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- Dia 152–155
- 4 de junho de 2025 12:00 - 7 de junho de 2025
- 3 noites
- ⛅ 16 °C
- Altitude: 13 m
NamíbiaSwakopmund22°41’14” S 14°31’27” E
Swakopmund and Walvis Bay by Mel

Hello from Swakopmond (Another name hard to pronounce!),
We are back on the coast of Namibia and it is cold again!
On the 4th of June (5 months on the road!!!), we drove to Swakopmund. The previous night Andrew got pretty sick: he spewed a fair few times and didn’t fall asleep until at least 1am in the morning. Emma got sick during the morning. We think it was the water we drank at Spitzkoppe, but we are not sure as Kev and I are fine. We still had to pack up and go, which we did. Andrew slept in the car on the way to Swakopmund, which took us just under 2 hours.
We found our campsite and set up everything. The camp is right near the beach, with the sound of the waves as background sound which is very nice.
We had to find some pants for Emma (One of hers has holes all over), and for Kev and I as we only packed one pair of pants (we were thinking hot weather, so we have more shorts!), but as it is cold here, we really need another pair! So we did that. We then found a place to have lunch, which was delicious, but the kids didn’t eat anything as their stomach is not back to normal and they don’t feel like eating anything. Hopefully, their appetite will come back soon.
We went back to camp and the kids rested in their bed, while Kev and I relax, doing not much. We had a tough night too, helping Andrew, so we are pretty tired.
The next day, we tried to take it easy as the kids are slightly better, but not back to normal yet. We visited the Crystal Galerie. This is a museum/shop with a lot of semi-precious stone as Namibia has a lot of those. This is one of the trades of Namibia especially diamonds.
The gallery has the biggest quartz cluster in the world (it weighs 14 tonnes!!!) This is a massive quartz (well, lots of them attached together), taller than a human. It took them 5 years to excavate it. There are a lot of different rocks and crystals, with a rainbow of colours and shapes. It was a nice place to visit. You can buy some if you want to and have the money! Emma bought herself a blue heart pendant.
When we left the gallery, we walked pass a pharmacy, so we took the occasion to buy something to help the kids recover faster, as they are still a bit off. We had lunch (well Kev and I as the kids didn’t eat much), then went to the museum.
It was a great museum. A lot was covered: from the vegetation in the different part of Namibia, to the history of whale hunting in the area, passing by the animals you can find in Namibia, as well as old print press and the recreation of an old room from the late 19th century during the German occupation in Namibia and also some cultural object of native Namibian. There was a bit for everyone. I could have stayed longer but the kids were getting really tired so we went back to camp to rest. Early evening and bedtime.
The following day was a fantastic one. We booked a full day tour. We got picked up (which means we didn’t have to pack up the tents! Yeah!!!) and drove to Walvis bay which is a 30 minutes drive from Swakopmund) to start the day in a boat.
As soon as we left, the resident seal followed the boat and our guide for that part of the day, introduced “Moustache” to us. With the aid of a few fish, Moustache climbed on the boat with us. I am not for feeding wildlife, but the guide said he only feed this one. We could pat Moustache while he was enjoying his fish. Seals are impressive animals. Emma loved it and said it felt silky. Andrew said it was crazy to have a seal coming on the boat but also amazing. Which it was (but it still feel uneasy to feed wildlife)!! We also had the visit of a pelican looking for fish too. They are massive birds! The wingspan can be up to 3 meters. They are so beautiful to watch when they are gliding on the wind.
We sailed further away from the port in search of dolphins. And we found them!!! Several groups of bottle nose dolphins. There was a couple of boats there, so they did waves together and the dolphins had fun riding them. It was magical!!!! I loved it. Watching them doing jumps and playing in the waves was absolutely dreamy! I am so glad we got to see that. I’m not sure how many dolphins were there, but enough for us to enjoy a magnificent show.
After a while, we went it search of whales and we found one, a humpback whale!!! We could see it surfacing, blowing some air and a few times we also saw the tail coming out. When that happen, it means it is going deeper under the water, and it will take a bit of time to resurface again.
We also went close to a colony of seals. We previously saw some on land (at Cape Cross) and it was nice to see them in the water. They were so many flipping around, jumping, rolling around: they are really fun animals to watch.
While we were there, the guide got some food out and some bubbly (despite being still pretty early in the morning, but well!). Then we sailed back toward the port.
Andrew said we got so close to the dolphin and a whale and it was amazing. Touching the seal and the pelican was crazy. They are both massive animals.
Emma said it was cool to watch the dolphins and seal jumping out and do flips.
The second part of the day was on 4wd. We got picked up by another guide and we drove to the Namib desert, which is not far, as it is all around the town! The Namib desert is the oldest desert in the world and is famous for the giant dunes which border the ocean.
We did a couple of stops: One to look at flamingo. There isn’t much at this time of the year as they are just starting to come back from migration and another one, to look at a pink lake in a salt farm. It is pink because of an algae. That was pretty cool. We also looked at the sand which is a marroon-ish. The guide took Kev’s phone and took a very close up picture of the sand to show us why it is: there are lots of tiny semi precious rocks, especially rubies and quartz which give it the colour. Andrew straight away started digging when he found out you can find diamonds sometimes in the sand!!!
After that, the guide managed to find a little gecko, the webbed Namid gecko, who only lives in the Namid desert. Its skin is see-through as it lives under the sand and only come out at nighttime. The guide had to dig into the sand to find it. We obviously put it back in the sand after we had a look at it. It is super cute (very scientific description!)
We then drove to a place called Sandwich Harbour where there are some massive dunes. They are over 100 meters high. After some 4wheel driving in the dune, which was pretty fun, the guide dropped us at the top of one of the massive dunes. The landscape is pretty amazing: dunes as far as you can see and then you turn and can see the ocean and the lagoon made of brackish water (salt and fresh water for those who don’t know like me!). We took some pictures obviously. There were a lot of tourists there, but not so much that it was annoying. After a while we walked back down; I was expecting the kids to run down, but they both are still a little bit tired from being sick, so we only walked down (Emma ran a tiny bit with Kev). Some refreshments and nibblies were waiting for us at the bottom. We drove back in town after that. Andrew said it was fun and exciting: driving up and down the dunes were super fun.
Emma liked running through the sand with Kev.
It was a very good day filled with amazing memories. For me the dolphins were the best time of that day and so magical.
The next day, we moved to our next location, Walvis bay which is 30 minutes from Swakopmund (and is where we drove to for our tour the previous day). I booked us an accommodation instead of camping, and I am glad as it is pretty cold at night time and the kids are still recovering, so it is nice to be in warm bed at night!
We did a tiny bit of shopping. It is always hard to buy just the right amount of food for the days we have left here (we are not good at planning that!) and we also got Andrew a warmer coat as he is freezing (I am not sure how he is going to survive Canada in December!). We spent the rest of the day inside our accommodation, resting for the kids, doing a bit of planning for me and Kev. Early night for all!
Sunday the 8th, we walked along the esplanade in Walvis Bay (which means Bay of the whales by the way as there used to have plenty before they got hunted almost to extinction). Walvis bay and Swakopmund are small town with a lot of small houses: it feels very European, It could be a small suburb of a German town for example, especially with the names.
While walking on the esplanade, we saw some dolphins pretty close to the beach. We assumed they were chasing some fish in the shallow waters. It is so cool to see dolphins like that during your morning walk!
We also got into a few tour companies to find more activities to do around here. It is one of the issues in Africa, it is hard to do things by ourselves. Everything is through tour agencies, and it makes the trip a lot more expansive, especially with 4 of us (lucky the kids often pay half price)!
After a lovely lunch, we went to a big shopping centre, to buy gloves! We booked a tour on quad for the next day which start at 8.30am and it is going to be cold, so they advised gloves. I’m sure we will use them again in Canada!
The shopping centre was very much like the one we have in Australia. I even went to a bookshop and we found, in the kids section, the same books that the kids read in Australia (Wimpy kid, Worst week ever, and more) We really could have been in Townsville shopping for books: that surprised me.
Back to the accommodation, for some school work as the kids are feeling better.
They won’t do blogging for those few days to give them a break, but a bit of math, English and science on Studyladder will be done! With big smiles and willing kids (I’m kidding!). After a good school work session, they had free computer time, which they always love. A bit of tv after dinner and bed.
Monday the 9th, we did a quad tour in the Namid desert around Walvis Bay. It was not quite what I was expecting, but it was still good. The guide doing the tour has been doing them for 20 years and know his stuff: he had a lot of information about how the wind, the rivers and rain formed the landscape around here. He showed us how the dunes are moving and covering and uncovering the plain they are on. He talked to us about the history of the area and showed us where a village used to be with grave and as the ground get uncovered, some skulls and bones appear until they get eroded by the wind. We saw pieces of the urn they put on top of the grave with food in it for the afterlife. We saw some small insects that lives here: the fog beetles, which in the morning put the bottoms up to catch the water of the fogs and drink that water. We talked about the plants that lives in this area and how they find water in the desert: some rivers are still running under the dunes, so they grow really long roots to get to it. We looked at animal and human footprints dating back to 2000 years old: as it doesn’t rain a lot, when it does, the mud is thick and footprints stay there, then the dune moves and cover them: there is some fossilised footprints of human and animal who were walking here 2000 years ago. I found that fascinating. It was an interesting tour but I wish we could have see a little bit of wildlife. The quad part was fun: going up and down big dunes were a bit scary but amazing. Andrew loved the speed and we screamed a few time in delight going down a big dune. Until I got too cocky and took a turn too fast, so I got thrown out of my quad. I was riding with Andrew in front of me and he stayed on the quad, which I am very happy about, as I had a helmet but Andrew didn’t, as the guide said it won’t work with the kids sitting in front of us. No bad injury, just a sore side and back for the next few days. I slowed down a bit after that! It was a good lesson for the kids about knowing your limit and speed on wheels! We had lunch in one of the restaurants of the harbour (there isn’t that many): the fish here is delicious.
Andrew said it was really fun to be on the quad and Emma loved going over the big dunes (Obviously she said!)
Then we got back to our accommodation and played video game all together. The kids loved it!
Tuesday the 10th of June is our last full day at Walvis bay and we did one more boat tour to try to see more ocean life. This time, we booked on a catamaran as it is higher and I thought it would be easier to see whales on those. We got to see dolphins right under our feet: not the bottlenose dolphins that we all know, but the Dosky dolphin: they are smaller dolphins and have specific black, grey and white markings. They played on the side and the front of the boat for a while: it was incredible. I don’t care how many time you see that, it will always be amazing to watch dolphins playing, jumping, interacting with us. I love it.
We saw seals and pelicans of course as they are everywhere here.
Unfortunately, we didn’t see any whale. But this is wildlife: you enjoy what you get and we did enjoy. Food and drinks were served on the boat, but as I got seasick when we hit the small waves of the open ocean, I took it easy!
Emma liked just watching the dolphins swimming under us.
Andrew absolutely loved it when he was at the point at the front of the boat and the dolphins were under him swimming.
After the tour, we posted some postcards as we are leaving Namibia soon and we are running out of time to post them! And back to the accommodation, pack our bags as we are leaving tomorrow for our very last stop in Namibia. We are going to Sossuvley in the south of the Namib desert.
We’ll see you there.
Mel
PS; no blog from the kids on that part, as they were crooked and we gave them a break.Leia mais