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Namibia Tourist Guide

Map of Namibia

Fast Facts about Namibia

  • Capital: Windhoek
  • Government: Republic
  • Currency: Namibian dollar (NAD); South African rand (ZAR)
  • Area total: 825,418 sq km
  • Population: 2,030,692 (July 2006 est.)
  • Language:  English 7% (official), Afrikaans common language of most of the population and about 60% of the white population, German 32%, indigenous languages: Oshivambo, Herero, Nama
  • Religion:  Christian 80% to 90% (Lutheran 50% at least), indigenous beliefs 10% to 20%
  • Electricity: 220-240V/50HZ
  • Calling Code :+264
  • Time Zone:  UTC +1

General Information about Namibia

Although not as well known as some of its African neighbours, Namibia is a gem for those in search of wildlife and wilderness; see oryx, elephants and rhino roam the country’s numerous reserves, and explore this open landscape of undulating dunes.

Desert, savannah and mountains
Essentially a desert country, Namibia offers contrasting landscapes. The Namib Desert is a vast swathe of high dunes and desolate plains with an awe-inspiring sense of space. The thorn bush savannah and rugged mountains of the central plateau give way to the majestic Fish River Canyon in the south.

Safari scenery
In the north, landscapes range from the dense bush and open plains of the great Etosha Pan, to woodland savannah and lush vegetation. Etosha National Park, the third largest in Africa, owes its unique landscape to the Etosha Pan, a vast shallow depression edged by waterholes to the south which guarantee rewarding game viewing.

Peaceful republic
Independent since 1990, Namibia was once governed by Germany and South Africa. Germanic influences can be seen in its colonial architecture, and in its roads and rest camps, most of which are well-maintained. Namibia is peaceful and more prosperous than many nearby countries because of its productive mining, farming, fishing and tourism industries. However, with half the country’s agricultural land owned by a few thousand white farmers, land reform is a burning issue.

The capital of Namibia lies at an altitude of 1603m and has a population of 150 000. The name of the city can be traced back to Chief Jonker Afrikaaner. The mountains around Windhoek reminded him of the farm Winterhoek near Tulbagh in the Cape (South Africa).

Waterberg

The Waterberg is the relic of a sandstone layer which once covered a substantial part of Namibia. The sandstone was eroded away, leaving only fragments scattered over the plain like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle on the floor of a child’s playroom. The Waterberg remnant of this lost landscape is a flat-topped plateau 48km long and between 8 and 16km wide.

Etosha National Park

Its name derives from the Ovambo e Tosha and conserves 22 270km2 of semi-arid savannah, including the pan itself. The pan temporarily fills with water during wetter summers, attracting breeding flamingos, pelicans and other waterbirds. The more common mammals are springbok, blue wildebeest, gemsbok, red hartebeest, greater kudu, giraffe, steenbok, black faced impala, and the Damara race of Kirk’s dik-dik.

Following large scale hunting by European hunters, the first German governor Von François introduced hunting laws and made hunting permits obligatory. In 1907 Governor von Lindequist declared one fourth of South West Africa a nature reserve. The Etosha Pan and the surrounding area were included. The fauna regenerated rapidly. The Kaokoland was incorporated into Etosha making it one of the largest reserves in the world. The Odendaal Plan based on the homeland policy of South Africa removed Kaokoland from Etosha in 1972. The Park is entirely fenced similar to the South African parks; Kruger, Zululand etc.

Namutoni

The fort was built by the Germans as a police post in 1903. A Silesian nobleman Count Wilhelm von Saurma Jettsch had the idea of a gleaming white fort in the wilderness. The count designed the fort as an irregular quadrangle, 60m x 68m, with four towers and three gates. Accommodation for officers and men was provided inside. There was a kitchen, a cool room for provisions, some sheds, a bakery, smithy, gunsmith’s workshop, joinery, wheelwright, and even a swimming-bath outside of the fort. On 6 July 1915, Namutoni was occupied by South African troops after the Germans were defeated.
From then on, the fort was only occupied occasionally and gradually became dilapidated. The fort was declared a historical monument in 1950 and funds were allocated by the government to rehabilitate it and to convert it into a tourist camp. In 1957 the reconstructed building was opened to tourists who were mainly local residents from Windhoek. Sunset at the tower is a superb spectacle of colour over the endless savannah plains.

Halali

The most recent camp in Etosha. The name is derived from the bugle call made by the German soldiers.

Okaukuejo

Also known as the Watering place of the lion is the headquarters of the park and the first and largest tourist camp built in Etosha.

Damaraland

The Odendaal plan had envisaged homelands for the various indigenous population groups, including the Damara. The Damara probably originate from the Sudan, and they knew how to melt iron and copper and to forge metal. They made spearheads and axes for the Herero and Hottentots. The most serious problem encountered in Damaraland is the lack of water. Dryland farming cannot be practised due to the poor quality of the soil and the low rainfall. Khorixas – the main town of Damaraland – was formerly known as Welwitschia.

Twyfelfontein

The valley is known in the Damara language as Uais (one fountain). When it flows, this fountain has attracted game animals and man. Since its nature has always been erratic, Europeans have named it Twyfelfontein (the doubtful fountain). The origin of the well preserved rock engraving is uncertain. They are probably the work of Bushmen or Nama artists and are estimated by some to be about 5000 years old. Engraving on rocks is difficult, with no possibility of erasing errors. The engravings are so skillfully done that they must have been the work of artists who have previously learnt the skill on waste rock and who had made no amateurish mistakes.

Cape Cross

Diego Cao erected a padrao (cross) in 1483. Presumably he was the first European to step onto the Namibian soil. It was a custom of the Portuguese to erect a cross of wood or limestone wherever they landed.

Seal Colony

About 50 000 seals are at Cape Cross. Seals are warm blooded animals (37°C) and have an 8mm thick layer of fat to protect them from the icy waters of the Benguela Current. The Benguela Current is rich in plankton which attract an abundance of fish on which the seals feed.

Swakopmund

The name derives from the Swakop River that flows into the Atlantic south of the town. The Germans, in the process of expanding their colony in South West Africa, needed a port but the only natural harbour on this part of the coast was Walvis Bay, which was already annexed to the Cape. The Germans built an artificial harbour and a narrow-gauge railway to convey goods across the Namib to the interior. Swakopmund has many interesting buildings of the German colonial era. The Swakopmund museum is excellent, with well-displayed exhibits on themes such as the Namib Desert, the ocean and Swakopmund.

Welwitschia Mirabillis

In 1853, Dr Welwitsch the director of the Botanical Gardens in Lisbon was requested by the Portuguese Government to do research on flora and fauna in their colony of Angola. Dr Welwitsch, an Austrian, penetrated as far as the Skeleton Coast and discovered typical species of the flora of an arid region, amongst others, the Welwitschia Mirabillis which was named after him – Welwitschia (from the doctor) and Mirabillis (miraculous in Latin).

The carrot-shaped stem of the Welwitschia can grow up to 3m into the soil and has a tap root with numerous ramifications. Apart from the two cotyledons the plant has only two very long leathery leaves beginning at the stem and worn away at the tips. These leaves rest on the ground and are being shredded by the action of the wind. The lifespan of the Welwitschia is extremely long and certain plants are estimated at more than 1000 years old.

Namib Desert

A vast, solitary place, harsh and primeval – one of the oldest deserts on earth. Namib means a vast open plain, seemingly without end. The cold Benguela Current produces a mist over the coast and covers the Namib, causing some dampness due to condensation, but not proper rain. Most of the creatures and plants depend on the mist from the Atlantic for survival. Over 200 species of beetles, scorpions, spiders, geckoes, chameleons, crickets, wasps, slide winder snakes and jackal have adapted to this harsh environment.

Sossusvlei

This is a huge clay-floor pan dotted by camelthorn trees (acacia erioloba) surrounded by dunes which are amongst the highest in the world (±275m). The Tsauchab River flows every fifteen to twenty years into the pan after a long rainfall. The pan was filled by water in early 1997.

Sesriem Canyon

The name derives from the time of the first settlers when six thongs made of ox leather (Afrikaans: riem) were required to pull up buckets of water from the pool in the gorge. The Tsauchab River has cut a 50m deep gorge into the schist layers of metamorphic rock.

Naukluft

The name means narrow cleft. The park consists of a massive jumble of rocky mountains carpeted with diverse flora and abounding with perennial water, and a rich bird life with a population of baboon, leopard, rock hyrax and Hartmann’s mountain zebra.

Fish River Canyon

The canyon is 161km long, 27km wide at maximum, and up to 549m deep. These days, the Fish river, whose energy caused this vast gash in the landscape, flows only intermittently, but water is always contained in a succession of deep pools which are full of fish such as barbel and yellowfish. Four pluvial (wet periods) seem to have occurred in the south western part of Africa during the last million years, resulting in the powerful run-off of water which eroded this canyon.

Skeleton Coast

The Skeleton Coast Park is one of our planet’s most inhospitable, but hauntingly beautiful places – it is wild, desolate and uninhabited. It has everything from roaring sand dunes, windswept plains, towering canyons, salt pans to seal colonies, shipwrecks and even one of the most productive fishing grounds anywhere. The arid desert environment in the Skeleton Coast is within the northern reaches of the Namib Desert. The Benguela current brings cold waters all the way from Antarctica and helps to moderate temperatures. The cool air off the ocean meets the hotter desert air, and nearly every morning, a cool mist envelops the coastline, bringing life sustaining moisture to the desert. Another bonus is that this current also moderates the temperatures. In the middle of the desert in the height of mid-summer the temperatures almost never rise above 28 degrees C. The cold Benguela Current travels all the way up from Antarctica and brings plankton rich waters to this coastline – along with massive amounts of fish.

The Skeleton Coast National Park has three zones. The southern half is the public area of the national park focused around Terrace Bay and its accommodation, which is used predominantly on self-drive safaris. The northern zone from Mowe Bay northwards is a totally private concession within the National Park (where the safaris we offer are conducted), while the extreme north of the park is the research area. Between Mowe Bay and the research area is about 200,000 hectares of incredible countryside, which is totally isolated and private.

Fresh water springs permeate through barren sands to create rare oases in the desert, which sustain pockets of wildlife. Springbok, Gemsbok (Oryx), the Desert Elephant, Ostrich, Jackal and Brown Hyena eke out an existence in this rugged terrain, along with vegetation like Welwitschia which has adapted to the harsh conditions.

Visas

Tourists may enter Namibia for up to 3 months.

Citizens from the following countries do not require a visa to visit Namibia: Angola, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Botswana, Brazil, Canada, Countries in the Commonwealth of Independent States, Cuba, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Lesotho, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, New Zealand, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Russia, South Africa, Singapore, Spain, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Tanzania, Ukraine, United Kingdom, United States of America, Zambia, Zimbabwe

Visitors not from the above countries need to apply for a visa from the Namibian consulate in their country of origin or the Ministry of Home Affairs

All visitors require a passport valid for at least 6 months after date of entry into Namibia.

Getting to Namibia By plane

Hosea Kutako International Airport, located 45 minutes east of Windhoek, is the main entry point for air traffic. Air Namibia operates flights from Frankfurt, London, Cape Town, Johannesburg, Victoria Falls and Maun to the international airport. Flights between the smaller Eros Airport and Cape Town are also available. South African Airways and no-frills Kulula.com operate flights from South Africa, too.

Getting around Namibia

Despite the vast distances in Namibia, most people get around by land, and not air.

Namibia’s roads are very good, with primary routes paved, and secondary routes of well-graded gravel. An all-wheel drive vehicle is not necessary except on tertiary roads and the Skeleton Coast. Driving at night is very dangerous because there is a lot of wildlife on the roads. Traffic drives on the left.

Food and Drinks

Namibians are not particularly adventurous when it comes to their food; meat is pretty much the standard. This often comes served with a porridge like mixture called mahango or pap (or something else depending on where you are). In restaurants steak and chips is nearly always the Namibian choice.

Vegetables are not popular amongst the majority of Namibians, and are viewed as the poison of the cultural imperialists.

Things are changing and many restaurants in Namibia offer a wider range of foodstuffs and some even cater for vegetarians. Vegetarians should be prepared for a lot of questioning about their particular eating disorder and can also expect little pieces of bacon or ham in their salad, but remember this is only your chef trying to be kind.

The favourite way of preparing meat in Namibia is the braai (barbecue) and this ritual is obeyed in the majority of households on Saturday and Sunday afternoons, the braai is a social occasion and only two things are guaranteed firstly eating will take place much later than anticipated and secondly there will be beer!!!

Fruits and Vegetables. you will find in Namibia avocados, bananas, mandarin oranges, oranges, pineapples, kiwi, peanuts, beans, rice, couscous, millet, tomatoes, corn, bread, onions, pasta, potatoes, and celery. Many of these foods are imported and may be expensive and limited to seasonal availability

If visiting Windhoek. you will find local and international cuisine in the many diverse restaurants and cafes. Pretty much anything you want, you will find here

Namibia’s nightclubs are always happening and always open late (pretty much until the last person leaves). They are mostly located in bigger cities: Windhoek, Swakopmund and Oshakati. There are not many bars, though there is very good beer, and there are a lot of shebeens. The flagship beer of Namibia is Windhoek Lager. an easy-drinking filtered beer, not dissimilar to many  German brews.

Climate

Typical semi-desert – hot days and cool nights. Midsummer temperatures can rise to over 40°C. Winter days are warm but dawn temperatures may drop to freezing.

Along the coast it is cool with low rainfall and fog prevails from late afternoon until mid-morning.

The rainy season lasts from October to April. The rest of the year is dry and cloudless. Namibia averages 300 days of sunshine a year.

What to pack

As temperatures can be very high during the summer months, clothing made from cotton is preferable. During winter, light clothing, combined with a sweater and/or jacket is recommended, as it becomes cold in the evenings and early mornings.

Important items to pack: comfortable walking shoes, swimsuits, binoculars, sun hats and sunglasses, sun block, mosquito repellent and battery-operated or conventional razors for visiting remote areas.

Credit Cards

International cards are widely accepted throughout the country, including most Government rest camps, hotels, shops and restaurants.

Currency

Namibian Dollar (N$), divided into 100 cents. Notes of N$10, N$20, N$50 and N$100 are in circulation. South African notes and coins are also legal tender.

Drinking Water

All water from taps is purified and visitors need have no hesitation in drinking it.

Health

The dry climate of Namibia is extremely healthy and most tropical diseases are unknown. Vaccinations are only required if the visitors should take precautions when traveling in Etosha, Ovambo and Caprivi.

Language

The official language is English and all documents, notices and directional signs are in this language. German and Afrikaans are also used throughout the country and there are numerous African languages and dialects which fall into two main groups: Bantu and Khoisan.

Medical

By virtue of Namibia’s vast size and the remoteness of many venues, high costs are involved when illness or accidents occur. Travel insurance covering baggage and valuables plus accident should be considered before departure.

Crime

Theft is not a major problem in Namibia, but in a country with very high unemployment rates and a great deal of financial inequality, tourists often make good targets. However by following some simple precautions and being aware of your surroundings you should easily be able to minimise your chances of being a victim.

Be careful in major centres and never leave anything in an unattended vehicle in any city or town. Pick pocketing occurs in the towns and cities but if you exercise some caution and do not carry huge day packs or camera bags around with you the risk is minimised.

Muggings, although becoming more common, almost never include violence, do not resist if anyone points a knife at you (unless you have that black belt in karate). If you’re mugged at gun point consider yourself special as this is almost unheard of.

Windhoek now has two police forces the municipally funded City Police & the state operated police force. If you are in need of assistance it is generally best to contact the city police as their response times are excellent and they are generally extremely helpful.

In national parks such as Etosha or Sossusvlei crime is rare, it is generally safe to leave your luggage in your car, accommodation establishment or even tent.

Trust local advice, and don’t be afraid to ask people at your accommodation establishment, but it is worth remembering that many southern Africans are rather paranoid when it comes to crime and love to regale visitors with horror stories.

Category: Namibia
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One Response
  1. Hoyt Bean says:

    Thanks for putting together Namibia Tourist Guide, Traveling to Namibia, Namibia Tourist Information | Exotic Vacations I am enjoying your posts. Would you consider a guest post? You can see my post style at http://timwicks.com.au and certainly I would be interested in having you post an article or two on my blog, what do you think?

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