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Namibia Culture and Wildlife Adventure

Overview
Highlights (Bullets)
- Encounter leopards and cheetahs up close with a Naankuse researcher as founded by National Geographic, and track cheetahs on foot in the Okonjima Game Reserve.
- Search for rare desert-adapted black rhinos and elephants.
- Spend two days getting acquainted with the ancient hunter-gatherer culture of the San (or “Bushmen”) people.
Short Description
With deserts that reach all the way to the sea, twinkling salt pans, and lunar-like red-rock landscapes, Namibia is stark, wild, and spectacular. On a variety of safaris and wildlife walks, track animals of all sorts, including cheetahs, desert-adapted elephants and rhinos, and the kudu, zebra, and oryx of Etosha National Park. Meet with scientists to learn first-hand about efforts to preserve Namibia’s cheetahs, leopards, and rhinos. Spend time in San and Himba settlements and get acquainted with the fascinating ancient cultures that make their home in this harsh and mystical land.
Destinations
NamibiaActivities & Interests
Bird watching Cooking Culture Game drive Historic sightseeing History Safari Wildlife viewingItinerary
Day 1: Windhoek, Namibia/ Naankuse
Meals: Dinner
Accommodation: Naankuse Lodge
Arrive in Windhoek, Namibia’s capital city, and travel to nearby N/a’an ku sê, a research and conservation center focused on protecting Namibia’s wildlife and cultures. Encounter leopards and cheetahs up close and personal with a Naankuse researcher as founded by National Geographic. Stay in the center’s stunning not-for-profit eco-lodge tonight.
Day 2: Okonjima Game Reserve
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner
Travel north to the Okonjima Game Reserve, stopping to browse local handicrafts in the markets of Okahandja. Stretching some 50,000 acres, Okonjima is home to the AfriCat Foundation, which seeks to rehabilitate injured or captive predators and mitigate conflicts between wildlife and local farmers. Settle into your private thatched chalet, and then head out on safari. Track cheetahs on foot or leopards in a vehicle, and later, go on a night hike to observe nocturnal creatures such as porcupines, honey badgers, and perhaps a leopard. (2–3 miles walking, 1–2 hours)
Days 3 & 4: Tsumkwe
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner
After a morning safari, travel east to the land of the San people, who have lived off this harsh land for millennia. Immerse yourself in their ancient hunter-gatherer culture, taking part in everyday activities such as fire- and rope-making, cooking, and setting traps to catch game. Join community members for a bush walk, tracking game, looking for honey, and foraging for edible or medicinal plants. With luck, our visit will coincide with a traditional elephant or giraffe healing ceremony in the evening. (Day 3: 2–3 miles walking, 1–2 hours; Day 4: 3–4 miles walking, 2–3 hours)
Days 5, 6, & 7: Etosha National Park/Ongava Game Reserve
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner ( For all days)
Drive west, stopping to visit Lake Otjikoto, where retreating German forces dumped tons of armaments in 1915 during the British campaign in German Southwest Africa. Arrive at our bush camp on the eastern boundary of Etosha National Park. Enjoy two full days on safari in different regions of the park, and spend a night in the adjacent private Ongava Game Reserve. Spot gemsbok and rare black-faced impalas, look for endemic birds like Hartlaub’s francolin and the bare-cheeked babbler, and catch a glimpse of elephants splashing at the water’s edge.
Day 8: Damaraland
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner
Enter Damaraland, a stark desert landscape where unusually succulent plants thrive, fed by mists off the Atlantic. We’ll seek out the Himba people, semi-nomadic pastoralists who live in conical homes built of palm fronds, saplings, and mud. Meet with Himba elders to learn about their history and unique traditions—largely unchanged over the centuries. (1–2 miles walking, 1–2 hours)
Days 9 & 10: Twyfelfontein/Palmwag Concession
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner
This morning, search for the elusive desert-adapted elephant. Then, at the UNESCO World Heritage site of Twyfelfontein, hike into the hills to examine San petroglyphs and discover the geological curiosities of Burnt Mountain and the Organ Pipes. Continue to the vast, arid landscape of the Palmwag Concession, home to one of the world’s largest natural populations of the rare black rhino. Our camp here is part of the Save the Rhino Trust, which has helped revive the rhino population after the species was nearly wiped out. Go rhino tracking on game drives and walks with wildlife guides, and discover rare flora and fauna. (Day 9: 1–2 miles walking, 1–2 hours; Day 10: 3–4 miles walking, 2–3 hours)
Days 11 & 12: Swakopmund/Sossusvlei
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner(Daily)
Accommodation: Sossus Dune Lodge
After a leisurely breakfast this morning you will board your private chartered aircraft for your flight to Sossusvlei. You will fly over the famous Skeleton Coast, flying over shipwrecks, abandoned diamond mining camps, spotting seal and marine bird colonies as well as the giant sand sea (weather permitting). Make a brief stop in the town of Swakopmund for lunch. Fly on to the Sossusvlei clay pan in the southern part of the Namib, renowned for its massive ochre-hued dunes—among the highest in the world. Settle into our eco-lodge within Namib Naukluft Park, and go hiking in Sesriem Canyon, carved into the rock by the Tsauchab River over millions of years. Rise early to experience sunrise over the dunes, when the light accentuates their towering, wind-sculpted curves. As we explore, keep an eye out for springbok, bat-eared foxes, geckos, and other desert wildlife. (3–4 miles walking, 2–3 hours)
Days 13 & 14: Windhoek
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner; Breakfast(Day 14)
Accommodation: Galton House
Drive to Windhoek and enjoy free time, then gather for a farewell dinner. The next day, transfer to the airport for your flight home.
Availability
30 National Geographic Expeditions Travel Reviews & Ratings
Namibia Culture and Wildlife Adventure
Company Reviews
Inconsistent information, No Refund
How to Ruin a Trip to Norway
TOO MUCH TOO FAST
We arrived in Luxor, were taken to the hotel, deposited our luggage (the room wasn’t ready), had breakfast, and then met our tour guide at 10:00 AM for our first tour. We were exhausted, but mustered our energy for the occasion.
Is there a good reason why Cairo wasn’t the first city on our tour? In retrospect, it should have been for many reasons, not the least of which was the logistics described above.
All right, so now we’re in Luxor, and by afternoon we’re ensconced in a luxurious hotel with a magnificent view of the Nile River. There’s a swimming pool that we’re looking forward to relaxing by the next day during some much needed down time during the free time described in the itinerary; exactly what we expected from National Geographic. But instead, that evening we were told by our guide that we needed to have our luggage ready to check out of the hotel the next morning to relocate to the Nile River ship Minerva (coincidentally, owned by the same company as the hotel). We obliged, and in the morning we were taken on a tour with the luggage in the car, and then brought to the ship in the early afternoon. Our four suitcases were put in a room that was barely large enough to contain the bed, but the view of the river from our room was good enough to overlook this inconvenience, at least for the moment. I looked forward to resting in our cabin in the afternoon because I was exhausted. In fact, I was so tired that I have little recollection of that morning’s tour until I look at the photos to affirm that I was actually where the itinerary said I would be.
We went to lunch in the ship’s dining room and returned to our cabin to find that our view of the Nile was obliterated by a ship that had tied up alongside our own. This is now our view (see photo) and the blackout drapes that were drawn to hide it made the small cabin a crowded, dark dungeon.
Furthermore, that ship’s bunker oil fumes were now in the air conditioning system of our ship and flowing freely into our cabin making me nauseous and giving me a headache. I complained but there was nothing to do about it.
And if this wasn’t bad enough, the sound of the neighboring ship that accompanied the smell was intolerable.
Other issues I had with our cabin on the ship included;
- The bypass closet door wouldn’t stay shut
- There was a leak under the bathroom sink
- The carpet in the area near the bathroom was wet
- The toilet seat lid came off repeatedly
- Wifi on board the ship was only in the main lobby area, and was poor at best
I talked to the ship’s desk clerk, and he assured me that things would be taken care of shortly. They never were.
This doesn’t take into consideration that the buffet style food served on board was repetitive if you didn’t take the offered main course, which was usually meat (I don’t eat meat).
Oh, and I didn’t yet mention that our ship wouldn’t be leaving its mooring until the next day! We had traded a luxurious hotel for this!
With that said, it begs the question of why we were taken out of a luxurious hotel 24 hours in advance of the ship sailing away from Luxor? No pool to sit by, no view of the sunset over the banks of the Nile, no quiet room in which to sleep, and no dinner of delicious food. Certainly not what we expected from a Nat Geo Private Tour for which we had paid a premium price!
Unrelated to these issues, NatGeo’s survey asked if we felt that our health was well-protected. “No” is the short answer. A fuller reply is that we both got Covid on this trip; my husband first, then inevitably, myself three days later. We had avoided catching it for more than 2.6 years, and now we had it. I realize that one takes risks when going out in the world, and I certainly don’t blame NatGeo for our getting sick. But their people weren’t wearing masks until I asked them to, mostly to protect themselves from us. One agent who met us at the airport when we arrived back in Cairo from Aswan, now openly sick with Covid, disappeared for 10 minutes to purchase a mask when I told him in no uncertain terms that he needed to wear one around us.
Overall, NatGeo profited from our illness as we were too unwell to utilize the dining allowance at the Cairo Ritz Carlton or to go to out for most meals offered with our guide. The one restaurant I was taken to for dinner without my husband was a touristy place with fake grapes leaves hanging from fake arbors. When a 35 person tour group trouped in past us it told me all I needed to know. My bowl of pasta with a tomato sauce not much thicker than tomato juice certainly couldn’t have cost more than $10, if that much. Then, the next day I was too sick to go out at all, my husband, who was feeling better by then, went out alone with the tour guide for the day, but it’s my understanding that they skipped all meals.
All in all, there were many aspects of the trip that were memorable for all the right reasons, but also memorable for the above mentioned wrong reasons. For us to have paid as much as we did begs the question, “Was it worth the expense for this private tour experience?” As seasoned world travelers, I’m hard pressed to reply in the affirmative.
Best Part of Trip was Cancelled
Cancel my trip but no refund
DO NOT BOOK WITH NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC - LOST MY TRIP MONEY
They have not refunded any portion of my money. They said the airfare was non-refundable and that I couldn't even have a flight credit. But they are the ones that canceled the trip. However Delta told me that a refund check was sent to the agency. Then they said they would refund the other portion of the trip expense, but it may take 6 months. It is completely unacceptable. The entire 100% of the trip should be refunded and should have been refunded the day they canceled the trip.
The business is not responsive to this. I filed a complaint with the BBB and they did not respond. I sent a 30 day demand letter in preparation of filing in court against them. So far no resolution.
I expect a 100% refund AND I share this story to strongly advise against anyone ever booking a national geographic trip of any kind.
I will be posting this review online in every spot I can find.
Details
Flight & Transport Inclusions
All internal ground transport
Group Size
Small Group - 24 max
Maximum Number of People in Group: 14
8 to 14 people
Trip ID#:
namculnat
What's excluded
- International airfare
- Optional gratuities
- Personal items
Meals Included
13 Breakfasts, 12 Lunches and 13 Dinners
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