in multicolours of rocks. Red sandstone coloured mountains rose before us on the dusty bone shaking road. Then mountains with yellow bottoms and dark brown tops that made them look like they were in the shadows of clouds. Dark grey mountains passed by. A long ridged mountain escarpment was a sandy yellow colour with a dark band of rock running right along the upper middle of it. The mountains also came in all possible shapes and sizes. There were two mountains with flat tops and other jagged ranges with pointed tops. We passed an open flat plain with widely spaced trees and saw a group of ostrich, oryx and a small herd of zebra.
We stopped off at an unusual roadside bar and shops with old cars slowly rusting in the desert sands with a mountain backdrop. There was a very tame ground squirrel by the car park which delicately took peanuts out of my hand.
We turned off the main road and into our large campsite, Sossusvlei Dune Camp Sesrium, in the desert sands within impressive backdrop of mountains and sand dunes. I put my tent up in blistering heat and went for a cool drink in the bar. I then went for a swim to cool off in a lovely small swimming pool under a tree with a big social weaver birds nest and views out to the mountains. Small birds flew down and drank from the water on the wing as I swam. It was my cool group's turn to cook the evening dinner and I felt the responsibility of the group cooling on of my recipe ideas, Boston bean pot, which was quite stressful cooking for 14 people. The meal went down well with most but the added dijon mustard was too hot for some.
After dinner we drove to a small canyon nearby. It was an interesting canyon with steep side and carved out of the surrounding mudrock which was filled with other stones and pebbles and must have been part of a river delta millions of years ago. We walked back to the top of the canyon and watched the sun go down behind some fire edged clouds. The sky then went a deep red. above the distant mountain ranges. We drove back to camp in the dark and saw baboons move through the desert scrub and low trees. Venus rose in the sky near a bright and waxing crescent moon. Back at the camp the stars shone brightly in their endless multitudes as the milky way arched overhead. It took a while to settle for sleep with people talking in nearby tents, but I did manage to drift off in the cooling night with the stars twinkling through the netting of my tent. I regretted my decision to put up my tent early as the desert sands had blown into the netting of my tent and fell down into the tent as a dusty rain through the night. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 69
- sobota, 1 lutego 2020 06:20
- 🌙 18 °C
- Wysokość: 2 110 ft
NamibiaDune 4524°43’42” S 15°28’24” E
Desert sunrise - Deadvlei - to Naute Dam

I had to get up at 4.30am to get a hot shower and pack up my tent in time to board the truck at 5.30an to drive to a very large sand dune 45 which is supposedly the second largest sand dune in Namibia. We climbed the slipping desert sands for over half an hour up to top of the dune. It was quite a climb and the views over the surrounding sand dunes and huge flat valley floor wea quite breathtaking. This was the classic evocative desert views that one imagines when thinking of Namibia. We sat on the ridge of the dune at the top and watch the sun rise behind low clouds and over distant mountains. After admiring the ever changing colours of the sands from deep reds to browns and yellows for quite some time we made our way back down the dune which was much more fun than coming up and filled my shoes with sand. Breakfast was waiting for us as we returned with pancakes and toast made by Often, our driver, and Jemma, our tour leader. After breakfast, we headed for a visit to the highest dune in Namibia and possibly the highest in the world. We parked the truck and were driven to the bottom of the giant dune in safari jeeps. We didn't have to time or energy to climb the dune but walked out to a big open area below the dunes where 700 year old dead trees stood evocatively on an old, flat, sun baked valley floor. This was a very atmospheric and peaceful place with too many other tourists there for my liking bit I was able to get away from them to have a quiet moment to myself. There used to be a river running through this valley, but after a long drought 700 years ago, the sand dunes blew across the valley and cut off the river. The trees died and the trunks were preserved in their original form for all these hundreds of years. The scene gave one a sense of the passage of time.e with the dead trees and the shifting sands of the dunes. We walked back to the jeep taxis, admiring the views of the huge red and yellow sand dunes all around us, and got back on the truck for the next long leg of our journey. We continued on through dry desert landscapes and past long mountain ranges which seemed to get more and more varied and spectacular as we drove. There were long flat mountains with different coloured striated rocks and one amazing conical mountain with a thin rocky top.
We arrived at our campsite next to the damn and lake in the early evening. After pitching our tents and pegging then down to secure them from the wind., we had a nice evening meal of vegetable and bean chilli as we watched the sun go down into a bright orange horizon, giving the clouds a fiery tinge. Hundreds of geese returned noisily to spend the night on the small islands in the lake. The dark descended and a few stars and crescent moon appeared between the clouds as we sat around the camp fire chatting. The night was extremely hot and it was difficult to get to sleep even with the outer tent removed and a hot breeze blowing. I slept between the light rain that occasionally fell through the tent during the night. Czytaj więcej
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- Dzień 70
- niedziela, 2 lutego 2020 08:55
- ⛅ 24 °C
- Wysokość: 2 726 ft
NamibiaKaras27°34’42” S 17°36’24” E
Journey to Fish River Canyon

We got up in the very early morning with the pre-dawn sky just beginning to redden. I packed away my tent in the dark as it lightly rained. It had gently rained during the night and woke me up several times wondering if i needed roll down the outer waterproof cover. It was rolled down for me by English Brian at one point when it began to remain more heavily but I rolled it back up again as I wanted to stay as cool as possible. I felt very tired after I got up as I have had so many early mornings over past nights. We had breakfast as the sky reddened further with the sunrise over distant mountains and the lake. We boarded the truck and headed out for Fish River Canyon, the second biggest canyon in the world after the Grand Canyon. We arrived and walked to the first viewing point. The view of the canyon with the shadows of the early morning sun was mesmerising. The Fish river valley which was almost dry wound its way through an enormous, deep canyon for kilometres into the distance. The layered canyon sides were dry and devoid of trees or shrubs and shone in various shades of desert yellows and browns. We then walked along the top of the canyon for about a mile with wondrous views of the canyon at different angles until we reached a final viewing point and information centre at the far end. I stopped along the walk for a while to connect with this natural wonder and feel its austere, grand and ancient atmosphere. All too soon it was time to re-board the truck and head onwards. We drove along the enormous winding gorge for many miles as it fed into an enormous pale yellow desert plain lined by rows mountain ranges. This was nature on an epic scale. We drove up into mountains composed of reddish brown loose rocks which looked unearthly like a Martian landscape. We carried on along arid roads with rock layered mountains of many shapes and colours. We passed a small conical mountain composed of grey green rock. Then we passed over into a vast plain which gave one a sense of infinite space. We travelled along the white desert road towards a huge red mountain range with impossibly folded rocks. Then we passed a long ridge with large tubes of rock looking like a giant's church organ. We descended into contrasting bright green vineyards and past a a shanty town with an incongruous supermarket where we shopped for food for the cook group. Apparently, three zebra crossed the road there. This was a fascinating area of the country with the complex and diverse geology I have ever seen in one place.
We drove on to our campsite, Felix Campsite, which was a very nice irrigated grassy campground with a lovely bar and large pool which had beautiful views over the Orange river below and mountain gorge ridges behind. We rested in the 41 degree afternoon heat, cooling in the pool and resting in the bar with a glass of red wine. I watched some sport on the TV with a fish eagle circling over the river nearby. I showered and joined my fellow travellers for our evening meal. The sky darkened with the moon waxing to the first quarter. The stars shone brightly in the clear sky with the arc of the milky way showing clearly. I went to the camp bar with Lauren where we felt protective towards our fellow traveller, Kristin, who had been struggling with the persistent attentions of one of the locals who ran the bar. We did manage to rescue Krisitn from her predicament and return to our tents. There was a lovely cooling breeze in the evening which really helped me get off to sleep with the myriad stats twinkling through the netting of my inner tent. Czytaj więcej