Thursday, 30 June 2022

Namibia: Otjiwa Lodge - Eagle's Rest and Mountain Lodge | Очива Лодж Намибия

Eagle's Rest and Mountain Lodge

Otjiwa Safari Lodge, in the central highlands region of Northern Namibia, has started 2022 with a bang, with not one, but TWO major renovation projects.

At Eagle's Rest, the main reception, dining and bar areas have been completely rebuilt, changing the entire look and feel of the lodge itself.

The reception area is lighter, brighter and more inviting, creating a cozy ambience which invites the traveler to take off their shoes, and feel right at home!

The Farmhouse Restaurant has a new menu, taking inspiration from local cuisine.

As promised, we have new images of the main area.

The, very aptly named, Mountain Lodge is set perched atop a kopje with panoramic views over the Namibian bush below.

The main area has been completely refurbished and exudes an air of easy luxury. It is the perfect marriage of  African style and western architecture.

The five luxury chalets will be completely revamped during the course of 2022 (we are hoping that the first one will be completed within the next few weeks) and at the start of the 2023 tourism season, we will be launching Mountain Lodge as a new, high end product offering in Namibia.

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Wednesday, 29 June 2022

South Africa: Maitland Beach in Eastern Cape

Magnificent Maitland

Just 30 km to the west of Port Elizabeth, Eastern Cape you’ll find the magnificent dunes and golden sands of Maitland Beach.

Situated at the mouth of the Maitland River, the beach borders on to the Maitlands Nature Reserve. This area was once the property of the Maitlands Lead Mines, but is now a thriving forest reserve with towering yellowwood trees and protected milkwoods.

The 125 ha forest provides refuge to several small buck, and dozens of bird species, including the Knysna lourie and the paradise flycatcher. The small section of coastal forest can be explored from various short circular hiking trails ranging in length from 3 km to 9 km.

Trails begin at the old wagon trail and lead through a variety of biomes, primarily dune vegetation and coastal forest. Nature at its finest.

Великолепный Мейтленд

Всего в 30 км к западу от Порт-Элизабет, Восточный Кейп, находятся великолепные дюны и золотые пески пляжа Мейтленд.

Расположенный в устье реки Мейтленд, пляж граничит с заповедником Мейтлендс. Этот район когда-то был собственностью компании владельца свинцовых рудников Мейтленда, но теперь это процветающий лесной заповедник с высокими деревьями желтого дерева и охраняемыми молочными деревьями.

Лес площадью 125 га является убежищем для нескольких мелких оленей и десятков видов птиц, в том числе лурье и райской мухоловки.

Небольшой участок прибрежного леса можно исследовать по различным коротким кольцевым пешеходным тропам длиной от 3 до 9 км. Маршруты ведут через разнообразные биомы, в первую очередь дюнную растительность и прибрежный лес.

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Tuesday, 28 June 2022

South Africa: Magnificent Maitland in Eastern Cape

Magnificent Maitland

Just 30 km to the west of Port Elizabeth, Eastern Cape you’ll find the magnificent dunes and golden sands of Maitland Beach. Situated at the mouth of the Maitland River, the beach borders on to the Maitlands Nature Reserve.

This area was once the property of the Maitlands Lead Mines, but is now a thriving forest reserve with towering yellowwood trees and protected milkwoods. The 125 ha forest provides refuge to several small buck, and dozens of bird species, including the Knysna lourie and the paradise flycatcher.

The small section of coastal forest can be explored from various short circular hiking trails ranging in length from 3 km to 9 km. Trails begin at the old wagon trail and lead through a variety of biomes, primarily dune vegetation and coastal forest. Nature at its finest!

Великолепный Мейтленд

Всего в 30 км к западу от города Порт Элизабет, Восточный Кейп, находятся великолепные дюны и золотые пески пляжа Мейтленд. Расположенный в устье реки Мейтленд, пляж граничит с заповедником Мейтлендс.

Этот район когда-то был собственностью компании владельца свинцовых рудников Мейтленда, но теперь это процветающий лесной заповедник с высокими деревьями желтого дерева и охраняемыми молочными деревьями.

Лес площадью 125 га является убежищем для нескольких мелких оленей и десятков видов птиц, в том числе лурье и райской мухоловки.

Небольшой участок прибрежного леса можно исследовать по различным коротким кольцевым пешеходным тропам длиной от 3 до 9 км. Маршруты ведут через разнообразные биомы, в первую очередь дюнную растительность и прибрежный лес.

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Monday, 27 June 2022

South Africa: Route 72 region Sunshine Coast | Маршрут 72 Южная Африка

One of South Africa’s best kept secrets is the Route 72 region, otherwise known as the Sunshine Coast.

Route 72 - explore the beauty and adventure on the pristine Sunshine Coast. Nanaga Farm Stall to East London - Eastern Cape, South Africa on the R72.

Route 72 is a scenic road that winds through the heart of the Sunshine Coast, connecting the bustling cities of Port Elizabeth and East London. It incorporates a pristine stretch of shoreline between the Garden Route and the Wild Coast.

Route 72 will:

Entice you with its many spectacular, unspoilt beaches and clean, navigable rivers. It is home to 5 of the 7 natural biomes and is a great place to view wildlife in a safe, malaria- free environment.

Enchant you with the warmth of local hospitality. Its quaint seaside towns and art villages provide excellent accommodation options and a variety of culinary experiences.

Excite your zest for life with all the activities it offers. You can hike, bike, fish, surf, water ski, canoe, dive, golf, bird watch, game drive, horse ride and more.

Reconnect with yourself, and with the exquisite natural landscapes of the Eastern Cape.

Route 72 is yours to explore.

Один из самых красивых районов Южной Африки - регион Маршрута 72, также известный как Побережье Солнца

South Africa: http://www.namibweb.com/indexsa.htm

#Route72 #SouthAfrica #SunsetAfrica #EasternCape #PortElizabeth

#WestCoast #TravelNamibia #Dronesberg #ExploringNamibiaTV #NamibwebCom #TravelToNamibiaCom #ЮжнаяАфрика #Маршрут72 #АэровидеоАфрика #ВосточныйКейп

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Sunday, 26 June 2022

South Africa: Karoo Gariep Nature Reserve | Заповедник Кару Южная Африка

Khoisan Karoo | Get Out In Nature And Support Conservation

Karoo Gariep Nature Reserve

Hanover

Get Out In Nature And Support Conservation.

Join the The Biodiversity & Development Institute (BDI) with Professor Les Underhill, Dieter Oschadleus and Tino Herselman at the Khoisan Karoo Conservancy for two exciting nature events.  Hosted by the Karoo Research Centre.

Atlas Bash In The Karoo

Contribute Your Knowledge

The Winter Bird Atlas Bash marks the start of regular bird atlas monitoring of a rectangle of pentads centred on New Holme to generate high quality data on changes in bird distributions in this area. Tino Herselman will lead and coordinate this special event.

DATES: 15 July to 19 July 2022.  You have the option of staying two, three or four nights. More dates available for 2023.

Ring Birds In The Karoo Wilderness

Experience South Africa’s Birdlife Up Close

Our bird ringing expeditions provide wonderful opportunities to ring African birds, to interact with local ornithologists and conservationists, to contribute to important long-term citizen-science projects, and to experience delightful accommodations in spectacular landscapes.

The courses will be led by Dieter Oschadleus, Bird Ringing Coordinator at SAFRING and held at New Holme Guest Farm inside the Khoisan Karoo Conservancy, near Hanover in the Northern Cape - a carefully selected site to maximise the number of species that can be netted and ringed. Fantastic opportunity for trainers, as well as registered ringers.

DATES: 1 to 7 September 2022 and 31 October to 6 November 2022.

Explore The Karoo

Khoisan Karoo Conservancy (8 000 ha) is between Colesberg and Hanover and includes the Karoo Gariep Nature Reserve (with the only hippos in the Northern Cape and home to the Shy 5) and the Hanover Aardvark Nature Reserve.

+ Karoo Gariep Nature Reserve Accommodation

New Holme Nature Lodge is the main lodge at Karoo Gariep Nature Reserve with Stoffels Rus and Karoo Gariep Tented Camp as additional accommodation options.

+ Hanover Aardvark Nature Reserve Accommodation

Mieliefontein Guest Farm is the main lodge at the Hanover Aardvark Nature Reserve with Wolmado as an additional accommodation option.

At Karoo Gariep Nature Reserve, we offer a variety of activities, from bird watching, night drives, a 3-day horse trail, fishing and mountain biking.

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Saturday, 25 June 2022

African Monarch Lodges: Kids on Safari - Junior Ranger Course | Намбва Намибия

African Monarch Lodges

Kids on Safari | Junior Ranger Course

Looking at the wonders of nature through the eyes of a child is the most remarkable way to go on safari as a family. It is for this reason that African Monarch Lodges love hosting young ones at its Nambwa Tented Lodge where children with their moms and dads are accommodated at a Peter Pan Treetop Style lodge.

We run a Junior Ranger Family Retreat during scheduled dates, for the balance of the year we offer a ‘Kids on Safari’ package.

BOAT CRUISE TO NAMBWA TENTED LODGE

The late afternoon sun’s rays will reflect off the water’s edge, the soothing sound of the water as it is gently broken by the bow of the boat cutting through the water’s surface as you and your family are transferred to your home for the next 3 nights. Our guides steer the boats past varied landscapes of papyrus islands and reed floodplains and get within respectful distances of hippos, crocodiles, other mammals, and the varied bird species this area is known for.  Your Junior Ranger Guide will teach you all about the aquatic birds and wildlife species that you will encounter along the way.

ARRIVAL AT NAMBWA TENTED LODGE

Once you settle into your suite, you will receive your guide pack which contains a Treasure Map of all the goodies you need to find to help keep you entertained and to educate you about the African Bush. Then you will be whisked away by the Junior Ranger Guide for the famous Nambwa Treasure Hunt, which will help you familiarize yourself with the bush around Nambwa, while you go in search of all the treasures. There is so much to discover around this massive Peter-Pan style treehouse.

AFTER DINNER WITH YOUR FOLKS

You will once again be whisked away to a private bonfire on the ground where the wildlife seek sanctuary in the night.  You will be entertained with tales from the African bush and some pertinent anecdotes for your ranger journey ahead.

BUSHWALK INSIDE THE WORLD’S LARGEST CONSERVATION AREA FOR WILDLIFE

You get to explore on foot with the Junior Ranger Guide and one of our Local Guides the wanders of Mother Nature.  They will teach you their tracking skills and share with you their ancestral repertoire of medicinal uses of the flora along the way and their tales of the wild and their upbringing in this area.

It is an experience, which connects and grounds any participant to our Earth. You will be taught survival skills in the bush which is home to lion, buffalo, elephants, leopard, and other wildlife roaming these plains freely. You will get to tick off many species on your checklist.  Perhaps even have a competition with the adults on who spotted more.

You will be prepared for your bush quiz which awaits you back in camp!  After breakfast, you will be making your own bedroll for the evening using the indigenous Papyrus reeds which grow in abundance along the Kwando River.

BOAT CRUISE ALONG THE KWANDO RIVER

Late afternoon you can all explore the riverways and you get to continue your African bush school as you meander along these exceptional rivers with your Junior Ranger Guide.  Who knows how much can be learned during these magical hours as time tends to stand still when in awe of Africa?  Your family could try their hand at fishing for the energetic Tiger Fish or continue the "Who identifies more" on your checklist.  By the end of your trip you will know all the collective nouns, main characteristics and tracks for the wildlife you encounter and you will be able to identify these by sound or sight.  You are after all an apprentice as a Junior Ranger!

CAMPING UNDER THE AFRICAN SKY ON A PRIVATE ISLAND

Once back at Nambwa, you will say good night to Mom and Dad.  You will then board a boat and drift down the river on a majestical quest with your Junior Ranger Guide.  You will arrive on a private island where camp has been prepared for an adventurous night under the symphony of stars.  The reed mats you made earlier will be laid out with a mosquito net overhead, so you get to soak in the starlit skies once ready to curl into bed.  As your private Chef cooks your dinner straight on the fire, you get to be inspired by the tales of your guide as hyenas giggle, frogs croak, with crazy creatures and amazing animals all around you.

THE SIJWA PROJECT EXPERIENCE

The Sijwa host and the Junior Ranger Guide will meet you and your parents and guide you through the project which was established by African Monarch Lodges as part of its endeavor to be sustainable and give back to the community and conservation by protecting the natural resources and developing the local community through a biodiverse economy.

It is here where you will be entertained and be enriched with local culture as you partake in a visit to the cultural village.  A walk through the permaculture plants, recycling workshops where waste such as plastic, glass and cans are turned into beautiful artifacts.  You will try your hand at polishing recycled beads and then you will get to design your very own bracelet.  You will also be given a piece of paper onto which you will write your private wish and you get to watch this melt into a special mold which will be used to create your personal lucky glass bead.  You will only see your bead again during your Junior Ranger Award Certification.

AFTERNOON GAMEDRIVE WITH A SUNDOWNER PICNIC AT HORSESHOE BEND

As the afternoon shadows lengthen your game drive departs to discover the unknown behind every bend within the Bwabwata National Park.  Your classroom in your own private game viewer with the bush at large.

You will arrive at the place where a large troop of baboons call home.  While Mom and Dad get to enjoy a delightful sundowner on their picnic blanket you will be entertained by the Baboons antics while you too could be entertaining them with silly bush games such as spitting buck poop.

JUNIOR RANGER CERTIFICATION

Then for the grand finale you get to celebrate your exploration in the Bwabwata National Park as a Junior Ranger and will be awarded your Junior Ranger Certificate and the special Rangers Gift (hmmm, remember the glass bead with your special wish you made at The Sijwa Project?

KIDS ON SAFARI PACKAGE 

Our Kids on Safari Package can be Booked during the Reservation Process.

The KIDS ON SAFARI Supplement will Include:

- All meals including tailor-made child-friendly menus plus chocolate smors around the fire before bedtime.

- Arrival welcome gift

- A treasure hunt to collect the treasures for their guide backpack to keep them entertained and to educate 

  them about the African Bush;

- Safari walks around the Lodge to spot birds, insects, and many other creatures;

- Junior Ranger training whilst on game drives and boat cruises

- Fishing on the Kwando River in a private boat with a private guide. Dads can join for a fun family adventure;

- The art of jewelry making and wish embedding at The Sijwa Project;

- Making of a traditional reed bed for their camping quest

- Dinner & camping on a private island in the bush

- Tales around the fire

- Junior Ranger Certification & Gift 

We have game drive vehicles that can accommodate a young family of four for private game viewing with a private guide without having to pay exclusive use of the vehicle.

African Monarch Lodges, P.O. Box 5072, Windhoek, Namibia

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Friday, 24 June 2022

Bushtracks Expeditions & Bushtracks Africa merger

Bushtracks announced merger Bushtracks Expeditions & Bushtracks Africa merger!

BUSHTRACKS IS THRILLED TO ANNOUNCE THE MERGER

The Tett brothers were born into a sixth-generation African family and have run two separate enterprises for many years. Bushtracks Expeditions, situated in California, and Bushtracks Africa, based in the Kaza Region around Victoria Falls, in the heart of Africa. These two companies have merged into a union that is stronger than the sum of their separate parts and now they each work to support and enhance the other.

David and Christopher Tett believe that Combined under the Bushtracks umbrella, we will draw on our decades of experience to push the boundaries of travel innovation and continue to focus on delivering outstanding services and capabilities.

Bushtracks, as a united force, have experienced staff in the United States and Africa and is in a unique position to offer luxury travel throughout the continent, seamless service, and exceptional support when planning and booking any itinerary in Africa. Our professional reservations team is strengthened by knowledgeable ground handling experts and long-standing relationships with Africa's premier suppliers allowing us to deliver high-quality, bespoke safaris to all of our valued guests.

Each Bushtracks journey is a true African adventure, planned by African insiders with first-hand knowledge of the continent's attractions, camps, and guides. The Tett brothers spent much of their youth camping in Botswana's Makgadikgadi Salt Pans and Okavango Delta, and Zimbabwe's Hwange, Mana Pools, Gonarezhou, and Chizarira National Parks. When you embark on a Bushtracks safari, you'll be exploring wild regions they know intimately and meeting African personalities they've known for decades.

Bushtracks is keenly aware of the vital importance of sustainable travel and how it supports wild places and their cohabitating communities. Staying at our hand-picked safari camps ensures you contribute to conservation. Collectively, these safari camps manage and protect millions of acres of wildlands and fund hundreds of communities.

Bushtracks looks forward to the growth and synergy that will come from the merger in the years ahead. With this in mind, we have refreshed our brandmark to unite under one bold, goliath heron, fittingly symbolic of autonomy, persistence, and longevity.

“Together with our highly capable US and Africa-based teams, we are very confident about our ability to seize the opportunities ahead and remain leaders in our fields." - Nicholas Tett, Chairman.

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Thursday, 23 June 2022

Trip report Botswana: Kgalagadi and Khutse

Ian Griesel

Trip report: Botswana (Kgalagadi and Khutse)

My wife and I have recently returned from a trip to the Khutse and the Botswana side of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park and thought that my observations may be of use to readers.

As the Twee Rivieren border post is still closed we entered Botswana via the border post of Gemsbok (SA side) / Bokspits (Botswana side) near Askham early in the morning. Officials on both sides were very friendly and formalities were completed quickly. On the SA side there was a slight delay as we had to wait for their computers to boot up. On the Botswana side we had to wait a few minutes for the Port Health official to arrive to complete COVID formalities.

Because of a power failure Botswana was unable to process payment of our road transport levy and requested that we pay it at the Middelputs / Middelpits border post on our way to Tsabong. We were slightly sceptical as we knew this border post is still closed under the COVID regulations. On arrival at the Middelpits border post we found the gate locked with a chain and diverted to the police station for information. The police phoned the border post and informed as that the border officials are in attendance, and we should just approach the border post via the staff housing. We did this and were quite surprised to find six officials sitting at their posts inside the closed border post. Unfortunately, a significant delay ensued as – with the border post having been closed for two years – the computer login details of the officials have lapsed and had to be reset by IT support before they could process the payment.

The tarred road between Bokspits and Tsabong is in a very good condition with almost no potholes. The only problem we had is that a number of speed limit signs were absent – for some reason usually those telling you that you can revert to a higher speed after driving through a settlement. Being wary of possible speed fines, we proceeded unnecessarily slowly.

In Tsabong we shopped at the Sefalana Supermarket and Choppies. Beef and goat was of good quality and very cheap by South African standards. All through the trip mutton tended to be either unavailable or not of good quality. Vegetables in Tsabong were also not that great.

The gravel road from Tsabong to the Mabuasehube East Gate of Kgalagadi was quite corrugated in places. Where it joins the cutline at the border of the park it turns into deep sand.

That night we stayed at Bosobogolo 2 (Shade shelter; no other facilities). This campsite has a nice view over the Bosobogolo pan.

The next day we shifted to Lesholoago via Mpayathutlwa. The track between Bosobogolo and Mpaya is quite corrugated. Otherwise, the tracks in the Mabua area are in OK condition and as they are well-used seeds and grass on the “middelmannetjie” did not pose problems.

Lesholoago 2 is a nice roomy campsite close to the Lesholoago waterhole. Neither the campsite nor the waterhole had any water. Water was still functional April last year (and according to one report as recently as December) so hopefully it will be fixed. Unfortunately, it seems that maintenance at the DWNP campsites in Mabua is way behind and has been sadly neglected for a very long time – for example the poles of the shower structure at Lesholoago are rusted right through (and has spilled sharp rust particles right through the shower). An interesting feature of this campsite is that it has two longdrops – the one in much better condition than the other.

While camped at Lesholoago we had very heavy rain – so much so that the Mabuasehube pan went from dry to lots of water overnight. The area was very green with lush grass after a good rainy season. It was great to see it that wet and green, although it did make game spotting more difficult.

At Mpayathutlwa pan a lioness that was being rehabilitated was held in a boma (fenced enclosure). According to some other tourists she was relocated to the park after killing cattle elsewhere and was in a terrible condition when she arrived. She is now looking quite well and as we understand it the intention is that she will be released into the park as soon as the resident pride has become used to her. For that there is still some way to go. While one of the males made friendly overtures to her, we witnessed another female (that deviated from her pride for kilometres to visit the captive female) acting very aggressively toward her – repeatedly charging the fence when the captive female showed herself. It would be great if other travellers can keep the forum informed as things develop.

From Lesholoago we proceeded to Bosobogolo 1 (Shade shelter, shower enclosure, longdrop, no water). This camp has less of a view over the pan, but all in all was a nicer campsite than number 2.

From there we took the two-way trail to Nossob. This was in quite a good condition and by the time we were there grass and seeds were no longer a problem.

We stayed the next night at Nossob (try to buy your meat elsewhere – the shop prices are exorbitant) and from there went to camp at Swartpan. The road north of Nossob was corrugated as usual. The KAA access road (also known as the Kannaguass trail) was in decent condition, but not being used that frequently seeds and grass were a problem (despite the use of a seed net). Closer to KAA this improved and there were even signs of fairly recent track maintenance (bushes being cut back etc). We saw a very large herd of Eland in the area.

The access track from KAA to Swartpan was quite overgrown, especially from Sizatswe (not to be confused with Sesatswe on the Polentswa trail) onwards, and we had to stop very frequently to clear grass and seeds from the radiator and exhaust. Also with bushes encroaching onto the road you have to accept that your vehicle will be scratched. The 75 km from KAA to Swartpan took us more than four hours.

There are two waterholes at Swartpan, but neither is currently functional. According to the Tracks4Africa guide there should be water taps at the Swartpan campsites, but we could not find any sign of them (and in any event with the boreholes out of commission there would not have been any water anyway). The airstrip shown on the T4A maps was no longer visible.

The state of the access track and the absence of water really is a shame as Swartpan is spectacular and the area exceptionally rich in game. With a bit of track maintenance and fixing the water supply Swartpan could easily rival Mpayathutlwa.

At the moment Swartpan provides utter seclusion (the attendant at the KAA gate could not remember when somebody last stayed there) to the totally self-sufficient traveller that does not mind coping with an overgrown track.

On the way out we decided to travel along the cutlines – first north along the Namibian border and then east along the cutline at the northern border of the park. This provided a fast and easy – if somewhat boring – route.

On the bright side, the attendant at the KAA gate mentioned that there are plans to fix the waterholes (officials recently visited the area to obtain the GPS coordinates of the boreholes). The timeframe within which this may happen was not quite clear: “Perhaps this next financial year”.

From the KAA gate we took the track to Zutshwa and Hukuntsi. Note that the track to Zutshwa crosses through a concession area managed by the local community and that a transit fee is payable. There is a self-issue permit station situated in Zuthswa. The transit fee is BWP50 cash, but can also be paid in ZAR and USD. The transit fee is waived if you stay in one of the community campsites. You do get something in return for your transit fee – during our visit the track was in a decent condition with clear signs of recent maintenance (encroaching bushes cut back and fallen branches picked up). We also saw the largest herd of Springbok we have ever seen – it must have been hundreds of them.

At Zuthswa the track turns into a normal gravel road (fair condition) and at Hukuntsi it becomes tar (good condition). At Kang we stayed at Kalahari Rest Lodge. We opted for an airconditioned chalet and had dinner at the restaurant which offered a choice of T-bone, Sirloin, Rump, Fillet or Chicken Schnitzel. We found the food to be tasty and well-priced. They source their meet from Kang Meat Market and we wanted to stock up there the next day, but unfortunately they were closed at the time.

From Kang we travelled to Khutse via Lethlakeng. Between Lethlakeng and Kudumelapye there were a number of serious wash-aways and water pools that have become watering points for livestock. From Kudumelapye to Salajwe the road is very corrugated. Between Salajwe and the park the road has recently been graded and was in a good condition.

The tracks in Khutse are well-used and in decent condition. It seems that the concrete road signage is being renewed but in many cases this has not yet proceeded beyond the base coat of paint so currently much of the signage is not useable. With the aid of T4A maps this did not pose a problem.

Much of the vegetation in the area is of the “thicket” variety, so game viewing is best and easiest at the pans. Personally, I prefer the scenery in the northern part of the CKGR to that in the Khutse area, but we did have a fantastic wild dog sighting, and saw numerous giraffe, general game, raptors and signs of recent elephant activity. 

At the Khutse pan there are 10 campsites, all reasonably close to the Khutse waterhole. Campsite 1 is closest to the waterhole and seems to be the most popular.

The campsites at Moreswe are more secluded than those at Khutse (where you may still be aware of your neighbours). Campsite 2 at Moreswe offers the best view of the pan. Campsites 3 and 4 are somewhat difficult to find. We forgot to take waypoints of these sites after finding them on our second circumnavigation of the pan.

After Khutse we travelled to South Africa via the Ramatlabama border post. The road south of Molepolole was severely potholed in places, but improved after the next town.

We needed a COVID test to re-enter South Africa.  Note that the Ramatlabama border post does not have rapid testing facilities, so you will have to obtain your test elsewhere (according to the new SA rules this will not be necessary if you are vaccinated). We had a rapid test done at Diagnofirm in Molepolole. Diagnofirm has a large number of depots – visit their website to find the one closest to your route.

The layout of the South African side of Ramatlabama is not very logical – the port health authority that must be visited for completion of COVID formalities for entering into South Africa is located in the last building on the exit side (just before you would enter Botswana). When we were there this was not signposted and we had to ask for directions twice. At the time vaccination status was irrelevant, but they did accept our Diagnofirm rapid test without question (your mileage may vary).

We drove back to Cape Town via Bloemfontein to visit family. Our route took us over the Bloemhof dam between Bloemhof and Hoopstad. This road featured potholes the size of aardvark holes. The R700 between Hoopstad and Bloemfontein was also severely potholed and is not recommended at night or in rainy weather (we drove it experiencing both).

Final observations

It is clear that tourist numbers in Botswana have not yet recovered after COVID. Outside Kgalagadi we encountered only four foreign (South African) tourists. In Khutse all the other tourists appeared to be locals on a weekend break. By the Sunday evening it felt as if we had the park to ourselves.

High quality beef can be obtained cheaply in Botswana. In South Africa supermarkets have largely replaced traditional butcheries, but this does not appear to be the case in Botswana so you may be better served by visiting a butchery than buying meat at a supermarket. Mutton is scarce, and you may have to settle for goat. Availability and quality of vegetables is very variable.

As in the past we found Botswana officials to be quite helpful.

For a South African used to people ignoring laws, it remains a strange sight to see locals wearing masks walking next to the road miles from anywhere. This may be because of high fines, strict enforcement or general tendency to be law-abiding – I’m not sure which.

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