Welcome to Birdquest
Birdquests's Namibia & Okavango (Botswana) birding tour is a classic African birdwatching and wildlife journey that features a spectacular feast of bird and mammal encounters, not to mention some magnificent scenery. Taking in the edge of the Skeleton Coast, Etosha National Park and the world-famous Okavango, as well as several equally good but less well-known parts of Namibia, our itinerary is the most comprehensive around and produces more specialitles than any other.
Wednesday 6th March -
Saturday 23rd March 2013
(18 days)
Leaders:
Derek Scott and Steve Braine
Group Size Limit: 12
Tour Category: Easy
The endemic Hartlaub's Francolin poses on a rock in the early morning sunshine. For more photos from this excellent destination, please see the 2008 tour write-up (Pete Morris)
The southwestern corner of Africa not only contains some of Africa’s most magnificent scenery but also the greatest concentration of endemic birds on the continent. This part of Africa offers superb, easy birding with many endemic or restricted-range specialities, some of the best mammal watching on the continent, wonderful scenery, amazingly good roads, and mostly good accommodations and food. Namibia and the adjacent Okavango in Botswana are a huge region and road distances are great, so they need a tour of sufficient duration for a thorough exploration that allows plenty of time for birding and mammal watching.
Namibia, once the German colony of South West Africa, is one of the last great wildernesses in Africa and, still almost empty of people, provides the visitor with a birding experience that is hard to match. Washed by the cold, nutrient-rich Benguela Current that flows northwards from the Antarctic, the coastline itself is a bleak area of endless dunes and expanses of gravel – the stark Namib Desert that gives the country its name. This remote, fog-bound coastline, famous as the Skeleton Coast, a graveyard for ships, is nonetheless a scenically impressive area that possesses some of the largest concentrations of coastal seabirds and waders in Africa.
Further inland the plains of the Namib give way slowly to the mountainous central uplands and progressively richer vegetation. From thin scrub one passes through dense bushveld and mopane woodland before the landscape again becomes more arid and less vegetated as one reaches the Kalahari Desert that stretches onwards across Botswana to the borders of Zimbabwe.
In striking contrast to the rest of the country, the northeastern part of Namibia has a tropical feel about it and enjoys a much higher rainfall. Here the waters draining from the highlands of Angola join to form the Okavango River that flows on towards the southeast and ultimately creates the famous Okavango Delta in Botswana.
This is the most comprehensive birding and wildlife itinerary available in this fantastic part of the world, producing more of the speciality birds than any other. We will be in the region during one of the very best times to visit Namibia and the Okavango.
During this marvellous journey through Africa’s newest democracy, Namibia, and adjoining Botswana (two of the friendliest and most modern states in Africa), we shall first explore the rugged hills of the Windhoek region in search of Rosy-faced Lovebird, the strange, terrestrial White-tailed Shrike, the rare Herero Chat and many other interesting birds.
Next we head out across the desert to the Atlantic coast at Walvis Bay and Swakopmund, where the myriads of waterbirds contrast so strikingly with the paucity of birds inland (although these do include such specialities as Rüppell’s Korhaan, and Dune and Gray’s Larks).
From the Skeleton Coast we return inland, working our way north to Dolomite, a thornveld and kopje area at the western end of the vast Etosha National Park, and home to a good selection of Namibian specialities such as Hartlaub’s Francolin, Rüppell’s Parrot, Violet Woodhoopoe, Monteiro’s and Damara Hornbills, Bare-cheeked Babbler and Rockrunner.
From Dolomite, we shall penetrate still further north, to the Kunene River in the far northwest of Namibia with its two primarily Angolan specialities; Rufous-tailed Palm Thrush and the enigmatic Cinderella Waxbill.
Next we explore the wilderness of Etosha National Park. This world famous sanctuary, centred on the dried-out Etosha Pan, offers some of the most exciting birding and wildlife experiences to be found in Africa. Here, Lions and African Elephants will compete for our attention with stately Blue Cranes and elegant Double-banded Coursers, not to mention Red-necked Falcon, Pink-billed Lark and Rufous-eared Warbler.
From Etosha we journey northeastwards to the curiously-shaped Caprivi Strip, a quirk of late 19th century colonial diplomacy, and the adjacent northern region of Botswana. Here the Okavango (or Kavango) River flows out of Angola and crosses Namibia on its way into Botswana and its eventual dissipation in the sprawling Okavango Delta. A visit to this remarkable area, a meeting point between the avifaunas of the arid southwest and the moister regions of Central Africa, provides an opportunity to see all the Okavango bird specialities (including Slaty Egret, Black and Rufous-bellied Herons, and the splendid Pel’s Fishing Owl), plus several species that are otherwise restricted to Angola and adjacent parts of Central Africa. We shall stay in four different lodges beside the river, including one in northern Botswana.
Finally, to complete this splendid journey through southwest Africa, we will enjoy the hospitality and Freckled Nightjars of a splendidly situated lodge in the starkly beautiful Erongo Mountains near Omaruru in central Namibia.
Birdquest has operated tours to Namibia and Botswana since 1987.
(Note: The above is a summary of the tour. For more information please download the detailed, day-by-day itinerary. The button is at the top right of the page.)
Accommodation & Road Transport: The hotels/lodges are of normal Birdquest standard throughout (although some are rustic, they are comfortable and reside in superb settings). At Etosha National Park some rooms at the lodges have a private bathroom and some share a bathroom between two rooms. It is not known in advance which type of rooms will be allocated on arrival. Road transport is mostly by minibus, but we use large, open-sided safari vehicles for much of the time in Etosha. Roads are mostly of good quality (even the untarred roads in Namibia are well graded), which is just as well as there are some long drives.
Walking: The walking effort is easy throughout.
Climate: Rather variable. In interior Namibia most days will be hot, dry and sunny, but overcast conditions are not uncommon and it may well rain in the north. In coastal Namibia conditions range from warm to rather cool during the frequent periods of sea-fog, but rain is unlikely.
Bird/Mammal Photography: Opportunities are very good.
Tour Price: (provisional): $6690 Windhoek/Windhoek. Price includes all transportation, all accommodations, all meals, bottled water, some drinks, all excursions, all entrance fees, all tips for local drivers/guides and for accommodations/restaurants, leader services.
Single Room Supplement: (provisional): $771.
Deposit: 10% of the tour price (excluding any single supplement).
Air Travel To & From The Tour: Our in-house IATA ticket agency can arrange your air travel in connection with the tour from a departure point anywhere in the world, or you may arrange your own air travel if you prefer. We can tailor-make your itinerary to your personal requirements, so if you would like to travel in advance of the tour (and spend a night in an hotel so you will feel fresh when the tour starts), or return later than the end of the tour, or make a side trip to some other destination, or travel business class rather than economy, we will be happy to assist. Please contact us about your air travel requirements.
Boat trips into the Okavango Delta provide plenty of excitement. Southern Carmine Bee-eaters nest in the banks, though the real prizes are Pel's Fishing Owl and White-backed Night-Heron (Pete Morris)
African Skimmers are fairly common on the sandbars in the Okavango Delta (Pete Morris)
The elusive Rufous-bellied Tit may be found in the dry deciduous forests in the north of the country (Pete Morris)
The impressive Black Rhinoceros is a frequent visitor to the waterholes at Etosha during the hours of darkness! (Pete Morris)
The diminutive Damara Tern is always a favourite (Pete Morris)
Other localized or endemic species include the Herero Chat (Pete Morris)
... the Bare-cheeked Babbler (Pete Morris)
... and the recently split Damara Hornbill (Pete Morris)
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