Namibia – A Bountiful Harvest Awaits the Adventure Traveler
Author: Andrew Muigai
Namibia is a largely arid country of stark rough-hewn beauty. The most vivid
images are those of a haunting technicolor landscape of swirling orange dunes,
shimmering mirages and treacherous dust devils. The apparent desolation is
deceptive and plant and animal life and even man has adapted to this
environment. The country is designed almost specially with the active and
adventure seeker in mind. Timeless deserts, thorn bush savanna, desolate wind
ravaged coastlines, majestic canyons, and sun-baked saltpans are the bounty that
awaits the traveler.
Namibia's top draw is the Etosha National
Park, rated as one of Africa's finest game sanctuaries. The birding experience
in the country is truly superior. On a
Namibia safari, the range of activities you can indulge in the
unsurpassable physical environment is truly impressive. Ballooning over the
desert, skydiving over land and sea, paragliding, whitewater rafting and sand
skiing along coastal dunes are good activities for starters. More fun games to
pick from include abseiling - that most spectacular of rock sports, coastal and
fresh water angling, desert camel riding, scuba diving, 4x4 desert runs, hiking
and mountaineering.
Namibia has four distinct geographical
regions. In the north is Etosha Pan, a great area for wildlife and heart of
Etosha National Park. The slender Caprivi Strip is nested between Zambia and
Botswana and is a wet area of woodland blessed with a few rivers. Along the
coast is the Namib Desert, which at the age of 80 million years old, is said to
be the world's oldest desert. At the coast, the icy cold Atlantic meets the
blazing African desert, resulting in dense fogs. The well-watered central
plateau runs north to south, and carries rugged mountains, magnificent canyons,
rocky outcrops and expansive plains.
Namibia, one and half times
the size of France, is very sparsely inhabited and carries only 1.8 million
souls. The people are as unique as the land they live on. The most intriguing
are the San, otherwise known as Bushmen. These most hardy of people have a
highly advanced knowledge of their environment. It is a marvelous thing how well
they are adapted to their difficult habitat. Just pause and think that these are
the only people in the world who live with no permanent access to water. In the
Kalahari Desert, one of their domiciles, surface water is not to be found.
Tubers, melons, and other water bearing plants as well as underground sip wells
supply their water requirements.
In Namibia today, Bushmen
number about 50,000. Historians estimate that they have lived, mostly as hunters
and gatherers, for at least 25,000 years in these parts of the world. Bushmen
speak in a peculiar click language and are very gifted in the arts of
storytelling, mimicry, and dance. Namibia's other people, who are indigenous to
the continent, are mostly of Bantu origin. They are thought to have arrived from
western Africa from about 2,400 years ago. The African groups include the
Owambo, Kavango, Caprivians, Herero, Himba, Damara, Nama and Tswana.
The Africans aside, other groups comprise about 15% of the population and have
played an important role in the emergence of the modern nation. White Namibians
amount to about 120,00 and are mainly of German and Afrikaner heritage. Germans
arrived in significant numbers after 1884 when Bismarck declared the country a
German Protectorate. Afrikaners, white farmers of Dutch origin, moved north from
their Cape settlements, especially after the Dutch Cape Colony was ceded to the
British in 1806. This strongly independent people, whose ancestors had lived in
the Cape from 1652 resented British control.
Two other distinct
groups complete the spectrum of Namibia's people - Basters and Coloureds.
Coloured in Namibia and southern Africa refers to people of mixed racial
heritage, black- white for example. They have a separate identity and culture.
This makes sense considering that Namibia was run by South Africa after the
First World War. Even in pre-Apartheid South Africa, racial classification was a
fine art. The Afrikaans-speaking Basters, descended from Hottentot women and
Dutch settlers of the Cape. Alienated from both white and black communities,
they trekked northwards, finally founding their own town Rehoboth, in 1871.
Baster is actually derived from "bastard", but it is not derogatory, and the
Basters are indeed proud of it.
Namibia's barren and unwelcoming
coastlines served as a natural deterrent to the ambitions of European explorers.
That was until 1884 when the German merchant Adolf Luderitz established a
permanent settlement between the Namib Desert and the Atlantic seaboard that
afterwards took his name. Bismarck subsequently declared the territory covered
by Namibia a German colony and named it Südwestafrika or South West Africa. As
German settlers moved into the interior, conflict was inevitable with the
inheritors of the land.
The German occupation was a particularly
unhappy experience for the Herero. The Herero resented the German's harsh and
racist rule and the effect of the encroachment on their lands on their
livelihood and way of life. On the first day of the year 1904, the Herero led by
Chief Samuel Maharero, rose suddenly and unexpectedly in arms against their
colonial overlords. The Nama joined the insurrection and the authorities did not
regain control even after six months of trying. Over 100 German settlers and
soldiers died in the uprising. Historians now consider events that followed to
constitute the first genocide of the twentieth century.
Lieutenant General Lothar von Trotha was furnished with a contingent of 14,000
soldiers and tasked to put down the rebellion. The governor general of the
territory was then Rudolph Goering -the father of Herman Goering, Hitler's right
hand man. Lothar von Trotha was a generation ahead of his time and his kind of
thinking was to become government policy under the Third Reich. He argued that
the Herero must be destroyed as a people and he did not wince at the murder of
women or children. At the end of it all, 100,000 Nama and Herero were killed.
The survivors were herded in concentration camps where unspeakable things
happened. The Herero fared very badly and 80% of her people perished. The
population of the Nama diminished by 35-50%.
Windhoek, the
capital of 165,000 people is the only true city in the country. For those
traveling to more remote regions, this is where you settle practical matters.
The positive aspects of the German period can be seen in the charming style of
older buildings in the city. Places of interest in the city include the State
Museum, State Archives, and the Namibia Crafts Centre. The Dan Viljoen Game Park
lies 24 Km west of Windhoek on the gentle hills of Khoma Hochland. In this
resort you find ostriches, baboons, zebras and over 200 species of birds. The
Waterburg Plateau Park, located 230 km from Windhoek is popular with weekenders.
This extensive mountain wilderness is home to cheetah, leopard, kudu, giraffe,
and white rhino.
Etosha National Park is what brings wildlife lovers to Namibia. The
park is comparable in size and diversity of species with the best in Africa. The
unusual terrain of Etosha holds savanna grassland, dense brush and woodland. But
it is the Etosha Pan, a depression that sometimes holds water and covers 5,000
sq km, that is the heart of park. The perennial springs around the pan, attract
many birds and land animals in the dry winter months. The effect of this
background is magical and some of the best wildlife photographs have been taken
here.
There are 144 mammal species in the park and elephants are
particularly abundant. Some other interesting wildlife here includes giraffe,
leopard, cheetah, jackal, blue wildebeest, gemsbok and black rhino. The birding
is great at Etosha and over 300 bird species have been recorded. You will get
best value by spending at least three days here. There are excellent
accommodation facilities at the three rest camps of Namutoni, Halali and
Okaukuejo. The best time to see animals is between May and September, when water
draws them in huge numbers to the edge of the pan. Etosha is 400 km to the north
of Windhoek by road.
The
Fish River Canyon is unrivalled in Africa and only the Grand Canyon
in the U.S in larger. The Canyon runs for 160 km and reaches a width of 27 km
and depth of 550 m. But size alone does not explain the appeal of the canyon.
You experience incredible views at various points along the rim. Adventure
lovers do not merely come for the views. Hiking through the canyon is the
ultimate endurance adventure for hikers. There is an established 90 km hiking
trail that will take you 4-5 days to cover.
The trail ends at
Ai-Ais hot spring resort where you can unwind. You are allowed to hike between
early May and end of September. The hike is quite strenuous and needless to say,
you must be physically fit. The authorities disbelieve the capacity of most
people to undertake the hike and will actually insist on seeing a medical
certificate of fitness before allowing you to start off. Fish River Canyon is
580 km to the south of Windhoek.
The Skeleton Coast has been the
graveyard of seafarers and whales and deserves that morbid name. The problem is
the dense fogs. And woe to the ship wreck survivor who expects respite onshore!
Ahead is the Namib Desert, one of the driest and most unwelcoming places.
Adventure travelers love trekking along the coastline as they enjoy the stark
beauty of the area. To the south at Cape Cross, you find a seal colony carrying
tens of thousands of seals. The Skeleton Coast Park covers 16,400 sq km and
begins at 355 km northwest of Windhoek.
The Portuguese explorer
Diego Cao reached this part of the world in the year 1486. He is probably one of
the people whose experiences discouraged Europeans from venturing ashore until
the arrival of the Germans 400 years later. Further south is the Namib-Naukluft
National Park, a vast wilderness covering 50,000 sq km. The landscape is very
diverse and covers mountain outcrops, majestic sand dunes, and deep cut gorges.
For really spectacular dunes, the Sossusvlei area is unsurpassed. Here you have
dunes rising to 300 m! The orange tint giants extend as far as the horizon and
the area has an unreal, unforgettable atmosphere.
To the
northeast of the country, the well-watered Kavango and Caprivi Strip region
offers an unspoilt wilderness suitable for rugged game viewing and camping. The
area also promises a feast for bird lovers. Game reserves in the area include:
Kaudom, Caprivi, Mahango, Mudumu and Mamili. Poachers did great damage to
wildlife during the years of the civil war in neighbouring Angola. Animal
numbers are however building up rapidly. Some of the wildlife in the region
includes leopard, elephant, buffalo, cheetah, lion and various antelope species.
The Caprivi Reserve falls in an area of swamps and flood plains. Here you have
an opportunity to partake fishing, hiking, game viewing safaris and river trips
in traditional mokoro boats.
In Namibia you can enjoy up to 300
days of sunshine. The coast is temperate and thermometers run between 5C-25C.
Inland, daytime temperatures range from 20C-34C, but can rise to 40C in the
north and south of the country. Winter nights can be quite cold and frost occurs
over large parts of the country. The rains inland fall in summer
(November-April) and are heaviest in the Caprivi region. Rains do not much
affect travel, but beware of flash floods in the vicinity of riverbeds. The best
time to travel is over the dry months of March to October, when it is easier to
see animals at waterholes. It is best to avoid the Namib Desert and Etosha
between December and March when it can get unbearably hot.
You
can get by wearing light cottons and linens in summer. Over winter nights and
mornings, you need heavier cottons, warmer wraps and sweaters. Comfortable
walking shoes are essential, as the ground gets very hot. Some useful stuff to
pack includes: camera, binoculars, sunglasses, sun hats, sunscreen and mosquito
repellant. Be ready for dusty conditions and carry your clothing, equipment and
supplies in dust proof bags. Do not be tempted to buy items made of ivory. You
may not be allowed to carry them through customs at home. And it also good that
you do not encourage the trade in ivory products that keeps poachers busy.
Copyright © Africa
Point
About the Author
Andrew Muigai is editor of AfricaPoint Insider online newsletter. It is part of AfricaPoint.com- the Africa travel website that has helped thousands of travelers discover Africa. You can view more info on Namibia safari and tours at the website.
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