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ETOSHA
NATIONAL PARK, NAMIBIA
In
depth guide to the seasons, animals, birds & wildlife
habitats of the African safari region
of Etosha Game Reserve in Namibia.
To request a private safari tour of Etosha in Namibia, click here >>> |
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Etosha
is one of the largest and best game viewing
parks in the whole of Africa. The reason is
in the Ovambo name Etosha, which means 'huge
white area' or 'place of dry water', depending
upon whom you ask. For most of the year a vast
shallow pan, which was once a lake the size
of Holland, shimmers a glaring bright white
from crystallised salt across its entire surface.
Surrounding the pans is a variety of grass and
woodlands amongst which live a wonderful variety
of animals and birds, insects and reptiles.
The
inhospitable pan is 75 miles (120km) long and
45 miles (72km) at its widest, and lone wildebeest
or herds of oryx can be seen crossing it or
just standing as if mesmerised.
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ever you are likely to see a mirage it will be
here, as the intense hazy sun reflecting against
the shimmering pans distorts your eyesight and
makes you see all sorts of things that are not
really there.
In complete contrast, when
the rain arrives, up to three feet (1metre) of
water turns the parched surface into an algae-rich
soup attracting thousand of birds. The pink mist
shifting slowly across the water is a huge flock
of flamingoes, for whom this is an important breeding
ground. After a good watering, the surrounding
woodland savannah and scrubland, which is normally
sparsely vegetated, bursts with an abundance of
yellow blooms and rich grasses.
Etosha has dozens of waterholes,
some are natural while others are artificially
fed from boreholes. During the dry season, staking
out a position at a waterhole viewpoint is a rewarding
way to watch game without moving from one spot.
A veritable 'Noah's Arc' of species queue up to
take a drink, with elephants hogging the lion's
share! |
| ANIMALS
& BIRDS
Plains
game such as zebra, wildebeest, giraffe, springbok,
impala and eland abound in great numbers on the
grasslands and congregate at waterholes in the
dry season. Herds of fifty elephants are not unusual
and often walk right down the middle of the road
giving people in cars an incredibly close and
thrilling encounter. Lions and hyenas must be
searched for, but silver-backed jackals trot around
almost oblivious to you. The desert dwelling oryx,
upon which the mythical unicorn must surely be
based, will certainly be seen here along with
the impressive curly horned kudu. Etosha also
contains endangered black rhino and unusual species
like the black-faced impala - a larger and darker
subspecies found only in south-western Angola
and north-western Namibia. |
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| Etosha
birdlife is absolutely wonderful with every kind
of feathered friend. One to look for is the ground
hornbill who looks like a downhearted widow with
a red scarf around her face. Other less terrestrial
hornbills are the cheeky yellow-billed hornbills
whose squawk and loping flight becomes a familiar
sight. Lilac breasted rollers are colourful enough
at they sit on their favourite perch, but when
they take off in pursuit of an insect, their underwings
give a blinding flash of electric blue. Eagles
and vultures cruise high in the warm air currents
or perch on branches with beady eyes alert.
SEASONS
The best game-viewing time is during the coolest
dry months of May to September, but bird watching
is at its peak in the rainy season from November
to March. The average daily temperature is 88°F
(31°C) and average minimum is 57°F (13.7°C).
Rainy Season: Rainfall is approximately 14 inches
(358mm) per year with January to March the hottest
and wettest months. During this time the pans
usually fill with water and animals give birth.
Dry Season: July to September are the driest months.
The 'in between' months, which are neither wet
nor dry but somewhere in the middle, are very
pleasant.
ETOSHA
GAME RESERVE SPECIALITIES
· Dry-season waterhole
watching
· Glistening salt pans
empty or full are a spectacular sight
· Sensational rain clouds
forming
· Huge herds of elephants
· Mirages from the distorting
heat of the salt pans
· Thousands of flamingoes
when the pans are full
· Black-faced impala and
little dik diks
· Fascinating and colourful
birdlife
· Oryx meandering across
a salt pan
· Wet season fields of
yellow blooms dotted with grazing animals
FACTS
As this is a National Park, no off-road or night
driving is allowed.
Several days are needed to visit this unique park
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Follow the links below to Namibia's premier wildlife regions and game reserves.
PRIVATE SAFARI LODGES WE RECOMMEND IN THE ETOSHA REGION |
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