Your African holiday
starts here.
Lush, sub-tropical wetlands
Large expanses of open water are fringed with palm trees, reeds and papyrus. Flood plains are dotted with broad-leafed woodlands and the wildlife is mostly riverine.
Untouched by the outside world
Kaokoland is a succession of hills and mountains punctuated by endless plains. Very few people live in this harsh land and the traditions of the nomadic Himba pastoralists have remained unchanged for many generations.
Shipwrecks, marinelife and uninhabited wilderness
The Skeleton Coast is a sliver of desert that spans the 1,500km from the Orange River in the south to the Kunene River and Angolan Border.
Where the earth meets the sky
The Kalahari is a vast basin of semi-arid plains, dry savannah and moist woodland.The attractions are few and very far between and that in itself is one of the major attractions of this endless land.
The handiwork of the ages
One of the largest in the world, the canyon proper is about 60km long, up to 8km wide, and 550m at its deepest.
The Namib Desert and the logic-defying town
The only rocky part of the 1,500km Namib coastline and poised between sand and sea, Lüderitz is a remote frontier at the very end of everything - or the beginning depending on which way you look at history.
A wildlife haven en route to the north country
The plateau rises 200m above the surrounding plains and creates a diversity of habitats. The Waterberg Plateau Park and surrounding game farms are the base for numerous conservation-related research projects.
Kalahari wilderness and off-road adventure playground
Though harsh and inhospitable, this expanse of uncharted wilderness in the northern Kalahari has nine different habitats and supports communities of hunter-gatherers - known locally as Bushmen - and a high concentration of wild animals and birds.