TOURING MONDESA TOWNSHIP SWAKOPMUND WEST COAST NAMIBIA | ТУР В ТАУНШИП МОНДЕЗА СВАКОПМУНД НАМИБИЯ
#Namibia #WestCoast #Swakopmund #MondesaSunday, 29 November 2020
Namibia: Touring Mondesa township in Swakopmund video | Мондеза тауншип Свакопмунд Намибия
Wednesday, 25 November 2020
Namibia: Flight Swakopmund - Omarunga Camp, Epupa Falls & Himba Village video | Химба и водопад Эпупа Намибия
Namibia: Flight Swakopmund - Omarunga Camp, Epupa Falls, Skeleton Coast & Himba Village video
Полет из Свакопмунда на водопад Эпупа, деревня Химба, Омарунга Кемп, Берег Скелета, Каоколенд, Намибия
Himba tribe Omarunga Camp Namibia
YouTube video:
Two hundred metres upstream from the cascading falls, Omarunga Epupa Falls Camp is a cosy thatched lodge on the riverbank set under the palms, and the perfect place from which to experience Epupa enchantment. Dine with a river view and wake to the music of the falls and the sound of palm thrushes singing in the trees. Let Epupa lull you into a peaceful reverie.
In between rest and relaxation, there is much to experience here. Take the golden opportunity to visit the Himba, one of the last semi-nomadic groups in Africa; get your courage in check for a guided walk in search of the Kunene crocs or a rafting trip on the river (seasonal); and follow trails downstream keeping eyes open for our avian friends who favour this riverine habitat. And at sunset join the sundowner drive to a hill overlooking Epupa Falls for that time of day when everything pauses for beauty and celebration.
GPS Coordinates -17.00222, 13.24611
Epupa Falls (also known as Monte Negro Falls in Angola) is a series of large waterfalls created by the Kunene River on the border of Angola and Namibia, in the Kaokoland area of the Kunene Region. The river is about 0.5 kilometres wide in this area and drops in a series of waterfalls across a length of 1.5 kilometres, with the greatest single drop being 37 metres in height.
The name "Epupa" is a Herero word for "foam", in reference to the foam created by the falling water. The Epupa Constituency is named for the falls.
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Sunday, 22 November 2020
Namibia: Caprivi Mutoya Lodge is open | Каприви Мутоя Лодж Каприви
Caprivi Mutoya Lodge is open!
Air-Conditioned Chalets
Even though it's been a very tough nine months, and with a tight hold on our purse strings, we have managed to save enough to install air-conditioners in our chalets. This has been done to try and entice more Namibians and fishermen to stay with us during our relentless hot months. So welcome to all Namibians.
Zambezi River Fishing Packages
For those who have always wanted catch that elusive Tiger Fish on the Zambezi River, now's your chance as we have on offer 3 nights and 4 nights special packages that will be valid until the end of December 2021.
PACKAGE RATES
3 Nights / 2 Full Days Fishing
Chalets: N$4950 per person sharing
Luxury Tents: N$4220 per person sharing
Campsite Tents: N$2340 per person sharing
Camping: N$2080 per person sharing
4 Nights / 3 Full Days Fishing
Chalets: N$6865 per person sharing
Luxury Tents: N$5895 per person sharing
Campsite Tents: N$3380 per person sharing
Camping: N$3040 per person sharing
Rates Include:
* Dinner and breakfast
* Ice, water, soft drinks and lunch packs on the boat
* Boat with a guide, fishing rods, fishing licenses, bait and 20 litres of fuel a day
* VAT and Namibian Tourism Levy
Rates Exclude:
* Single supplement
* Extra meals, drinks and activities
Normal booking terms and conditions apply.
South Africa is open for tourism | ЮАР открыта для туристов
At last, some fantastic news in the long and difficult year that is 2020 – South Africa’s president, Cyril Ramaphosa, announced last night that the country’s borders would be fully open to all international travellers. The red list of high-risk countries has been removed with immediate effect.
We are ready to welcome all of you back to our shores, and can assure you that the South African tourism industry has the safest possible COVID protocols in place. All you are required to do is provide on arrival a valid certificate of a negative test which was obtained not more than 72 hours before the date of travel.
We know that some of you may not yet be able to travel due to your own country’s lockdown rules, but while you wait we are preparing enthusiastically for your return. This has been a challenging time for the tourism industry and we couldn’t be happier to see the light at the end of this dark tunnel.
Please get in touch with your travel queries, dreams and ideas and let us help you plan your triumphant trip to the wide open spaces of Southern Africa.
South Africa: sharks at Muizenberg, Cape Town | Акулы на пляже Мюзенберг, Южная Африка
Bathers and surfers were cleared from the water at Muizenberg beach, Cape Town, South Africa after a shark was spotted close to shore on Friday, November 13.
Muizenberg town YouTube video:
Beach safety organisation Shark Spotters confirmed that the animal was a bronze whaler shark.
“Muizenberg beach had some interesting visitors this week! While there has still not been any white sharks recorded in False Bay for a long time, we have started seeing large bronze whaler (bronzie) sharks coming very close to shore, following small school of bait fish in shallow water,” according to Shark Spotters.
Video:
“This bronzie was seen on Friday morning at Surfers Corner and one of our drone pilots was able to get this awesome footage”.
“While bronze whaler sharks do not pose as significant a threat to water users as white sharks, we do still clear the beach as a precaution if they come very close to shore. This is because from the mountain it can be hard to tell the difference between a large bronzie and a smaller white shark, often needing to be confirmed by drone, and so the spotters will always err on the side of caution to ensure the safety of water users.
Saturday, 21 November 2020
Namibia: West Coast shipwrecks: "Anne Mondell" & "Arcona" | Кораблекрушения Намибии
Namibia: West Coast shipwrecks: "Anne Mondell" & "Arcona" | Кораблекрушения Намибии
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3. "Anne Mondell" wreck
No image available
Date: 1840s
Location: Ichaboe Island
4. "Arkona" wreck
Remains of "Arkona" shipwreck is located a couple of kilometres north of the "Otavi" wreck. The shipwreck is hardly visible.
Friday, 13 November 2020
Namibia: Neckertal Dam & Theodor Rehbock
Neckertal Dam & Theodor Rehbock
If one were to build a solid concrete wall one meter high and one meter wide from Cape Town past Keetmanshoop in the south of Namibia, one would need the same amount of concrete that was used to build the recently-inaugurated Neckertal Dam west of Keetmanshoop.
To construct the dam wall which is 540 meters long at the crest and 60 m wide at the bottom, more than a million cubic meters of concrete were used. The dam wall is 82,5 m high from the lowest point to the non-overspill crest and can store a total of 857 million cubic meters of water when full. This is three times the amount that can be stored in the Hardap Dam near Mariental. Neckartal dam stretches 38 km upstream with a surface area of 25 km². It is a curved gravity dam in the Fish River, 40 km west of Keetmanshoop, and a few kilometers north of Seeheim.
The dam will mainly be used for irrigation purposes and the government plans to have 5000 ha made available for the farming of Lucerne, dates, grapes, and vegetables. Water will be released at a rate of 50 m³ per second by two turbines which are three meters in diameter and which can together generate 3,5 MW per hour.
The water will flow down the Fish River for 13 km where it will be dammed up at an abstraction weir from where the water is being pumped into a reservoir on top of a hill, nine km away. From there the irrigation scheme will be supplied with water. All necessary infrastructure is already in place.
On the 13th March this year (2020), the Neckartal dam was officially inaugurated by Namibia’s Vice President Nangolo Mbumba. Construction had started on the 11th September 2013 and was completed in September 2019. The plans to build a dam on this site in the mighty Fish River date back to German colonial times.
In 1896 and 1897 Theodor Rehbock, who was born in Amsterdam in 1864, at the invitation of the colonial Syndicate of Water Affairs, conducted an expedition through Namibia and South Africa. During this, he became a visionary of a country transformed by more permanent water supplies in farm dams and massive dams in river beds.
He designed Pokkiesdraai and Avispoort Dams for Windhoek, Hatsamas near Dordabis, De Naauwte or Naute Dam in the Löwen River southwest of Keetmanshoop in the now !Karas region and a system of terraced dams in the Fish River starting with the Kommatsas North dam (today´s Hardap Dam) and climaxing with Kokerboomnaute or Neckertal Dam. In his two books, German South West Africa, its economic development with special emphasis on the usage of water resources (Berlin 1898) and Germany´s duties in German South West Africa (1904), he outlined his designs and his plans to finance the projects.
Farm dams were the responsibility of the individual farmers organized in co-operatives and aided by state-sponsored credit institutes. Larger dams would be state-financed and could be linked to farming co-operative complexes.
The project derived its name from Neckartal and Kokerboomfontein; two farms just outside Keetmanshoop and the Berseba Reserve. Theodor Rehbock attended school in the Netherlands and Germany and studied engineering at the Technological Institutes in Berlin and Munich. After completing his diploma, he was engaged in prestigious projects: building the innovative arch bridge across the River Weser in Germany and renovating the German Parliament (Reichstag).
In 1899 Rehbock became a professor of hydrology in Karlsruhe. In the 35 years he spent there, he became famous for the mock-ups he constructed which were up to 60 m in length and in which he tested the behavior of water before putting his plans into practice. His academic obligations did not prevent national and international engagements in Spain, South America (Panama Canal), and New Zealand. His most prestigious work was making the Rhine navigable up to Switzerland, solving problems that had arisen during the construction of the gigantic Dutch Zuiderzee polder system. He remained eager to put his Namibian dam projects into practice.
Though his ideas became significant during the German colonial period, the war lasting from 1903 to 1908 disrupted further plans. This was also due to the enormous amounts of money spent during the war. Farm dams were constructed, but plans for the larger dams were only approved in 1912 and then aborted by the time World War I started.
From 1915 to 1955 not much happened in terms of building further dams, and Theodor Rehbock and his ideas were somewhat forgotten, despite the fact that he was considered an international engineering celebrity. The poor whites flooding into Namibia from the south, received Land Bank credits to drill boreholes on their farms. In 1933, at the height of drought and global depression, dams were built hastily at Avis and in Ovamboland as part of a relief-payment-for-work-scheme.
After World War II and between 1955 and 1969, water affairs officials Otto Wipplinger and Heinz Stengel built many of today’s dams in Namibia. Thereby they reactivated many Rehbock traditions and visions. Upon their retirement and resignation, water affairs lapsed into relative inaction.
The second phase of the Neckartal project now awaits completion, in order to use the dam’s potential to the fullest and to benefit the people in the surrounding area. Not only will agriculture provide jobs and food security, but even tourism can play an important role in job creation efforts. Water sport like water skiing and angling on Namibia's biggest dam could attract many tourists for competitions and leisure, an aspect Rehbock had never considered. With all the water available, the natural world too will benefit and another paradise for aquatic birds could establish itself in this part of the country.
Honours:
Rehbock weir – a device to accurately measure the discharge in open-channel flows.
Rehbock dentated sill – for kinetic energy dissipation at the end of a stilling basin, into which the spillway of a large dam ends. This, in order to prevent or reduce scour.
Theodor Rehbock Medal – of the Deutsche Vereinigung für Wasserwirtschaft, Abwasser und Abfall (DWA; German Association for Water, Wastewater and Waste), to honour members who made outstanding innovations within the fields covered by the association. This award has been established in 2007.
Honorary doctorates from the Technical University Munich and the Palatine Joseph University of Technology and Economics in Budapest.
Honorary Member of the Dutch Royal Institution of Engineers (KIvI) in The Hague.
A street in Karlsruhe has been named after him.
Namibia: Magic Waters of Ai-Ais Resort
At the southern end of the Fish River Canyon, a mineral-rich hot spring encircled by rugged mountains has attracted people for centuries. It was known from the earliest times by the Nama who went there when sick to be healed by the rejuvenating waters, but Stone Age people had probably known of its existence thousands of years before. /Ai-/Ais is the Nama word for ‘very hot’ and although the clicks have been dropped, the descriptive name has been retained. Ground water heated up in the Earth’s crust rises to the surface at about 60*C in passages created by the deep fault systems found in the canyon.
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Ai-Ais Resort in the 1950s |
During the Nama uprising of 1903–07 the hot spring was used by German military forces as a base camp. In 1915, the area was also used as a base by South African troops who were recovering from wounds during the South West Africa Campaign. In 1962, the spring was leased to a local entrepreneur and was subsequently proclaimed a national monument in 1964. In 1969, the springs became a conservation area and on 16 March 1971, the camp was officially opened. The thermal water has an average temperature of about 60 °C. The water is piped to a series of indoor pools and jacuzzis.
Tuesday, 10 November 2020
Uganda: Sanctuary Gorilla Forest Camp news
We're delighted to welcome guests back to Sanctuary Gorilla Forest Camp from 1st December 2020
Sanctuary Gorilla Forest Camp, nestled deep inside Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in southwest Uganda, will be opening its doors once again to guests from 1st December 2020.
Ecologically respectful, contemporary-yet-classic in style, Sanctuary Gorilla Forest Camp blends in sensitively with the dramatic African mountain landscape. Each of the ten tents has a spacious, stone-walled bathroom with a freestanding bath for a relaxing soak after a day's trekking.
At Sanctuary Gorilla Forest Camp, once-in-a-lifetime encounters with Uganda's endangered gorillas await guests as they track these incredible creatures through one of Africa's most remarkable landscapes. The past year has seen Bwindi Impenetrable Forest experience a rare mountain gorilla baby boom with the birth of seven babies to date, the most recent born on 2nd September.
New COVID-19 precautionary measures have been introduced at all Sanctuary Retreats properties to ensure the safety of guests and staff and with new flexible booking conditions in place, we are ready to welcome guests back to enjoy all Africa has to offer. Sanctuary Retreats has been awarded the World Travel & Tourism Council's Safe Travels stamp. This stamp certifies that Sanctuary Retreats properties have adopted health and hygiene global standardised protocols so guests can experience 'Safe Travels'.
Immersed in Nature
Located in one of the remotest areas of Africa, these ten canvas tents come complete with a private terrace and ensuite with a freestanding bath.
Eat, Drink and be Merry
The camp's communal area stars a comfortable lounge with a well-stocked bar and elegant dining area, bestowing great views over the verdant rainforest.
Walk on the Wild Side
Get up close and personal with one of the rarest animals on Earth in Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, where half of the world's mountain gorillas are to be found.
Camp with a Conscience
Guests have the opportunity to visit one of the philanthropy projects taking place around the camp, including Ebenezer School and Bwindi Community Hospital.
Namibia: updates to entry requirements
UPDATES TO NAMIBIA’S ENTRY REQUIREMENTS
We are excited to let you know about recent updates to Namibia’s tourism revival strategy that will enable stress free travel of our wide open spaces!
*Travellers (International, Business & Namibians) that arrive at our borders (International Airport and selected land borders) with a NEGATIVE PCR TEST not older than 72 HOURS will be permitted to enter Namibia with no further testing or quarantine measures.
This means no more testing on day 5!
In addition to entry requirements, Air Namibia has also announced that they will resume regional flights between Windhoek & Walvis Bay to Johannesburg & Cape Town making travel for our South African neighbours possible.
For international travellers looking to visit South Africa but unable to travel directly because the are coming from a ‘high risk’ country then Namibia is a perfect stop over. Why not offer your clients wishing to visit South Africa now a 10 day add on to Namibia so they can meet the South African entry requirements, and enjoy an incredible 10 day visit to Namibia!