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Namibia self drive safari

country:Namibia
departures:We offer a complete tailor made service allowing you to decide when to travel, where you stay and what to do.
price:From £1580 - £2185 (11 days) excluding flights. Prices vary according to standard of accommodation & season & are per person based on 2 people sharing.
more info:Price includes 2-wheel drive car hire, accommodation and meals as per itinerary.
vouchers:Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday
 
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the amazing things you'll be doing
Namibia is a land of geographical extremes encompassing vast areas of inhospitable desert, towering mountain ranges and magnificent, unspoilt wilderness areas, home to elephant, rhino, lion, giraffe, and a host of unique flora and fauna.

This tour is an 11-day/10 night Luxury Self Drive safari of Namibia’s North. You will experience wildlife, immense landscapes, as well as culture and community projects with the freedom and independence in your own vehicle and at your own pace. Namibia has good tarmac roads, straight and traffic free! Please note that activities at the lodges are not included, unless otherwise stated, giving you the freedom to choose your own daily itinerary. There is also the opportunity to drive yourself into some Game Reserves.

The North, by huge contrast to the desert of the South, consists of the rich farmland of Damaraland, fed mainly by the Okavango, alternating with sub tropical forest and the mopane bush of the Etosha National Park, one of the largest and best game viewing parks in the whole of Africa.

This itinerary allows you to explore the most rugged and scenic areas in Namibia’s Damaraland staying at lodges working with local community and animal conservation projects in the area. See desert adapted elephants in dry riverbeds, black rhino, ostrich and springbok in the vast expanse of the wilderness, and explore prehistoric rock paintings of San (Bushman) art in the Twyfelfontein Conservancy.

Continue to Etosha National Park to your lodge situated along the southern boundary of the park in the Ongava Game Reserve. The reserve acts as a buffer to Etosha in order for animals to move freely around the park without coming into contact with the surrounding environment. In Ongava you will see white and black rhino which have been reintroduced as part of a huge conservation project. You will go on game drives in both reserves and have the opportunity to see lion, elephant, rhino, giraffes, buffalo, amongst other wildlife.

The itinerary will end at Okonjima, home to the animal rehabilitation and research centre - The AfriCat Foundation, where you will come into close contact with cheetah, leopard, and lion first hand.

Best time to go
The best time to visit is during the winter months from March to October (April and June are preferable) as days are warm and dry, and wildlife easier to spot as they tend to congregate at waterholes. Nights can be very cold with frost.

Rainfall occurs exclusively in the summer months, between November and February, when heavy thunderstorms can be expected. Summer is very hot and the Namibia Desert should be avoided at this time as temperatures are often above 104ºF (40ºC). The coast is cooler and often foggy.
day-by-day itinerary
Day 1:Arrival at Windhoek International Airport from London. (International flights not included). Meet & Assist and transfer to your guesthouse.
Day 2:Free day in Windhoek to explore the city. A must see is the Namibian Craft Centre in the Old Breweries Building in Tal Street, where you will find unique handiwork from Namibian only manufacturers. By buying at the Craft Centre you directly support the Namibians with no middlemen sitting in between. (B)
Day 3:Pick up your car hire and drive to Damaraland Camp in the Twyfelfontein Conservancy. Damaraland Camp is a warm, friendly place situated in the Huab River Valley in one of the most pristine wilderness areas in Namibia; accommodation is in large en-suite, adobe-style thatched units that are raised off the ground offering endless vistas across stark plains, ancient valleys and the soaring Brandberg Mountains. The award winning Damaraland Camp is a rare synergy, which integrates the local community and the environment with sustainable ecotourism and has become an inspiration for communities and conservationists throughout Africa and beyond. (B, D)
Day 4:Day spent at leisure taking advantage of activities in the area which can be paid locally: including 4WD nature drives, walks, or mountain biking during which guests can see species such as desert-adapted elephant, and occasionally cheetah and black rhino as well as interesting flora and fauna. Also you can visit the proposed world heritage site of Twyfelfontein – scene of some 2000 rock engravings by long vanished San people. (B, D)
Day 5:Today you will head north to Desert Rhino Camp. The camp, set in a wide valley, has eight large Meru-style tents with an en-suite bathroom comprising hand basin, flush toilet and en-suite shower. Desert Rhino Camp is run in conjunction with Save the Rhino Trust (SRT), an organisation that has been singly responsible for helping the rare, desert adapted black rhino survive from near extinction from poaching throughout other parts of Africa in the '80s and '90s. Today this population of black rhino is growing in numbers and the area boasts the largest concentration of rhino anywhere on the planet outside of a national park. (B, L, D)
Day 6:Guests can gain an amazing insight into the ecology and conservation of this area, while at the same time a portion of guest revenue contributes to the Trust and its rhino conservation projects. Activities included in your stay are: rhino tracking on foot or by vehicle, full-day outings with a picnic lunch, birding and day and night nature drives to explore this intricate ecosystem. (B, L, D)
Day 7:Today you will head further north inland to Ongava Lodge, which is situated along the southern boundary of Etosha National Park in the privately owned Ongava Game Reserve. The Lodge offers luxury accommodation in fourteen en-suite units made of rock and thatch. There are impressive views from the beautiful vantage point of the main lounge, bar and dining areas which overlook a waterhole and the plains beyond. The Reserve forms a buffer between Etosha National Park and the farms to the south. This buffer enables large game such as elephant and lion to move in and out of the Park without entering hostile environments. Most general game has been reintroduced onto the property, the most successful reintroduction project on the Reserve, however, is the white and black rhino project. At present, Ongava holds one of the largest Namibian rhino custodianships for the Namibian government. (B, D)
Day 8:You can drive yourself into Ongava Reserve and Etosha National Park. Other activities on offer which can be paid locally include game drives in open 4x4 vehicles into the Okaukuejo area of Etosha where lion, elephant (seasonal), gemsbok, springbok, black rhino, greater kudu and red hartebeest can be seen at numerous waterholes and fringing habitats. Apex predators like leopard, cheetah and spotted hyena also occur in this area. Ongava has resident white and black rhino allowing guests staying here the unique opportunity to see both of these charismatic species. Ongava’s proximity to the National Park also makes it the ideal base for exploring Etosha's kaleidoscope of wildlife. (B, D))
Day 9:Drive south of Otjiwarongo to Okonjima Lodge in a 22,000 ha private nature reserve in central Namibia. Okonjima lies nestled in the unspoilt beauty of the Omboroko Mountains; part of the Waterberg Plateau. Okonjima Main Camp is the original Hanssen-family farmhouse, reconstructed as a lodge in 1992. This privately run guest lodge has ten luxury en-suite double rooms and a secluded swimming pool. Apart from the camp, there is also an animal rehabilitation and research centre on the property, the Africat Foundation. Namibia has over 20% of the world's cheetah population – the largest concentration in the world, and Okonjima is the base devoted to saving the country's big cats - cheetah, leopard, lion and even caracal. Guests at Okonjima have the opportunity to experience these cats first hand, and will also learn about what is being done by the foundation to ensure the survival of these animals in Namibia. (B, D)
Day 10:Guest can visit the orphaned cats at the AfriCat Foundation as well as other activities on the reserve. Get in touch with nature on our numerous walking trails. Follow in the footsteps of an Ancient People on the guided Bushman trail, cheetah and leopard tracking trail on foot, game drives, guided & self-guided nature trails, night viewing nocturnal & bird hides. (B, D)
Day 11:Return to Windhoek today. Drop your car hire at the international airport in time for your departure flight (not included).

B=Breakfast, L=Lunch, D=Dinner
tailor made holiday
This trip can be tailormade to create a unique holiday for your individual requirements by travel experts with intimate knowledge of the destination. It is a more luxurious trip that will suit those who enjoy immersing themselves in new cultures and environments before relaxing in comfort in some of the best and most characterful local accommodation! Quality and value are the hallmark of these trips.
how this holiday makes a difference
Environment
Although Namibia enjoys one of the lowest population densities in the world, the main drive behind conservation is overwhelmingly its people - given the fact that in so many cases land is shared between wildlife and people.

Nowhere is this more apparent than in the community conservancies. Here large areas of small-scale pastoral farming have been brought under wildlife with successful ecotourism the most important revenue earner and employer for the communities.

Hunting and poaching in Namibia is forbidden meaning that wildlife is at its most natural, and with such vast spaces of wild land, humans are not as encroaching on the animals as some other African countries.

Namibia is bringing mainstream conservation into tourism with its community projects and animal conservation projects, such as AfriCat, Save the Rhino Trust, and the Torra Conservancy.

Save the Rhino Trust’s (SRT)
Due to poaching of desert wildlife in the early 1980’s the rhino numbers shrank to near extinction. This prompted people in the area to form a Trust, the aim of which was to stop the horrendous slaughter of rhino, elephant and other wildlife. Since the Trust's inception, it has successfully collaborated with government, traditional leaders and local communities with an aim to provide security for and monitor the rhino population in the region, as well as to benefit the community through conservation and tourism.

All staff at SRT come from the areas neighbouring the rhino range within the Kunene region. Many more community members are benefiting indirectly from the work done by SRT, through the Trust's employment of local people. The SRT has established one of the first Community Based Species Survival (CBSS) Projects for rhino in Africa, with direct community involvement in the conservation of rhino, and benefits received through conservation and tourism flow to the local population.

Several tourism ventures in the Kunene region have been supported by SRT for the benefit of the community, for example Desert Rhino Camp and Ongava Lodge.

Desert Rhino Camp
The camp offers a brilliant insight into the ecology and conservation of this incredible area and at the same time contributes directly to the Trust and ultimately the sustainability of this vulnerable area and its wildlife. This concession supports a healthy population of desert adapted black rhino and elephants.

The Desert Rhino Camp donates a portion of each guest's fee to the project, while the Wilderness Safaris Wildlife Trust has funded specific projects such as relocation of individual rhino to boost other population centres in Namibia.

Ongava Game Reserve
In 1991, the shareholders of Ongava converted four unproductive cattle ranches into a highly productive 30,000-hectare private game reserve that is now a haven to large concentrations of wildlife. The Ongava Game Reserve forms a buffer between Etosha National Park and the farms to the south, which enables large game such as elephant and lion to move between the Park and the private reserve.

The most successful reintroduction project on the Reserve, however, is the white and black rhino project. At present, Ongava holds one of the largest Namibian rhino custodianships for the Namibian government.

Today, Ongava is a safe haven for breeding rhino to more sustainable numbers and then reintroducing them into areas where they previously flourished making it possible to show its guests an endangered species and to participate in meaningful conservation programmes.

Okonjima – Africat Foundation
Based on Okonjima's 22,000 ha private nature reserve, in central Namibia, the AfriCat Foundation was founded in the early 90’s and formally registered as a non-profit organisation. AfriCat has since grown significantly and what started out primarily as a welfare organisation has over the years identified the need to include a focus on education and research as being essential to accomplishing long-term conservation of Namibia’s large carnivores.

The foundations objectives are to create awareness and promote the tolerance of large carnivores among the farming community by assisting farmers in effective farm management techniques including targeting problem predators as opposed to indiscriminate removal. They also educate youth about large carnivores and environmental awareness.

As well as this they provide humane housing, treatment and care for orphaned and injured animals. The AfriCat foundation has rescued more than 850 cheetahs and leopards and over 85% have been released back into the wild.

Community
The ground agents we use have been fundamental in the conservation in Namibia, owning a lot of National parks and Lodges, and consequently supporting wildlife trusts, schools and local families and communities in those areas. They believe that in protecting these areas, and including the local communities in this process, they can make a difference to Africa and ultimately the world. Tourism is a crucial part to the conservation for this reason. All staff at the lodges and game reserves are local to the area.

Our local ground agents have a unique approach to bringing tourism and conservation together with its goal to share these wild areas with guests from all over the world, while at the same time helping to ensure the future protection of Africa's spectacular wildlife heritage and sharing the benefits of tourism with local communities.

Windhoek Craft centre
Namibian Craft Centre in Windhoek offers unique handiwork from Namibian only manufacturers. By buying at the Craft Centre you directly support the Namibians with no middlemen sitting in-between.

Okahandja Town
Okahandja is an important centre for woodcarvers from the north. They practice their ancient skills at the Woodcarvers Market next to the main road. The Wood Cavers are a major tourist attraction and offer curios at very low prices. Stone and other products are also available. Most of the items sold are truly African and are made locally. This is a good place to pick a souvenir as well as support the local community and their families.

Damaraland Camp
The Damaraland community comprises of a unique group of people who have recognised the value of the wildlife on their land and formed a Community Wildlife Conservancy to protect it.

Torra Conservancy is an unfenced multiple use area, zoned by the community members in order to derive benefit from wildlife populations while continuing sustainable, subsistence and commercial farming projects. In return for responsible management of wildlife populations, the Namibian government gives communities the rights to consumptive and non-consumptive use of this natural resource. The formation of the conservancy has resulted in substantially increased numbers of desert wildlife and in uplifting of the local community.

In the case of Damaraland Camp, finance, project management and expertise has been provided for the camp’s development while the community contributed labour, skills and the conservancy itself. Revenue flows back to the community both directly and indirectly through the payment of the land lease, conservation levies and salaries. All staff employed in the lodge come from the community and their employment is overseen by a joint committee comprised of the Torra Conservancy and Damaraland Camp ensuring that income is as evenly distributed across the 40 villages of the conservancy as possible.

The camp's emphasis on conservation-positive impact and sustainable ecotourism has been reflected in the considerable increase in general game numbers. The award winning Damaraland Camp has become an inspiration for communities and conservationists throughout Africa and beyond.

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