Showing posts with label Khorixas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Khorixas. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 August 2023

Namibia: Lodge Damaraland is open

Lodge Damaraland is open

Just outside Khorixas, en-route to Twyfelfontein

Experience a true sense of freedom at Lodge Damaraland. Heighten your appreciation of the unspoiled natural landscapes of this unique and mystifying region, known as the Arid Eden Route.

Here you will be spoiled with luxury and treated with true Namibian hospitality and warmth. Lodge Damaraland is within easy traveling distance of the Petrified Forest & Twyfelfontein.

Part of the “The Arid Eden Route”

Unspoiled natural landscape

Authentic Namibian Cuisine

Namibia hospitality

Facilities

Free Wi-Fi ( rooms and common area)

Swimming pool

Restaurant serving breakfast, lunch and dinner

Spa with massages

Local wellness products

Cash & credit card (visa, MasterCard)

Laundry

Mobile connectivity

Bar

Boma fire

Inside and outside dining

Rooms

26 twin rooms

4 family rooms ( can accommodate 2 adults and two children), two rooms with one bathroom

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Monday, 10 July 2023

Namibia: Camp Doros Damaraland

We are opening a new camp in Damaraland, which will be called CAMP DOROS.

Much like CAMP SOSSUS in the Namib, CAMP DOROS offers a truly sustainable “back to nature” experience, allowing guests to touch, feel, smell and experience the essence of Damaraland, but with their feet remaining firmly on the rocks that cover this incredible area. This ultimate connection with earth, nature and people, in a very up-close and personal way, gives an intimate and unforgettable experience. Camp Doros is NOT merely an accommodation establishment. It offers a fully inclusive IMMERSIVE EXPLORATION of Damaraland over a minimum of 2 nights, and it should be offered as such.

Whilst staying away from brick and timber buildings and all the luxury paraphernalia associated with those, our aim is still to provide complete comfort while ensuring immersive exploration of Damaraland, by vehicle and on foot. Guests are looked after by some extraordinary people whose only desire is to ensure that each moment spent with us is as perfect as possible. The personal service, incredible food and great attention to detail experienced at our other camps such as ONDULI RIDGE, CAMP SOSSUS , GALTON HOUSE and THE NEST @ SOSSUS will also become standard at Camp Doros. Days are filled with thrilling encounters, and nights are enhanced with memorable experiences beyond most people’s wildest dreams. Our aim is to leave long-lasting impressions and happy memories but, most of all, to offer those life enriching experiences for which we have already become so well known.

OVERVIEW

Camp Doros is deliberately small and intimate, and it is located in a core area for desert adapted black rhino, with activities largely focused on tracking these rhino with an experienced and qualified Rhino Ranger team. The camp is perched on a high bank overlooking a (generally) dry riverbed and groves of Mopane trees in the heart of Damaraland. Protected from the prevailing winds, the camp carries arguably the lowest environmental footprint of any camp in Namibia. Six shaded guest tents (one of which is a family unit) are raised on platforms and most have twin beds, with some doubles, cupboards, solar power for lighting and 220V charging points, as well as en-suite bathrooms with hot running showers and flush toilets.

The camp has a spacious common area including bar serving area, dining room, lounge with fireplaces and a campfire deck, as well as a welcome plunge pool and sun deck. There is a focus on personalized service delivery, and this includes hearty and scrumptious meals which are prepared in a largely solar and wood-fired kitchen. The essence of the camp is immersive exploration of this incredible area.  

COMFORT, INTIMACY & REDEFINING LUXURY

Camp Doros emphasises every aspect of our intention to redefine luxury. Our own definition of this encompasses privacy, intimacy, experiential focus and total flexibility, all whilst being perfectly comfortable.  We can provide all of this at an affordable price as we have removed the element of material opulence and the consequent need for high pricing that is generally associated with luxury accommodation. The camp is deliberately small, and is open year-round, providing a great and more exclusive alternative to any traditional lodge or camp in the southern Damaraland or Twyfelfontein area. All this whilst offering unparalleled opportunities for immersive exploration of a fascinating area away from the more beaten tracks. The shaded tents all have a basic infrastructure that offers all important comforts, and the essence of the camp remains both experiential and immersive.

WORLD CLASS GUIDING

Guests at Camp Doros are hosted and taken on fascinating and immersive excursions by members of the renowned Ultimate Safaris Naturalist guiding team. They therefore go out to explore some of the world’s most beautiful wild places, encountering wildlife spectacles and experiencing unique aspects of Damaraland while receiving detailed interpretation of all they get to see. Throughout this whole experience, they are wrapped in the warm and caring hospitality that has become the hallmark of Ultimate Safaris. The skills and knowledge of our Naturalist guides are of the highest order, and the guides are considered to be the most important ingredient for providing these immersive explorations. We hear the same comment time and again from guests leaving at the end of their safaris : “Ultimate guides are truly out of this world!”

Knowledge, experience and character should be taken for granted, but the addition of charisma, passion and motivation provides a combination of the traits that create perfect guides. They are personable, engaging and caring and they have a passion for travel and the world around them which gives them the ability to immerse guests into what is a truly unique Damaraland experience. These guides quickly turn a standard safari experience into a life enriching one, creating a deeper understanding and appreciation for this incredible area. They are the link between our guests and the intricacies of the natural world and the people guests encounter, sharing their knowledge with enthusiasm, understanding, and humour.

IMMERSIVE EXPLORATION

A fundamental and unique part of any stay at Camp Doros is the exploration of Damaraland in the care of one of our Naturalist Guides. Activities offered would normally include RHINO TRACKING assisted by trackers trained by Save The Rhino Trust (SRT), ELEPHANT TRACKING (only available during three-night stays), ROCK ART EXPLORATION (only available during three-night stays), GUIDED WALKS and SCENIC DRIVES. Incredible night-time STAR GAZING and tutorials are also commonplace at Camp Doros.

COMPLETELY SUSTAINABLE

Camp Doros carries arguable the lowest environmental footprint of any camp in Namibia, probably rivalled only by CAMP SOSSUS. Tents are equipped with furniture built mostly from recycled metals, oil drum lids and recycled wood, all of which were originally destined for landfills. All power is generated via a solar farm; wastewater is processed through a sophisticated reclamation process; solid waste is disposed of via our sophisticated solid waste management system; and great care is taken to conserve our most important resource, water. The latter includes doing all laundry offsite where more water is available.

CONSERVATION & THE DOROS JOINT MANAGEMENT AREA

Ultimate Safaris concentrates on identifying areas in communal conservancies where our tourism and developmental activities can have a truly positive impact, and the Doros Joint Management Area is certainly one of these. Black rhino were reintroduced in the area many years ago, and it is also home to steady populations of Elephant, Giraffe, Oryx, Springbok, Hartmann’s Mountain Zebra, Kudu, Hartebeest, Steenbok, Klipspringer, Bat-eared Fox, Aardvark, and Aardwolf, as well as predators such as Leopard, Cheetah, Brown Hyena, Spotted Hyena and Lion. However, no viable commercial tourism related activities have previously existed here.

The Joint Management Area consists of 19,000 hectares that have been set aside for conservation. However, sadly, this had been at the centre of a wrangle lasting almost 20 years as its ownership was disputed between three communal agencies, namely the Uibasen Twyfelfontein, Sorris Sorris and Doro !Nawas Conservancies. Fortunately, Ultimate Safaris, working with the Conservation Travel Foundation (our own non-profit organisation) and with very supportive NGOs, has served as the catalyst to persuade the three conservancies to agree to terms for joint management of the area. This agreement means that they can now jointly own, manage, and share the benefits derived from effective management of the land concerned. A leasehold registration is in process and, once approved, this will make this area, now called the Doros Joint Management Area, the single largest registered communal land leasehold in Namibia. 

This is an incredible success story, and it will act as a blueprint for other areas such as this in time to come. Operating in this area will have its challenges, but we believed these challenges could be overcome, and that our involvement would make a significant impact in assisting with the protection of the resident rhino and other wildlife. We were also convinced that we would have a major effect on the lives of many local inhabitants.

This partnership between private sector and local communities has set the benchmark for forward-thinking and innovative leaders who have seen the benefits of responsible tourism. Ultimate Safaris is dedicated to conservation and will be the support entity for the conservancies as they take full ownership of this area and create additional benefits that will ensure the longevity of the landscape and its wildlife. The main goal of this partnership between the Doros Joint Management Area, Ultimate Safaris, the CONSERVATION TRAVEL FOUNDATION and SAVE THE RHINO TRUST is the conservation of the local habitat and the protection of the threatened desert adapted black rhino that live in it.

Efforts to achieve this are well underway and these include the employment of six Rhino Rangers to monitor rhino activity; provision of fixed accommodation for them with running water and electricity; financial support to Save the Rhino Trust in their generic conservation efforts; the installation of a radio communication for better communication between rangers and camp; and the donation of solar e-bikes for more efficient rhino patrols. We have also been able to install two water points, elephant proofing for the water installations, and to improve the local road network for patrols. In addition, we have jointly earned WILDLIFE CREDITS which help to bring in additional income for conservation. One of the biggest achievements the establishment of a management plan for the area, which includes road demarcation, ethical regulations and increased observation and monitoring. And all of this in only 5 months, and our first 5 months of being present in the area. 

Furthermore, it is envisaged that around 20% of all revenues earned at Camp Doros will be directly re-invested into the conservation of the area via the Doros Joint Management Area, thus staying true to our philosophy of re-investing into conservation, environment, and people. This is possible because of our model that means the investment into our camps is moderate from both a financial and environmental perspective, ensuring sustainability on all levels without the pressure of having to recoup large financial outlays. 

THE END OF AN ERA AT //HUAB UNDER CANVAS

Unfortunately, the world is now scrambling for resources to aid further technological advancement, and we too have been impacted by the realities that this brings - despite all our efforts to preserve an area that we truly valued. For several years we and the //Huab Conservancy, our partners in //Huab Under Canvas, have been relentless in our fight to try to keep mining away from a core wildlife area. Sadly, after exhausting all other possible avenues, we have now needed to be involved in supporting the community as it engages with court proceedings to ensure no dangerous precedent is set.

Namibian courts are extremely slow moving, and there are serious backlogs so litigation can take several years before there are any outcomes. As there is now an established mining enterprise situated very close to our camp, we have had to take the difficult decision to cease our operations in this area whilst legal counsel litigates. There was no choice about this as mining operations that include blasting are simply not compatible with the operation of conservation and tourism activities in the same area. We are confident that, in time, the desired outcome will be achieved, and we are in full support of the //Huab Conservancy while this happens. However, the operational result of this situation is that all existing bookings at //Huab Under Canvas will be UPGRADED to CAMP DOROS with immediate effect. If you haven’t yet been informed of this, your Journeysmith will be in touch about it very soon.  

AT A GLANCE

° Open year-round.

° Fully inclusive of all meals, local drinks and all activities offered.

° Open to everyone and available to be booked on a per tent basis.

° Use of a local airstrip at Onduli – where guests will met by a guide and taken on a guided nature drive of around 75 minutes into camp (pick-up daily at 15h00).

° Self-drive pick-up point at Onduli Airstrip (directions to the airstrip will be supplied upon booking confirmation). Guests will met here by a guide at 15h00 and taken on a guided nature drive of around 75 minutes into camp.

° Waiting lounge with ablutions located at Onduli Airstrip pick-up point.

° 6 shaded en-suite Meru tents (one of which is a family tent).

° Private vehicle required for children 12 years and younger.

° Kiddies’ menu and family-friendly activities available.

° Families with children under 6 are welcome if the camp is booked for exclusive use

° Open-air bathroom with flush toilet & hot water shower.

° Day bed on deck.

° In-tent 220V charging stations.

° In-tent fan.

° Shared plunge pool and sun deck.

° Spacious communal lounge, dining room, campfire circle and deck

° Minimum 2-night stays (3 nights recommended).

° Activities include desert adapted black rhino tracking, desert adapted elephant tracking (only on 3-night stays), visit to rock engraving site (only on 3-night stays), scenic nature drives, guided nature walks and star gazing.

° Artisan coffee.

° 100% solar powered.

° Separate WI-FI lounge

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Thursday, 24 February 2022

Namibia: Flash floods have wiped out EHRA Base Camp!

19 February 2022

Elephant Human Relations Aid (EHRA)

Absolute nightmare - Flash floods have wiped out EHRA Base Camp!

We are in complete shock.

After being, initially, so elated by the recent rains, we are absolutely devastated having received nightmare news and footage from our camp team.

Base camp has essentially been wiped out by the force of water roaring down off the surrounding area - including a vehicle & trailer being actually picked up by the force of the water, dragged into the path of the river, carried 300 metres downstream, and buried up to the steering wheel in mud.

The entire valley coming from the main road transformed into a river! Can you imagine?

Thank goodness nobody is hurt!

Rachel has just left with a back up team to assess the full extent of the damage and to take provisions to the stranded team.

The Uis to Khorixas road is currently officially closed, as; parts of the road have washed away, the bridge over the Ugab has partly collapsed and more rain is expected…

…she will let us know more as soon as she gets through….

Remember the Pleasure Dome?.. The securable store containing our high value equipment is GONE and the elephant protection walls for the borehole have been destroyed. Also the elephant dam is gone.

As per the photos, the sleeping platform has been mutilated almost beyond recognition...

The base camp team currently have limited food & water and are sheltering on high ground in tents belonging to an adjacent camp (thank you Tracks & Trails).

We will keep you posted once we hear more news!

This is so hard to fathom... So difficult to comprehend the extent of this disaster.

Any help is always so welcome thank for all your incredible support!

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Thursday, 21 January 2021

Namibia: The Vingerklip (Rock Finger) - the landmark rock in Damaraland

The Vingerklip (Rock Finger) is a tall, thin rock balanced on top of a hill. It is 35 m high and 15 m wide. It is a conglomerate monolith. Vingerklip Lodge is the nearest accommodation establishment.

Vingerklip Lodge YouTube video:


About 120 million years ago, when the super-continent of Gondwana broke up and South America drifted away from Africa, the southern African plate rose and increased the slope to the sea. The steeper slope made the Ugab River to flow faster, and it eroded more soil. For the next 100 million years the Ugab River cut deeper and deeper into the rock.
At the end of the ice age, 10 to 20 million years ago the sea level rose. The flow of the Ugab River slowed and filled the riverbed with over 100 meters of sand and rock. Two million years ago, during the northern hemisphere ice age, the sea level dropped again. Although the Ugab River once again flowed faster and cut into the previously deposited sediments the riverbed became progressively narrower.

The Ugab River was rich in dissolved carbonate. As the riverbed narrowed the carbonate glued rocks and sand into a conglomerate which was as hard as concrete.
As the riverbed continued to cut deeper and became narrower it formed terraces of decreasing heights.

Over the last 2 million years smaller rivers formed and flowed. The carbonate was washed away, leaving the hardened rock and sand in place. The Vingerklip is a part of an eroded terrace.

When looking south from the Vingerklip the different, flat terraces of the Ugab can be seen. The main terrace is the oldest and widest part of the riverbed. It is more than 160 metres above the present riverbed. A medium-aged terrace follows at 100 metres, and the youngest terrace rises only 30 metres above the modern Ugab.
Since this area does not get much rain and, the Vingerklip sits on a sound 44 meter wide base, it is unlikely to fall over in the near future as the "Finger of God" did in December 1988.

In 1970 American mountaineer Tom Choate was the first to climb the Vingerklip. His hooks can still be seen today. In 1973 the east side of the Vingerklip was conquered by free climber Udo Kleyenstuber.
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Wednesday, 20 January 2021

Namibia: Khorixas community celebrated 2020 World Rhino Day

Khorixas community celebrate World Rhino Day

Community members joined the march on Friday 20 September through Khorixas to celebrate World Rhino Day. The march was led by Deputy Minister of Environment and Tourism, Bernadette Jagger and U.S. Ambassador Lisa Johnson, flanked by Save the Rhino Trust CEO Simpson Uri-Khob and USAID Country Representative Dr. Randy Kolstad.

More than 400 community members joined the march through Khorixas to celebrate World Rhino Day on 22 September 2019. The march was led by Deputy Minister of Environment and Tourism, Bernadette Jagger, and U.S. Ambassador Lisa Johnson.

The march was a call for the protection of the rhino population. “Together, we must save Namibia’s rhinos from illegal poaching,” Johnson said in Khorixas at a ceremony to mark Rhino Day, which occurs on 22 September.

“Our hard work is paying off,” she said in her remarks at the World Rhino Day ceremony, which was hosted by the Namibia Nature Foundation and Save the Rhino Trust.

Community game guards and rangers

Remarks by U.S. Ambassador Lisa Johnson at the World Rhino Day Celebration

I am very happy to be here today with you all to celebrate World Rhino Day.  Many of you here are those who are responsible for protecting Namibia’s natural resources, including its rhinos, and you are to be congratulated on the Kunene region’s remarkable success in doing so in recent years.

Wildlife trafficking is a multi-billion-dollar illicit business that is decimating Africa’s iconic wildlife populations.  Many targeted species, such as the African rhinoceros, face the risk of significant decline or even extinction.  Between 2007 and 2018, over 9,000 African rhinos were poached.

U.S. Ambassador Lisa Johnson highlighting the successful partnership between the United States and Namibia in protecting rhinos at World Rhino Day in the Khorixas stadium.

Wildlife crime undermines Namibia’s economic prosperity and threatens the country’s natural capital resources.  It obstructs sustainable economic development, including the development benefits derived from legal, nature-based enterprises such as tourism. In Namibia, wildlife tourism is an increasingly important and growing industry that benefits both communities and the national economy.

Wildlife crime, including poaching, also erodes social stability and cohesion.  It impoverishes communities at the same time as robbing their cultural and natural heritage.  Communities that are dependent on natural resources are exposed to security threats and to the loss of their livelihoods and income.

The governments of the United States and Namibia have been working in close partnership to combat wildlife crime, including poaching and wildlife trafficking.

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Namibia: 2020 message from SRT CEO | Save The Rhino Trust Namibia

Protecting Namibia's rhino for 37 years

Celebrating 2 years of no poaching.

Message from our CEO, Simson Uri-Khob

Greetings to all rhino supporters in Namibia and abroad.

​The month of September was a highlight in rhino conservation when we celebrate International Rhino Day. Locally the festivities took place in Khorixas; the heart of rhino world.  I am especially excited about the commitment and efforts to understand the problem shown by Traditional Authorities. In a workshop hosted by B2Gold and attended by the Minister of Environment and Tourism, 42 traditional leaders from Erongo and Kunene Regions again pledged their support of conservation efforts.

We are pleased to have been nominated to join the 3rd cohort for the African Conservation Leadership Network Programme. Maliasili high-impact local organizations that put people at the center of conservation. They help them become stronger by working to identify their challenges and find the right solutions. We look forward to use our exposure to best practices to further our organizational success.

At the end of August SRT also celebrated 2 years of zero poaching in the Kunene and North West of Namibia where we are mandated to monitor and protect the critically endangered black rhino. This achievement is undoubtedly due to the fact that SRT work very closely with Government facilitating black rhino conservation initiatives, unifying the local communities, NGOs, donors and other national and international partners to ensure the long- term survival of the species, the habitat and the people.

Simson Uri-Khob, CEO

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Monday, 4 May 2020

Namibia: Mowani Mountain Camp | Мовани Кемп Дамараленд Намибия

Namibia: Mowani Mountain Camp | Мовани Кемп Дамараленд Намибия

Mowani Mountain Camp is located between the Ugab & Huab rivers, in Twyfelfontein Conservancy, Damaraland, Namibia.  Between beautiful, unspoilt wilderness and unsurpassed desert scenery, unusual geological formations, archaeological sites and a unique variety of fauna & flora lies Mowani Mountain Camp - meaning "Place of God". Nestling among rugged boulders at a high elevation, affording panoramic views over the pristine surroundings, the camp creates the impression of an African village. Accommodation is in elegantly decorated tents with furnishings designed especially for your comfort and convenience. A pool with deck is lodged between boulders, while the boma of Mowani marks a special area for sundowners and campfire discussions.

Directions to Mowani Camp:
Take the road C35 from the coast via Uis to Khorixas, turn left on road 2612. Turn off to Mowani is signposted before turn  off to Twyfelfontein.
Facilities and statistics of Mowani Camp:
Member of Hospitality Association of Namibia, 24 beds are available in the 12 tents, swimming pool, restaurant.

Facebook:

NAMIBIA:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/namibia.namibia

DAMARALAND:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/damaraland

TRAVEL NAMIBIA:
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