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Namibia family safari

COUNTRY:
Namibia
DEPARTURES:
2012: 31 Mar, 18 Jul, 25 Jul, 8 Aug, 15 Aug, 22 Dec
2013: 30 Mar, 17 Jul, 24 Jul, 7 Aug, 14 Aug, 21 Dec
PRICE:
From £2639 - £3449 (15 days ) including UK flights
MORE INFO:
From £1719 - £1889 excluding flights. From £2299 - £2899 per child including flights from the UK. From £1489 - £1629 per child excluding flights.
VOUCHERS:
Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday
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Namibia family safari

Namibia family safari

How this holiday makes a difference

Responsible mission: As adventure travellers we relish and celebrate the diversity of the world. We also recognise our obligation to protect the environments that we explore. Our aim is to tread lightly, whilst contributing to maintain the world’s culture and nature, and most importantly to engage the help of all our customers to utilise the potential of tourism as a tool to aid sustainable development. We believe that responsible travellers are welcome in the places that they visit.

On this trip: We travel in small groups (max 16 people) so have a minimal impact on the environment as we go. On this trip we use a local agent from Namibia, locally owned hotels, local leaders. Not only does this mean that more of the money we generate stays within the community, but their local knowledge and expertise helps us to better understand the environment in which we are travelling, whilst reinforcing within the local community that preserving this environment is both important and worthwhile

On this trip: The Africat Foundation is involved in numerous projects. They provide animal welfare for large carnivores such as cheetah, leopard, lions and hyena including raising orphaned animals. In addition to this they run research projects to better protect these animals in the wild and provide solutions for man and nature to co-exist.

By staying at the foundation we are not only able to provide income for the charity but our clients can also learn about the fantastic work they do and are able to transport this knowledge to help inform others. For more information about the foundation and its valuable work you can go to their website.

Responsible code: Being Responsible is at the heart of everything our company does - full details of our code can be found on our website. The local supplier for this trip will promote our responsible travel code throughout your adventure. You will also receive specific information on this trip’s responsibility in your trip notes.

Helping to minimise negative impact: All of our customers are invited to offset their international flight emissions. Contributions go to the Blue Ventures Carbon Offset program, a non-profit organisation which provides solar stoves for subsistence communities in Madagascar, benefiting the people and protecting the environment. We also contribute £2 per person towards offsetting of your in-country travel. We fully offset all emissions from our staff travel and run an energy efficient office.

Giving something back: We have a foundation that collects the funds that you donate to us to support our projects. All our customers are invited to make a £1 per person contribution to the foundation at the time of booking. We will match every contribution that you make with our own £1. You as a customer choose where these funds are used from a shortlist of nominated projects – so it really is YOUR foundation.

Partnerships: As a company we support The Travel Foundation, a UK charity that has been established to promote responsible travel practises throughout the whole of the travel industry. We also work with a number of charity partners who work in the destinations that we visit; including Friends of Conservation and Born Free Foundation. We partner with many small grassroots projects throughout the destinations that we visit - they all share our responsible vision.

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Namibia family safari

Reviewed 03 Jan 2007 by Nicola Pulham5 star rating

We had a brilliant time in Namibia; it's a fantastic country with an amazing variety of scenery, wonderful birds and animals and a great climate. Compared to many other countries in Africa it is well run, has a reasonable infrastructure and can be enjoyed without too much hassle, important when travelling with 4 children.

The highlights were some amazing wilderness campsites and a young lion trying to catch a giraffe and making a complete hash of it! And then there were the black rhino at the waterhole, the Damara dik-diks, sooooo cute, the Himba village......I could go on for ever. No improvements necessary, it really was excellent and our guides were superb, from their inside knowledge to their wonderful cooking!

I would certainly recommend the trip to anyone even with young kids (ours 9-13). We saw so much and travelled huge distances but it never felt that we spent too long in the bus and there was always things to see out of the windows so kids happy. Rate it 10/10

Reviewed 30 Aug 2006 by Richard House4 star rating

1. What was the most memorable or exciting part of your holiday?


The walk through the dunes of Sossusvlei was the most memorable event. For the kids, their first sky-dive at Swapokmund was definitely the most exciting, but probably the most anxious for mother!

2. What tips would you give other travellers booking this holiday?


Take a travel plug for sinks in your wash bag. Only one campsite had any sink plugs. A terrible waste of water in such a dry country. Deciding on the volume of clothes to take was a problem. Knowing there is a coin-operated laundry at the Swapokmund accommodation would have been helpful. Hand washing elsewhere is possible, although air drying is only really possible where 2 nights are spent at the same campsite. Smart clothes aren't required. A three-season sleeping bag is ideally required for the desert nights, though the safari bus carries blankets for extra warmth. A head torch is more useful than a hand torch.

With so many wonderful sights, being able to charge the digital camera batteries was a must. Namibia uses the old British 3-pin standard with round pins. I took a UK three socket adapter with a short lead and wired up a plug bought in Windhoek on the first day. This enabled the whole group to charge batteries at Swapokmund and at the Etosha campsite.

3. Did you feel that your holiday benefited local people, and minimized impacts on the environment?


Namibia values the tourist industry and visitors to the remote parts of the country seems to benefit local people. The small campsites seemed to minimise the impact on the countryside and actually were of a more comfortable standard than the larger ones.

4. Any other comments?


We would rate the trip between 4* and 5*. The only downside was the time spent on the safari bus (2,200 miles) but there are few ways around that due to the size of the country.

Reviewed 23 Aug 2006 by Ruth Atkinson4 star rating

1. What was the most memorable or exciting part of your holiday?


The dunes at Sossusvlei, where both my 5 & 7 yr old made it to the top of dune 45. And Etosha with its expanse of wildlife.

2. What tips would you give other travellers booking this holiday?


There are long journeys involved, and you need to love or be prepared for some stunning (but basic) campsites. p.s the dust gets everywhere!

3. Did you feel that your holiday benefited local people, and minimized impacts on the environment?


Low impact, some good community projects, however the colonial past remains evident also.

4. Any other comments?


**** excellent family holiday. Fantastic guide.

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Holiday Reviews

We invite every traveller who books a holiday via us to send in a review. Because we don't run the holidays they're completely independent and unedited... remember to read between the lines though, as two people on the same holiday can have different views!

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