Winged Safaris Amid The Desert Sands

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The afternoons are by far the best time of day in Namibia. Sipping a cold drink as the sun sits low within the African sky, bleeding the harsh desert shades into soft pastels. As the still, evening air cools in the heat of the day, the sky becomes awash with an boundless sprinkle of stars.
Perhaps not as popular as some of its African neighbors, Namibia is really a jewel for those who are in search of wildlife and wilderness.
Occupied since the dawn of time, the community individuals, plants and animals have come a long way, adapting in remarkable and unique ways to their, often, tough environment. The distinctive culture, spectacular landscapes and exquisite silences of Namibia supply a welcome change from the frantic pace of modern life.
Big parts from the country are so distant and untouched, you will often feel like you’re the first individual to discover these magical places and you will never be missing room to look around at your own pace.
Gliding along a absolute blue, cloudless sky over the crisscross jigsaw from the cracked desert floor – a fly-in safari offers unequaled access to this parched and lonely land that belies the rich array of flora and fauna that calls it home.
Back on very dry land within the heart of Kaokoland, one from the final surviving wilderness areas in Southern Africa, following the rare desert dwelling elephant, black rhino and giraffe will take you exploring the tough landscape amid stunning mountain scenery. Silent, huge and for the most part empty, Kaokoland is truly the back of beyond.
Along Kaokoland’s northern border the perennially flowing waters of the Kunene River run past richly colored rock walls within the shade of wild fig trees, baobabs and waving makalani palms. A touch of white water rafting and canoeing offers some welcome respite from the harsh desert climes, and might bestow a glimpse of some of Namibia’s impressive birdlife, as an African fish eagle and a tiny Malachite Kingfisher hunt along the banks side by side.
A short, comfortable flight west will soon have you skimming low over the desolate, unworldly sands of the Skeleton Coast, dotted with a maritime graveyard of landlocked carcasses of ships whose surviving sailors came ashore to die in the pitiless wastes from the Namib Desert. Eerily cold sea breezes blow across hot desert sands that are frequently shrouded by fog.
A winged safari vehicle is the only method to get close to among the inhospitable sand dunes, canyons and mountain ranges of the Skeleton Coast Park, which offers a unique view of diverse and ever-changing geological formations and the refuges of black rhino and desert-adapted elephant.
A variety of local lodges provide the chance to explore and also the possibility of spotting a cackle of hyenas as you scramble over this bleak landscape on a quad-bike, or get stopped in your tracks by lonely-looking flock of ostriches wandering the desert amid the shimmering sands.
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