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Cape Town to Victoria Falls Adventure

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Cape Town to Victoria Falls Adventure

1-Join tour Cape Town
One of the most vibrant and beautifully located cities on the planet, Cape Town, set before the iconic backdrop of Table Mountain, has grown to embody the true feelings of energy and hope that South Africans feel for the future of their country. Founded by the Dutch East India Company in 1652 as a refuelling point along the trading routes between Europe and the spice rich lands to the east, Cape Town grew over the next century to become a thriving town. Over the intervening years it has absorbed the cultural influences of the Dutch, French and British settlers, as well as the freed Muslim slaves, and all have left their mark on this city in one form or another. Today it is a rich fusion of spectacular natural assets, modern high-tech city centre and a mixed population that lives relatively peaceably together, whilst still retaining the unique diversity of their own customs and traditions. During your free time this afternoon there may be an opportunity to ascend Table Mountain by the Aerial Cableway (optional). This is our first encounter with some of the unique and colourful flowers from the Cape Floral Kingdom – which has more indigenous plant species per square metre than anywhere else on earth. Views from the top are simply stunning and a network of trails crisscross the plateau, providing a variety of vantage points.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

2-Full day’s sightseeing around Cape Town
We spend the whole day enjoying a comprehensive sightseeing tour of some of the many highlights that the Cape Peninsula has to offer. One of the highlights of today’s tour is a visit to the Cape of Good Hope, first seen by a European in 1488 when Diaz sailed round it on his search for a sea route to the East Indies. A century later Sir Francis Drake described it as ‘the fairest cape we saw in the whole circumference of the earth’. But it was another century before the Dutch East Indies Trading Company established a permanent settlement to supply ships with the cattle and water traded from the indigenous Khoi herders. We will also visit the African Penguin colony at Boulders Beach, just on the outskirts of Simon’s Town. This is one of only two mainland colonies anywhere in the world for these amazing, and sadly endangered creatures, commonly known as Jackass Penguins because of their donkey-like braying. We will then return to Cape Town via Hout Bay, an attractive fishing port once flanked by dense forest and in sight of nearby Seal Island, home to some 1000 Cape fur seals and guarded by the impressive ‘Sentinel’, a towering mountain that dominates the harbour.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

3-Drive to Cederberg
If not done already there may be another opportunity this morning to enjoy an early ascent of Table Mountain by cable car, before we leave Cape Town behind and head for our camp lying in the shadow of the imposing Cederberg Mountains. Note: Departures in September and October (Spring) may well coincide with the blossoming of wild flowers, though this cannot be guaranteed as it is quite unpredictable.
Overnight: Basic Camping

4-Drive to Gariep River (Namibia) via Springbok and Okiep
Continuing north through Namaqualand this morning we pass through the small mining settlements of Okiep and Springbok en route to the Namibian border. Seemingly barren and desolate though this landscape might appear, the traditional heartland of the Nama people is actually home to the greatest diversity of succulent flora on the planet. The day sees us traversing this unique desert landscape of granite rocks and sweeping dunes as we head for the Gariep River (Orange River), which forms Namibia’s southern boundary with South Africa. Beginning in the highlands of the Drakensberg Mountains, the river flows for some 1800km, finally ending its epic journey amongst the waters of the Atlantic and this evening we will camp close to its meandering course, as we enter our second country in this remarkable odyssey.
Overnight: Simple Camping

5-Drive to Fish River Canyon and explore on foot
After breaking camp this morning we head for the world-renowned Fish River Canyon, one of the great natural wonders of Africa and the second largest canyon in the world after the Grand Canyon. Measuring some 161km in length, up to 27km in width in some places and over 500m in depth it is one of the world’s most grandest natural creations. On arrival we will have some time to explore the canyon, with a walk this afternoon around the upper rim that will afford us an opportunity to appreciate this stunning landscape. San legend has it that the canyon was carved by a great serpent, Kouteign Kooru, however less romantic theories put its creation down to the action of erosion and glaciers. We will be camping tonight at Hobas, whose plains are sometimes dotted with steenbok and springbok, whilst the rocky slopes above tend to be a favoured haunt of Chacma baboons and klipspringer. The richer vegetation close to the river also attracts a number of birds, including raptors such as rock kestrels and lanner falcons.
Overnight: Simple Camping

6-Drive to Sesriem, Namib Desert
Today’s journey brings us into the magnificent setting of the Namib Desert and the Namib-Nakluft National Park. As we head north, crossing the Namib gravel flats and the awe-inspiring landscapes of some of the oldest desert on the planet, we have our first opportunity to watch the sun cast its shadows over the red dunes of some of the most spectacular vistas on earth. Covering some 50,000 sq km this is one of the largest national parks on the continent, encompassing an area of truly magnificent desert scenery
that is credited with being home to some of the strangest flora and fauna on the planet.
Overnight: Basic Camping

7-Full day in Namib-Naukluft National Park
We spend the day exploring this majestic landscape in all its glory, firstly with a morning visit to the towering dunes of Sossusvlei, some of the highest on earth. The area itself is a vast depression or clay pan, dominated by sand dunes that can reach up to 300m in height. In the early morning the first rays of the rising sun turn these towering sand giants a deep orange, presenting us with a landscape of overwhelming grandeur that is truly a photographer’s dream. It is a wild, beautiful and romantic spot, with sparse vegetation edging the few watercourses that flow in from the Tsauchab River. Here springbok and ostrich are often seen and the occasional acacia tree stands out in stark contrast against the golden sands. Lying amidst this harsh and barren world we come across the surreal landscapes of the Dead Vlei, an ancient salt pan of dazzling white, filled with the skeletons of long dead acacia trees, their gnarled and twisted carcasses presenting an incredible spectacle against the softer tones of the surrounding desert. This afternoon our tour takes in the cooler confines of the Sesriem Canyon, which we will explore on foot. Small, but very picturesque, the canyon presents a marked contrast from this morning, with numerous plants growing in the shade and shelter offered by the canyon walls and water pools attracting several species of birds and animals. Sesriem translates as ‘six thongs’, referring to the six lengths of rawhide rope (from a wagon) needed to haul a bucket of water up to the canyon rim from the stream below. It may also be possible later to climb the Elim Dune for sunset this evening, presenting the stunning spectacle of the Naukluft Mountains in the distance.
Overnight: Basic Camping

8-Drive to Swakopmund via Kuiseb Canyon and Walvis Bay
Travelling via Solitaire and through the spectacular Kuiseb Canyon, we then pass more fascinating landscapes as we head to Walvis Bay. Here a large spit forms a natural deep-sea harbour, which attracted the first navigators in the late 1400′s. Today the shallows located where the spit joins the mainland are home to a diverse collection of birds, the most spectacular being the flamingos and pelicans that feed here seasonally (May to November usually). From here it is just a short drive to our final destination for the day, the coastal town of Swakopmund.
Overnight: Simple Camping

9-In Swakopmund
Initially founded by German settlers at the end of the 19th century, Swakopmund was intended to serve as the main harbour for German Southwest Africa. Over the next few years it saw a steady increase in maritime traffic, eventually handling all the export and import traffic for the entire territory and this importance is reflected in the array of German architecture that still makes up a large percentage of the old town. Swakopmund is a fascinating mix of Bavarian grandeur, Herero traditional and African colour, all set between the pounding waters of the Atlantic and the vast expanses of one of the largest areas of unspoilt wilderness on the planet. Today has been left free to enjoy this eclectic hotchpotch of cultural mores. You may like to pay a visit to the town’s excellent museum, or take a wander through the stately grandeur of its colonial architecture. The town is also a popular resort area and there are a number of optional activities available to make the most of its natural delight. There may be an opportunity to take a half day cruise in Walvis Bay in search of dolphins and seals, or perhaps enjoy a scenic flight over the desert and coast. This evening you may like to round off the day watching the sunset across the coastal dunes.
Overnight: Simple Camping

10-Drive to Southern Damaraland via Cape Cross and Brandberg Mountain
Today we head along the coast, where we visit the Cape Cross Seal Colony. It is here that between 80,000 and 100,000 Cape fur seals bask in the sun or swim playfully in the cold waters of the Atlantic Ocean. The seals are quite big, an average male weighing-in at anything up to 187kg (501lbs). The females give birth to a single pup around late November to early December and are considered pregnant for most of the year. Driving into Southern Damaraland we’ll pass the majestic sight of Brandberg Mountain (2,573m). The Brandberg is Namibia’s highest peak, located in the Damaraland region of the northwestern extremes of the Namib Desert, and its imposing presence on the gravel plains makes it an easy landmark to spot from miles away. The Herero call this majestic peak Omukuruvaro (The Mountain of the Gods) and within its craggy granite folds lie the famous White Lady rock paintings. To the ancient San Bushmen this site was sacred and this ancient image has been attributed to these indigenous peoples, although its interpretation has been open to debate for decades since its discovery in 1917 by a German explorer. Harsh as these landscapes are they are also rich in life, and although numbers are small most of Namibia’s desert dwelling wildlife live in the area, including desert elephant and the rare black rhino. Our final destination for today is the Aba-Huab community campsite close to the famous area of rock engravings at Twyfelfontein.
Overnight: Simple Camping

11-Drive to Khorixas; visit Twyfelfontein rock paintings and Petrified forest
This morning we drive towards Khorixas and pay a visit to the San Bushmen paintings and engravings at Twyfelfontein and view the so-called Petrified Forest. The massif of Twyfelfontein contains a spectacular record of the rock art of the Khoisan people, painted and incised into the sandstone of the mountain over a thousand years, presenting us with one of the richest areas of rock engravings in Namibia. The barren surroundings and rock-strewn slopes seem a most unlikely place for any human habitation, but there is a small spring near the base of the hill and this has been providing water to animals for millennia. The water and abundance of game also attracted Stone Age people and indications are that they inhabited the area for centuries. The extraordinary Petrified Forest, with its huge fossilised tree trunks, was declared a National Monument in 1950. It is estimated to be about 200 million years old, and both the bark and the tree rings are perfectly preserved, providing a unique insight into a bygone age millions of years ago.
Overnight: Basic Camping

12-Game viewing in Etosha
This morning we continue our journey into Etosha National Park, the ‘Great White Place’, ranked as one of Africa’s great game parks and offering some of the best game viewing on the continent. An immense, saline desert, covering over 12,400 square miles, and offering a haven for 114 species of animals and some 340 species of birds, Etosha has been described as the best game reserve in Africa. At the very heart of Etosha is the Etosha Pan, which geologists believe was formed some 12 million years ago from an inland lake about the size of Holland. Shrunk to its present dried-up size, it is now a gigantic depression in the ground – flat, saline and silvery, a mysterious place of mirages and dust-laden images, that after heavy rainfall converts back to a lake again. Today sees us exploring the area along the southern and eastern edge of the Pan, where we should see elephant, rhino and hopefully lion. The terrain ranges from dense bush to large open plains where animals roam freely and we will drive along a network of gravel roads that criss-cross the park, visiting the various viewpoints and the permanent waterholes around which animals congregate. There is something enigmatic about the vast silent grey-white pans that cover this remarkable reserve. Numerous waterholes and underground springs attract large herds of animals including springbok, zebra, wildebeest and giraffe, making for some exceptional encounters. Later we will continue on to our second night’s camp at Namutoni and, after setting up camp, enjoy an afternoon game drive. July to October are generally the best months for game viewing, during Etosha’s dry season.
Overnight: Basic Camping

13-Game Drives in Etosha National Park
Today we continue our game drives in Etosha. We will travel across the park taking in more of the abundant wildlife until we reach our second night’s camp at Namutoni. Here we will have some lunch before heading out on a game drive in the Namutoni area of the park.
Overnight: Simple Camping

14-At the Kavango River
Today we drive towards Rundu and our campsite situated on the banks of the Kavango river where you can enjoy the natural serenity of the area. In the late afternoon there may be an opportunity for a walk along the river and a spot of birdwatching.
Overnight: Simple Camping

15-Drive to Shakawe via Bwabwata National Park
Crossing into Botswana today we head along the western edge of the Delta (better known as the Pan Handle). The Okavango is the third largest river in Africa and its delta area covers 16,000 square kilometres of crystal clear channels, a myriad of ephemeral lakes and ever changing islands surviving at the northern limits of the Kalahari Desert. The river flows south east from the Angolan highlands over 1,000 km away, taking up to six months to reach the delta area which floods on an annual cycle. Our journey takes us through this fertile and captivating landscape. This afternoon we will have a short stop at Bwabwata National Park before continuing on into Botswana to our campsite near Shakawe.
Overnight: Basic Camping

16-Full day boat cruise in the Okavango Delta
The Okavango Delta is thought to be the country’s most beautiful game region, and is rated as one of Africa’s greatest wildlife sanctuaries. It covers an enormous wilderness area composed of permanent swamps, islands, forest and dry land and is an ornithologist’s paradise. Exceptional though the geography of the delta may be, it is the amazing wildlife of the waterways that draws us and we plan to set out on a full day’s boat trip. Thick beds of papyrus block many of the waterways and make much of the region impenetrable except by motorboat. We’ll spend our time exploring the waterways as we cruise slowly through a maze of interconnecting channels, allowing us to get superb close-up pictures of the wildlife. Here, we’ll experience one of Africa’s most natural and unspoiled wonderlands – hippo, crocodile, red lechwe, and a great variety of birds have made their home in the delta, as well as the elusive Sitatunga antelope, whose elongated hooves allow it to walk on the marshy ground without sinking. Bird lovers
may spot fish eagle, jacana, kingfisher, heron, stork, egret, weaver and bee-eater – just some of the magnificent species found here.
Overnight: Basic Camping

17-Drive to Kasane
Today we have a long drive crossing the border into Namibia and drive to the eastern Caprivi strip. The Caprivi Region has a colourful and interesting history. The Caprivi, known lby local tribes as Itenge, was under the rule of the Lozi kings until the end of the 19th century, but it was administered as part of the British protectorate of Bechuanaland, now known as Botswana. As a result of the European superpower political manoeuvring, Germany laid claim in 1890 to the British administered island of Zanzibar to which Britain strenuously objected. The Germans were keen to link their colonies in German East Africa (now Tanzania) with German South West Africa (now Namibia). The dispute was settled by the Berlin Conference in 1890 when Queen Victoria acquired Zanzibar and Germany acquired the territory which became known as the Caprivi Strip. This strip of land was named after German Chancellor General Count Georg Leo von Caprivi di Caprara di Montecuccoli. Say that after a beer … We make our way towards Chobe National Park and base ourselves just outside the park near the riverside town of Kasane.
Overnight: Basic Camping

18-Game Drive in Chobe National Park, boat trip on the Chobe River
Chobe National Park comprises a variety of habitats of flooded grassland, thicket and salt pan. The banks of the Chobe River, one of the Zambezi’s main tributaries, is home to an abundance of wildlife. A major feature of Chobe is its elephant population and is considered to be the largest surviving continuous elephant population and is currently estimated at 120 000 strong. This population covers most of northern Botswana plus northwestern Zimbabwe and has been built up steadily from a few thousand since the early 1900s when massive poaching at the height of the illegal ivory trade decimated other populations in the 1970s and 1980s. The Chobe elephants in this area have the distinction of being the largest in body size of all living elephants, but the ivory is brittle and there are no more of the huge tuskers from a bygone era. This morning we take a game drive in Chobe NP and this afternoon we can enjoy a boat safari on the Chobe River. The river is brimming with hippo and crocodile and its waters teem with bream, barbel and tiger fish (freshwater barracuda), making it an angler’s paradise. This area is also famed for its beautiful scenery and magnificent red and gold sunsets and offers a wonderful experience for the end of the day.
Overnight: Basic Camping

19-Drive to Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe
This morning we drive across the border into Zimbabwe to one of the country’s largest game reserves, the Hwange National Park on the edge of the Kalahari Desert. This afternoon we will pay a visit to the Painted Dog Conservation Centre, a vital refuge that is working to protect the endangered African wild dogs from the devastating consequences of illegal poaching. At one time these phenomenally successful predators ranged across the entire continent and numbered in the hundreds of thousands. Sadly today those numbers are estimated to be as low as 3000-5000, placing them on the verge of extinction.
Overnight: Basic Camping

20-Full day game drive Hwange National Park
Today we have a full day’s game drive in Hwange NP which covers some 14,600 square kilometres and is home to over 100 species of mammals. The park is blessed with a rich assortment of game that includes large numbers of gemsbok, brown hyena and elephant, as well as one of the largest populations of African wild dogs on the continent. Encompassing a variety of landscapes, from desert sands and sparse woodland to open savannahs and granite outcrops, the park is one of Africa’s finest wildlife refuges and we will have an opportunity to discover something of its natural treasures.
Overnight: Basic Camping

21-Drive to Victoria Falls; tour of the falls
Today we transfer to Victoria Falls where we spend the final nights of our tour. The thundering cascades of Victoria Falls, one of the planet’s most spectacular natural wonders is called Mosi-oa-Tunya by the indigenous peoples (The Smoke that Thunders). The falls of the Zambezi River plummet over a sheer cliff wall that spans more than 1676m, dropping some 100m into the abyss below. This afternoon we take a tour of Victoria Falls, located on the southern bank of the mighty Zambezi, seeing for ourselves one of the most breathtaking sights on earth. Whilst neither the highest nor the widest set of falls in the world, it is the largest, and at its peak an astonishing 550,000 cubic metres of water cascade into the Zambezi Gorge every minute.
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

22-Free in Victoria Falls
Today is left free for you to follow your own interests. You may choose to take advantage of some of the many optional activities on offer such as whitewater rafting on the Zambezi, a scenic helicopter flight or perhaps an elephant-back safari. You could also take an optional half day game drive into Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park to search for white rhino. Your leader will be on hand to advise you and to assist with any bookings. Alternatively you may want to take advantage of the more sedate attractions that Livingstone offers, such as the National Museum or the Railway Museum (or to give it its full title, The Zambezi Sawmills Locomotive Sheds National Monument).
Overnight: Standard Hotel
Single Room option available

23-Tour ends Victoria Falls
The tour ends today after breakfast. Depending on the schedule of your flights, you may be able to spend some additional time at leisure in Victoria Falls.

Tour includes:

22 Breakfast
17 Lunch
16 Dinner
Transport:
Boat, 4WD, Ferry, Truck
Accommodation:
4 nights Standard Hotel
11 nights Basic Camping
7 nights Simple Camping
Tour Staff:
Driver(s), Explore Tour Leader, Local Guide(s), Boat Crew, Cook
Group Size:
Generally 10 – 16

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explore holidaysExplore have been running small group adventure holidays throughout the world since 1981 and have a vast array of experience, knowledge and well established close personal contacts in all the countries in which they operate, which makes them stand out as one of the most trusted adventure tour operators in the UK.

They are passionate about what they do, and above all, simply love nothing more than to travel. The founder directors ran overland trips through Asia, Africa and the Americas in the 1960s and 70s prior to setting up the company, and were determined that the spirit of adventure that was such an important part of those early pioneering days, should continue to play key role as part of the driving ethos of Explore.

Our Opinion
It is little wonder that over 60% of all Explore customers who travel each year have travelled with them previously, Explore are clearly committed to the “travel experience” and their itineraries are always offer that slight “Explore Twist” which makes them even more appealing.

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