WildLife Adventures
African Overland Adventure Safaris to Southern and East Africa


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WILDLIFE ADVENTURES

Tel: +27 (0)21 - 385 1530
Fax: +27 (0)21 - 385 1573

Physical Address:

8 Montreal Drive,
Airport Industria,
7925
Cape Town

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Botswana - WildLife Adventures

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- Chobe National Park

- Maun

- Nata

- Okavango Delta

Botswana

Botswana is one of the most famous destinations in the world. The stunning waterways of the Okavango Delta, the Kalahari Sand Dunes and the abundance of wildlife are just a few features of what makes Botswana an ultimate destination.

Most people's highlight is the makoro safari experience in the Okavango Delta where you will be gently poled by experienced guides through the winding water ways teeming with wildlife. The north eastern region of the Kalahari Basin contains the Makgadikgadi Pans - an extensive network of salt pans and ephemeral lakes.

Tours that pass through Botswana

Must do's

  • An absolute must is the spectacular river game cruise at Chobe National Park  time and time again it's noted by our past clients as their no. one highlight!
  • Take a Mokoro safari into the depths of the Okavango Delta.
  • Experience the Delta's hidden beauty from the air by taking a flight over the Delta.
  • Take an excursion to the Makgadikgadi pans and party up a storm at Planet Baobab!


QUICK FACTS - BOTSWANA:

Area: 582,000 sq km
Population: 1.6 million
Official languages: English & Setswana
Time: GMT/UTC + 2
Currency: Pula
Capital: Gaborone

MORE INFO ON BOTSWANA:

Although Botswana has no mountain ranges to speak of, the almost uniformly flat landscape is punctuated occasionally by low hills, especially along the southeastern boundary and in the far northwest. Botswana's highest point is 1,491m Otse Mountain near Lobatse, but the three major peaks of the Tsodilo Hills, in the country's northwestern corner, are more dramatic.

GEOGRAPHY

Landlock Botswana extends more than 1100km from north to south and 960km from east to west. The Kalahari (Kgalagadi) covers 85% of the country in the central and South-Western areas.

The country lies between longitudes 20 and 30 degrees east of Greenwich and between the latitudes 18 and 27 degrees approximately south of the Equator. The Okavango, which originates in the uplands of Angola to the northwest flows over the sandy Kalahari to form an inland delta. The delta covers 17,000 square kilometers, which make it the largest inland delta in the world.

HISTORY

San (Bushmen) were the aboriginal inhabitants of what is now Botswana, but they constitute only a small portion of the population today. The Tswana supplanted the San, who remained as subjects. Beginning in the 1820s, the region was disrupted by the expansion of the Zulu and their offshoot, the Ndebele. However, Khama II, chief of the Ngwato (the largest Tswana nation), curbed the depredations of the Ndebele and established a fairly unified state.


A new threat arose in the late 19th century with the incursion of Boers (Afrikaners) from neighboring Transvaal. After gold was discovered in the region in 1867, the Transvaal government sought to annex parts of Botswana. Although the British forbade annexation, the Boers continued to encroach on native lands during the 1870s and 80s. German colonial expansion in South West Africa (Namibia) caused the British to reexamine their policies, and, urged on by Khama III, they established (188485) a protectorate called Bechuanaland.

CULTURE

About 60% of the people claim Tswana heritage. Botswana also has one of the world's most predominantly urban societies, with the greatest concentrations in the strip between Lobatse and Francistown. The small number of Europeans and Asians live mainly in Gaborone, Maun and Francistown, and the Herero, Mbukushu, Yei, San, Kalanga and Kgalagadi are distributed through the west.

CLIMATE

The rainy season is from November to March and the best season for wildlife viewing is during the dry winter months (late May to August), when animals stay close to water sources.

TRAVEL TIPS

  • It can get very hot in Botswana. You should drink plenty of water to avoid dehydration and use high factor sun lotions.
  • Do not swim in rivers or lakes. Always check with your local guide in case wild animals, especially crocodiles are prevalent.
  • Full banking services are available in big towns.
  • Take medical advice on pre-travel vaccinations and anti-malarials





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