Ju Hoansi Bushman tribe tour in Namibia
| country: | Namibia |
| departures: | Tailormade departures - the best time to go on this trip is May - August |
| price: | From £810 (5 days) excluding flights. Price includes 3 meals a day, accommodation, roundtrip to Tjokwe and fully qualified Namibian Tour Guide |
| vouchers: | Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday |
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introduction to Ju Hoansi Bushman tribe tour in Namibia
5 days trekking and experiencing Ju’Hoansi tribe life
From the Cucumber to the Elephant dance, from digging for roots to collecting berries. Such would be the experience with the Ju’Hoansi tribe in North-Eastern Namibia. Be mystified by the ancestral medicinal trances and local herb remedies prepared from the bush. Witness the expert tracking abilities and the indescribable bond that these people have with nature. Learn to appreciate life in the most basic of ways.
Between speaking and doing, lies a thousand miles, goes the saying. With this tour the same principle applies. One can speak and rave about the tour, but the actual experience you will get from this could be indescribable. The way of living in harmony with nature that the Ju’Hoansi tribe shows, goes beyond belief. Every single thing they have and consume comes from their immediate surroundings. They have a saying "When the wind blows, we must move". This just shows how in tune these people are with nature and their surroundings.
Note: the best time to go on this trip is between May and August.
From the Cucumber to the Elephant dance, from digging for roots to collecting berries. Such would be the experience with the Ju’Hoansi tribe in North-Eastern Namibia. Be mystified by the ancestral medicinal trances and local herb remedies prepared from the bush. Witness the expert tracking abilities and the indescribable bond that these people have with nature. Learn to appreciate life in the most basic of ways.
Between speaking and doing, lies a thousand miles, goes the saying. With this tour the same principle applies. One can speak and rave about the tour, but the actual experience you will get from this could be indescribable. The way of living in harmony with nature that the Ju’Hoansi tribe shows, goes beyond belief. Every single thing they have and consume comes from their immediate surroundings. They have a saying "When the wind blows, we must move". This just shows how in tune these people are with nature and their surroundings.
Note: the best time to go on this trip is between May and August.
day-by-day itinerary
| Day 1: | Windhoek to Roy’s camp. Here you will get your first taste of the San people of Namibia. Go for a afternoon bush walk with the people that intimately know the area. |
| Day 2: | Roy’s camp to Tjokwe. Today we meet the Ju’Hoansi tribe where we will stay for the next 2 nights. Day and evening spend getting to know the tribe members and observing without interfering. |
| Day 3: | Ju’Hoansi tribe. Today we live a day in the life of the Bushmen. We go tracking, collect veldt food and prepare the food you have gathered that evening. |
| Day 4: | Tjokwe to Roy’s camp. After lunch we leave the Ju’Hoansi tribe and start heading back to civilisation. |
| Day 5: | Roy’s camp to Windhoek. A last stop at Okapuka for some game viewing, before we leave for the airport. |
how this holiday makes a difference
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This is not a commercialised or much visited tour. Dries Alberts, one of our members has lived and worked for the past 7 years with this tribe, so has built trust and friendship with these people.
Every tourist will contribute £ 10 per day towards the Tjokwe village and £ 5 per day towards the Nyae Nyae Conservancy. Thus, 10 % of the tour costs in total. Please note that this amount excludes activities like dances and bush food collection. If these activities are included, the percentage will increase to 20 %. The Ju’hoansi are easy-living people. Tourists can dress in comfortable safari clothes that offer protection against UV radiation as sunlight is plentiful in this area. It is not recommended to show off jewellery as it might come across as showing off wealth. Our local Ju’hoansi guide will translate from Ju’hoansi to English and will provide, at the spot, all required information about the tribe, culture and beliefs. The cultural exchange will stretch through-out the tour via the local guide. At the start and the end of the trip bungalows forms the main accommodation type. When living with the tribe we share their huts, or most likely get huts for our own use. Tents will be available for the “not so brave”. People will have to share. Each tour will differ regarding the environmental policies, depending on where our visitors decide to stay over. With the Ju’Hoansi tribe, nature forces them and the visitors to be environmentally friendly. Water is scarce so will not be wasted on cleaning or bathing; only for drinking and cooking purposes. No electricity is available. The only light will come from a fire in the evening. Waste recycling is a thing not known with the tribe, as they have no waste to recycle. If the visitors take other food with them, these tins and papers will be brought out again, and then placed in recycle bins in the nearest town. It is the same on our camping tours as well. All waste taken in is brought out again, and then recycled. With the Ju’hoansi, each village chief or headman is regarded as the custodian of his area, which includes all natural resources. Thus, he calls the shots on what may and what may not be harvested or used. We only employ local Namibians. The guide is a local Namibian, and if any other staff is need these people is drawn from the tourism sector in Namibia. A local Ju’hoansi guide and translator will be hired from the village where the tour is hosted itself. This tour is something of a novelty. Not many people ever try and do this. This in itself makes it very special. When walking with the Bushmen you will follow game trails where possible. Trying to gather food sometimes dictate that one must leave the game trails and walk into the bush itself. Since different trails are used for different purposes, impact is very low. The Ju’hoansi truly live off the land. They know quite well that if they jeopardize nature, they jeopardize their own way of life and subsequent future. This is the way they have lived for centuries and we will not attempt to change their way of life, nor would we even consider spoiling the beauty that is Bushmanland and Namibia in a whole. Leave only a footprint is the motto of the tour. |
Tourism can be good and bad for destinations & local people. We carefully screen every holiday against our criteria for responsible travel. 'Look behind the brochure' to find how each holiday makes a difference (see left). We don't claim to be perfect - there is no global accreditation - but we've led the way since 2001 and screened 1000's of holidays. We invite every traveller to write a review about their experiences and responsible tourism. This valuable feedback is sent to the people who run the holidays. We keep a very close eye on it and take off holidays that don't live up to our standards. |
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