Namibia
car hire - Namibia vehicle rental
Namibia
is a startling country - a celebration of the weird and wonderful.
It contains the world's second largest canyon, the highest sand dunes,
the oldest desert, the largest existing meteorite, the smallest antelope,
some of the most bizarre plants and many other truly unusual attractions.
Everywhere you look, there is something astonishing.
It's mostly desert, with
big rivers on its borders - the Orange on its southern border with South
Africa, the Kunene on its north-western border with Angola and the
Okavango on the north-eastern border of the Caprivi Strip, which was tacked
on to Namibia in order to give the German colonialists access to the Zambezi.
To the west, the icy Atlantic
Ocean pounds the desert shore with relentless fury, throwing up all manner
of flotsam, including numerous wrecks. It's called the Skeleton Coast and
the name says it all, really. But don't, for a moment, think that desert
means boring, dull or monotonous. Oh no. The Namib Desert presents a whole
host of spectacular landscapes - from gravel pavements, huge red dunes
and contorted geological formations which have been dubbed 'the moon landscape'
to vast underground forests of welwitschias, which are massive, ancient
desert trees that - literally - grow underground with only the top of the
trunk, two enormous leaves and flowers showing. Many of the trees are thousands
of years old.
Vast areas of the country
are true wilderness and there are a number of game reserves, most notable
of which is the Etosha National Park. Centred on a huge saltpan, Etosha
is home to an enormous array of animals. All the usual big guys like rhinos,
elephants, lions, giraffes etc, abound but there are some interesting endemics.
The black faced impala is much like the usual impala, except it looks like
someone ran a sooty finger down its nose.
It's hard to imagine anything
prettier than an impala, anyway, but the black-faced ones looked like Max
Factor got hold of them to great advantage. The smallest antelope in the
world is the cute little Damara dikdik, which is endemic to the park. One
of Etosha's main attractions is the floodlit waterholes on the edge of
the camps - you can stay up all night with a blanket and a flask of coffee
watching an ever-changing parade of animals.
The high-lying Waterberg
Plateau Park is a bit anomalous, in that it's quite well watered - as the
name suggests - and mountainous. Kaokoland, in the northern part of the
country is a wild, desert area just to the south of the Kunene River, where
the fascinating and friendly Himba people herd their goats and cattle and
live as they have done for centuries.
There are desert elephants
and desert rhinos, huge ephemeral lakes that support enormous flocks of
flamingos that arrive mere days after the rains have filled the pans. Nobody
knows how they know it has rained thousands of miles away. They just do.
There is so much to see and do in this awesome country. You could do a
rafting or canoeing trip on either the Kunene or the Orange. The game viewing
and bird watching is excellent in Etosha, the Waterberg or any of the many
other game reserves. There is awesome rock climbing at the spectacular
Spitzkoppe, a huge granite inselberg rising up from the plain with dramatic
sheerness.
Dragon's Breath Cave holds
the largest underground lake in the world. There are interesting sinkholes,
which local divers have been exploring for decades. Bitterwasser is a glider's
paradise where international pilots spend the summer months doing immensely
long cross country flights and setting all manner of records. Only for
the bold, a horseback trail across the Namib Desert is a real challenge
and a wonderful experience. Camel expeditions are also on offer. There
is wonderful sea kayaking near Swakopmund, where you may see seals and
dolphins. There is good rock art scattered all over Namibia but the most
unusual is the rock engravings at Twyfelfontein. There are some very tough
hikes, including one in the Fish River Canyon and one in the Namib Naukluft
Park. You could do a balloon flight over the desert at sunrise.
And the capital city, Windhoek,
is a clean, modern city rising up from the desert. It has all the usual
facilities - golf courses, Namibia restaurants, shopping and good hotels.
Namibia was a German colony, and many of the smaller towns still retain
a Teutonic flavour, particularly Swakopmund and Lüderitz on the Atlantic
coast. As well as the European-style buildings, you'll find lots of German
restaurants and pubs. And - of course - Namibia makes the best beer in
Africa, which is most definitely as a result of its German heritage. All
Namibian beer conforms to the German Reinheidsgebod (purity law) of 1516.
Germans don't muck about when it comes to making (or drinking) beer. |