Join us and enjoy the unique beautiful nature of Botswana.
Okavango Delta
The Okavango Delta is a large low gradient alluvial fan or ‘Inland Delta’ located in north-western Botswana. It is in a near-pristine state being a largely untransformed wetland system
The inscribed World Heritage property encompasses an area of 2,023,590 ha with a buffer zone of 2,286,630 ha.
Undoubtedly one of Africa’s most beautiful rivers, the Chobe supports a diversity and concentration of wildlife unparalleled anywhere else in the country.
The most accessible and frequently visited of Botswana’s big game country, the Chobe Riverfront is most famous for its large herds of elephants and cape Buffalo, which during the dry winter months converge upon the river to drink.
Savuté is an area of many curiosities and is best known for its predators, particularly lions, cheetah, and hyena, of which there are large resident populations.
When the channel is filled with water, it becomes the venue for thousands of migratory birds and animals, particularly large herds of zebra.
The Moremi Game Reserve covers much of the eastern side of the Okavango Delta and combines permanent water with drier areas, which create some startling and unexpected contrasts.
The reserve presents insights and views even for the most experienced of travelers. It is home to nearly 500 species of bird and a vast array of other species of wildlife.
Imagine – if you will – an area the size of Portugal, largely uninhabited by humans.
Normally extremely arid when the rains come the pans flood, attracting wildlife, zebra and wildebeest on the grassy plains, and most spectacularly tens and sometimes hundreds of thousands of flamingos.
Part of the great Makgadikgadi complex, Nxai Pan National Park covers an area of 2578 sq km and comprises several larger pans.
These larger pans are non-grazed and are scattered with islands of acacia trees, and smaller pans that fill with water during the rainy seasons – thus providing rich resources for wildlife.
The Central Kalahari Game Reserve is the largest, most remotely situated reserve in Southern Africa, and the second-largest wildlife reserve in the world.
Nothing prepares you for the immensity of this reserve, nor its wild, mysterious beauty.
Victoria Falls, or Mosi-oa-Tunya (Tokaleya Tonga: The Smoke That Thunders), is a waterfall in southern Africa on the Zambezi River at the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Victoria Falls is boasts the largest sheet of falling water.
The Ngwezumba pans lie approximately 70 km south of the Chobe River and comprise a large complex of clay pans, surrounded by mophane woodlands and grassland plains.
During the rainy season, the pans fill with water, then attracting wildlife that moves away from the permanent water sources of the Linyanti and Chobe Rivers.
Linyati
During the dry winter months, game-viewing at the permanent waters of the Linyanti can be excellent.
The area that falls within the Chobe National Park, which has a public campsite, is sandwiched between photographic concessions to the west and hunting concessions to the east.