Okavango Delta, Botswana: Poling in to the Delta and camping overnight on one of the salt islands has has been one of our most memorable experiences to date. To understand the uniqueness of this trip requires understanding the uniqueness of this landscape.
Tagged: Botswana, bush walk, Camping, canoe, delta, dung, mokoro, Okavango, poling, salt island, termite mound
Kasane, Botswana: After crossing the border from Namibia, we set up camp in Kasane on the edge of Chobe National Park. We drove through the park two days and took a boat tour another, which was the perfect combination of ways to see the most wildlife in this spectacular park.
Tagged: boat tour, Botswana, buffalo, Chobe, elephants, giraffe, hippos, Kasane, kneeling, playing, warthogs
Tagged: Camping, campsites, Caprivi Strip, Grootfontein, hippos, Ngepi, Popa Falls, Roy's Rest Camp
Tagged: trees
Tagged: Etosha, Etosha National Park, giraffe, Namibia, Park, rhinoceros, zebras
Khorixas, Namibia: On my birthday, I had hoped to see a giraffe, zebra or elephant. Instead, I was paid a visit from the birthday bananasaurus, a special singing banana that Thomas debuted in 2013. This little guy traveled all the way from Turks & Caicos where he made his last appearance to the Damaraland, Namibia. After a tune and birthday breakfast, we decided to take a one-night break from camping to celebrate in a lodge.
Tagged: bananasaurus, birthday, Khorixas, kudu
Henties Bay, Namibia: From Sossusvlei, we drove several hours on the gravel roads through the Namib Desert on our way to Swakopmund. We were looking forward to making it to this booming metropolis because the guide book said (a) it was ‘anything but boring’ and (b) the effect of the hot desert against the icy Atlantic made it feel ‘like a movie set.’ Unfortunately, the guide book was wrong. Swakopmund was most certainly boring and actually felt pretty weird. Sure, the fog was a bit reminiscent of San Francisco, but instead of being romantic & mysterious, it was eerie & sketchy.
Tagged: coast, eerie, fog, Germans, remote, Skeleton Coast, sketchy, Swakopmund
Windhoek, Namibia: We picked up our 4×4 in Windhoek and drove south towards Sossusvlei. Based on what we’d learned from our camping experience in New Zealand, we thought it would be reasonable to make it 220 km on our first afternoon. We were wrong. The roads turned from paved to gravel within 20 km of leaving Windhoek, so we were slowed considerably. At twilight, we started seeing wildlife come out for a visit, so we decided to pull off and call it a night. Our campground was situated 8 km off the main ‘road’ overlooking an idyllic canyon where the only others close by were the cicadas who hummed us to sleep.

We’re off to Africa for 25 days of camping across Namibia and Botswana. Photos and updates to follow once we land on the new continent!